North Bay's The Gathering Places faces uncertain future, scales back outreach services
North Bay’s soup kitchen, The Gathering Place, on Cassells Street fears it could have to close its doors later this year, as early as the fall.
The Gathering Place in North Bay in December 2021. (File photo/Eric Taschner/CTV News Northern Ontario)
Donations at Christmas significantly dropped compared to previous years and donations continue to drop as many people are feeling the pinch in their wallets.
As a donation-based charity, this trickle-down effect is seriously hurting the soup kitchen, according to its executive director.
“If this trend continues, we’re not sure we can stay open,” Dennis Chippa said.
This has forced the soup kitchen to significantly scale back its crucial services for people homeless or living on the cusp of homelessness in North Bay and its surrounding area.
The soup kitchen is cutting back on to-go meals. The outreach program is also now on pause. This means outreach staff have been reduced to part-time hours.
“You get to know these folks. You know them all and how difficult it is for them on a day-to-day basis and then you can’t provide that support you’ve been doing,” said Chippa.
"It’s a concern."
Chippa told CTV News that he fears closing the doors would put major pressure on area food banks and local church food banks.
In early November, the soup kitchen announced it was pausing its outreach service to West Nipissing due to a severe lack of funding and the loss of its outreach services kitchen used to cook food.
Staff would normally serve around 700 meals a week for that town's homeless and others who need a meal.
“There is no real core funding for an agency like ours,” Chippa said. “We don’t fit some of the niches that things like food banks would. We’re not part of Food Banks Canada because we’re not a food bank.”
The staff also run the city's warming centre during the winter months and when its doors were opened for meals, Chippa and the rest of the staff said they would normally see a reduction in clients - that didn’t happen this winter.
“Today for lunch we saw between 112-115 people. We used to see 90,” said Chippa.
“At dinner, we would see 110 or 115. Now we’re seeing between 130-140.”
Chippa said he fears that without donations to help stop the financial bleeding, the doors will close even sooner.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING House of Commons Speaker Greg Fergus survives vote calling for his ouster
Greg Fergus survived a vote to oust him as House of Commons Speaker on Tuesday, but with close to half of MPs expressing a loss of confidence in him, he faces a precarious path forward in maintaining order in Parliament.
'It was hell': Israeli mother held hostage with her children describes 51 days in captivity
Hagar Brodutch, her three children and four-year-old neighbour were kidnapped by Hamas-led militants from their home in Kfar Aza, Israel on Oct. 7 and held for 51 days. They were released in November, but Brodutch says her thoughts are never far from those still being held in Gaza.
'Unruly passenger' forces WestJet flight to make emergency landing in B.C.
A WestJet flight heading to Calgary had to make an emergency landing in northern B.C. Monday due to an incident involving an 'unruly passenger,' Mounties say.
P.E.I. kiteboarder 'lucky to be alive' after shark attack in Turks and Caicos
A professional kiteboarder from P.E.I. says he has been seriously injured in a shark attack that occurred while he was snorkelling in the Turks and Caicos Islands last week.
BREAKING Teen dies after being hit by train in N.W. Calgary
A teenager has died after being hit by a train in northwest Calgary on Tuesday afternoon.
Black bear kebabs make family sick with parasitic worms
It was supposed to be a celebration, but one family’s unique meal of black bear meat sent several members to the hospital instead.
'It's his vacation too': Jimmy the baby goat joins 2-week road trip across Canada
After Jimmy the baby goat was shunned by his mother, a New Brunswick man took the kid on a two-week road trip across Canada.
The double-level airplane seat is back. This time, there’s a first-class version
It’s the airplane seat design that launched a thousand memes and kickstarted a media storm. And now the double-level seat is back – only this time, with a twist.
New COVID-19 subvariants become the dominant strains in Canada
More than four years after COVID-19 effectively shut down the world, two new variants of COVID-19 have become the dominant strains of the novel coronavirus in Canada.