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Waiting for an accessible unit, this St. John's woman is trapped in her bedroom

Waiting for an accessible unit, this St. John's woman is trapped in her bedroom

CBC
Wednesday, July 13, 2022 01:42:19 PM UTC

Phyllis Churchill's world is 290 centimetres wide and 315 centimetres long — just about nine and half by 10 and a half feet.

When you add her bed, her chair and her commode, the three main features of her life, it shrinks even further.

There's a window in her room, but she can't reach to look out of it. She spends her days sat up in her chair, tearing through word-search puzzles and paint-by-number games on her iPad.

Churchill is trapped, an effective prisoner inside her own bedroom, due to a combination of increasing mobility issues and a housing unit that cannot be made to fit her needs.

Two sets of stairs separate her room from the kitchen and living room in her public housing unit on Watson Street in St. John's. Her daughter says she hasn't been down them in almost a year.

Aside from medical appointments, when she is moved with the help of an ambulance, Churchill does not leave her room.

"The only word I can really think of is isolation. She's isolated from everything," said her daughter, Samantha Churchill.

"I wouldn't be able to do it. I don't know how she does it and still manages to be happy and laughing and smiling."

Last summer, Samantha and her mom's home-care worker managed to take Phyllis out to sit in the sun for an afternoon. She hasn't had that experience since.

"They're worried sick about me," Phyllis Churchill said of her family and friends. "They don't like it."

Samantha and Phyllis asked Newfoundland and Labrador Housing Corporation last year for an accessible unit, and have been waiting on a wait list ever since.

Around 600 of the housing corporation's roughly 5,500 units are partially or fully accessible.

They've also been looking on the private market for a unit that could fit their needs, using online tools like Facebook, but they say that isn't moving any faster.

"I've been trying to get some place to live, and I'm hitting brick walls. I can't find nothing, not a thing," Phyllis Churchill said.

Read full story on CBC
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