Latest news with #Kwiatkowski

CBC
31-03-2025
- Health
- CBC
Consumption and treatment sites in Kitchener and Guelph will close this week despite injunction being granted
A judge has ruled the consumption and treatment services (CTS) sites in Kitchener and Guelph can stay open. But the win in an Ontario Superior Court doesn't mean the local sites will stay open beyond Monday — the day the province has said they must close by. Sanguen Health Centre, which operates the Kitchener site, said in a social media post on Sunday that they will close. There are two reasons why, the post said. One is because the site's exemption under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act expires on Tuesday. The other is that there is no funding to remain open. "We find the judge's acknowledgement of the potential harm caused by these closures hopeful," the statement said. "However, the situation is complex. The absence of provincial funding and the expiration of our CDSA exemption present significant barriers to maintaining services." Melissa Kwiatkowski, CEO of the Guelph Community Health Centre which operates the CTS in Guelph, confirmed they are unable to extend CTS services beyond Monday. "The government has been clear they will not fund the [CTS] site and will withhold funding from organizations that continue to operate," Kwiatkowski said in an email to CBC News on Sunday. Last week, advocates from Toronto and Waterloo region took the province to court over the decision to close CTS sites across Ontario. They sought an injunction to stop the closures on March 31, a deadline set by the province. They also argued closing the sites violates both the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Constitution, including the right to life, liberty and security of the person. On Friday afternoon, Justice John Callaghan of the Superior Court of Justice granted an injunction until he could make a decision on the Charter challenge, which he said will take more time to decide. A spokesperson for Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones said the ruling doesn't change the province's plans to replace the CTS sites with homelessness and addictions recovery treatment (HART) hubs. "Provincial funding for HART Hubs cannot be used for drug injection services and will be contingent on the organization not seeking to continue those services," Hannah Jensen said in a statement on Friday. Diana Chan McNally, a Toronto community worker and expert in harm reduction, told CBC Toronto"even though we are not illegal at this moment, it does mean that we will most likely lose services" because of the lack of funding. Kwiatkowski said the team at the Guelph Community Health Centre "continues with the difficult work of preparing our community for Guelph's CTS service to close on March 31st while we operationalize the government's new HART Hub model." "Over the last seven months, we have worked diligently with many partners in our community to ensure this program provides urgent help to those who need it. Our HART hub will have some services available as of the 1st of April," Kwiatkowski said. "While this is not a replacement for [a consumption and treatment site], it does have promise, and we want it to be a success for our community." CTS closure a 'significant' loss: Sanguen The site in Kitchener is the only one in Waterloo region. It has operated since 2019 on Duke Street W. near Kitchener's city hall and has offered people a space to use drugs with staff on-site, as well as other support services. Sanguen has run the site on behalf of the region and reports there has never been a death at the site from an overdose. Staff intervened to prevent an overdose more than 1,000 times since 2019. In 2024, the site saw more than 15,000 client visits and managed 79 on-site overdoses. In its post on Sunday, Sanguen said the organization "remains absolutely committed to re-establishing fully funded and legally exempt supervised consumption facilities in our community." "These services are integral to harm reduction efforts aimed at mitigating overdose risks and are a fundamental component of the health care we believe everyone is entitled to," the statement said. Sanguen said they would reopen immediately "if we had the necessary exemption, facility and funding." Advocates who are part of the Waterloo Region Drug Action Team are hoping to convince local politicians to find that funding. In a letter sent to Waterloo region's MPPs and regional councillors on Sunday, and shared with CBC News, the drug action team urged the politicians to help keep the site in Kitchener open. "One of the applicants in the court challenge is a resident of Waterloo region. The court has accepted the high risk of death and injury to CTS clients should CTS sites close, including the risk of death to the Waterloo region applicant. We do not want your constituent, or other CTS clients, to die," the letters said. "The lives of constituents locally and beyond very much hang in the balance. Time is of the essence, obviously, and the community is unclear about how area MPPs are facilitating an emergency response." HART hubs to open Tuesday The province announced in August 2024 it would close consumption and treatment sites it deemed were too close to schools or daycares. The sites in Kitchener and Guelph will be replaced by HART hubs, with HART standing for homelessness and addiction recovery treatment. The biggest difference will be that drugs will not be allowed inside HART hubs. That means people cannot use or have drugs tested on site. In Kitchener, the HART Hub will be located at 44 Francis Street S. and will be operated by the organization Community Healthcaring Kitchener-Waterloo. It is still slated to open on Tuesday with provincial funding. It will offer services including mental health, addictions, transition beds and help with housing, identification and employment. In Guelph, the HART Hub will remain at the Guelph Community Health Centre, although staff say not all services will be available right away as the provincial funding is worked out. Kwiatkowski previously told CBC News services like crisis and withdrawal recovery beds and supportive housing units will be placed on hold for now. "I know how much we asked for, but we don't know how much we're getting," she said in an Interview with CBC News. "We can't spend money we don't have." In an email to CBC News, Ontario's Ministry of Health said it continues to work with HART Hub partners to collect information for their multi-year budgets. The Ontario government is investing $529 million to create a total of 27 hubs across the province. Nine of those hubs are expected to be open by Tuesday.


