40 people displaced due to fire at Brantford’s largest homeless shelter
A fire broke out Tuesday night at Rosewood House, Brantford’s largest homelessness shelter, leaving 40 residents without a place to stay or the essential services they rely on.
Ryan Stephenson is one of those people.
“Most of my stuff’s actually still in there,” he told CTV News on Wednesday. “All I could get was just a change of clothes and I got a little bag on my back.”
Homelessness is nothing new to those who stay at Rosewood House.
“Some decided to sleep in the park,” said Tim Philp, the shelter’s executive director. “A lot of them went to motels that have been set up through the SOAR organization that does the intake for homelessness. We had some people couch surf.”
He said the fire appeared to be accidental and started on the stove top around 6:30 p.m.
“It was limited to the kitchen,” said City Councillor Dan McCreary. “The fire doors worked. It didn’t spread anywhere else.”
Fire damage in the kitchen at Rosewood House in Brantford. (Provided)
“The rest of the building, while there’s no physical damage, there is a great deal of smoke damage,” Philp explained. “We’re going to have to completely gut the kitchen and we’re going to have to pull everything out. Throw away all the bedding, mattresses, everything else that’s here.”
Rosewood House is the city’s largest shelter and welcomes people in on a first-come first-serve basis each night. They also offer in-house mental health and addiction services.
Philp said he spent much of Wednesday morning making calls to other organizations to see if he could find a temporary homes for his clients.
By late afternoon, he got a bit of good news.
Philp said approval to gut the kitchen and rebuild was fast-tracked, so the work can start as soon as Thursday.
He initially thought it could take up to eight months to reopen Rosewood House.
Philp called it a “miraculous” development.
Fire damage in the kitchen at Rosewood House in Brantford. (Provided)
Stephenson, meanwhile, said he spent Tuesday night at his girlfriend’s place.
“I’ve been [at Rosewood House] for the last seven months, and it’s the only place I’ve got to go, other than the streets,” he said. “With it out of commission, I don’t know where I’m going to end up.”
Everyone staying at Rosewood House has been offered motel vouchers and the Salvation Army has stepped in to provide meals.
Officials have estimated the damage at $150,000.
McCreary said, at last count, there were about 120 people in the city’s shelter system.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
First standardized housing designs coming in December, but won't be permit-ready until 'early 2025'
The first iteration of the federal government's standardized pre-approved design catalogue – a revival of a wartime housing effort – will be unveiled in December, CTV News has learned.
He told his mother there was 'no way' he'd meet someone in Australia. Then he fell in love at first sight
Mike Grossman was adamant he wasn’t going to fall for anyone in Australia.
'Headspin hole': Man develops scalp tumor after decades of breakdancing
Researchers in Denmark have published a case report revealing an unexpected consequence of one of breakdancing's most iconic moves: the headspin.
5 things not to say to a grieving friend
It’s almost impossible to know what to say to someone in the throes of grief. We all want to say something comforting. Very few of us know what that is.
Severe weather has some snowbirds leaving Florida, others battening down the hatches
When Julie Riddell and her husband, Gerry, bought their Fort Myers, Fla., vacation property in 2009, it didn't cross their mind that they might be buying in a hurricane-prone area.
Missing father, kids spotted in New Zealand wilderness 3 years after disappearance: police
A New Zealand man who disappeared with his three children in 2021 was spotted on a farm along the country's northwest coast, police say.
Food banks continue to face a surge in demand
As millions of Canadians head into the Thanksgiving weekend, food banks across the country continue to see a surge in demand.
How gloves belonging to Audrey Hepburn and Marilyn Monroe wound up in Newfoundland
A five-hour drive from St. John's, N.L., and well off the beaten path, Point Leamington seems an unlikely spot for a one-of-a-kind tourist attraction.
Picture-perfect engagement under Manitoba northern lights
Sometimes love is written in the stars, but for one couple, it’s written in the aurora borealis.