Abbotsford churchgoer starts free mobile shower trailer
Emma Prestwich, Broadview, January 24, 2020
https://broadview.org/abbotsford-mobile-shower-trailer/
Henry Penner says the service has been used more than 600 times since last May.
For the past several months, those who are homeless or just in need of a hot shower in one Vancouver-area city have been able to snag one for free, thanks to one entrepreneurial Mennonite.
Since May, Henry Penner, who attends King Road Mennonite Brethren Church in Abbotsford, has operated a mobile shower trailer along with other volunteers to give anyone interested a chance to refresh.
Similar initiatives in the U.S. inspired Penner to start Refresh Mobile Showers, he says. He also felt a strong religious conviction to tackle the project.
“I talked to people in the community, and then they definitely echoed that there was a need for it,” he says.
The church, local businesses and individuals helped him raise the $35,000 needed to buy the trailer and have it shipped to Abbotsford.
May 1, 2019 marked the first shower. Since then, the service has been used 617 times, Penner says.
The trailer is driven to a cold-weather shelter on Mondays, another local Mennonite Brethren church on Wednesdays, and the Mennonite Central Committee Centre on Thursdays.
Access to a hot shower usually coincides with a free meal or offer of clean clothing from another local organization. A City of Abbotsford “inter-agency care team,” which is a mobile group of professionals including registered psychiatric nurses, social workers, and outreach workers, is often also present.
Penner says users seem happy about the chance to get clean.
“Virtually nothing but positive [feedback],” he says. “‘Thank you,’ ‘God bless you,’ ‘it’s a wonderful thing you do.’”
City councillor Ross Siemens, who chairs Abbotsford’s homelessness action advisory committee, says city service providers can’t force people to take shelter, even if the weather is severe.
“So we’ve recognized that the only way that we can have any meaningful impact with people who are experiencing homelessness and other related mental health issues is to build relationships,” he says.
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He says that when Penner approached the city with his idea, officials thought it would be one effective way to build those relationships.
“Henry came forward, and said, ‘I feel if I haven’t had a shower and I’m cold and wet, I just don’t feel I’m in my right space.’”
Siemens estimates that there are about 250 people designated “homeless” in Abbotsford, although the true number is likely higher because it doesn’t include those who may be couch surfing. In 2019, Abbotsford-Mission’s rental vacancy rate was 1.1 percent, one of the lowest in the country.
Siemens says he knows of a number of initiatives aimed at tackling the housing issue, including a provincially funded modular housing project, one for Indigenous people at risk of homelessness, and a program that helps youth aging out of foster care learn to live independently.
The trailer is available for two hours at a time. Penner likes the idea of expanding its hours and locations, but says a volunteer-run operation makes that difficult. King Road still invites donations for operational costs.
Siemens says the city is open to helping make the service available on a more regular basis, but wants to make sure that people are using it.
“We’re tracking the numbers, making sure that it is meaningful,” he says. “Is this actually a touchpoint where we can actually build relationships and get these people into shelter and into housing and into care that they need?”