![Community bingo night offers belonging to struggling Windsor, Ont., residents](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7361598.1729729312!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/bingo-night.jpg)
Community bingo night offers belonging to struggling Windsor, Ont., residents
CBC
Sitting around the table for bingo night at the Streetlight Community Centre in Windsor, Ont., you get the feeling you're sitting with a big, boisterous family.
Bingo night is free to play and open to the community in a nondescript building on Wyandotte Street East. It's been running for about the last two months, says coordinator Ashley Shepley.
The goal? To give people a welcoming and comfortable space for their community in the evenings.
"We were getting a lot of feedback about how people are bored and they don't have anything to do out here and then they end up engaging in other things that aren't necessarily healthy practices in life, right?," Shepley said.
"I think it's really important to offer these free, healthy opportunities for folks to enjoy things they like."
Throughout the evening, Shepley ferries bowls of soup and snacks from the small kitchen, welcoming each new person while keeping a watchful eye on the crowd.
Meanwhile, a competitive game of bingo is ongoing.
Adrienne Brown, a volunteer, is at the front of the room working an app on her phone that calls the numbers, while she keeps track of numbers and winners. There are some sought-after prizes, including a plush throw blanket.
Shepley says Streetlight is open to, and attracts, people from all walks of life. Some are homeless, either temporarily or chronically. Others are in community or low-income housing or treatment homes, in need of community and a positive space to be.
"I started coming because I was lonely and I just wanted to get involved in things," said Bryce Rocha, who lives in one of the downtown Glengarry buildings.
"Everyone kind of has each other's back, where it's a pretty safe area, which is good, in contrast to the building that I live in where it's not very good ... it's less of a community and more like a family. We all just kind of watch out for each other."
The community centre opened its doors in the Wyandotte Street East space in July, and doesn't involve the city's housing and homelessness hub or the Downtown Mission, according to Shepley — both of which she calls important services.
"We had absolutely no idea ... we went in blind just knowing that there was a gap that needed to be filled and we're going to figure it out along the way," she said. "So far it has been a place of belonging, connection ... we're offering less of a facility drop-in and more of a family place where you can feel belonging and loved.
"We can sit together and heal together. And now we get to play together too, right?"