Calgary - Low Income Resources
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Calgary HEP Fund
If you're in Calgary and are a low-income resident in the city who is worried about being evicted due to non-payment of rental funds, check this out
Homeless and Eviction Prevention Fund
Not a whole ton of information is made readily available or easily accessible about this fund, but hopefully the above link will help you if you're facing difficulties.
Also, the Red Cross organization sometimes helps with Damage Deposit money, as does CUPS, but you have to contact these organizations to see if you qualify for assistance on these matters.
Important Announcement Summer 2008!
**Important**
St. Mary's Church Sunday Supper is not available during Stampede week.
Do not go to St. Mary's during Stampede week in July for any meals - the soup kitchen is entirely closed and there are no emergency food hampers while Stampede tourists are in great numbers for 10 days.
That is the location near the old Holy Cross hospital at:
221 18 Ave. S.W. Phone: (403) 218-5532
I believe the Sunday "Feed The Hungry" program suppers resume again during the last week of July - but above, the phone number is provided if you need to phone and check these details.
INCREDIBLE Story about Barriers for the Disabled
Unfortunate Change at Mustard Seed
At Calgary's Mustard Seed shelter, there has been an unfortunate change to the availability of 'soup kitchen' meals.
I learned recently that the Mustard Seed no longer has most meals available to the public. The meal that is still available to the public is the evening meal, however, the public used to be able to go to the Seed around the lunchtime hours for a meal as well.
The homelessness problem in Calgary is more than STAGGERING!
All of the shelters are OVERWHELMED with population...with NO END IN SIGHT, it seems.
MONEY AND FOOD DONATIONS WILL NOT HELP THIS PROBLEM!!!
IT is a PEOPLE Problem, not a MONEY and FOOD problem.
People and the attitudes that people hold...about class, gender, financial status, success - and the STIGMA that people adhere to about low-income people and SERVICES...is at the base of the homelessness problem.
And now, due to attitudes, misinformation and misunderstandings about this problem, even the shelters are having to cut back on making resources available!
The Mustard Seed is trying to make sure that its services maintain their quality for any person who is a resident...thus, making sure they have appropriate foods for the residents...so they can no longer offer the extra public meals.
It's a DAMN SHAME that a city where MONEY IS FLOWING is folding to the pressures of stigma and garbage like 'status,' allowing WORKING HOMELESS PEOPLE to flounder...these are not people without values, worthiness and importance who get stuck in shelters...
Two blocks north of the Mustard Seed in Calgary, Alberta, you will find elite businesses, and the shelter is located RIGHT BEHIND one of the city's MOST POPULAR AND WELL KNOWN LANDMARKS.....The Calgary Tower.
How can people visiting the Calgary Tower MISS KNOWING ABOUT THESE HOMELESS PEOPLE?
I should answer that question...
...the lot south of the structure is a parking lot. A PARKING LOT separates the elite from the homeless. Beyond the parking lot, to the south...is a world away from elite street, I guess.
Anyhow - due to the ever pressing and growing problem of a rising homeless population, the shelter behind The Calgary Tower can no longer offer extra public meals for low-income Calgary citizens. If you don't have a Mustard Seed resident ID card, you can only eat a public meal around 7pm.
Street Issues
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Run in the Fam'ly: A Novel (Peter Taylor Prize)
Price: $8.94
List Price: $32.95 |
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The Public Assault on America's Children: Poverty, Violence, and Juvenile Injustice (Teaching for Social Justice, 5)
Price: $19.00
List Price: $24.95 |
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Under the Overpass: A Journey of Faith on the Streets of America
Price: $6.10
List Price: $11.99 |
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Contextualizing Homelessness: Critical Theory, Homelessness, and Federal Policy Addressing the Homeless (New Approaches in Sociology: Studies in Social Inequality, Social Change, and Social Justice)
Price: $31.12
List Price: $39.95 |
Food In Calgary
Food on street level:
Prepared food is available to those in need in many locations in Calgary. The primary shelters in Calgary serve meals to 'residents' and prepare a 'public' meal, as well to people who have run out of food or the ability to cook food at home.
**********DAILY**********
Calgary Drop In Centre 423 4 Ave. S.E. T2G 0C2 (downtown Calgary) Phone: (403) 266-3600
The Drop in Centre is open 7days/wk 24h and has meals at 7am, 9:30am, 12pm (noon), and 6pm. Snacktimes are 9:30am and 3pm. DROP IN and HAVE SOMETHING TO EAT!