CBC
12-03-2025
- Health
- CBC
Funding delay means Guelph HART Hub won't be fully operational on time
CTS sites will be replaced by HART Hubs by next month 2 hours ago Duration 1:50 There are only about twenty days left until nine consumption and treatment services (CTS) locations are set to close across Ontario, including one in Kitchener and one in Guelph. Those facilities will be replaced by Homelessness and Addictions Recovery Treatment — or HART — Hubs. Melissa Kwiatkowski is the CEO of the Guelph Community Health Centre, which is the home of the new HART Hub in Guelph. She spoke to CBC's Aastha Shetty about winding down CTS services in the city. As the consumption and treatment services (CTS) site winds down in Guelph, the service set to replace it will not be fully operational in time. Instead, the Homelessness and Addiction Recovery Treatment (HART) Hub will only offer a portion of its services, while the new and more pricey services like crisis and withdrawal recovery beds and supportive housing units will be placed on hold. Melissa Kwiatkowski is the CEO of Guelph Community Health Centre (GCHC), the organization who will run the HART Hub. She said the delay is because the provincial government still hasn't sent a funding agreement. "I know how much we asked for, but we don't know how much we're getting," she said in an Interview with CBC News. "We can't spend money we don't have." While Guelph's HART Hub will still provide wrap-around health and support services starting April 1, Kwiatkowski said, "the delay in getting confirmation of funding definitely impacts our timing on when we can have services up and running." In an email to CBC News, Ontario's Ministry of Health said they continue to work with HART Hub partners to collect information for their multi-year budgets. "The first round of funding has been approved by the Ministry and will be received by the sites early next week," the email said. The Ontario government is investing $378 million to create a total of 19 hubs across the province. By March 31, it's expected that there will be nine HART hubs, located in Guelph, Hamilton, Thunder Bay, Ottawa, Kitchener and four in Toronto. Transition away from supervised consumption HART Hubs are replacements for any CTS site in Ontario located within 200 metres of a school or daycare, as mandated by the provincial government last year. The main difference between the two services is that while CTS provides a space for clients to bring and use outside drugs while under supervision by health and support professionals, HART Hubs prohibit the use of drugs. Instead, HART Hubs provide beds for people in crisis or experiencing withdrawal as well as supportive housing units. Kwiatkowski said these new services are a welcome addition and essential to the recovery process, but "HART Hub services are not a replacement for supervised consumption." "We need to be adding more services to the care continuum, not taking them away," she said, adding that "for many people, supervised consumption services are a very, very low barrier entry point into the broader system of more health supports." Through the CTS location Kwiatkowski's GCHC has operated over the past five years, and she said more than 1,000 people have been connected to primary care. "Those people wouldn't have gotten access to primary care if they hadn't come through CTS," she said. "That door is going to be closing for people." To account for the transition from CTS to the HART Hub model at the downtown Guelph GCHC, supervised consumption hours are being slowly reduced for the remainder of the month. Kwiatkowski said she's telling clients about the change in service, but if they show up on April 1 they can expect to see the same staff present, even if all the same services aren't being offered. HART Hub in Kitchener In an email to CBC News, Community Healthcaring Kitchener-Waterloo, operators of Kitchener's future HART Hub location, CEO Tara Groves-Taylor said they're in communication with the Ministry of Health and expect to receive their funding agreement shortly. "The HART Hub of Waterloo Region will open April 1, 2025, with scaled services available, and will transition to the full model of Hart Hub programs and services over several months," said Groves-Taylor.


