Manitoba

Brandon's Samaritan House gets $172K to run emergency shelter year-round

The funding will allow Samaritan House Ministries to keep its southwestern Manitoba shelter open in the summer months, as opposed to closing in the late spring and reopening in the fall when temperatures drop.

Southwestern Manitoba city's Safe and Warm shelter usually closes in the late spring, reopens in fall

Barbara McNish, executive director of Samaritan House Ministries in Brandon, Man., says she's grateful for funding that will help keep the ministry's shelter open year-round. (Riley Laychuk/CBC)

People experiencing homelessness in Brandon will now have a safe haven available to them year-round.

Samaritan House Ministries is getting more than $172,000 in provincial funding to allow its Safe and Warm shelter in the southwestern Manitoba city to stay open in the summer months, as opposed to closing in the late spring and reopening in the fall when temperatures drop.

"It's wonderful. We're so thankful that the province has come along side of us, that they want to support us and keep us open," said Barbara McNish, executive director of Samaritan House Ministries.

"It's one year at a time … but I know that our government is hoping to continue this full-time funding on more than just the one-year basis."

Samaritan House has been collecting data on how many people in Brandon have used an emergency shelter, in order to show the need for the resource year-around, said McNish.

The COVID-19 pandemic has also exacerbated the issue, as limits on how many people can be indoors have forced more people outside. That helped in getting more funding too, she added.

$750K raised for needed renovations

The pandemic also meant many organizations and buildings had to look at upgrading their facilities in order to allow for better air flow and more spacing, for example. Samaritan House was no exception.

The building's HVAC system needed an upgrade and its roof needed to be replaced. But once contractors and engineers came to inspect the building, they listed a series of other required changes before it met standards, said McNish.

"What we started as a roof replacement project became a renovation project … and ended up with just over a million-dollar project," she said.

"We went, 'Take a breath. OK, Lord, let's see what we're going to do.'"

Samaritan House applied for various grants and to agencies that had COVID-19 relief funds. Various businesses and donors chipped in as well and the non-profit has raised about $750,000 of the required funds, said McNish.

She hopes that the upgrades to the shelter will be done within days, but the roof won't be started until the weather changes.

With files from Marjorie Dowhos