Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Street-messaging' system for homeless could save lives: community group

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 03 Sep, 2014 12:11 PM
    VANCOUVER - A non-profit Vancouver group says a new text-messaging system that gets information to homeless people could potentially save lives.
     
    Tracey Axelsson, executive director of the Vancouver Community Network, says extreme weather alerts and warnings about bad batches of heroin or other drugs could be passed on to people through their cell phones.
     
    She says a cell phone is more of a lifeline than a luxury for people who have few ties in communities such as the Downtown Eastside.
     
    Axelsson says residents there can also access the so-called street-messaging system from computers at a library or social agencies.
     
    She says the system being launched this month will also provide updates on availability of shelter beds, locations where food is being distributed and job opportunities.
     
    Vancouver police issued a warning this summer about seven people overdosing from a toxic batch of heroin, and Axelsson says that kind of information could also be passed on through street messaging.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Harper airborne en route to London and Wales for NATO summit meeting

    Harper airborne en route to London and Wales for NATO summit meeting
    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is airborne on his way to a NATO summit in Wales.

    Harper airborne en route to London and Wales for NATO summit meeting

    Widower, 60, goes back to university to study the cancer that killed his wife

    Widower, 60, goes back to university to study the cancer that killed his wife
    EDMONTON - Powel Crosley was lost after his wife died of a rare form of ovarian cancer.

    Widower, 60, goes back to university to study the cancer that killed his wife

    Applications up, approvals slow for Health Canada medical marijuana licences

    Applications up, approvals slow for Health Canada medical marijuana licences
    OTTAWA - The number of Canadian firms applying for lucrative medical marijuana licences has topped 1,000, as a so-called "greenrush" continues to overwhelm Health Canada.

    Applications up, approvals slow for Health Canada medical marijuana licences

    Fraud trial of ex-Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault to resume Oct. 2

    Fraud trial of ex-Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault to resume Oct. 2
    QUEBEC - The fraud trial of former Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault will resume Oct. 2.

    Fraud trial of ex-Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault to resume Oct. 2

    Judge allows man charged in beating death in Halifax to fire lawyer

    Judge allows man charged in beating death in Halifax to fire lawyer
    A man accused in the fatal beating of a gay rights activist in Halifax has been granted his request to fire his lawyer.

    Judge allows man charged in beating death in Halifax to fire lawyer

    Inquiry into deadly mall collapse to report Oct. 15 in Elliot Lake, Ont.

    Inquiry into deadly mall collapse to report Oct. 15 in Elliot Lake, Ont.
    TORONTO - The public inquiry into a deadly mall collapse in northern Ontario will issue its final report next month.

    Inquiry into deadly mall collapse to report Oct. 15 in Elliot Lake, Ont.