Better supports needed for vulnerable people after 3 men attacked in Point Douglas area: advocates - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:51 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Better supports needed for vulnerable people after 3 men attacked in Point Douglas area: advocates

Community activist Sel Burrowstalked to a witness of one of three attacks that happened early Monday, and says it appears that all three victims were homeless. The attacks illustrate how people experiencing homelessness are vulnerable to violence, he says.

Recent attacks illustrate how people experiencing homelessness are vulnerable to violence: Sel Burrows

A Winnipeg police vehicle is parked in a lane between two buildings, which is blocked off by police tape. Inside the tape is an empty wheelchair.
Winnipeg police investigated the scene of an assault between Logan Avenue and Higgins Avenue Monday morning. It was one of three serious assaults in the same area Monday, all of which happened within an hour of each other. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Community members in Winnipeg's Point Douglas neighbourhood are calling for more housing support, after a string of violent assaults happened within an hour of each other Monday morning.

Three men in their 50s were found seriously injured at three different locations in the Point Douglas neighbourhood, in the span between 4:30 and 5:30 a.m., police have said.

Two of themen remainedin critical condition Tuesday, according to police, while the other is in stable condition. Investigators believe all three assaults are related, but have not said how.

A woman identified as Danielle Dawn Ballantyne, 36, was also found dead in the Point Douglas neighbourhood early Monday morning, but police have not said whether her death is connected to the attacks.

Community activist Sel Burrowstalked to someone who witnessed one of the attacks on the men. He says that it appears that all three victims were homeless.

"This is just an absolutely horrible, ugly situation. And everybody in the community is just furious, upset, scared," Burrows said Tuesday.

The witness told Burrows that the attack appeared to be random.

Burrows, who founded the North Point Douglas crime-prevention Point Powerlinetip line,says the recent attacks illustrate how people experiencing homelessness are at risk ofcrime and violence.

"The homeless are extremely vulnerable and we need to figure out how else do we help to make them safe? Their lives are worth just as much as yours and mine," Burrows said.

The head of End Homelessness Winnipeg, Jason Whitford, says he's noticedmore and more peopleliving in encampments, and attacks against them are increasing, too.

"They're fearful of their safety, because they're at risk on the streets. There's increasing violence," Whitford said.

He says that shelters should not be relied on for long-term housing in lieu of other accessible and affordableoptions.

"Housing is the only solution to the issues that we're facing today. We need supportive housing, we need transitional housing, we need deeply affordable rent," Whitford said.

In the short term, Whitford wants to see resources brought together to work collaboratively to better support people experiencing homelessness.

Better support needed for vulnerable people after attacks in Point Douglas

2 years ago
Duration 2:05
Three men in their 50s were found seriously injured at three different locations in the Point Douglas neighbourhood, in the span of an hour on Monday. Community members in the neighbourhood are calling for more housing and support.

With files from Andrew Wildes