Chicago Tribune
19-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Chicago Tribune
For Polish post-punk band Trupa Trupa, coming to Empty Bottle, the atrocities of the past aren't in the past
In 2018, Trupa Trupa was 15 minutes from taking the stage at the venerable South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, when singer and guitarist Grzegorz Kwiatkowski's amp burned out. His frantic search for a replacement ate up 10 minutes of the psychedelic post-punk band's 30-minute slot. Most bands would have sighed and shaved a few numbers off their setlist. Trupa Trupa? They blasted through the entire set as originally planned at double speed. 'Hello we are Trupa Trupa we are from the city of Gdańsk, Poland, where the Second World War started so … come on!' Kwiatkowski remembers yelling before diving into the set. No matter how crunched for time, Trupa Trupa — Kwiatkowski, fellow singer-guitarist Wojtek Juchniewicz, and drummer Tomek Pawluczuk — will always acknowledge their history. Trupa Trupa plays at the Empty Bottle on Feb. 25 to commemorate their just-released EP, 'Mourners.' The title track begins with pummeling percussion, then a primal cry from Juchniewicz. From there, he and Kwiatkowski trade off slightly altered verses: Kwiatkowski sings to 'let the mourners come,' inspired by a line from W.H. Auden's 'Funeral Blues' ('Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come'), while Juchniewicz sings to 'let the mourners go.' The song captures what Trupa Trupa is all about in three tight minutes. The trio's lyrics are mantric, minimal, haunting. They sing the vast majority of their songs in English, a nod to influences such as Fugazi, Sonic Youth, The Beatles and the Velvet Underground. (Another song off 'Mourners' is even titled 'Sister Ray' in tribute to the Velvets.) Trupa Trupa's lyrics tend to be wide-open, but one — or several — readings are, invariably, political. 'I wanna eat all my uniforms,' Kwiatkowski sings in a song off 2022's 'B FLAT A.' Only those listening closely will notice the refrain subtly change: 'I wanna be all my uniforms.' 'The songs of Trupa Trupa are always very paradoxical,' Kwiatkowski tells me on a video call from Gdańsk. 'You can think that maybe I am right, or maybe he is right. Usually, things are very complex. Things are not black and white — never, ever.' Above all, Trupa Trupa dwells on the painful work of memory — and Kwiatkowski insists that remembering is work. The grandson of a Polish prisoner of war who married into a Jewish family, Kwiatkowski, 40, grapples with World War II's long shadow across all facets of his life. He's a published poet, with a residency at Yale University; he names Edgar Lee Masters' 'Spoon River Anthology,' a cycle of short free verse poems documenting the residents of a fictional Illinois town, as a major influence. Kwiatkowski writes his own aphoristic, bluntly matter-of-fact poetry on a Nokia flip phone, so that each word, each letter, is painstakingly chosen. Take this poem from his soon-to-be-published collection 'Without an Orchestra,' translated into English by Peter Constantine: they killed eighty-year-old Chana Lerner because she was too old and Manya Fininberg's one-month baby because she was too young '(My work) is not about the past: It's about human beings, and the eternal possibility to make evil,' Kwiatkowski says. When he's not writing poetry or music about those evils, Kwiatkowski is fighting them in his native Gdańsk. He successfully urged the city to better recognize the sites of war crimes, including installing Stolpersteine ('stumbling stones,' or pavement plaques commemorating the former homes of people annihilated in the Holocaust). His day job is at a do-good social institute for metro area residents, founded by former Gdańsk mayor Paweł Adamowicz. An outspoken supporter of LGBTQ and immigrant rights and one-time organizer in the Solidarność trade union movement, Adamowicz was assassinated in 2019. After being invited back to South by Southwest, Trupa Trupa dedicated its performance at that year's festival to Adamowicz's memory. I first learned about Kwiatkowski — and, by extension, Trupa Trupa — through his semi-regular emails to journalists. Written in sparse, staggeringly candid English, Kwiatkowski's missives take after both the band's lyrics and Constantine's translations of his own poetry. Since Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, they have all begun the same way: Greetings from the free city of Gdańsk. Kwiatkowski opened his most recent email to journalists, on Feb. 15, in the usual way. It continued, each sentence on its own line: 'I've written these words so many times. I've begun so many letters with them. And now, I believe in them more than ever. In this idea of freedom. In this necessity of freedom. Because we have just entered a new era of fascism. And, unfortunately, I am quite sure I am not exaggerating …' Despite breathless critical praise in the West — including from former Tribune critic Greg Kot, who listed Trupa Trupa's South by Southwest concert among his top concerts of 2018 — Trupa Trupa's members maintain they've been met with comparative indifference at home in Poland. Kwiatkowski believes Poland's dominant culture remains homo sovieticus, particularly in the face of resurgent fascism and historical denialism. 'You should be humble; you shouldn't be proud of yourself. You shouldn't smile at each other on the street; you shouldn't say hello,' he says. 'People were affected by the history, by the system. In my opinion, more or less, we are all victims. 'But I'm like a glitch in the system. I was always not like that.' In the case of the Museum Stutthof — commemorating the concentration camp east of Gdańsk, where some 65,000 people died and Kwiatkowski's grandfather was once incarcerated — he claims he's even been met with annoyance. The museum keeps a glass display case containing several thousand shoes, most of them belonging to murdered Jewish prisoners. But during a walk in the woods outside the museum in 2015, Kwiatkowski found more rotting shoes — in fact, mountains and mountains of them. Since then, prominent Jewish and human rights groups have joined him in petitioning the museum to inter the shoes and post commemorative signage. But in 2018, the Polish government made acknowledging Poland's cooperation in the Holocaust illegal, and Kwiatkowski claims the museum has not yet made good on its agreement to secure more of the shoes and mark the area. As recently as last month, a stroll through the woods with a BBC reporter turned up more decaying soles. The first he picked up belonged to a child. 'A lot of people told me, 'You're wasting your time; the time of the big wars and atrocities, it's finished.'' From 4,500 miles away, Kwiatkowski looks very tired. 'Unfortunately, they weren't right.'