Tensions rise in Charlottetown neighbourhood after serious assault, issues at seniors' housing - Action News
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Tensions rise in Charlottetown neighbourhood after serious assault, issues at seniors' housing

A Charlottetown woman says she's afraid to go outside in the communitywhere she grew up after an assault earlier this year and she's not the only resident to voice concerns about the changing neighbourhood.

Outreach centre under fire, but police say services 'have to be delivered somewhere

Community Outreach Centre on a sunny day.
The Community Outreach Centre moved into the old curling club on Euston Street in June 2021. (Kevin Yarr/CBC)

Warning: This story contains details of an assault that some may find disturbing

A Charlottetown woman says she's afraid to go outside in the community where she grew up after an assault earlier this year and she's not the only resident to voice concerns about the changing neighbourhood.

Kate Lee lives on Victory Avenue in downtown Charlottetown. A few blocks away sits theCommunity Outreach Centre, a provincial facility established in 2021 to help people without homes get access to services.

"The neighbourhood has really changed," said Lee. "I don't think the area can handle any more."

Lee says she was walking homeat about 10 p.m. on May 7 when she saw three young women in a nearby parking lot, one of them kicking a car.

Kate Lee holds her phone with a photo of her injuries.
Kate Lee on the incident that left her with these injuries: '[I] literally got my head kicked in.' (Tony Davis/CBC)

"I told her she was a twit," said Lee. "Her friends and her took offence to that."

Lee says the women followed her and pushed her down onto the sidewalk.

"[I] literally got my head kicked in. I had throttle marks around my neck," she said. "I was unconscious for a few hours. I'm not sure how many hours."

Lee went to the hospital for treatment the next day. Weekslater, she says she's still dealing with the aftereffects ofthe attack.

"I forget things," she said. "I don't like to go outside unless I have to. I get headaches. It's really hard to wash my face."

No leads, say police

Lee can't definitively connect the young women who attacked her to the Outreach Centre, but she sees it as a symptom of how the neighbourhood has deteriorated since the centre opened.

"I don't know if some of them [the centre's clients]realize how much damage they're doing to the neighbourhood," she said. "I mean, needles lying around. There was a lady on Orlebar[Street], her dog brought in a bag of used needles, like a Ziplocbaggie. It's just gross."

Charlottetown Police Services chief Brad MacConnell told CBC Newsnearby security cameras weren't any help but the investigation into Lee's assault continues.

However, he said, "We do not believe it was related to the Outreach Centre."

Brad McConnell in uniform in front of police logo.
Police are taking neighbourhood concerns seriously, says Chief Brad MacConnell. (Tony Davis/CBC)

Police say36 assaults were reported at the centrein 2022,all involving people at the centre,either among clients or between clients and staff.

MacConnell isn't aware of any cases of centreclients assaulting anyone else, but he knows residents are worried.

"We know that there are concerns," he said."I'm acutely aware of the perception of safety from neighbours and passersby that see certain activity and are concerned or unsettled by it. There'll always be isolated incidents."

'Atime for understanding and compassion'

Two police officers are dedicated to the centre, with funding from the province. They reply to calls about incidents at the centre, but also spend time building relationshipswith the goal of being able to better defuse any issues that do arise.

The population served by the Community Outreach Centre is a vulnerable one, said MacConnell, and he asked for understanding and compassion about the work being done there.

The way that we need to deal with issues has to evolve.Chief Brad MacConnell

"These are important services delivered. They have to be delivered somewhere," he said.

"This is a time for understanding and compassion throughout our city and province, and understand that things that once were are not always the way they are now, and the way that we need to deal with issues has to evolve also."

MacConnell believes the centre'shigh visibility location is partially to blame for the concerns.

The Community Outreach Centre was established at what had been the Charlottetown Curling Club in June 2021, and its operationwas taken over by the Adventure Group in April 2022.

Director Roxanne Carter-Thompson saidcentre like this almost always spurcomplaints from neighbours.

Roxanne Carter-Thompson, inside
When a centre for vulnerable people moves in, it can be blamed for a lot of a neighbourhood's problems, says Roxanne Carter-Thompson. (Tony Davis/CBC)

A youth centre run by the Adventure Group had to move three times, she said,until they stoppedputting a sign over the front door and the complaints stopped.