The Salvation Army - Centre Of Hope (downtown Calgary) 420 9 Ave. S.E. T2G 0R9 Phone: (403) 410-1111 (24 hour)
Free COMMUNITY MEAL at 4pm DAILY!
The Mustard Seed (Downtown Calgary) 102 11 Ave. S.E. T2G 0X5 Phone: (403) 269-1319 (line available business hours 9am-4:30pm)
Daily lunch 1pm-2:30pm, daily supper 7pm-8:30pm
Feed The Hungry program at St. Mary's Cathedral 221 18 Ave. S.W. T2S 2T2 Phone: (403) 218-5532
**********Limited Times**********
FEED THE HUNGRY Program at St. Mary's Cathedral Hall (Church) just off downtown Calgary (Near Holy Cross hospital) 221 18 Ave. S.W. T2S 2T2 Phone: (403) 218-5532
Limited - ONLY ON SUNDAYS This location is at a church just off downtown, meals at 3:30-5:00pm Sundays.
Practical Items for Homeless People
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Pair of Big Muppet Dolls one is Backpack!
Current Bid: $4.99
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◆◆Sale Genuine Lowepro SLINGSHOT 200 AW BACKPACK BAG◆◆
Current Bid: $58.99
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PRESCHOOL BOB THE BUILDER TOYS BACK PACK FIGURES MISC
Current Bid: $7.95
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Shelters In Calgary
Inn From The Cold: (*Priority Given To Families*) 117 7 Ave. S.W. T2P 0W5 (downtown) Phone: (403) 263-8384
This is an overnight temporary shelter that attempts to assist families first. Intake and screening process from 4pm-5:30pm daily. Inn From The Cold provides a hot supper, overnight shelter, then a breakfast and bagged lunch. This shelter service is located downtown along the street where the C-Train runs, on the south side of the street. It's across from the big TELUS building.
Calgary Drop In Centre: 423 4 Ave. S.E. T2G 0C2 (downtown) Phone: (403) 266-3600
This shelter provides mats to sleep on temporarily, and beds in segregated areas are available for those whose stay is going to be longer. Also available, dormitory beds (these require an assessment of your situation and needs and aren't immediately available upon first request). Generally, if you arrive past 9pm, you'll have trouble getting in here. If possible, get to the Drop In Centre before 7pm and you should be okay and have an indoor place to stay for the night.
Salvation Army - Centre Of Hope/including Booth Centre: 420 9 Ave. S.E. T2G 0R9 (downtown) Phone: (403) 410-1111 (24 hour) Residential inquiries, men:(403) 410-1184...Residential inquiries, women: (403) 410-1126. Separate building, The Booth Centre at 631 7 Ave. S.E. T2G 0J8 for men: (403) 262-6188
Centre of Hope has segregated areas, and also a separate building (The Booth Centre) for males only. Cot/beds are available in the free/emergency areas and some low-cost private 'transitional' rooms are available for those who can afford them for short durations. (Some subsidies available for those who qualify).
The Calgary Mustard Seed: 102 11 Ave. S.E. T2G 0X5 (downtown) Phone: (403) 269-1319
The Seed has approximately 80 beds available. Also, "Step-Up" transitional housing program is available to those who qualify. Applications are taken in for the Step Up program daily from 1pm-4pm. If you require shelter overnight it is best to arrive before 7pm to make sure a bed can be provided. This shelter is located just south of the Calgary Tower, downtown.
THERE ARE OTHER SHELTERS IN CALGARY but some are designed to assist abused women, teens, and people in other specific situations (including shelters for sex-trade workers who are desperately trying to change their lifestyle and assume a safer lifestyle), so their details are not freely given in public for obvious reasons.
If you are in danger as well as needing shelter, the above agencies and shelters will access the OTHER resources for you to help keep you anonymous and safe.
More Practical Items For Homeless People
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SLEEP Space BLANKET Emergency Disaster,Safety Survival
Current Bid: $.99
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4 Emergency Rescue Space Thermal Mylar Blankets 84 x 52
Current Bid: $7.44
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Calgary - Out Of Time
The time for people to ACT upon the homeless, housing, economic crisis that has been building for the last 5 years has come and gone...
The time already passed whereby people could PREVENT the problems. Prevention is just a 10-digit word and one heck of a good concept at this point, however, it's not a practical word anymore.
The people in Calgary who are already homeless and the hundreds more who will become homeless this winter (2007/2008) need for people to THINK CREATIVELY because the resources have run out and the homeless are still being 'created' by the housing and economic crunch...
