Winnipeg youth drop-in centre closed

Joseph 'Beeper' Spence Youth Drop-In Centre unable to raise enough money

A drop-in centre for children and youth in Winnipeg's north end has shut down because it has run out of money.
Staff at the Joseph "Beeper" Spence Youth Drop-In Centre had issued a public appeal last month for funding(external link) to keep the facility open, or else they would be forced to close its doors on Dec. 23.

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Caption: Nancy Flett, the assistant executive director at the Indian and Metis Friendship Centre, told CBC News on Sunday that the youth centre closed a couple weeks ago. (CBC)

Staff at the youth centre, which is located inside the Indian and Métis Friendship Centre on Robinson Street, said $80,000 was needed to keep the facility open.
But Nancy Flett, the friendship centre's assistant executive director, told CBC News the drop-in centre shut down a couple weeks ago.
"The centre is already closed. We still haven't gotten no funding," Flett said Sunday.
"We sent in some proposals for different areas … but as of right now, we haven't heard anything from anybody."
About 35 children went to the drop-in centre every day to meet friends, play educational games, do homework and use computers after school.
The youth centre was named after Joseph "Beeper" Spence, who was killed in a drive-by shooting while walking down a north end street in 1995. At the time, the 13-year-old boy was mistaken for a gang member.
Flett, Spence's mother, said she hopes corporate sponsors will still come forward with enough money to reopen the youth centre.
"[We're] very much hoping that we do, you know, get some sort of funding," she said. "Even to open … three days a week would be good."