(SEE ACCOMPANYING REACTION TO HOMELESSNESS FROM COMMUNITY MEMBERS AT THIS .)
Where are we supposed to stay? Where are we supposed to go?
Ken Derkach asks these questions several times throughout an interview last week from the sidewalk of Alexander Street.
Personable and thoughtful during this conversation, he is referring to the predicament of people who are homeless in Salmon Arm.
Derkach says police have kicked him out of three spots in the past three weeks or so. Last week an officer told him he canāt be within 15 metres of a bank, he says, pointing to the RBC Financial Group near him.
While he says he doesnāt like or respect the RCMP, ātheyāve actually treated me fairly well.ā
Bank staff, he says, are friendly.
āI want to go up against a judge. Iām even willing to do a little time in jail ā at least Iād have a bedā¦ā
He says he thinks the city gets the RCMP to crack down on homeless people because theyāre bad for tourism.
āThey donāt want anybody to know we have homeless people in Salmon Arm. You have to look good⦠The truth is, weāre here.ā
He notes that the Salvation Armyās Lighthouse Emergency Shelter closes from April 1 to November 1.
āWhere are we supposed to go? Iām not blaming anyone. One of my sayings is, āIt is what it is. Deal with it.āā
Derkach says he spent 30 years in construction, as well as working as a DJ (disc jockey).
He lived in Coquitlam and, before Salmon Arm for the past five years, Āé¶¹AV.
His eyes fill with tears when he talks about how his life went into a tailspin.
āMy wife died at 42. Brain tumour. That was kind of my downfall.ā
He says he has two daughters, now 25 and 27, but he rarely sees them. Sometimes they talk on the phone.
His drinking spiralled.
āI used to be a weekend drinker. Now itās pretty much every day.ā
He adds, āI donāt cause any problems.ā
Derkach now has Parkinsonās Disease and, last year, he suffered a heart attack. Heās 53.
He points out that he holds his knees as he sits on the sidewalk so his legs donāt shake. He also struggles with anxiety and depression.
Recently someone told him he looks thinner and more unhealthy than the last time they saw him.
āThatās the street life. I used to be about 195 pounds. Now Iām about 140. It has to do with health and everything else. You donāt get from 195 pounds to 140 and keep your health. Iām intelligent enough to know that. And itās over the last two years. In high school I was 165, now Iām 140.ā
āI actually feel like Iām not long for this world,ā he says, as tears well again. āIām sorry. I donāt worry about it ā itās one less mouth to feed.ā
Forging ahead, he says when he was 12 or 13 years old, he remembers hearing there were about two billion people on earth.
āNow there are 7.4 billion in the world. I donāt understand how weāre going to take care of people.ā
He says when he came here from Āé¶¹AV, he was on his way to New Brunswick.
āI got stuck here because of the people and the atmosphere,ā he says, adding people in Āé¶¹AV werenāt friendly, whereas people in Salmon Arm are.
During the interview, a young man stops by to wish him well and give him a bottle of water. A woman also greets him and gives him a handful of change.
This year is the first heās had to panhandle, he says.
āThe people in this town are the best Iāve ever seen⦠Walking along the street, you hear āgood morning, good morning.ā In Āé¶¹AV, youāre trying to have a conversation at a bus stop and they look at you like youāre crazy. People donāt understand Iām a sociable person, I get to meet all kinds of people.ā
He says the odd person tries to verbally assault him and his friend, and they just say, āHave a nice day.ā
He wants to rebut what he saw in a newspaper recently ā that homeless people are lazy bums. He says he used to work at the bottle depot, and tried going back after his heart attack, but he didnāt have the energy.
Derkach grew up in Saskatoon and came to B.C. to escape the cold.
He says he is something of a social worker on the street.
I listen ā thatās the biggest thing. Hopefully you can give them a little bit of advice ā and maybe they follow it.ā
āI used to call God the higher power. Since coming to Salmon Arm, Iām actually believing in God. God is benevolent and he is real. I had a Sprite can burst in my back pack and it ruined my bible. A couple of people are going to bring me one. I like to read it. Itās not all believable. But it inspires me to help other people and be a good man.ā
What help would he like to see for people who are homeless?
āIf they have the shelter open 24/7, 365 days a year, that would help.ā
He says paying rent is out of the question because it would take $2,000 to get a place, with the damage deposit, utilities and the first monthās rent.
āThatās why a lot of us are homeless. We just canāt afford itā¦
āThe RCMP say why are you here? I say, thereās no place else to be.ā