Volunteer group secures 2 guest houses in Waterloo for Ukrainian refugees
CBC
A local volunteer group has secured two new guest houses for newly-landed Ukrainian refugees arriving in Waterloo region.
One is a five-bedroom apartment, offered by a local landlord. The second is an apartment owned by Wilfrid Laurier University, a student residence, with five single bedrooms and a shared living space. Both are being rented to the group for $2,000 a month.
"This was basically agreed upon last Wednesday and we already have people moved in yesterday and today," said Stephanie Gortez, a volunteer and founding member of Waterloo Region Grassroots Response to the Ukrainian Crisis.
Both are short-term agreements until the end of August, said Gortez, but will go a long way to providing people with a softer landing when they arrive in the region.
When people escape the war in Ukraine and arrive in Canada, the federal government puts them up in a hotel for up to two weeks. Many are not prepared for the uphill climb that awaits, said Gortez.
"A place to live, a place to work within those two weeks?" said Gortez. "Most of us cannot find a single place to live within two weeks. Let alone a job and a place to live … without speaking English, perhaps, with having no references, maybe not having a resume, no form of transportation and very little revenue."
The Ukrainians who arrive can open a Canadian bank account and are eligible for transitional financial assistance of $3,000 per adult and $1,500 per child from the federal government, but that can take time to process, said Gortez, and there's reluctance to spend all that money in case it's needed later.
"If they don't find employment, many of them have a return ticket. Or many of them are unwilling to spend the last thousand or two thousand dollars to fly back home because they see no other option."
According to the most recent Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation numbers in Oct. 2022, the vacancy rate in Kitchener, Cambridge and Waterloo was 1.2 per cent. The average price of a one-bedroom apartment was $1,327; a two-bedroom apartment was $1,454.
The rising cost of living — especially rent — has made the role of host families evermore important, said Gortez.
"One of the ladies, a 60-year-old woman, was in a bus shelter when she sent me a message on Facebook and she had nowhere to go. So we rushed down and we picked her up around 11 p.m., got her to an emergency host at midnight and the next day she was with another host and her hosts are sharing, learning each others' language and meals."
Randy Kraemer, his wife and six children, live north of Waterloo region, near Conestoga Lake. His family signed up to be a host family with Waterloo Region Grassroots Response to the Ukrainian Crisis months ago but it wasn't until April that they were matched with a couple in their mid-30s.