June 10, 2005
Council committee
says yes to the Sally Ann
"They have the
right to live as human beings"
JIM
BELL
Iqaluit City Council's
engineering and planning committee said yes this past Tuesday to the Salvation
Army's proposal to move Iqaluit's shelter for homeless people from building
156 in south Iqaluit to building 778 in Lower Base, but not before a lengthy
debate, and a tie-breaking vote from Coun. Nancy Gillis, the committee's chair.
Some residents of the Lower
Base neighbourhood have complained that the proposed new location would threaten
their security, create disturbances, and lower the resale value of their property.
"I don't want to see
people in my neighbourhood causing noise and disruption. I don't want to see
the RCMP there 24 hours a day," said Denise Hutchings, who lives nearby.
But Garry Jones of the
Salvation Army said the Iqaluit RCMP detachment told him that at the homeless
shelter's current location, the police have only been called three times in
the past eight years.
Coun. Simanuk Kilabuk,
who lives near the current shelter, said the new building is "urgently
needed" before winter this year because of the cramped, dilapidated building
that's now being used.
"I have lived near
the shelter and I have never heard of any complaints from neighbours who live
beside the shelter," Kilabuk said.
Coun. Glenn Williams, who
also supports the proposal, said he's "confident" that the Salvation
Army, who have run the homeless shelter since March 31, would provide good management
of the new facility.
But he pointed out that
building 778 is a retro-fitted building with a limited lifespan, and that the
city should identify a site within the general plan for a permanent homeless
shelter.
Coun. Brad Hall voted against
the proposal, saying the majority of Lower Base residents he's talked to are
opposed to it. Coun. Claude Martel also voted against the proposal, saying that
homeless people in Iqaluit already have a "roof over their head,"
and that he understands the fears of people in the area, especially people with
children.
After a vote on the proposal
produced a 2-2 tie, Coun. Nancy Gillis, the chair, voted in favour of the motion.
"They have the right
to live as human beings," Gillis said.
The committee's recommendation
will now go to council for a final vote, which is likely to be done at the next
city council meeting.
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