100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Temporary day shelter open with provisionally reduced capacity

The temporary day shelter at the Side Door building is open as of Monday.

The building, formerly the Mine Safety building and the home for the Side Door youth group, was acquired by the GNWT for the new temporary day shelter on Friday, after the territory declared a public emergency in Yellowknife.

The shelter will have an initial capacity of 15 people, while “kinks” are being worked out, according to a post health minister Julie Green shared to Twitter Monday morning.

These kinks, according to health department spokesperson Damien Healy, involve “sorting out how the building will flow with staff and clients while respecting CPHO orders. This can only be worked out once clients are in the building.”

After these kinks are worked out, the capacity will increase to 25 people, according to Green’s tweet.

In a press release when the location of the temporary day shelter was announced, the GNWT said 40 people had been displaced by reducing the capacity at the existing sobering centre, run by the territory’s disabilities council.

The Side Door location for was acquired by the territorial government to meet an “urgent need” for shelter capacity, according to Paulie Chinna, Minister Responsible for Homelessness.

The GNWT declared a public emergency in Yellowknife only, and acquired the Side Door location to house the temporary day shelter, which had been previously rejected by city councillors, due to fears on how it would impact nearby businesses, like Overlander Sports.

But in a press conference Friday when the decision was announced, Yellowknife Mayor Rebecca Alty said the GNWT had “mitigated concerns” that had been raised. Security measures like a having guard posted outside, a fence between the Side Door building and the overlanded parking lot and staff patrols will be implemented at the location.

Bailey Moreton
Bailey Moreton
Bailey is new to the north, arriving from Ottawa where he studied journalism at Carleton University. He has worked for newspapers in Halifax, Windsor, and Ottawa. He came to the north hoping to see polar bears. He will settle for a bison. If you have a tip, send it to 905 252-9781, or [email protected].

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Ulukhaktok school latest to test positive for elevated levels of lead

Helen Kalvak School in Ulukhaktok has tested positive for elevated levels of lead in the drinking water. At this time, information is not publicly available about how many fixtures tested positive for lead levels above Health Canada's guidelines.

Dr. Kandola recommends daycares, especially in older buildings test water

The GNWT's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Kami Kandola is recommending that day centres and day homes in the N.W.T. have their drinking water tested even though the testing of these facilities does not fall under the purview of the GNWT. One main reason for the recommendation,  has to do with the age of buildings along with the risk contaminants like lead and rayon can pose to children ages 6 and under, explained Dr. Kandola.

Geminid meteor shower to light up the night sky this weekend

In December, the night sky is the place to focus your attention, as the annual Geminid meteor shower will be at its finest on the night of Dec.13, into the morning of Dec. 14. “A 23 per cent waning crescent Moon will rise late into the morning hours, so no big interference this year. This is a weekend event. If cloudy Saturday night, it’s still visible on Sunday night, but the numbers will be reduced,” says The Backyard Astronomer Gary Boyle.

Still Dark releases second wave of 13 additional acts

The Still Dark Festival has just released the second wave of artists slated to perform at the Still Dark Festival beginning Feb. 5 and running to Feb. 8.

Tuktoyaktuk, Aklavik, Inuvik and Paulatuk brace for extreme weather

As the community of Tuktoyaktuk braces for a weekend of blizzard conditions, predicted to begin this morning, more communities in the Aklavik, Inuvik and Paulatuk region are facing extreme weather and warnings. Originally the federal agency had predicted that a blizzard would begin late Friday in Tuktoyaktuk, but according to reports, conditions intensified earlier than expected and the storm is predicted to begin this morning.