There is no way out for some people this winter, so let's stop B.S.-ing and pasting band-aids on BIG PROBLEMS.
People aren't ducking into the shelters for temporary 2 or 3 night stays, they're going IN this winter and they're going to have to stay put until Mother Nature is finished what Mother Nature does...
Things that people rarely consider about the needs of PEOPLE (let's not always call them 'the homeless' - they are PEOPLE) are that PEOPLE need a certain amount of comfort...
Shelter residents and homeless people have to pretty much carry what they own on their back. How about some PRACTICAL donations this year at the shelters...Backpacks, Travel Mugs, Bus tickets (for those who are able to go to work, but who are often prevented from working due to having no way to GET TO WORK), Coffeeshop Gift Cards (so people can keep their sanity and have someplace else to sit once in a while). It really helps to give items to people that help them assume some semblance of normalcy when they get stuck in shelters...
In Calgary, we're not looking at the 'usual' situation with homeless people. Though there are SOME homeless people who become conditioned to the streets and shelters, for whatever (various) reason(s), a great number of Calgarian homeless have become that way due to issues beyond their control.
A TON of homeless people in Calgary have been lured here by the prospect of good jobs...but with little warning about how bad the housing crunch is, many people travelled here only to have their first few paycheques eaten entirely up by rent and housing fees. Now, some of these people cannot even get back to where they came from and are stuck here...
This is not a normal 'poverty' situation...
Any constructive comments appreciated...
If you are from an area or another country that has experienced a similar problem and recovered from it, I'd really like to hear some ideas.
* Note - any references to the homeless as being 'lazy,' 'bums,' or 'deserving' of this fate will obviously be deleted. There aren't any more reasons to 'blame' and 'name-call' in this situation.
It's a PEOPLE problem - not a money or character-deficit problem.
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Comments
Squeeky wheels and grease haha I like that. Truly, I think some of the politicians are UNINFORMED...some of them. They've toured the shelters - but haven't 'experienced' much under $70 000+/year
It would be interesting to throw out a challenge to politicians.... spend 48 hours in a Shelter, anonymously, no VIP treatment.... have any of them got what it takes to turn up the door and experience it first hand. How can fix it or help it if you have never experienced it...
Both of your comments, Whirling Dervish and Drax, are more valuable than my hub, I think!
"being aware of what others have to offer" is so important!
"How can (you) fix it or help it if you have never experienced it" ? Maybe we need to ask the right questions from now on, eh?
Those of us that have families and go to work everyday, are 2 steps away from joining those downtowna t the shelters. Everyu penny made goes towards rent and bills. How are we supposed to feed our families when we have no maney left after cashing paychecks.... Calgary's homeless problem isnt just abou those who choose to be on the streets, now it is about those who have no choice but to be on the streets. Many ppl have made the choice to live on the streets, but most have ended up there thanks to the booming economy in Calgary that most of us can not keep up with. Why should we all have to pay $1500 a month for rent, when not everyone is cashing in on the economy.
And many of those lumped in with "isn't just about those who choose to be on the streets" are actually "those who have no choice but to be on the streets" TOO!
The poor before who were on the streets - before the 'boom' in Calgary - don't deserve to be seen as "those who choose to be on the streets" all of a sudden just because a new 'demographic group' is now being pushed toward the street.
Other than feeling a need to comment on that part of the statement, I am glad that someone else commented on the problem in Calgary - YES - it is getting WORSE when working people with famililes have the threat of poverty looming constantly overhead! Poverty in Calgary is no longer limited to those having trouble finding jobs, for whatever reasons.
Can you all spell 'C-R-I-S-I-S' situation?
Here is a question where do you go to get help for rent?? I broke my ankle and I still owe for july and than I have august to pay for. What do you do?
HEP- the Homeless /Eviction and Prevention Program, be prepared to provide a rent report, proof of income (or explanation of why you temporarily don't have any) and if possible, a copy of an eviction notice or letter from your landlord. Call any social services office (Blue pages) for an appt.
briannarose, the HEP that whirlingdervish mentioned should help you.
thx dervish, for responding to that quickly! I owe ya one!
I called HEP amd provided all documents but they refused to help. They said to move. Well now I am trying to move and pay off july's rent by aug 15 and pay a sd and rent for the other place, so far I have paid my whole cheque to the new place and still owe 1300 for the rest of the rent and sd,. I still owe for the old place and I went back to HEP and they said they still could not help. they said that the program is for low income people that made under 24000 last year. I made 25000 last year, but all of that went to bills and rent. This year I have only made 7000.00 now I make less because of my ankle. I am down to living off of 600.00 a month how do you live off of 600.00 a month in this city??
