[h3]Who are the people living in streets and shelters?[/h3] [p class="timeStamp"]Updated Wed. Dec. 6 2006 10:00 PM ET[/p] [p class="storyAttributes"]CTV.ca News Staff[/p] Yogi Chandra is one of Vancouver's homeless, but he doesn't suffer from drug addiction, mental health problems or even unemployment. He simply can't afford housing in Canada's most expensive city. [/p] [/p]According to one charity worker, up to 20 per cent of Vancouver's homeless have jobs. [/p] [/p]Chandra lives in a Surrey shelter called Hyland House -- a place he heard about from a homeless person he once gave food, before he lost his own home. [/p] [/p]"I felt sorry for that gentleman and I helped him out," Chandra told CTV Vancouver. "I never thought this would happen to me." [/p] [/p]He now works as a landscaper three or four days a week, but lacks the money to afford rent. His free time is spent helping other homeless people at the shelter. [/p] [/p]"The reason I'm here is because I can't afford to have a basement suite at the moment, because I'm not financially rich," said Chandra. "And that's my goal: to save up enough money so I can get out of here very shortly." [/p] [/p]When a new poll asked Vancouver residents why individuals become homeless, only 27 per cent blamed a lack of affordable housing. By contrast, 57 per cent thought drug or alcohol addiction. [/p] [/p]The survey was conducted by the Strategic Counsel for CTV, the [em]Globe and Mail[/em] and CKNW Radio. [/p] [/p]Saira Khan leads a program called Project Comeback that helps the working homeless find housing. She said that 20 per cent of homeless people are employed, usually as day labourers or through temporary employment. [/p] [/p]The program is overseen by the Newton Advocacy Group and is the only one of its kind in Canada. [/p] [/p]"We assist them with damage deposit, first month's rent, work boots, whatever is required," said Khan.
[/p]According to Peter Fidos of Options Hyland House, the high cost of rent in Vancouver is forcing some employed people to live in shelters. [/p] [/p]"People are working and they can't afford to live," he said. [/p] [/p]"When you're paying $700 to $1,000 a month and you're working at $8.50, you're not cutting it anymore. People being told that a job leads to independence is starting to sound like a hollow lie." [/p] [/p]The Greater Vancouver area also has the highest average price for homes in Canada at $518,176, according sales recorded by the Canadian Real Estate Association's Multiple Listing Service. [/p] [/p]That's far higher than Toronto, which has the second-highest average price at $365,537.
[/p]The minimum wage in British Columbia is set at $8 per hour. Michael Beckley makes $9 per hour, but like Chandra he still found himself living in a homeless shelter. [/p] [/p]"It was a little degrading, but I figure the ends justified the means, and it's better to be in a place like this than out on the street," he said. [/p] [/p]Thanks to Project Comeback, Beckley was provided with a damage deposit and able to find an affordable basement suite. [/p] [/p]Chandra is also hoping the program will help him move out of his Surrey shelter room. [/p] [/p]"Everything costs so much these days," he said. "And ten bucks doesn't get you around." [/p] [/p]For more information about Project Comeback, please phone 604-596-2311 or 604-916-5112.
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[/p]Yogi Chandra is trying to save up enough money to get out the shelter and into his own home
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Some residents find sleeping in shelters 'a little degrading,' but better than living inthe streets
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Peter Fidos of Options Hyland House
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Michael Beckley makes $9 per hour, but still found himself living in a homeless shelter.