Affordable and accessible apartments being built, renovated in Moncton - Action News
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New Brunswick

Affordable and accessible apartments being built, renovated in Moncton

Six new accessible and affordable apartments are being built in the MacDonald Centre for independent living, and the existing 34 apartments are being renovated with some help from Ottawa's affordable housing strategy.

Federal government announces $1.4M toward the project, which is part of the national housing strategy

Vanessa Leslie uses a wheelchair and lives at the MacDonald Centre for independent living, in Moncton. She moved into a renovated apartment last November and finds it more open and easier to cook in. (Tori Weldon/CBC)

An announcement on Monday that six new affordable and accessible apartments are being built and 34 more renovated was welcome newsat Moncton's MacDonald Centre for Independent Living.

The $1.4 million comes from Ottawa'saffordable housing strategy.

More than 5,000 people in New Brunswick are on the waiting list for subsidized housing, with more than 500 people experiencing homelessness inMoncton, Saint John and Fredericton.

Stphane Demers,the director of operations at the MacDonald Centre, said the six new units are one step toward easing the housing crisis.

"There's a great need in Moncton," he said.

Demerssaid the centre, which was built in 1983, is staffed 24 hours a day and residents can get help with meal preparation, personal care and housekeeping.

Stphane Demers, director of operations at the MacDonald Centre, said the building was built in 1983 and was in need of repairs. (Tori Weldon/CBC)

"People have their own apartment, [they] can be as independent as they can, and we offer also support if they need it," he said.

He expects the new apartments and renovations to be completed by late June. While Demers isn't sure how many people are on the centre's waiting list, he is confident it will be easy to fill the new units.

Vanessa Leslie agreed there is a huge need for more apartments like hers. She uses a wheelchair and has lived at the centre for nearly four years.

Leslie moved into one of the newly renovated apartments last November and enjoys the new floor plan.

"It's much more open, easier to get around," she said.

"You were always backing into something or trying to avoid an obstacle."

Leslie's new kitchen layout allows her to make her own meals. She said she needs help to change the sheets on her bed and to do laundry but otherwise is able to do everything herself.

Although Leslie lives independently for the most part, the 42-year old said that without the assistance she gets at MacDonald Centre she'd most likely still be living with her mother and stepfather in north Moncton.

"I just wanted to get some independenceand to do my own thingessentially have a life of my own," she said.

Leslie attended Monday's announcement and applauded the move to create more affordable and accessible housing.

"I wish there was more of these kinds of places around," she said.

"It can open up some doors and give [people] some options to have some freedoms."