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Your Selkirk Avenue 55-plus building isn't feeling safe

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Your 55-plus Selkirk building isn't feeling safe

Morning from the Interlake — here's what's happening in Selkirk today.

You know, sometimes you hear a story and you just think, "This is not right." That's how I feel about what's happening at the 55-plus social housing complex on Selkirk Avenue. Residents there, folks who've likely called that place home for years, are now saying they don't feel safe. It’s all tied back to issues that started when the building began housing tenants who previously experienced homelessness. It's creating a real tension, and it's something we need to talk about openly here in Selkirk.

### What This Means for Selkirk

This isn't just about one building; it touches on bigger questions for our city. We’re a community that looks out for its own, but we also value our independence and the quiet strength of our neighborhoods. This situation really highlights the challenges of balancing compassion with the need for security in our established communities.

* **Safety Concerns:** Residents are reporting things like unauthorized individuals in the building, substance use, and general disruptive behaviour that has them on edge. They moved into a 55-plus building expecting a certain kind of peace, and that's been shaken.

* **Deteriorating Conditions:** Beyond safety, the living conditions themselves are reportedly slipping, which is unacceptable for any resident, especially seniors.

* **Community Identity:** Selkirk has always been a place where people know their neighbours. When a situation like this arises on a main street like Selkirk Avenue, it impacts how folks feel about the heart of our city.

This isn't an easy conversation, and it’s not about turning away anyone who needs help. But it *is* about making sure our seniors, who've built up this community, feel secure in their homes. We need to find solutions that support everyone while maintaining the integrity and safety of our existing residential spaces. This isn't Winnipeg; we have our own way of doing things, and that includes ensuring respectful living for all our citizens, especially those who've chosen to spend their later years here in Selkirk.

The guys on the morning show dive into these tough topics every day – catch them live at mornings.live.

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The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →