• Dundarave Festival of Lights
  • Festival Events 2012
    • Dundarave Christmas Fair, December 1
      • Dundarave Nativity Paddle Songs, December 8
        • World Christmas, December 15
          • Christmas Wassail & Bonfire Night, December 22
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              • Media & Newsletter
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                • Ending Homelessness
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                  • How to make your tree spectacular

                  Requisiat in pacem.  West Vancouver's Douglas Lalonde died in a shipping container fire on January 3rd, 2012


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                  "Doug wasn't anonymous," said David. "He was a great person, and a contributor to humanity."

                  Capilano University's Communications Students Name the Problem of Homelessness on the North Shore, 15/xi/2011

                  Karen O'Shannecery with Fanny Kiefer on Ending Homelessness

                  _"1,215 North Shore seniors are thought to be in urgent housing need, spending more than half of their income on housing. This group, the study determined, are at immediate risk of becoming homeless. And still, it’s one of the North Shore’s fastest growing demographics."
                  COVER STORY: Faces of homelessness

                  By Todd Coyne - North Shore Outlook
                  Published: October 12, 2011 3:00 PM

                   At 104% Occupancy, Lookout's North Shore Shelter Provides More "Bednights" than its Downtown Shelter

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                  From the Lookout Emergency Aid Society's 2011 Annual Report (Please see below for the complete report.)

                  No one should be left out in the cold.

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                  Creative Commons, Tim Norris
                  There are some things in life over which we have no control.  Homelessness is not one of them.  We can't change where we were born or when, or have any say at all in how the Sun and the Moon move through the sky.  In fact,  one of the biggest challenges in life is figuring out exactly where we can make change happen.  Despite the fact that homelessness is on the rise in our community, that many of our friends and neighbours may be one or two paycheques away from not being able to make a mortgage payment or pay the rent, we have the power to make homelessness a thing of the past.

                  The people we know who were homelessness now have fabulous careers.  One of our friends, a graduate of our favourite West Vancouver elementary school, slept in her car for a year.  Another friend found the only escape from violence in the home was to go to a shelter.   They were able to get back on their feet because no one left them standing alone.  You might know people like our friends, or have stories of your own to share.  Use the contact form below to let us know.  We'll post responses as appropriate on this page.

                  Today, the economic downturn is hitting the seniors in our community harder than most of us had expected, forcing many of them to choose how to stretch a fixed income over the costs of prescriptions, groceries, utilities and housing.  The North Shore Shelter reports that, for the first time in its history, our elders are turning to the shelter for protection against homelessness.  To put the scale of the demand in context, Lookout's North Shore Shelter provided 15,359 bednights last year, or one thousand and one fewer bednights than Lookout's shelter in the Downtown Eastside.

                  The Dundarave Festival of Lights allows all of us to stand together against the fact of homelessness, and end it one Christmas tree at a time.  After all, one of the main points about Christmas is that even the most remarkable people can find themselves with a manger for a bed.

                  This page has some challenging information about the facts of homelessness, because facing the facts is the first step in making some serious change happen.

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                  Prince William homeless for a night with Centrepoint boss Seyi Obakin

                  Homeless youth on the increase
                   By Jane Seyd, North Shore News,  July 10, 2011

                  "[...] in a disturbing trend, the figures point to more youth under the age of 25 as homeless.  Preliminary figures from the region-wide 2011 homeless count point to a 38 per cent increase in homeless youth on the North Shore compared to figures from 2008."

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                  Prince William homeless for a night

                  A cold alley in central London is a far cry from a palace, but it was the spot Prince William chose to sleep to highlight the plight of homeless British teenagers:
                  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/video/prince-william-homeless-for-a-night/article1409427/

                  Millions of Canadians live in inadequate housing: Report
                  By Norma Greenaway, Canwest News Service
                  November 5, 2009 8:02 AM

                  New report shows nearly 4 million Canadians still in core housing need
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                  On the coldest November day in our history, the North Shore Shelter was a refuge for everyone.

                    How has homelessness affected you or someone you love?

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