New facility will take in homeless youth in Yellowknife

Homeless youth in Yellowknife will have a new facility available to them on June 1.

The City of Yellowknife has teamed up with SideDoor Youth Ministries to support the purchase of a 10 to 15 unit building to serve homeless or at-risk youth between the ages of 16 and 24.

Through a federal program, the City will be contributing $594,000 over the next five years.

Yellowknife mayor Mark Heyck signed the agreement on behalf of the city on Thursday.

“Research shows that if people fall into homelessness in their youth they’re much more likely to struggle with homelessness into adulthood,” Heyck told Moose FM.

“To be able to put real infrastructure on the ground that’s going to house youth between the ages of 16 and 24 is fantastic news for Yellowknife.

“The funds will not only provide roofs over their heads. They’ll also provide supports. If youths are having issues with drugs, alcohol or mental health issues, support will be in place to help people with those issues.”

SideDoor executive director Iris Hamlyn told Moose FM her agency wouldn’t have been able to secure the purchase of the building without the city’s help.

She’s confident the new co-ed facility will mark a significant upgrade to their current emergency shelter.

“Currently we operate an emergency shelter for youth but our emergency shelter is a couch which isn’t sustainable,” Hamlyn said.

“This building will allow us to not only provide housing, but offer services like literacy, pre-employment and wellness including mental health and addictions.”

Hamlyn says the new facility will be staffed 24/7 and provide youth with all the tools they need to better their situation.

“People who aren’t involved in dealing with homeless youth or adults will generally say that all they need to do is get a job but our research has shown that that’s the last thing they need at this point,” she said.

“95% of our homeless youth have exited out of the foster system so we need to bridge the gap between exiting the foster system and adulthood by teaching them valuable life skills. This program will seek to do that.

“Youth are our future so I think the city has done a great job supporting homelessness and being proactive in their community.”

Hamlyn says SideDoor is still in the process of securing its purchase of the new building so its location hasn’t been made public at this time.

It will open under the name Hope’s Haven.

Mike Gibbins
Mike Gibbins
Hello and thank you for listening to 100.1 Moose FM! To contact me, you can email me, find me on Twitter or call (867) 920-4663.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

City admin backs draft bylaw for accessible taxis, security cams and fare increases

At a committee meeting on Wednesday, Yellowknife city council members and city staff discussed potential changes to by-laws overseeing taxi drivers, taxi companies and passengers The drafted bylaw calls for increases in fare rates, the installation of security cameras and a requirement for taxi companies to provide 24 hour “wheelchair accessible” transportation services along with administrative changes.

Hundreds of crew make progress on Decho fires relieved by rain

Hundreds of crew members co-ordinated aggressive responses to fires in the Dehcho region and along Hwy 1. On Wednesday cooler temperatures and rainfall reinforced long awaited progress by Wildland firefighters.

Shauit’s latest music project joins diverse richness of Indigenous north and south at FOTR

Shauit says his latest work blends Northern Indigenous and southern Indigenous Latin and African music. The artist is bringing ground-breaking fusions created in collaboration with musicians from Turtle Island’s North, Quebec, Mexico and France to Folk On The Rocks in Yellowknife. “To go to more places that Innu music didn't go before. To show my nation, to show young artists that they can do whatever they want,” explains the artist, who is originally from Maliotenam.

Hay River on roll to another ParticipACTION win

The town of Hay River has once again been named a finalist in the 2026 Community Challenge.Just last year, Hay River not only picked up the title of the most active community in N.W.T. but also nabbed $15,000 in prize funding support for local physical activity and sport initiatives. And in 2024, Hay River won the top prize in the national challenge, picking up $100,000 in prize funding.

Crews fighting fires in Dehcho amid extreme conditions and poor visibility

In the Dehcho region, Wildland crews reported that while some areas remain problematic, direct attack methods on FS016, south of Liidlii Kue and Fort Simpson were effective on Tuesday. In Wrigley, response efforts were overwhelmed by conditions and poor visibility.  In the South Slave region, a wildfire located about 20 km from Hay River has been 90 per cent contained following nearly two weeks of active response.