Saskatchewan shelters take action as cold weather hits
CBC
The snow has fallen and while temperatures continue to drop in Saskatchewan, non-profit organisations are trying to find solutions for people needing a place to stay warm.
Prairie Harm Reduction began operating 24 hours a day Tuesday and will continue to do so for the next week.
"People have nowhere to go," Kim Randall, the director of support services for Prairie Harm Reduction said.
"We'll be open for the next little bit 24 hours but still that's not a long-term solution, right now this is what we have."
The facility usually is in operation from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Randal said that although they would love to always be open 24 hours a day, the organisation doesn't have the funding or resources to support that.
She said it's disappointing to continue seeing a lack of resources for people facing homelessness every year.
"Everybody knew the snow was coming, everybody knows how cold it gets," said Randall. "It's really on the province and the city, they should have had a solution by now."
Prairie Harm Reduction is asking for donations of blankets, jackets, mittens, socks, toques and anything else to help people layer up and stay warm for when they find themselves outside of the shelter.
"People that don't have proper footwear, proper jackets, proper clothing are kind of in trouble right now," Chief Mark Arcand of the Saskatoon Tribal Council said.
Arcand expressed his gratitude for the warming shelters, but said more should be done right now.
"Right now I think we're behind in the city of Saskatoon, I don't think we're moving fast enough to accommodate the need."
Carmichael Outreach in Regina has also extended their hours as they open the doors to their warming centre, which runs from 7:15 p.m. to 6:45 a.m., seven days a week.
"We still have quite a few encampments that are set up [in the city] and those are people that don't meet the requirements of what a shelter needs," Chrysta Garner, the development co-ordinator for Carmichael Outreach said.
"There's a lot of barriers getting accepted into a shelter."