More B.C. seniors than ever in dire need of financial help, and it's only getting worse, say advocates
The number of calls for financial help from seniors has doubled, and what they need is greater too, a support group tells CTV News.
“It has increased from, 'Can we have some grocery vouchers?' to, 'I have nowhere to live, I don’t have enough money to afford what’s available out there,'” said Adam Thompson of the Hope for Freedom Society.
The not-for-profit group provides homeless outreach services for people, including seniors, in Metro Vancouver’s Tri-Cities region.
Brian McLeod has worked all his life. The 65-year-old was living in a motor home without plumbing and electricity until the society reached out and offered help.
McLeod admitted candidly that he "would have been dead” had the Hope for Freedom Society not intervened.
“I’m not the only one,” he told CTV News. “There’s so many senior citizens out there that need help in the worst way.”
The Office of the Seniors Advocate of B.C. estimates almost half of Vancouver seniors are living on incomes that fall below the minimum wage.
Many of them are people who have been employed all of their lives and saved what they could for retirement.
“With these high prices around food and the explosion in the prices in the rental markets, the proverbial chickens are coming to roost,” said the advocate, Isobel Mackenzie.
“People who were able to eke along in the past are now not going to be able to do that,” she said.
Critics are calling for an overhaul of seniors’ affordable rent programs, and a significant increase in pensions.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
China's Xi meeting Putin in boost for isolated Russia leader
Chinese leader Xi Jinping is due to meet with Vladimir Putin in a political boost for the isolated Russian president after the International Criminal Court charged him with war crimes in Ukraine.

One dead, six remain missing as police search for victims of fire in Old Montreal
One person has been confirmed dead and six people remain missing as police continue to search for victims after a fire swept through a building in Old Montreal on Thursday.
Woman suing Tim Hortons for $500K after hot tea spill left her 'disfigured'
An Ontario woman has launched a lawsuit seeking $500,000 from Tim Hortons after she suffered major burns from an alleged ‘superheated’ tea. The company has denied all allegations and said she was ‘the author of her own misfortune.'
Trails of human bacteria from sneezing and coughing preserved on Mount Everest: study
Even at one of the tallest natural peaks on Earth, humans have left their mark in a trail of bacteria as researchers have found germs from coughing and sneezing that have been potentially preserved for centuries on Mount Everest.
Banking giant UBS acquiring Credit Suisse for US$3.2 billion
Banking giant UBS is buying troubled rival Credit Suisse for almost US$3.25 billion, in a deal orchestrated by regulators in an effort to avoid further market-shaking turmoil in the global banking system.
Poilievre calling for national standardized test to license doctors, nurses trained outside of Canada
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling for a national standardized testing process to be created in order to speed up the licensing process for doctors and nurses who are either immigrants or were trained abroad.
Putin's world just got a lot smaller with the ICC's arrest warrant
President Vladimir Putin always relished his global outings, burnishing his image as one of the big guns running the world but with the International Criminal Court's war crimes charges against him, Putin's world just got smaller.
Possibility of Trump's arrest builds sympathy among his supporters
The possibility that Donald Trump may be charged for allegedly covering up hush money payments to a porn star during his 2016 campaign is garnering sympathy for the Republican former president, New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu said on Sunday.
North Korea: Latest missile simulated nuclear counterattack
North Korea said Monday it simulated a nuclear attack on South Korea with a ballistic missile launch over the weekend that was its fifth missile demonstration this month to protest the largest joint military exercises in years between the U.S. and South Korea.