British Columbia

Osoyoos 'gift cupboard' offers compassion, essentials to people in need

People in Osoyoos, B.C, have erected a wooden cabinet on the town's main street that offers essential items to people in need, whenever they want it.

Organizer says toothbrushes, toothpaste and bars of soap are most sought after items

The Osoyoos gift cupboard offers toiletries and essential items to anyone who needs them. (Facebook/Osoyoos Gift Cupboard)

Take whatever you need, whenever you need it.

That's the idea behind the "Osoyoos Gift Cupboard" — a wooden cabinet situated on the town's Main Street that offers up a selection of essential items, such as toothbrushes, shampoo and mittens for kids.

Osoyoos resident Gaye Horn says she started the project along with friends Brenda Dorosz and Jen Shiels after they heard about similar initiatives in communities in the U.S.

"It is predominately for those that are a little less fortunate," she said.

"There are many working poor in this town and we have many migrant workers and hitchhikers going through, and a lot of the time the things they can't afford are deodorant, hand soap, shampoo. And so it is for them."

But she adds, the cupboard is open to all. 

"Anybody at all. Whether you have the money or you don't have the money, if you are walking down the street and you've got a cut finger and the drug store is five blocks away, take a band-aid, please," Horn said.

Toothbrushes, hand soap and toothpaste are the most commonly sought after items from the gift cupboard, according to organizers. (Facebook/Osoyoos Gift Cupboard)

Apart from toiletries, Horn and her partners stock the cabinet with band-aids, shoe laces, pencils, colouring books and calendars.

They don't offer food, and they don't include clothing aside from mitts, toques and socks. Horn explained that the local food bank and thrift stores supply the rest of those items to people in the community. 

The idea is to help people less fortunate with essential items, but organizers say anyone can take something out of the gift cupboard. (Facebook/Osoyoos Gift Cupboard)

Horn and her partners have set up donation bins at businesses in town and regularly post a list of items they need on a local Facebook page so people who want to donate to the project can contribute.

The gift cupboard has now been in place for six weeks and is the first project of its kind in western Canada, according to Horn.

Two women in Calgary recently started a similar initiative, and Horn hopes the idea of a gift cupboard spreads to other B.C. communities.