Listen Live

Comox Valley initiative delivering homeless care packages across Vancouver Island 

A longstanding tradition to help the homeless is once again running this year. 

Chantal Stefan is a Grade 1 French Immersion teacher at Puntledge Park Elementary School and she started the ‘Everybody Deserves A Smile’ program 17 years ago here in the Comox Valley. 

Thanks to the help of students she is able to create and send over 2,000 care packages every year to adults and children experiencing homelessness in the Comox Valley, Nanaimo, Powell River, Victoria, Vancouver, and Red Deer every year. 

Usually, students hand-paint bags that are stuffed full of goodies, but Stefan says the team will have to make a few changes this year because of the virus.

“What we did is we created an envelope style care package instead of the bag packages. The bags are normally decorated and hand-painted by students, which is outstanding, but really a lot of work for teachers, so we went to envelopes.”

“Instead of having eight items coming in from our community donated by families, local businesses and everybody else we came down to about five items. So what we were asking this year, instead of actual homemade shopping items- and people who knit all year round- we’re inviting people to donate financially,” she added. 

Stefan says with the cash donations, the team will buy wool socks and hand sanitizers, as well as toothpaste, toothbrushes and soap. She is also encouraging those who submit a donation to include a note, which will be included in some of the packages. 

COVID-19 is also changing the way the packages are sent out. Stefan says students are usually the ones to hand-deliver the gifts all over the island but this year it will be made up of all adults. 

She says when the students can connect to those receiving the gifts, it can change the way they look at homelessness. 

“Students will know that there is homelessness and poverty but they won’t fully understand what the causation or the dehumanization of homelessness is.”

“People living on the streets, when they receive these care packages, it’s incredible to see the response. 

“For a student to carry that and be part of that, has been transformative. We’ve had students who have literally shifted in their core in terms of their ideas, their belief systems, their understanding that this is a person. It’s crucial if we want students and ourselves to fully understand people are people, then we need to get out there and do something about it.”

The goal this year is to create and send out 1,200 packages locally.

If you would like to donate or want to learn more about the Everybody Deserves a Smile project, visit their Facebook page

Continue Reading

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Heavy smoke expected across B.C. as wildfire season rages on

British Columbia wildfire officials say late-season heat waves and heavy smoke are signalling a longer and more challenging wildfire season extending into the fall.

No critical injuries after incident with B.C. Wildfire Service helicopter

Officials said there were no critical injuries after a B.C. Wildfire Service helicopter made a “forced landing” near Pemberton late Wednesday morning. 

Union, industry leaders push for Canadian-built ferries as summit wraps

The head of a union representing close to 5,000 ferry workers in British Columbia says he is optimistic about the future of shipbuilding in the province after attending this week’s “Made in Canada” summit.

Smoke and heat blanket B.C. as late-summer heat records fall

Smoke and high temperatures are settling over large parts of British Columbia, just a week after the last record-breaking heat wave.

B.C. public service worker’s union plans to expand strike

Over 2,000 British Columbia public service workers chanted and marched on picket lines today demanding wages increases and fair access to telework.
- Advertisement -