Related News

Some N.L. artists pull music from Spotify after CEO’s weapons investment

Some N.L. artists pull music from Spotify after CEO’s weapons investment

August 22, 2025
Election campaign, debates will give voters something to chew on this long weekend

Election campaign, debates will give voters something to chew on this long weekend

April 18, 2025
Filipe Mota Talks Contests, Progression and the Future of Skateboarding with World Skate

Filipe Mota Talks Contests, Progression and the Future of Skateboarding with World Skate

March 31, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

Related News

Some N.L. artists pull music from Spotify after CEO’s weapons investment

Some N.L. artists pull music from Spotify after CEO’s weapons investment

August 22, 2025
Election campaign, debates will give voters something to chew on this long weekend

Election campaign, debates will give voters something to chew on this long weekend

April 18, 2025
Filipe Mota Talks Contests, Progression and the Future of Skateboarding with World Skate

Filipe Mota Talks Contests, Progression and the Future of Skateboarding with World Skate

March 31, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CONTRIBUTE
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
No Result
View All Result
Home Canadian news feed

Buffalo Narrows, Sask., opens new transitional housing with Indigenous-led care

Sarah Taylor by Sarah Taylor
June 9, 2026
in Canadian news feed
0
Buffalo Narrows, Sask., opens new transitional housing with Indigenous-led care
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When Janelle Pedersen looks at Buffalo Narrows’s first housing development in more than 20 years, she sees a future gated community where elders sit on front porches, children play, and neighbours help each other stay healthy and sober.

You might also like

Feds extend amnesty period for firearms ban pending Supreme Court ruling

Toronto reselling World Cup tickets to ‘avoid’ spending property taxes on tournament, city says

Ontario Provincial Police officer killed in line of duty near Hearst, Ont.

Just 13 months ago, the site was undeveloped land. Now, people are moving in and beginning to call the 29 new transitional housing units home.

Created by the Buffalo Narrows Friendship Centre, the initiative “isn’t a housing program,” according to Pedersen, the centre’s executive director. Residents receive wraparound care, including on-site addictions counselling, budgeting classes and food programs —all Indigenous-led, culturally specific and trauma-informed.

“We do already have a waiting list,” Pedersen said, “Once we let the community and surrounding communities know that we are open … it filled up so fast.”

The hope is for the nearly-$10-million project to help fill service gaps in the northern village of Buffalo Narrows — 430 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon — where there is no detox centre and residents must travel hours away to places like Pine House, Lloydminster, North Battleford, Prince Albert or Saskatoon for rehab programs.

Before the new transitional housing units opened, those who were able to get a space in a treatment program often had no choice, after all that travel and hard work, but to go back to the same living situation they were in before rehab, Pedersen said.

“You go back to the same lifestyle, the same group of friends, the same habits.”

The vision was to create a safe space to return to in Buffalo Narrows, she said.

“This is their home. They want to be home. So this is their safe home that they can go to.”

Pedersen said she hopes the program — one of the furthest north of its kind — can become a model for other northern Saskatchewan communities.

Averie Sanders, 26, has been sober for more than three months and was one of the first residents to move into one of the new units.

Born and raised in Buffalo Narrows, Sanders said she struggled with drugs and alcohol for years, drinking every day for about 10 years, often until she was sick.

“I was drinking at school, I was drinking alone,” she said, “My face started swelling up and stuff, and I took myself to the hospital.”

When she couldn’t get into treatment there, she went to a different hospital, then travelled more than five hours to La Ronge for detox. She was then transported directly to a 10-day treatment program in Pinehouse.

It was her first time going to detox and getting sober.

“I didn’t have to leave and see my family and then try again,” Sanders said. “It was straight through.”

A few weeks after returning home to Buffalo Narrows, she was able to move into a unit in the supportive housing program.

“Having this safe place … it changed a lot for me,” Sanders said.

When you get sober, “you have to change everything,” she said — your location, your friends.

“If I went back to the house I was in, I would have went right back to the same thing.”

Moving to supportive housing, receiving the wraparound care and living with neighbours who understand what she is going through has felt like “doors opening,” Sanders said.

She said she feels safe.

“It’s very quiet. It’s very homey,” she said, “I don’t think I have felt content ever, until I moved here.”

The Friendship Centre interviews prospective residents, using a six-category point system to triage needs and determine how the centre can support them. Sometimes, an applicant’s needs are beyond what program staff are trained for, Pedersen said.

Residents need to be sober for at least 30 days to be accepted, but the program is also open to those facing mental health challenges and other triggers.

The majority of people who apply are housing insecure, living in unstable environments, couch surfing or even sleeping outside, centre staff said. Evaluating the risk of homelessness and safety of an applicant’s current housing is part of the point system.

Those at immediate risk, who are most impacted by systemic inequities, receive first priority.

Pedersen describes the model as a partnership between residents, staff and the broader Buffalo Narrows community. Residents must commit to taking part in programming and contributing to the community they’re joining.

The friendship centre, in turn, commits to working with the new resident to support their individual needs, including helping them find funding to afford the program fees.

That relationship and the wraparound services continue even after residents leave, Pedersen said.

The travel required to attend rehab programs and the limited number of beds for northern programs is a barrier for people getting sober, Pedersen said.

