Monday, June 18, 2012

Vancouver City Workshop at the Dugout

Friday, representatives of the City of Vancouver Community Services Group held a workshop at the Dugout. The purpose was to do some asset mapping and beginning to collect data from the residents of the DTES (Downtown Eastside) about what places and things are important to them. Participants opinions and observations will help the city planners understand the effects of development for the future of the community. This was the first of many workshops to be held in the area and the findings will be published this fall.

Tanya Fink, a Social Policy Planner organized the event. I am very familiar with her compassion and effectiveness as she serves in the Eastside. She started volunteering at the Church a few years ago, and was motivated by these experiences to get her master's degree in social planning at the University of British Columbia.

The group attending all had low income housing in DTES. Tanya had a large map of the area and each person used colored dots to demonstrate the assets of the community that are meaningful to them. The Dugout, First United Church, The Carnegie Centre and a variety of parks were the most common. General agreement was formed on the need for a large recreation center offering athletic, recreational and educational programs.

There were three men at my table who have lived in the DTES ranging from 17 to 33 years. It was my first in-depth chance to visit with residents who had worked regularly but are not now because of disabilities from  work injury or retirement. Two are living in SRO's (Single Room Occupancy) where 8-10 rooms share a bathroom and cooking is impractical in their rooms. They listed a half dozen new housing developments that have taken in homeless but not the existing residents in lesser facilities. One of the men who worked 17 years while living in the Eastside was talking about becoming homeless to gain entry given the advice of his residence manager.He has been applying for 8 years. He was prepared to get a tent and live this way if it would gain him access by being homeless. The other man had worked 32 years as a roofer while living in the area.

My primary interests are addressing addiction, but recovery is not possible unless there are stronger social / cultural / spiritual influences available than the drug culture. Safe low cost housing is essential for this to happen in the DTES.This all is in stark contrast to most of Vancouver which has the highest cost of living in North America.

Tanya will be holding another workshop like this in a variety of settings with the next one on June 26 at First United Church where most of the participants will be homeless. It will be interesting to gain from their perspectives.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Memorial for "Irish Mike"

Yesterday a memorial was held for a long term member of the First United Church Community. "Irish Mike" was well known and well thought of. Community members are generally very accepting of each other including those who are deeply troubled and prone to act out when they are using alcohol and other drugs.

Pictured playing the guitar is my friend and colleague Layton Peck. Layton is the night manager of the hosts who are the "front line" contact with those staying at the church. The hosts become very involved personally as well as keeping a sense of direction and supervision in the sleeping and dining areas. They are some of the finest people I have met with hearts of service that helps keep my heart soft and motivated. At least three were former residents at the church and now are living clean and sober lifestyles of service.

Layton, originally from Eastern Canada has been a business leader, minister, entertainer, and has a gigantic heart for the displaced and marginalized who reside at the church. For those who stay more than a few days he knows their names and a major part of the stories that bring them to the Downtown Eastside (DTES). For me he is also an expert on the criminal element that supplies drugs behind the scenes in the 10 block area.

Even though it is safe to walk the streets in the daytime, he tells me it is a different story at nights. Drugs are supplied by gangs and organized crime. It just occurs mostly out of sight. The visible signs of drug dealing I have seen on the streets from time to time in the day time are the secondary dealers, not the primary suppliers.

Layton was a major influence in the life of "Irish Mike." Layton recalls the first time he met Mike was to break up a fight. Then he became a night time confidant as Mike would seek him out when troubled. Layton has memories of holding Mike when he would have emotional collapses, counseling him, and taking him to secluded areas in the church to pray with him.

Mike passed away from natural causes which so sadly is not the reason for the other memorials I have attended at the church. Everyone in attendance was given an opportunity to share their thoughts and memories, and it gave me a sense of how much of a community exists in the DTES. It provides meaning and belonging in spite of the rampant addiction and mental health problems.There is an authentic element to their relationships that is very appealing and the sense of loss and grief was tear jerking.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Workshop at First United Church

Yesterday we kicked off an addictions workshop at First United Church. The participants are a mixture of community workers and hosts /hostesses who are the "front line" workers. They have most of the initial and continual personal contact with the homeless and marginalized staying at the church. First United Church is not a shelter, but a church with a shelter ministry which gives me the platform to present a faith based approach of addiction integrated with the science of addiction.

We will be meeting every other week for five, 2 hour sessions. After I have presented my understanding of addiction then the group will begin looking at strategies of community support for the residents. There are about 60 folks who stay regularly at the church and consider it their home. They are the core group for shaping community at First United Church.

There is a myth that one has to leave DTES to live clean and sober. Many who stay in the DTES are not comfortable living in mainline society and don't feel a sense of belonging so crucial to identity and recovery.The group will begin to explore the principles of abundant community and asset mapping to provide contact with and shaping restorative community in the DTES. The asset mapping will include all the available resources in the area and matching the gifts of the residents as well as considering new community constructs at First United.  Those volunteering and working with the marginalized will be encouraged to explore the gifts they bring to community.

I am so excited to discuss and help initiate the possibilities of "Missional Church" and its role in shaping community. I am so grateful for your thoughts, prayers and regular support that enables and encourages me to do so. If you would like to explore these principles more, click on my blog at Missional Church and watch the short series of videos by Alan Hirsch.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Oregon Coalition on Housing and Homelessness (OCHH) Conference

Greetings my friends.

The OCHH conference was a great experience! I had too much material for the time allotted in each of the 3 presentations including the 3 hour workshop on addiction. It was a great learning experience for me.  I am grateful my presentations were well received, even though my material was cut short. In the future I think I will be better able to prioritize material to time allotted.

