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Volume 48, Issue 37 Price - $1.52 plus GST
Your Community Connection
Return undeliverable items to: Yorkton This Week 20 Third Ave. N., Yorkton, SK S3N 2X3
Wednesday, May 4, 2022
Angela Chernoff, shelter coordinator at 139 Dominion Avenue where the work on a new low barrier emergency shelter is ongoing.
Emergency shelter being built in city By Calvin Daniels Staff Writer A new low barrier emergency shelter will soon be opening in Yorkton. The new shelter, currently being developed at 139 Dominion Avenue
in the city, is hoped to fill a need known to exist in Yorkton, explained Stefan Bymak with the Prairie Harvest Employment Program. Bymak said they have recognized a need for a shelter for some time. “We’ve always seen
that as a real need,” he told Yorkton This Week. “We’ve always wanted to develop it.” Then, in 2021, The Society for the Involvement of Good Neighbours (SIGN), along with Yorkton’s Social Housing Committee com-
missioned a report to assess homelessness in Yorkton. Bymak explained the report was completed in June of 2021, and reached the following conclusions in the executive summary: “The data provided evidence that the
hard-to-house and homelessness issue in Yorkton is worsening, and a solution is needed to correct the path.” One recommendation of the report reads: “input emergency shelter options that are all-inclusive”, “prioritize sup-
ports addressing mental health”, “address the largest barriers of homelessness” and “foster community partnerships that provide supports for those at risk of homelessness,” noted a fundraising letter circulated
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YRHS football field getting lights By Calvin Daniels Staff Writer Each year when the Yorkton Regional High School Raiders play a game under the lights it’s a huge draw. Well, starting this fall there will be more than one game under the lights as Century Field is getting lights, thanks to the Kinsmen Club of Yorkton and the efforts of several community businesses. The project was announced Saturday to a packed St. Mary’s Cultural Centre as part of the Football Night in Saskatchewan program. “As Yorkton Minor Football we have a lot of goals,” Darcy Zaharia told those attending
The Kinsmen Club of Yorkton provided $100 K to help the project get started. as he stood at the podium and members of the Kinsmen filled the stage behind him.
One of those goals has been to add lights simply because daylight hours are limited in
the evening in the fall, and with a growing football program finding enough hours for practices and games has become difficult. “We were running out of daylight in the fall,” said Zaharia. The Kinsmen stepped up with $100,000 for the project. “If a group needs something done the Kinsmen are always there for them,” said Zaharia. But the Kinsmen dollars were only the start of putting the project together. “Obviously I’m very pumped about getting lights,” said longtime coach Roby Sharpe. With the core funding from the Kinsmen Sharpe said they have spent the last couple of
weeks lining up the various elements of the project. The first stop was at RH Electric to figure out a price for the electrical work. Sharpe said they were told not to worry about the cost because they were told “we’re going to donate our labour.” It was then realized they’d getting better lighting to raise the towers, but that would require concrete, said Sharpe, but what would that cost? It was off to Yorkton Concrete for an estimate. They walked out within minutes with the best of quotes. “It’s going to be free. It’s not going to cost you nothing,” said Sharpe.
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