The lack of available family support can leave parents entering treatment wondering who will care for their children, she said.

“If you’re a mother or a parent that’s struggling with addictions then that’s what holds you back a lot of the time, because you’re leaving your whole family and then who knows when you’re going to be back?”

The Buffalo Narrows Friendship Centre Housing and Wellness Program can accommodate entire families, with two-bedroom units with bunk beds.

At the centre of the housing complex, several wheelchair accessible units will accommodate elders. Pedersen noted that when family members are struggling with addiction, elders can be taken advantage of and pushed out of their own homes by their younger relatives.

“That’s why we incorporated elders into this unit, so they have a safe place.”

Elders in the program can get long-term housing and support, and also provide cultural teachings to residents, including land-based healing.

“Our elders are our knowledge keepers,” she said. “I believe that cultural aspect of it, to rebuild this community, is very important because we need to go back to our roots.”

New supportive housing community in Buffalo Narrows gives people the help they need

Pedersen said there’s still a lot of work to be done on the site, including building a dedicated cultural support centre with staff, narcotics and alcoholics anonymous meetings, and other programming.

The Friendship Centre is still trying to find funding for the building, and is in talks with the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s Affordable Housing Fund to finalize a loan for the $3.2 million needed for construction.

Once the support centre is built, the community will be gated and an 11 p.m. curfew will be put in place.

Pedersen said the Friendship Centre also hopes to be able to help address a ‘critical gap’ in the north: the wait after 24-hour detox programs, where delays in getting a bed in often-full treatment programs regularly leads to relapse.

“If they say that there’s no bed available, then you’re on your own, until you get enough courage or enough strength to work on yourself again and then you try again,” Pedersen said.

“It is a very vicious cycle.”

In the future, the Buffalo Narrows Friendship Centre hopes to work with the province’s social services and justice ministries to layer in more intensive clinical and family reunification support, said Melissa Smith, a consultant working with the centre.

Years ago, it took new resident Brenda Lee-Hastings “three to four” tries to get sober. Had she been able to come to a similar supportive housing program during that time, Lee-Hastings says it would have been different.

“I think I would have gotten sober the first try,” she said.

Lee-Hastings said many people are held back from asking for help by shame or fear. In her new home, sobriety is “in the open,” there are resources and people you can rely on.

“You don’t have to face it alone. You don’t have to be scared. It’s OK to get sober,” she said.

“We haven’t even begun to even scrape the surface of the things that this place is going to become.”

Read Entire Article
Tags: Canada NewsCBC.ca
Share30Tweet19
Sarah Taylor

Sarah Taylor

Recommended For You

Feds extend amnesty period for firearms ban pending Supreme Court ruling

by Sarah Taylor
June 9, 2026
0
Feds extend amnesty period for firearms ban pending Supreme Court ruling

The Liberal government is extending the amnesty period for gun owners to comply with its "assault-style" firearm ban pending a Supreme Court ruling on the policyThe deadline had...

Read more

Toronto reselling World Cup tickets to ‘avoid’ spending property taxes on tournament, city says

by Sarah Taylor
June 9, 2026
0
Toronto reselling World Cup tickets to ‘avoid’ spending property taxes on tournament, city says

The city of Toronto is defending reselling its World Cup tickets for profit, with the mayor's office saying the move helps "avoid" spending property taxes on a tournament...

Read more

Ontario Provincial Police officer killed in line of duty near Hearst, Ont.

by Sarah Taylor
June 9, 2026
0
Ontario Provincial Police officer killed in line of duty near Hearst, Ont.

Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) say an officer was killed in the line of duty after he was seriously injured while conducting an investigation near Hearst, Ont, about 600...

Read more

Would-be drivers in B.C. can now take learner’s licence knowledge test online and at home

by Sarah Taylor
June 9, 2026
0
Would-be drivers in B.C. can now take learner’s licence knowledge test online and at home

Would-be drivers in British Columbia are now allowed to take the knowledge test for their learner's licence online and at home BC Attorney General Niki Sharma says the change came into effect...

Read more

Thunder Bay Jail ‘a ship that’s already under water,’ inquest for Ontario MPP’s nephew told

by Sarah Taylor
June 9, 2026
0
Thunder Bay Jail ‘a ship that’s already under water,’ inquest for Ontario MPP’s nephew told

WARNING: This story references thought of suicideJeffrey Bell told an Ontario inquest that he and fellow correctional officers at the Thunder Bay Jail “are constantly fighting the age...

Read more
Next Post
Emu born with 4 legs on Nanaimo, B.C., farm

Emu born with 4 legs on Nanaimo, B.C., farm

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

Some N.L. artists pull music from Spotify after CEO’s weapons investment

Some N.L. artists pull music from Spotify after CEO’s weapons investment

August 22, 2025
Election campaign, debates will give voters something to chew on this long weekend

Election campaign, debates will give voters something to chew on this long weekend

April 18, 2025
Filipe Mota Talks Contests, Progression and the Future of Skateboarding with World Skate

Filipe Mota Talks Contests, Progression and the Future of Skateboarding with World Skate

March 31, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS – AI Curated content

CANADIANA.NEWS will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.

CATEGORIES

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

BROWSE BY TAG

Canada News CBC.ca Golf Hockey Lifehacker Ludwig-van.com Skateboarding tomsguide.com

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.