Wesley Urban Ministries to close drop-in day centre in 2023
CBC
Wesley Urban Ministries, a Hamilton non-profit that works with people experiencing homelessness, announced this week that it is closing its Catherine Street North day centre on March 31, 2023.
"We will be refocusing our resources from emergency response to address the root causes of homelessness," executive director of Wesley Urban Ministries, Don Seymour, said in a press release issued Wednesday.
The Catherine Street North day centre offers people experiencing homelessness basic necessities, like food, water, washrooms, showers and harm-reduction services.
Seymour told CBC Hamilton that while the centre will close in March, the ministry will still provide the same services to the community.
"We will still be continuing to provide food to people on the street, as we always have been," Seymour said, adding that without a physical location, they will focus more on delivering their services directly into the community.
"If people want us to walk with them to where they are, where they will get service, we are prepared to do that."
The day centre opened in March, 2020, across the street from John Rebecca Park. The park, which itself opened in 2019 and was previously a parking lot, has been home to people sleeping in tents. People often congregate at the site and items such as bicycles, clothing, tarps and food wrappers have at times been left on the ground.
Club 77 manager and neighbour Paul McDonald told CBC Hamilton in July that the encampment caused an increase in crime in the neighbourhood and threatened the safety of his patrons, from patrons leaving at night getting in fights with encampment residents, to residents entering the bar during off hours.
However, before the park opened, there were reports of violence related to Club 77 itself.
McDonald said he does not blame the day centre for the issues he has had with park residents.
But some nearby residents, according to Seymour, have expressed concern with the day centre. He says has received "hostile" emails from some community members who wanted the day centre to leave the neighbourhood entirely.
He told CBC Hamilton Thursday that kind of feedback is not the reason behind the decision to close. Wesley Urban Ministries is turning its attention toward finding permanent housing for people, instead of providing them basic services while they remain living outdoors, he said.
"We have had a long internal conversation and decided that we'd like to focus on the root causes of poverty," Seymour said.
Tim O'Shea, a Hamilton physician who works with people experiencing homelessness, previously told CBC Hamilton the interests of the housed community are often pitted against the interests of the unhoused, and that the solution is to get people off of the streets.