Seniors 'gobsmacked' as community centre again becomes emergency shelter - Action News
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Ottawa

Seniors 'gobsmacked' as community centre again becomes emergency shelter

This isn't the first time Heron Road Community Centre has been used for emergency shelter and that's raising concerns for some seniors who access services there.

Heron Road Community Centre previously converted during COVID-19 pandemic

Heron Road Community Centre is well-used and draws many patrons who walk or bicycle from the nearby community.
Heron Road Community Centre, seen at left, is well-used and draws many patrons who walk or bicycle from the nearby community. It's also been slated to be converted into an emergency shelter in the weeks ahead. (Mateo Garcia-Tremblay/Radio-Canada)

Some seniors who use the Heron Road Community Centre say they're concerned that it's once again being used as an emergency shelter.

The City of Ottawa's general manager of community and social services confirmed the decision in a memo to council on Wednesday.

The memo said all shelters, pandemic-era distancing centres and overflow options are full. The centre, which was previously converted into a distancing centre during the COVID-19 pandemic, is expected to add space for about 200 more people as of the end of November.

"We were kind of gobsmacked about having to move again," said Christine Heron, one of the co-ordinators of the bridge club that meets on the second floor.

"Yes, the homeless people need a place. But the city needs to get its act together and find a permanent place for the homeless."

Janet White, at left, and Christine Heron, right, are coordinators of a bridge group that plays twice a week at the Heron Road Community Centre. They stand in their meeting room as about two dozen players, mostly seniors, sit at tables behind them.
Janet White, at left, and Christine Heron, right, are co-ordinators of a bridge group that plays twice a week at the Heron Road Community Centre. They'll be relocating to another centre that's roughly 45 minutes to an hour away by bus. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

Social connection, health clinics important

About two dozen people were playing bridge there Thursday, and Heron said the social connection is very important.

Sotoo are the health clinics that run at the centre.

"It's easy access that means one less trip for our seniors," she said. "You've got to remember that our average age here is between 80 and 85, so we need the convenience."

Janet White, another group co-ordinator, said they lost members many of whom walk or bike when the facility was turned into a physical distancing centre.

They've been told they'll move to the Carleton Heights Community Centre, a roughly 11-minute drive or between 45 minutes to an hour by bus, according to Google Maps.

"We definitely realize there's a need for housing. The weather's getting so much colder and the city doesn't have the capacity," White said.

"It's just that it seems that it's such an important area for seniors as well."

Pilates instructor Ana Pontiroli, who teaches a course for seniors,said she also saw participation drop off the last time they had to relocate.

"Probably for next time, they should [find]another place, another centre that's not being used like this one," Pontiroli said.

Ana Pontiroli, a Pilates teacher, in front of the Heron Road Community Centre.
Pilates instructor Ana Pontiroli says attendance in her class for seniors fell the last time she had to relocate. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

'Very limited options'

The Heron Gate neighbourhood has Ottawa's second worst ranking in the neighbourhood equity index, which measures disparity between areas based in part oneconomic opportunity and population health.

Heron Gate's median income is less than half the average for Ottawa as a whole, according to the 2016 census. Nearly half of the population is considered to below income, compared to about 12.5 per cent for the entirecity.

The city's director of housing, Paul Lavigne, said the location was chosen because it could be quickly converted to a shelter as the housing crisis has seen demand for lodging grow "exponentially."

"We had very, very limited options. Heron Road [is]the only option that we can stand up in an emergency situation," Lavigne said.

Lavigne said work can be done quickly to serve some of the city's 250 to 275 "unsheltered" people, many of whom are expected to access the shelter system this winter.

Heres how some users of the Heron Road Community Centre feel about it being converted into a temporary shelter

11 months ago
Duration 0:59
At the end of November, the city said it will be turning the Heron Road Community Centre into a makeshift emergency shelter. It would become the third recreation facility in Ottawa converted into a shelter for the unhoused, and the second in Alta Vista Ward.

Lavigne expects the shelter which already has showers, a kitchen and an eating area will assistsingle homeless peoplerather than families,and mostly asylum claimants who have nowhere to live.

While the seniors centre and other programming will be relocated, the food bank will continue to operate there, Lavigne said.

Lavigne added that the plan is to leave Heron Road"as soon as possible" but didn't provide a timeline.

"We recognize the impact that it has on communities," Lavignesaid. "And we definitely don't want to be in recreational facilities at all."

Seniors around Heron and Walkley roads are gobsmacked the city is turning the Heron Road Community Centre into an emergency shelter again.

with files from Arthur White-Crummey