ѻýCome in, weѻýre awesome.ѻý
Tim Gibson, executive director of the Shuswap Childrenѻýs Association (SCA), laughs as he describes the words on the rug at the entrance to the organizationѻýs facilities on Shuswap Street in Salmon Arm.
He is clearly proud and appreciative of the staff he works with, their stated goal to ѻýhelp children and their families to play, grow and thrive.ѻý SCA, which is a non-profit serving kids from birth to age 19, provides family-centred programs, services and resources focusing on childrenѻýs developmental and support needs.
As several staff members gather around a table, having agreed to talk about their services, some themes emerge.
From food to clothing to housing, itѻýs getting more difficult for many families in the Shuswap to make ends meet. And there are disparities.
While one child might have an overripe mushy banana for a snack, another might have a five-course selection in their lunch bag. While one might not have adequate winter clothing for playing outside, another might have two pairs of snow pants, one for the morning and one for the afternoon. One family shares one pair of boots between three family members. Families struggling economically appear to be in the majority.
Food prices are making healthy food choices more unattainable.
Those schools and daycares able to provide snacks or meals can make a big difference in a childѻýs day.
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ѻýWhat I hear with our play group is that families have to pick and choose when they come into town because gas is a big issue,ѻý said Christine Ondang, with Child Care Resource & Referral, referring to people who live farther from Salmon Arm, even Canoe. ѻýAnd even with programming, rec centre swimming costs money, Junglemania costs money, just a lot of things they want to do but they donѻýt have the money to do. Free programming is really important.ѻý
SCA offers more than a dozen programs and services for a variety of ages, several of them free, serving an area which includes Sorrento to Revelstoke, Enderby, Blind Bay, Sicamous and Malakwa.
Tracey Morland with the Loft, Project Affinity and Respite Care coordinator, said staff have provided extra supports in order for a child to participate in two programs in one day so their parent doesnѻýt have to make two trips into Salmon Arm. ѻýWe are adjusting to try to make things work.ѻý
Gibson explains there is no funding provided for food, clothing or gas, so people are referred to organizations like the food banks for food, or the Shuswap Family Centre and the SAFE Societyѻýs Hub for clothing.
He explained not all families receive funding for developmental delays or support needs their child may be experiencing.
ѻýIf they have a diagnosis, they can use funding for programs, depending on the diagnosis. But not all diagnoses come with funding. But they canѻýt use it for gas, they canѻýt use it for food. They canѻýt use it for living expenses, just therapy services. So itѻýs only for certain diagnoses,ѻý Gibson said.
ѻýAutism comes with individualized funding they can use for therapy services. And some materials, depending on what it is. Thatѻýs it. But some diagnoses donѻýt come with funding. So now you have a child in a family who has some challenges, but that family doesnѻýt get any financial support. Like FASD (fetal alcohol spectrum disorders) or Down syndrome. Thereѻýs no individualized funding, or funding, for that.ѻý
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Rachel Richardson, with Supported Child Development, said referrals to programs are up and money is definitely tighter for families than it once was.
ѻýThe price of everything is going up.ѻý
Morland added: ѻýNobodyѻýs getting off scot free. Everyoneѻýs affected.ѻý
The isolation of the pandemic has also been hard, particularly on teensѻý mental health, Tracey Morland said.
ѻýAnd theyѻýve missed out on some developmental milestones too. The 14 year olds havenѻýt had work experiences or summer jobs. This stuff adds upѻýѻý
The association created the FLY program, Friends & Leisure Youth program, for kids eight to 18 because the Loft program has such a long wait list that kids wonѻýt get in it. FLY helps kids work on social skills, learn new activities, get out in the community and stay active.
Young people who have support needs donѻýt necessarily get to participate in community sports, Gibson pointed out.
Angelina Hartwig with FLY noted: ѻýThey really need these opportunities to make new friends and find a place they belong, a safe place they can try new things and feel like theyѻýre part of our community.ѻý
Brad Shields with Supported Child Development emphasized the importance of social connection.
ѻýWith Covid coming in we get so used to being at home, and with the cost of things itѻýs a lot cheaper to stay home. To offer a program thatѻýs free, gets them out and about, fresh air, meet new friends, the social part of it, itѻýs more important now than before.ѻý
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Making programs cost less is what SCA is working on. Because it has bills to pay, it has to generate funding to support such programs.
Hereѻýs where the public comes in.
SCA is constantly doing fundraisers as itѻýs a charity, so it can take donations and provide donations receipts.
ѻýWe have a monthly donor campaign coming out now. Monthly donations help us provide services and programs to the community,ѻý said Gibson.
Currently the association is selling campfire sticks to raise money for FLY. Itѻýs also doing a ѻýsponsor a camperѻý campaign as itѻýs holding a weekend camp for kids with support needs in September. It puts on film festivals and a number of community events such as Story Time in the Park, a partnership with the library. Once again it plans to hold a Summer Bash in Blackburn Park with about 600 people expected.
ѻýIt is a free event for families, so any kind of donation to the agency helps all this programming we do,ѻý said Ondang.
She also points out that an Early Years Fair is set for May 10 from 2:30 to 5 p.m. at the rec centre in Salmon Arm, which will include many agencies that provide early years services.
SCA sells Askewѻýs cards at cost to the public and then gets a seven per cent reimbursement from Askewѻýs.
ѻýAll the donations, all the fundraising, all the grants we write ѻý itѻýs all about community building and providing services to the community,ѻý Gibson emphasized.
The association is located at 240 Shuswap St. NE, phone number 250-833-0164.
Like the families they support, staff also feel the stress of the current situation.
ѻýWeѻýre feeling the pinch to provide the services and weѻýve got some things in-house to help everyone to cope with the magnitude of the work weѻýre dealing with on a daily basis,ѻý said Gibson.
ѻýItѻýs the struggles that we see of our families we support and these kids we support. It also weighs on us,ѻý added Shields. ѻýWe just want to offer solutions to fix it. Itѻýs not always as easy as it sounds.ѻý
Emphasized Ondang: ѻýWe care about the families we work with so much.ѻý
ѻýĢĢĢĢĢĢĢĢ
Kim Sinclair, executive director of Aspiral Youth Partners Association, sees issues similar to those experienced by SCA.
The mandate of his organization is to work with young people to find supports and resources to build success in their lives.
A lot of the work they do is connected with the B.C. Ministry of Children and Family Development, he said, working with young people who are struggling for a variety of reasons: family circumstances, trauma, mental health issues and more.
ѻýOur job is to work with them to help them find a stable connection in home, community and school as possible.ѻý
Some good news, he said, is that the B.C. government plans to enact legislation that will support young people better, beyond the adult-youth agreement, with more financial and other support when they turn 19 and age out of eligibility.
Housing can be a big issue for people, much moreso than in the past.
But itѻýs not the biggest concern.
ѻýThe biggest one weѻýre struggling with right now is mental health.ѻý
Sinclair said the associationѻýs work is always about making connections, building relationships, helping people look at what they want and what strategies are going to help them to get there.
Asked what the most important message heѻýd like to convey to the public is, he replied:
ѻýLook around to the people that are within your sphere and connect. To re-establish those personal relationships and be there to support peopleѻý ѻýHey how you doing, you want to go for a coffee, you want to go for a walk?ѻý Itѻýs those human-to- human connections that are really the heartbeat of our mental well-being.ѻý
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This is the third story in a bi-weekly series on poverty, its effects and the services available. It is in conjunction with a campaign by the City of Salmon Arm and its Social Impact Advisory Committee to address poverty and help ensure residents know where to find resources.
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martha.wickett@saobserver.net
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