Abbotsford police seeing increase in multi-generational homelessness
Jim Kelly, 68, has been living in an encampment off Highway 1 in Abbotsford for about six months.
Recently, his 41-year-old son moved there too.
“I just came up here about three weeks ago since I got my finger cut off,” said Tyler Kelly.
He was looking for safety when he moved into the encampment after he said he was assaulted while staying at a shelter.
“I came up to him for comfort and someone to watch over me while I’m sleeping in case they come back and try to do something else to me,” said the 41-year-old.
Father and son both say they use fentanyl.
They both live in a tent.
“Sometimes it’s pretty sad, I guess, would be the best way to describe it,” Jim Kelly said when asked what it was like to live in the encampment.
Police say the tragedy of inter-generational homelessness is a growing one, and something they didn’t see 10 to 15 years ago.
“It’s extremely common for the children of individuals who are homeless to become homeless in their adult lives," said Jesse Wegenast of Sparrow Community Care Society. "Oftentimes, these are individuals who spend a good portion of their childhood, youth, in the foster system, which predisposes someone to homelessness."
“One thing that we’ve all been learning more about is intergenerational trauma and a lot of the things that can lead an individual to become homeless are often things that caused their parents to be homeless,” he said.
Abbotsford Police Department Insp. Kevin Murray believes part of the problem stems from a foster system that ages children out at 18.
“I don’t know too many 18-year-olds not in foster care moving out of their homes,” he said. “Yet we’re going to take kids who were vulnerable to begin with … we’re going to take those people and unleash them to the world without follow-up.”
He believes children in care shouldn’t age out of the system until they are 21.
“It’s almost like an intergenerational recidivism into homelessness,” said Wegenast. “I don’t think there’s any magic bullet on how to break that cycle, but I can tell you that allowing parents to invest in their kids no matter where in life they are, data shows that’s very positive for kids."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Conservatives launch marathon voting session over Liberal refusal to scrap carbon tax
Pierre Poilievre's Conservatives have launched what could become an overnight marathon voting session in the House of Commons, after signalling they'd be making good on their threat to delay the government's agenda over their opposition to the carbon tax.
Two charged with murder of Quebecer Daniel Langlois and partner in Dominica
The director of public prosecutions in the Caribbean nation of Dominica has confirmed that two men have been charged in the death of Quebecer Daniel Langlois and his partner.
Death toll rises to five in cantaloupe salmonella outbreak, as cases almost double
The Public Health Agency of Canada says the death toll has risen to five in a salmonella outbreak linked to Malichita and Rudy brand cantaloupes.
Hunter Biden indicted on nine tax charges, adding to gun charges in special counsel probe
Hunter Biden was indicted on nine tax charges in California on Thursday as a special counsel investigation into the business dealings of President Joe Biden's son intensifies against the backdrop of the looming 2024 election.
Ottawa announces $5.5M for health worker well-being and foreign medical grads
Ottawa has announced nearly $5.5 million in new funding to address health worker well-being and speed up the application process for international medical graduates who want to work in Canada.
UNLV shooting suspect had list of targets at that campus and another university, police say
The suspect in the deadly shooting at the University of Las Vegas, Nevada, had a list of targets at the school and at East Carolina University in North Carolina, police said Thursday.
Canada doubling cost-of-living requirement for international students
Canada will more than double the cost-of-living financial requirement for incoming international students on Jan. 1, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller announced today.
'The Brick' is at the centre of our galaxy. An unexpected new finding may help unlock its mysteries
A box-shaped cloud of opaque dust that lies at the centre of our galaxy has long perplexed scientists, and observations that reveal a new detail about its composition are deepening the mystery — possibly upending what’s known about how stars form.
Flight safety in Canada is plummeting, a confidential UN agency report finds
A draft report from a United Nations agency gives Canada a C grade on flight safety and oversight, down from an A+ and far below most of its peers.