Saturday, July 6, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Saskatchewan Promises Policy Review After Two Homeless Men Given Tickets To B.c.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Mar, 2016 12:00 AM
  • Saskatchewan Promises Policy Review After Two Homeless Men Given Tickets To B.c.
VANCOUVER — Jason Stennes says he knows what it's like to be down on his luck with nowhere to turn, so he wants to offer jobs to a pair of newly arrived homeless men who say they were given one-way bus tickets to B.C. from Saskatchewan.
 
"We've got to take care of each other ... and if I'm able to help out I will," Stennes, a 43-year-old high school dropout who is now owner and CEO of 360 Cranes Services, said Thursday.
 
"I've been offered chances in my life and I just feel it's important to pass it on."
 
Charles Neil-Curly, 23, and Jeremy Roy, 21, had been living at a homeless shelter in North Battleford, Sask., but Neil-Curly said a funding cut meant he had to find somewhere else to go.
 
Neil-Curly said he asked for a ticket to B.C. and was later on a bus with Roy, his friend from the shelter.
 
Workers from a local shelter were on hand to welcome Neil-Curly and Roy at the Vancouver bus station when they arrived Wednesday, offering them food, a shower and a warm bed.
 
Jeremy Hunka from the Union Gospel Mission said Thursday the men were in "good spirits" after staying overnight at the shelter and that the next step was to connect the two with caseworkers to develop a care plan.
 
"We want to make sure that they have a vision of where they want to go and we want to help them achieve their goals and get them out of being homeless," Hunka said.
 
"They're in the driver's seat."
 
Neil-Curly had expressed an interest in heading to Vancouver Island to be with his best friend, which is something Hunka said his organization could help facilitate.
 
"If that's the case, we will do the best we can to make sure they're connected before they arrive so that we don't have another situation where somebody's going to arrive in a new city with nowhere to go and with a really difficult situation in terms of finding shelter," he said.
 
However, it was also revealed Friday that Neil-Curly has an unresolved court issue at home and that a summary bench warrant was issued after he failed to appear in court for a traffic ticket.
 
He twice failed to appear in Unity provincial court since he was issued a ticket last year for driving while suspended.
 
Saskatchewan's Social Services Minister Donna Harpauer said Thursday the province would look into revising its policies around sending homeless people out of province if the Saskatchewan Party is re-elected next month. Harpauer had already ordered a review to see if the policy was followed correctly in this particular case.
 
Like other provinces, she said Saskatchewan has a long-standing policy to buy bus tickets, but that is normally done when someone needs to return to their home province or needs to reunite with family.
 
B.C. Housing Minister Rich Coleman said the two men were welcome in the province and would be taken care of.
 
People who arrive in British Columbia can apply for social assistance as soon as they arrive, but must meet the same eligibility requirements as anyone else. People who are in immediate need can apply for hardship assistance if they have no other way of providing for their basic needs.
 
"This is about people in need," Coleman told reporters in Victoria.
 
"We shouldn't decide to judge people who ... move across this country. The minute we do that, frankly, I think we lose our humanity."

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Forget Blenders, Some Newlyweds Ask Guests To Pay For Honeymoon

Forget Blenders, Some Newlyweds Ask Guests To Pay For Honeymoon
Before they say "I do," many couples are heading online to ask family and friends, "Will you pay for our honeymoon?" Websites such as Honeyfund, GoFundMe and Honeymoon Wishes make it easy to raise cash for a post-wedding getaway. 

Forget Blenders, Some Newlyweds Ask Guests To Pay For Honeymoon

Captured N.B. Fugitive Marissa Shephard Makes First Court Appearance On Murder And Arson Charges

Captured N.B. Fugitive Marissa Shephard Makes First Court Appearance On Murder And Arson Charges
  Marissa Shephard made her first court appearance Wednesday after being arrested under a Canada-wide warrant without incident outside a hotel in Moncton on Tuesday.

Captured N.B. Fugitive Marissa Shephard Makes First Court Appearance On Murder And Arson Charges

Is Your Boss Always A Jerk?

Is Your Boss Always A Jerk?
According to researchers, employees with fickle bosses were more prone to stress, job dissatisfaction and emotional exhaustion than people who were treated poorly all the time, finds a study.

Is Your Boss Always A Jerk?

Attachment To God May Lead To Increased Job Satisfaction

Attachment To God May Lead To Increased Job Satisfaction
People who feel attached to God are more likely to be emotionally committed to their workplace and satisfied with their jobs, says a new study.

Attachment To God May Lead To Increased Job Satisfaction

Study: British Need To Retire At 81 To Get Parents' Standard

Study: British Need To Retire At 81 To Get Parents' Standard
The retirement age for men and women is already set to rise to 66 between December 2018 and October 2020.

Study: British Need To Retire At 81 To Get Parents' Standard

Visit Simon Fraser University’s Surrey Campus For SFU’s 50th Anniversary Open House March 2

Visit Simon Fraser University’s Surrey Campus For SFU’s 50th Anniversary Open House March 2
  The event will offer a host of interactive activities and information on programs offered at the campus while celebrating SFU’s diversity and community connections.

Visit Simon Fraser University’s Surrey Campus For SFU’s 50th Anniversary Open House March 2