Informal event creates discussions surrounding toxic drug crisis
PRINCE GEORGE – Soonats’ooneh, formally the Central Interior Native Health Society, held an informal event Friday morning bringing community leaders and organizations together with people who have lived experience with poverty and addictions. The “Pancakes with Peers” event created a space for open and free discussion, where the peers with lived experience could speak directly with small groups of people.
“We wanted to be able to have it more as a conversation, like sitting down in a comfortable spot, just getting to know one another rather than something very formal where people are up on a stage where it might be a little overwhelming. Sometimes when people are on the spot conversations just don’t usually always flow that way, so we wanted to really break down those barriers and bring people together,” said Emily Christensen-Sweeney, Soonats’ooneh’s Community Action Team Coordinator.
“It’s easier to talk to people, and food always brings people together and it always makes people a lot more calm and easier to talk to,” said Antonia Prince, one of the peers with lived experience.
