Thank you, Madam Chair.
I would like to begin by thanking this committee for inviting us, Pembina Active Living, to appear before you.
My name is Bob Roehle, and I'm the President of Pembina Active Living. Beside me is Alanna Jones. She's our long-term Executive Director.
As a senior and someone married to one, I don't need to be convinced of the importance of the issues and challenges faced by older people, particularly older women, issues like access to transportation, health services and medication, home care services, affordable housing, justice, widowhood and loneliness. These are all quality of life issues that should, in my opinion, be a right of Canadian citizenship. However, let me say up front that our experience and comments will focus more on the issue of social inclusion and connectedness.
My approach this morning will be to give you an overview of Pembina Active Living, who we are and what we do. Ms. Jones, who is the long-term, hands-on person in the organization, is prepared to elaborate in more detail.
Pembina Active Living came into being in 2009 as a result of a few community-minded seniors in south Winnipeg getting together to discuss needs of their peer group, folks like themselves who had retired and were living in their own homes, condos and apartments. They realized, from their own experience, that much of their social network and connectedness related to their careers and children, and these had come to an end, hence the need for an organization to bring these lost souls together with folks of their own generation and station in life.
Out of these discussions, Pembina Active Living was born. It has a simple mandate, to enhance the quality of older adults living in south Winnipeg. In 2013, PAL achieved charitable status from the Canada Revenue Agency, thus allowing it to issue charitable tax receipts to donors. As a word of explanation, Pembina Active Living is essentially a community club or a community centre for seniors.
With annual funding from the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority of approximately $40,000, plus membership fees of $20 per person and an ongoing fundraising campaign, PAL is able to retain the services of a part-time executive director and administrative assistant. This allows PAL to operate two and a half days per week out of less than adequate space in a local church. This is supplemented by renting space as necessary in local community centres. PAL's membership varies somewhat from year to year and within the year depending on the activities being offered. PAL's current membership is around 450 people. It has been as high as 500.
Without the assistance of over 100 volunteers contributing in excess of 6,000 hours of their time, PAL's $100,000 annual budget could not be stretched to do the things we currently do or offer the services we offer to seniors.
PAL is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year. While we are pleased with our accomplishments to date, we have much more to do. Besides the critical need for more operating funds, our other immediate challenges are as follows.
We need space. PAL needs a permanent home of its own, a dedicated office and storage space and a five-day per week drop-in centre with a canteen to serve coffee and perhaps a light meal at noon.
We need diversity. We must find better and more creative ways to reach out to our indigenous community, to new Canadians and to the rainbow community. A recently awarded and much appreciated New Horizons grant from the federal government of $25,500 should go a long way to helping us reach out to these other groups.
On social cohesion or connectedness, PAL must strive to become more holistic as a seniors centre, not just a place to take one-off inexpensive exercise programs.
Allow me to end my formal comments with a quote from an editorial in a recent issue of Maclean's magazine. It is referring to a study done by people at Brigham Young University, a psychologist by the name of Julianne Holt-Lunstad. It says:
“Current evidence indicates that heightened risk for mortality from a lack of social relationships is greater than that from obesity,” Holt-Lunstad’s study concluded.... Being lonely is comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day.... It’s also worse for your health than the...risks arising from alcohol consumption, physical inactivity or air pollution—all of which get much more official attention than loneliness.
Humans are social creatures, and avoiding the necessity of social contact can be devastating to our physical and mental health. I believe that applies equally to both young and old in our society. That's really where PAL is operating. It's trying to increase social inclusion among the older adults of south Winnipeg.
Thank you.