‘Start expecting a war’: Enraged Medicine Hat residents share frustrations over Mustard Seed
Medicine Hat residents enraged by the impact that vulnerable people using The Mustard Seed’s services is having in their neighbourhood expressed their frustration on Wednesday over what they see is poor decision-making and inaction on the part of the non-profit and local elected leaders.
The non-profit in the Flats area operates an overnight shelter, serves free meals and runs a variety of programs aimed at providing care to those who need it most.
In the past six months, people who live or work near the organization’s two sites have become increasingly frustrated by rampant theft, illicit drug use and even sexual acts, and felt unheard by the representatives of the City of Medicine Hat and the Alberta government.
Emotions already at a boiling point spilled over in a town hall at the Medicine Hat Public Library that saw Hatters, often with visible anger, raise long-held concerns with Mustard Seed CEO James Gardiner.