"If they had known that we were there, and the population we were working with, anytime something got stolen you can bet our clients would have been accused of it," she said."But when they didn't know we were in the area, there were no incidents reported."

Carter-Thompson has her own issues with the Community Outreach Centre's location, saying people driving by are sometimes abusive, shouting insults or directing lewd comments at clients outside the centre.

A place to be supported

But like MacConnell, Carter-Thompson said services have to be delivered somewhere.

"If they weren't at the Community Outreach Centre, where would these individuals be? They would be all over Charlottetown, and that presents a problem," said Carter-Thompson. "At least when they're here, there are trained staff that are here to support them."

The centre connects people to provincial services to help move them away from homelessness, but also providesfinancial counselling, phone and computer access, and help for people looking to complete their high school education.

And the need for those services is growing dramatically. Carter-Thompson saidthe Adventure Group had 350 clients when it took overtwo years ago. Now ithas 710.

Wayne Casford, inside
'We probably dont have that long left. Let us live it in peace,' says Wayne Casford. (Tony Davis/CBC)

Dealing with trespassers

Seniors living in nearbyChampionCourt are among those saying the Outreach Centre is creating problems in the neighbourhood.

They say non-residents find theirway into the secure building, roaming the hallways andusing the laundry room. When people were found sleeping in the common room, management decided to shut itdown altogether including for legitimate residents.

"We had to lock it all down because of them coming over, getting in, sleeping on the couches," said resident Wayne Casford. "They're disrupting our lives, and we probably don't have that long left. Let us live it in peace."

Melanie Moffatsaid the change has been a loss for the building's residents.

Melanie Moffat, inside.
Melanie Moffat misses easy access to her Champion Court building's common room. (Tony Davis/CBC)

"People used to be able to come in and play cards at night, or just social gathering in the daytime and enjoy each other's company. It was a way of meeting other people when you move into a new place. That has changed," she said.

"We miss it, and we're trying to figure out a way to have those times again."

Challenges go back years

Carter-Thompson said problemsin the neighbourhood aren't new, though.

"There's been lots of challenges in this area over the years, long before the Community Outreach Centre came to the curling club," she said.

As for MacConnell,he doesn't believe the problems in the area are out of line with anywhere else, given the population density and high traffic.

"As far as problems being displaced from other areas of the city, I think it's too early to tell," he said."Certainly we're mindful of that, and it's not the only area of the city that is challenged."

Outreach Centre with view obscured by traffic.
The Outreach Centre is in a busy area, and that's not ideal, says director Roxanne Carter-Thompson. (Kevin Yarr/CBC)

Lee doesn't dispute that the Euston Street area hasn't been the place she grew up in for a long time.

"But not to the point where you can't have bathrooms [in the local coffee shop] because people are overdosing in them," she said. "You can watch [people] selling drugs and doing them It's really obvious."

Another move?

The centre's locationon Euston Street was supposed to be temporary; its services had been offered at three different spots before it settled into the former curling club.

Now that provincial space on Park Street is no longer being used for COVID-19 screening, Carter-Thompson herself has said a new outreach centre would ideally be located there, next toa provincially operated emergency overnight shelter complex made up of modular units.

There are people who are looking to be helped, and there are waiting lists, and there's not enough room.Kate Lee

The provincial government has been inviting people to an information session this coming Wednesday"to discuss the proposed expansion of health and social services at the 68 Park Street property."

That's expected to include the long-awaited overdose prevention site that will be operated by PEERS Alliance and overseen by the Department of Health and Wellness.

It's unknown at this point whether the Community Outreach Centre might be involved somehow.

Kate Lee, outside in front of CBC building in Charlottetown
Kate Lee says she doesn't know what the solution to the problem is. (Tony Davis/CBC)

The session will take placefrom 6 to8 p.m. at Memorial Hall in theConfederation Centreof the Arts.

Whatever happens next, Lee doesn't know what the solution is.

"I do feel for the people with mental illnesses," she said. "There are people who are looking to be helped, and there are waiting lists, and there's not enough room."

With files from Tony Davis