After surmounting significant public opposition, the team behind a housing project for men recovering from drugs and alcohol addictions may have had their efforts scuttled by an organization they thought was on their side.
Tom Smithwick from Freedom91Ƶs Door said he91Ƶs recently spoken with a representative from BC Housing, and learned that the $4 million funding they91Ƶd been relying on to build a 49-unit supportive housing project in Rutland is not likely to come through due to a changing mandate.
91ƵWe at Freedom91Ƶs Door put in a grant application to BC Housing over a year ago for the Freedom House project at McCurdy and Rutland roads,91Ƶ said Smithwick. 91ƵAnd we received a phone call indicating the applications of the past will not be going forward and there will be a new policy or set of criteria in place to decide who will be able to get funding from BC Housing.91Ƶ
READ MORE: FREEDOM HOUSE LOOKS TO THE FUTURE
Plans for Freedom91Ƶs House seem to fall outside the newly established funding criteria.
Grants are available for joint ventures with developers creating market-cost housing for middle-income British Columbians, Indigenous housing, addictions housing and for women who are fleeing violent environments.
The closest Freedom91Ƶs House comes to meeting the criteria is under the addictions housing model, but Smithwick said that Freedom91Ƶs House is for people who are already dry and in recovery 91Ƶ so it doesn91Ƶt meet the Crown corporation91Ƶs requirements.
The total cost for the Freedom House project was $9 million. Around $5 million was to be raised by the organization91Ƶ$2 million of which has been raised91Ƶ and the other $4 million was expected to come from a BC Housing grant.
91ƵUnless we have a knight in shining armour on a white horse giving us $4 million instead of the government that puts an end to the project,91Ƶ said Smithwick.
91ƵWe will have to move to a Plan B,91Ƶ he said, adding that the need doesn91Ƶt go away just because a funding opportunity has.
91ƵWe have 50 guys with us now, and housing is critical in Kelowna. Affordable housing is almost impossible and there is almost rental no housing available91Ƶ so when our graduates need us the question is where do they go?91Ƶ
An abstinence environment, which is what Freedom House was expected to create, is in high need.
91ƵWe have to solve that somehow,91Ƶ he said. 91ƵWe want to be part of that solution as we have in the past. We have been operating for 16 years as of Sept. 1, with five duplex homes housing 60 guys91Ƶ but the teams (are) greater than that.91Ƶ
Plans for Freedom House were some of the most hotly contested of 2017, with residents of the area urging council to reject the proposal.
Many said it was in the wrong location, being too residential, too close to schools, short on amenities and services. They also complained it would be too big and would add more traffic to an already busy intersection.
Many who opposed the development also took direct aim at the Freedom91Ƶs Door program and the men who will live at the building.
After a four-hour public hearing that saw close to 300 people pack council chambers in September 2017, the project was approved by council in a 6-3 vote by Kelowna city council.
BC Housing has yet to return a call.
To report a typo, email:
newstips@kelownacapnews.com.
kmichaels@kelownacapnews.com
Like us on and follow us on .