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SANSU Surrey Area Network of Substance Users’ “Our House” Parody for Homelessness Action Week 2016
SANSU Surrey Area Network of Substance Users’ “Our House” Parody for Homelessness Action Week 2016
SANSU – Surrey Area Network of Substance Users’ homelessness awareness video is a parody of an old 80’s song. So many people think they are not going to end up homeless.
I was a former business owner used to making thousands of dollars a day found myself being homeless after I became a disabled single parent.
Don’t think it can’t happen to you! Even if you do have a well paying job, one day due to unforeseen circumstances you may find yourself homeless just like I did.
I wasn’t a drug user, nor did I drink excessively. I still found myself checking my young 6 yr old daughter and I into a homeless shelter.
Watching this video put me back into my past experiences with homelessness. The federal and provincial government must do something about it The provincial shelter rate has been stuck at $375 for over two decades.
Everything starts with a safe warm place to live.
If people think that ignoring the homeless will make them go away. Think again, homeless people cost society many times over what we would pay if we properly had good support and adequate housing for the homeless.
Homeless people use far more community services such as hospital care than a person that has a safe place to live.
If all this doesn’t concern you, at least think about the massive amount of taxes wasted needlessly on emergency services. Want to pay lower taxes?? Then write your politician (Local, Provincial and Federal) and tell them to do more to end homelessness!
Message in Video:
“Homelessness Sucks!
Can’t Afford Rent
So We Live
In A Tent
Most of us
Didn’t Choose
To Be Here!
Most of You
Are One
Cheque
Away
From Being
Homeless Too
SANSU Advocates
For Affordable
Solutions For All
Help Us
Help Ourselves
Come Spend A Night With Us!
Sooner or Later 🙂
Support SANSU’s Work!”
SANSUSurrey@gmail.com
SANSU Surrey Area Network of Substance Users meeting on Oct 1 2016
A meeting of SANSU – Surrey Area Network of Substance Users welcomed new members, shared stories, discussed the concerns of substance users – Fentanyl, W-18, Overdoses, homelessness in the neighbourhood, harm reduction outreach and created a parody music video for Homeless Action Week 2016

SANSU Surrey Area Network of Substance Users’ I Fly So High PARODY of Can’t Stop The Feeling by Justin Timberlake
SANSU – Surrey Area Network of Substance Users’ “I Fly So High” Parody Video of Can’t Stop The Feeling by Justin Timberlake
We all may have a friend or family member who is in danger of losing their lives even to one episode of experimental drug use.
Dealers are putting Fentanyl and other powerful opiates into what some may call soft drugs (marijuana) to make it more potent thus making the user addicted.
SANSU’s Justin Timberlake parody has a serious message for the Provincial Emergency on substance users dying from Fentanyl overdose.
Please Watch and Share!
They are not statistics; this video shows they are real people!
Message in Video:
SANSU
Surrey Area Network of Substance Users
“This is Not a Joke! We Are Dying.
Fentanyl, W-18
Naloxone Kits are becoming more and more Ineffective!
So we continue to dance and die!
Please support SANSU’s work”
SANSUSurrey@gmail.com
SANSU Surrey Area Network of Substance Users meeting on Aug 22 2016
A meeting of SANSU – Surrey Area Network of Substance Users welcomed new members, shared stories, discussed the concerns of substance users – Fentanyl, W-18, Overdoses, homelessness in the neighbourhood and created a parody music video!


SANSU -Surrey Area Network of Substance Users meeting on Jan 5, 2015
First meeting of SANSU – Surrey Area Network of Substance Users marked the beginning of an exciting start to a brand new year.
Agenda:
Introductions
Inline Filter System to aid inhalation users as harm reduction
Andrew Longhurst – SFU student researcher
Tent City
Education series with Mark Haden
How do we co-exist in our community with others?
Moment of Silence
What SANSU is trying to engage on many fronts;
Personal health
Social housing
Abstinence based recovery
Harm Reduction
Work with community stakeholders-reduce crime, reduce litter, and reduce or eliminate used needles
Bring a holistic approach to social change within a systemic problem
Engage human life
Nurture transitional life changes
Bring resource awareness


































































































































































































