COVID-19 constraints at downtown church in Kelowna bring 'loss of a sense of community' for most vulnerable - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:15 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

COVID-19 constraints at downtown church in Kelowna bring 'loss of a sense of community' for most vulnerable

Outreach minister says closed buildings and social distancing are affecting support services and adding to the isolation.

Outreach minister says closed buildings and social distancing add to isolation

COVID-19 rules ended hot lunches and conversation tables in downtown Kelowna's First United Church. Now, First United outreach minister Cheryl Perry, in closed gym, says the loss of indoor visiting spaces has made it hard to maintain connections. (Cheryl Perry)

For Cheryl Perry, the empty gym at the First United Church in Kelowna tells a lot about how the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting the community's most vulnerable people.

Before the health crisis, the cavernous space was filled twice a week with conversation and laughter, Perry, the minister for outreach and families for the church,told CBC Radio West host Sarah Pentonin an interview.

Now the space is empty and quiet. The doors are locked. There are no worship services or meetings in the building.

"People come to an entrance and we still distribute groceries and lunches to people," Perry said."But we can't have people come in and sit down and have coffee and hot food like they were before."

"The loss of the sense of community around the table, a chance for people to just visit with their neighbour and get to know other people, is gone at this time."

Before the pandemic, when people could come into the building for coffee hour and sit around atable, Perry said she could meet with people and talk with them about their needs.

Downtown Kelowna's First United Church still provides take-away lunch and groceries during the pandemic. On Thanksgiving some tables were set up in the parking lot for distanced sit-down dining. (Cheryl Perry)

If they were facing eviction or needed a rent supplement or help with dentures or prescriptions, she could often find money for such "one-off situations" from the church discretionary fundor connect them with another agency that could help.

"That kind of work is not what I can do right now. I can't sit down with people and talk to them."

"I meet people at the door now as they come for groceries. And we have that sort of exchange about how things are going in their lives, but fewer of those opportunities to help people with bigger issues."

Personally, Perry finds one of the hardest aspects of the pandemic to be the loss of human connection. She laments the inability to really visit with the regulars who she still sees and she worries about the ones who have stopped coming by.

Missing faces a worry

"There's lots I can think of who I haven't seen now in six months," she said. "I don't know how they're doing. I don't know where they are. I don't know if they're still housed where they were before and whether they're lonely."

"And, you know the toll on mental health and particularly people with addictions in this time," she said. "I imagine that some of them may have even passed away because we've had so many opioid overdoses as people are shut in alone and using alone."

Perry and colleagues at the First United Church are doing what they can to give comfort and connection as winter closes in. There will beanew tent canopy to keep people dry while they wait outside to pick up groceries and preliminary discussions have begun aboutallowingdistanced indoor shelter in the gym duringsub-zero weather.

"But at this point, we're still doing things just outside," she said.


With files from CBC Radio West