Colleen Frank is exhausted. Discouraged. Angry. Most of all, sheās sad.
The 72-year-old from Chilliwack is facing eviction. At monthās end she has to be out of her small apartment unit in the Westwind complex on Watson Road, and sheās not sure where sheāll go.
āThere is enough land in this country for everybody to be able to have a decent home,ā she said. āBut thatās not the case.ā
Frank canāt afford anything sheās seen and sheās terrified sheāll eventually end up on the streets.
She was told in March that she has to leave the building that sheās lived in since July of 1999. She was informed by the buildingās owner that a family member āwas having issuesā and would need to move into her unit.
Frank strongly suspects sheās being ārenovicted.ā Thatās the thing where a building owner gets rid of existing renters, fixes up units and rents them out at a higher rate.
But itās only a suspicion, one she canāt prove.
Frank was supposed to be out at the end of May, but she filed a tenancy dispute. The hearing is July 28 and if the judge rules against her, sheāll have to be gone July 29.
It is a familiar tale these days. With real estate skyrocketing, people canāt buy. With rent skyrocketing, people canāt rent.
If you canāt buy and you canāt rent, whatās left?
For a senior like her, the financial considerations are huge. The Westwind strata was paying her to be the unofficial building manager, a job that covered her rent and no more.
āI have basically been referred to as the cleaning lady, caretaker, dorm mom, prison warden and FFM (free fake manager),ā she wrote in a letter to the Residential Tenancy Branch. āI have handled all emergencies, assisted with fire inspections, evacuations, maintenance calls and police matters for 20 years.ā
With that income soon to be gone, sheāll be left with Old Age Security and a small pension, adding up to a paltry $1,000 a month.
She canāt get the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIC), up to $995.99, that many low-income seniors receive.
Frank started to dip into her retirement savings in 2018, ājust to survive,ā and the money she took out is classified as a āhardship payment.ā Itās added to her income in 2022 even though she earned it decades ago, making her ineligible for GIC, and sheās taxed on it the following spring.
She is well below the 2022 basic standard of living Canada, set around $18,000.
āYou cannot rent, eat, have phone and cable, transportation and prescriptions on $1,000 a month,ā she said. āItās not possible.ā
Frankās been collecting letters of support from fellow tenants in recent weeks.
āResidents will suffer because thereās no way that we will find someone who will put the level of care into this place like Colleen does,ā wrote Kate McGladdery.
A little girl in the building added this thought.
āI really like Colleen and she has to stay here. Donāt be mean!ā
Frank has talked to politicians and resource workers, anyone she can think of who might be able to help. All of them mean well, but she finds herself in a never-ending circle of referrals. Person A refers her to person B who refers her to person C who refers her to person A.
āIāve had hundreds and hundreds of phone calls and talked to everyone there is to talk to, and I just get referred back to people Iāve already talked to,ā Frank said. āNobody answers the phone. Everybodyās on holidays. They say theyāll get back to you and they donāt.
āItās exhausting, and Iām tired.ā
The Shelter Aid for Elderly Renters (SAFER) program would be an option if it didnāt require a signed rental agreement as a condition to qualify. Frank canāt find a place she can afford, so she canāt sign a rental agreement and she canāt quality.
One resource worker suggested her only hope was to get someone to start a GoFundMe on her behalf, so she would at least have money to help her land on her feet.
And thatās what itās come to, a senior forced to resort to online begging to survive.
āIām not the type of person who asks for help,ā she said. āIām usually the one giving the help. Iām not one to beg and Iāve never been one to sit on my duff, so this is hard. Itās very hard. I try to be positive, but itās not easy and I donāt think Iāve had a good sleep since the fall of 2021.
āBut Iāve always said that youāve got to find at least one thing a day to smile and laugh at. Thatās what Iām trying to do.ā
Franksā GoFundMe is at .
eric.welsh@hopestandard.com
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