Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Burnout, despair facing workers on front lines of poverty and homelessness in Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2023 10:58 AM
  • Burnout, despair facing workers on front lines of poverty and homelessness in Canada

Those who work with people facing homelessness and food shortages say employees are carrying a massive emotional burden as demand for services soars beyond what their organizations can provide.

Warren Maddox, executive director at Fredericton Homeless Shelters, in New Brunswick, says staff are witnessing more desperation, more violence and more people in extreme states of crisis.

He says demand from staff on the organization's in-house mental health counsellor has increased and that it's harder to help employees see past what he described as "an unending chain of misery."

Tasha Lackman, executive director at the Depot Community Food Centre, in Montreal, says her group is being forced to make gut-wrenching decisions, including to reduce the amount of food clients get in their baskets. 

She says demand at the food bank is on track to nearly double this year compared to last year, and that staff are working harder but seeing their efforts have less of an impact.

Lackman says it's unconscionable that charities are forced to bear the brunt of what she calls a "massive systemic social crisis."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds warn 2023 on track to be the worst fire season ever seen in Canada

Feds warn 2023 on track to be the worst fire season ever seen in Canada
Bill Blair and six other federal cabinet ministers provided an update Monday on Canada's wildfire situation, even as smoke from fires north and west of the city covered Parliament Hill's Peace Tower in a grey haze. As of late Monday afternoon, 424 fires were burning across Canada, more than 250 of which are considered out of control.  

Feds warn 2023 on track to be the worst fire season ever seen in Canada

Conservative filibuster threatens potential citizenship for children born abroad

Conservative filibuster threatens potential citizenship for children born abroad
As it stands, Canadian parents who were born abroad cannot pass their citizenship down to their child unless the child was born in Canada. The NDP and Liberals proposed a change that would allow those parents to pass down Canadian citizenship if they can prove they've spent at least three years in the country.

Conservative filibuster threatens potential citizenship for children born abroad

Global economic growth slow: World Bank

Global economic growth slow: World Bank
The latest outlook from the World Bank predicts the growth of the global economy will likely slow sharply this year. The anti-poverty agency estimates the international economy will expand just 2.1 per cent after growing 3.1 per cent last year.  

Global economic growth slow: World Bank

Job action at Capilano U in B.C., as contracts inked with staff at five other schools

Job action at Capilano U in B.C., as contracts inked with staff at five other schools
A statement on the university's website says classes are suspended at its main campus and its Sechelt campus on the Sunshine Coast.  The job action comes as the Ministry of Finance announces agreements affecting about 2,100 public sector CUPE support staff at five post-secondary institutions in B.C.

Job action at Capilano U in B.C., as contracts inked with staff at five other schools

Dead body found in Kelowna

Dead body found in Kelowna
Mounties say a man has been found dead in Kelowna. They say officers responded to a report of the body in the area of McCulloch Road at Myra Forest Service Road around 8 a-m Sunday.

Dead body found in Kelowna

Fatal fire in North Vancouver

Fatal fire in North Vancouver
Mounties and firefighters in North Vancouver say one person died in a house fire in the city. The North Vancouver R-C-M-P and the city's fire department say they are investigating Friday's blaze in the 400-block of Queensbury Avenue.  

Fatal fire in North Vancouver