The perspective I brought from the DTES and the innovative approaches being taken there stirred some great discussions. I was reminded the majority of today's homeless in America are so because of poverty, not addiction or mental health as in DTES where I serve. I was touched by the passionate concern of the group and a number of them inquired about coming for a visit to experience the DTES first  hand.

All of us are concerned about deaths of the homeless. There were 47 reported just in Portland last year. We expect the most marginalized to be able to respond rationally to society's efforts to either "fix or contain them."  But those who die generally have such progressed addiction their willpower has been hijacked leaving few moments of clarity. Innovative interventions are needed for the most marginalized who are the most damaged. This calls for creative strategies in housing and shelters. I was able to share some psycho-social-spiritual dynamics for building community among the marginalized encouraging them to help each other.

A special treat was spending time in the beautiful setting at Hood River with old friends Nick & Marisha Johnson who serve on the board of OCHH. What topped off a wonderful time was my youngest daughter Courtney joining us for the addiction workshop.

Tomorrow I am meeting with an interest group at my home church Redeemer's Fellowship in Roseburg OR after the regular worship service. I will be sharing an update with many of my friends who support me with regular thoughts, prayer and financial  support.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Finding a Niche...

Greetings my friends:

When I arrived in this area on July 7, 2011; I was a stranger to most of the folks I would eventually be working with in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver BC (DTES). There are many civic organizations, government programs, a number of churches and faith based shelters all trying to create communities to help the marginalized living in the DTES recover from their dislocation.

As much as I enjoy meeting with and encouraging individual residents in the DTES, I feel my calling is primarily in educating, training, and encouraging staff and volunteers in the area about addiction and recovery. I teach a faith based view integrated with the science of addiction. I have become part of three groups here: First United Church, the Dugout, and The New Way Community. My passion also includes offering workshops to local churches outside the DTES as I feel the church is the ideal place to treat addiction in concert with self help groups (Workshops).

Last month we held a two part workshop at the Dugout which was well received and we will hold another there in the future. Next month beginning on May 18 I will be doing a two hour training every other week including case studies with the staff that has the most direct contact with the residents at First United Church.

At New Way Community we are discussing attracting theological and other students from local seminaries and universities to the DTES for a 1x1 guided tour. This would give me a choice to do some individual mentoring leading to group training on addiction and recovery for the most marginalized. Only 13% of pastors have had any formal education or training about addiction.

I am humbled about being a keynote speaker at the annual conference of the Oregon Coalition for Housing and Homelessness (OCCH) to be held in Hood River on May 2-4. At the welcoming luncheon my focus will be Homelessness and Addiction: Challenging the Status Quo. The next day will be a 90 minute seminar Home for the Homeless and then on Friday a 3 hour workshop on Addiction and Recovery that many of you have attended. What an opportunity to present faith based strategies and the reality that I am supported in this outreach by so many of you readers.

On May 6th I will be in Roseburg for an interest group meeting at Redeemer's Fellowship after the third service (around 1:15 PM). I hope to see most of you there to catch up on our fellowship and the current direction of this journey we share.

Your thoughts, prayers, and financial support make this "niche" possible.
Ross

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Asset Mapping

One of the principles of creating community  is known as asset mapping based on the work of John McKnight (Asset-based Community Development Institute). This includes:

     - Developing a method for identifying the voluntary clubs, organizations, faith groups,
       and associations in a neighborhood and fostering new productive relationships among
       them.

     -Identifying the specific gifts, skills, passions, and teachable knowledge of residents
      at the block level fostering new productive relationships between these individuals,
      their families, and children.

    - Developing a method for neighborhood planning that is based on resident ideas for
      improvement and that mobilizes these residents' productive capabilities for
      implementing their own ideas.

Yesterday I was chatting with a local neighborhood resident, a Native Canadian and
well know artist in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver BC (DTES). There is a large
totem pole that was carved and donated to First United Church a few years ago, and
Edgar was showing me the part he carved.

I went to the kitchen to get us a cup of coffee and when I returned he had retrieved
two colors of paint and a brush out of his backpack and had started painting. I had
earlier mentioned my attraction to red tail hawks and I soon saw that was what he was
painting. Then when he was studying my face I knew he was also including me. In no more than 10 minutes he gifted me with this painting.

Edgar is a prime example of how gifted so many of the residents of DTES are and
what a gift he is to the community I feel so privileged to be part of.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Spring at First United Church

Bunks in the Sanctuary
The freezing and rain drenched nights are finally ending with recent warmer temperatures. BC Housing is starting to shut down the winter shelters in the Downtown Eastside (DTES) of Vancouver BC.  First United Church receives funding from BC Housing to function the way they do, but this amount was reduced at the first of the year and restrictions imposed on the numbers allowed in the building.

First United does not see themselves as a winter shelter as its mission is to provide services year round. With the new restrictions the church now sleeps about 150 rather than 240, but still serves 800 to 1000 meals daily. In the last 3 month period 800 people spent 5 nights or less sleeping at the church.

However, the core of the community are the 60 people who see First United as their home right now. It is with this group we primarily attempt to establish a sense of restorative community with the church becoming a temporary home rather than just a place to sleep and get meals. There is a staff of advocates who are regularly seeking places for community members to live. Many of those who have found supported living, still spend considerable time at the church as we seek to provide a sense of belonging. There are avid hockey fans here and about 40 of us recently watched the first Canuck playoff game.

The picture shows some of the beds available for men in the space that used to be the sanctuary when First United was a traditional church. Spiritual programs now are held in the gymnasium where food is served or a smaller chapel that is in the process of being painted and revitalized. Last Wed night at our special dinner and gathering, I brought a message on  Addiction as Spiritual Poverty.

Thanks for your continued thoughts, prayers and support as I seek to help the process of building  community in the DTES of Vancouver BC. I also serve with two other groups: The New Way Community and the Dugout.