I am so mad that there are programs put in place to help people here but yet when it comes right down to it the only people that seem to get help are the ones doing drugs or have addictions of some sort. Sorry just an oppinion at this time because when I have ever needed help I have been turned away. This is the second time since I moved here that I have needed help and been turned away to struggle. Our room mate is a crack addict and they helped him find a new place and gave hime 1200 to move with, he did not even pay his rent. This is why I have this oppinion at the moment.
briannerose - I emailed you with a couple of contact numbers for agencies that help with rent when the HEP program fails decent citizens. I would still like to address part of your comment - re: "the only people that seem to get help are the ones doing drugs..." This is true - 'the Calgary way' of doing things has compounded the problem - by not helping THOSE WHO NEED HELP before they are in a tailspin. Calgary is run by biz-oriented people - not by people who truly understand the needs of human beings.
Take care of that broken ankle, eh? And contact me again if those phone numbers I sent are not helpful.
Nice article teeray and your comments too. I hope to post more social comment on my site soon, I just started today.
Regards
I'm heading right over to your profile, madellen, to see what you've got for me!
:)
I think this 10 year plan to end homelessness is important, too
Yes, Ruth, the 10 year plan is a good start - but the problem of poverty and homelessness is pretty complex. I don't think it is a situation that is up to 'just' one or two or a few groups to solve or to enact 'just' one or two 'plans' to solve.
great comments people! I work hard everyday, pay my bills and rent and groceries and at the end of the month am broke again.. how are people like me supposed to ever own a property? i wonder if we are always going to be living pay check by pay check ? i have been in several agencies for some food or suplies and it seems that you have to live in the streets to even be looked at! its pretty anoying how people think that because you work 2 jobs and pay rent you ar eok when in reality you are also broke like those in the streets!
I was just wondering where I could find help for furniture and bedding for my family of 4, I just found housing and have absolutely no furniture to put in my home. If anyone could help, that would be wonderful. Thanks and God Bless.
I live in Calgary and my friend who has been out of work for months living on her roommates goodwill finally got a call back for an interview at a bookstore (she has applied at over 50 places, unfortunately she has little work experience and a high school education). She desperately needs clothes appropriate for the interview and hopefully the job when she gets it. I hope to be in contact with the Women In Need Society about a donation of clothing, and I hope the Doorway is still giving out haircut coupons. In a perfect world I'd just purchase everything for her but my situation is close to hers except I'm lucky enough to be attending post secondary and own a work appropriate wardrobe. Any more ideas on services she can access before this Friday, and in the future would be great. She is s petite, a size 0 or 2 and needs dress pants, button up shirts and the like. my email is peoplearesilly1992@gmail.com sorry it isn't very professional.
Janet,
Call the Calgary Women's Centre, W.I.N. stores (403 255-5102), Salvation Army stores - try calling the following:
Calgary Association of Self Help 403 266-8711
Salvation Army 403 410-1111 (main) 403 410-1167 (employment and edu resources) 403 220-0432
CUPS 403 221-8799 (family resource centre, food, clothing, shelter and related services)
Exit Community OUtreach 403 262-9953 (storefront) 403 860-6521 (outreach) - mostly all for street youth but these people may know about more resources
The Mustard Seed 403 269-1319
Calgary Drop in and Rehab Centre 403 266-3600 (clothing room 8-9am and 1-2pm three days per week)
These numbers are listed in the Street Survival Guide, Janet, however - some policy changes at many shelters and fewer open hours for clothing rooms are making resource hunting brutal and discouraging for most people these days - keep trying - have your friend make sure to access these places beyond Friday to build up wardrobe for future job interviews, etc.
Women's Centre 403 264-1155 these people might know additional resources - be sure to ask a lot of questions here.














whirlingdervish says:
2 years ago
Thank you for this incredibly valuable list of resources tee-ray, there are some on here that I wasn't familiar with everything they did. I know you've heard my thoughts on the subject but I'll reiterate- It's got a lot to do with politicians making promises they have no intention of keeping, and government personelle doling out dollar amounts that no-one can live on. The only way to get people in high places to listen is to keep hammering at them until they get so sick of hearing your voice that they do what needs to be done. (Something about squeeky wheels and grease I think) -If I keep up this is going to turn into a hub all its own LOL- It's also about remembering that just because you don't have a lot to offer doesn't mean you (you being any person here, not you in particular) have nothing to offer, and being aware of what others have to offer.