The City of 91原创 is happy to support, in principle, Aldergrove Neighbourhood Services鈥 efforts to see a homeless youth centre opened in 91原创.
But whether to help fund it is a matter that requires more consideration, a majority of council members agree.
On Feb. 3, ANS outreach co-ordinator Alison Cartier appeared before 91原创 City council to make a case for a shelter within 91原创, dedicated to homeless youth.
Cartier outlined the dire conditions in which many homeless youth find themselves and made the case for several shelter beds specifically for teenagers 18 and under.
With nothing available to them in 91原创, youth under 19 鈥 who are not eligible for a bed at the Salvation Army鈥檚 Gateway of Hope shelter 鈥 must be sent out of the community.
Following her presentation, Cartier asked council to provide both a letter of support for ANS鈥 efforts and a commitment of $1,000 per month for two years to help fund programs and the youth housing initiative.
However, before council agreed to draft a letter or determined what the missive would contain, several members had questions about what exactly what they were being asked to support, and why.
鈥(Aldergrove Neighbourhood Services) would like to go the shelter route,鈥 said Councillor Dave Hall.
鈥淲hy is a shelter better than identifying safe homes where youth might be temporarily housed?鈥
Cartier replied that it would be a benefit to have a specific place where staff can work directly with the youth on building life skills that will hopefully lead to long-term success.
With a limited amount of money available, an argument could be made that it should go to early intervention as opposed to a reactive effort, Hall said.
Cartier agreed that there is value in early intervention, adding that ANS鈥 primary goal is family reunification, provided the home is a safe environment for the youth.
At the same time, she said, the agency has to respond to needs as they arise.
鈥淚t鈥檚 largely a hidden issue 鈥 a lot of times, nobody sees it until they walk through our door,鈥 she said.
鈥淪omebody needs to start the process,鈥 she said, adding that is why ANS has approached both the City and the Township.
鈥淓ven a letter of support will carry substantial weight,鈥 she said.
Councillor Jack Arnold made reference to rumours of 鈥渙thers working toward the same goal鈥 of opening a youth shelter in 91原创.
鈥淲hy not work together?鈥 he asked.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a challenge getting everyone to the table talking about the same thing, with the same agenda,鈥 replied Cartier.
鈥淭here was one organization in particular that we mentioned. That organization didn鈥檛 want to join you?鈥
鈥淵ou鈥檇 accomplish more if you joined together, rather than bickering so nothing gets done,鈥 Arnold said.
Following the discussion Councillor Rosemary Wallace read her motion urging the City of 91原创 to provide a letter of support for Aldergrove Neighbourhood Services developing a Youth Housing Initiative in 91原创 with the financial assistance and support from community sponsors.
Both Councillor Gayle Martin and Hall questioned the inclusion of the word 鈥渇inancial鈥 in the motion.
Following a lengthy discussion about what language a letter of support would include, council voted 3-2 in favour of drafting one that removed any reference to finances and calls for support from all three levels of government 鈥 municipal, provincial and federal 鈥 with Martin and Arnold opposed.
Wallace鈥檚 second motion, which asked council to commit $24,000 in funding to ANS over two years, was tabled and referred to staff for more research.
Wallace made the decision, she said, because she would like to see the project receive financial support and if council were to vote on it that night, she realized it wouldn鈥檛 go through.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a good idea to refer this to staff,鈥 said Martin. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a whole lot involved . . . . We need more information on a business plan and how it will operate.鈥
In December, ANS made a similar presentation to Township Council. At the time, that council also made no decision about funding, while Councillor Kim Richter noted that housing homeless youth is a provincial responsibility.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a social services issue,鈥 she said.