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Barrie Out Of The Cold
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Hospitality and Compassion -
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Boston Pizza

Wanting to Volunteer?

This season, we’ve received many applications for our 5 -8 pm shift and are currently assigning these applicants to vacancies.

If this is the only shift you can do, please submit your application understanding that we may not have a team position for you this season. Please indicate on your application if you are interested in being placed as a spare volunteer for the 2011/12 season.

Volunteers on our spares list are given the first option when new vacancies on the 5-8pm shift occur.

Men are urgently needed for all four shifts.

Women are needed for the 8 -11 p.m., overnight and early morning shifts.
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About Barrie Out Of The Cold

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Our Mission: Barrie Out of the Cold provides safe, respectful and welcoming overnight accommodation and meals to the homeless from November to April.

The Barrie Out of the Cold program (B.O.O.T.C) aims to provide an alternative to sleeping out in the cold. The program originated in downtown Toronto.

In 1986 a homeless man named George died on the street. The knowledge that someone could die of cold on a street in Toronto brought people together to take action. Sister Susan Moran, Father John Murphy, and Rev. Canon John Erb, with the help of St. Michael's High School, made arrangements to provide for a location, food and volunteers for the homeless. A small storefront on St. Clair Ave. was opened on January 15, 1987. From this humble beginning the Out Of The Cold program has spread throughout Toronto and many other cities across Canada.

In January 1998 St. Andrew's church in Barrie, Ontario, responded to the same needs and was the first Barrie church to open its' doors to BOOTC. Two other churches, Collier St. United and Central United, joined the program shortly after, in November 1998. Hi Way Pentecostal became a member church in 2000 followed by St. Mary's in 2001. In 2006, Hi Way Pentecostal was unable to continue with the program and Bethel Community Church then stepped in that year to provide the shelter on Tuesday nights. Since 2001 BOOTC has been able to provide shelter seven days a week during the coldest months of the year.

During it's season of operation, which runs from mid November to the end of April, BOOTC functions without a central office location. We rely completely on the generosity and hospitality of the six host churches to provide the facilities needed for providing meals and overnight accommodations for our guests.