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First came the apartment. Then he got clean. Now he’s giving back

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The first time Colin Beaudry was arrested, he was just 13 years old. Now,┬аat 47, Beaudry is finally breaking a cycle of addiction, incarceration and homelessness тАФ a change he hopes will inspire others.

Beaudry┬аnow lives alone┬аin an apartment he finally secured in April┬аafter a year of living on the street. He even has a cat┬аnamed Kit Kat.

“Maybe I’ll give someone else hope, too,” said Beaudry┬аas he sat at┬аa picnic table in Dundonald Park in Ottawa’s Centretown neighbourhood.

“If they see that someone else could make it, that was in the same shoes as them тАФ not a lot of people make it out of where we are тАФ maybe it’ll show someone else that you can do it.”

Beaudry is tall and lanky with shoulder-length brown hair. He speaks quietly and smiles subtly.

He┬аsays he was bullied in school┬аand it’s┬аwhy he┬аstarted lashing out. Before he turned 12, Beaudry moved into┬аresidential care at┬аSudbury’s Algoma┬аHospital, now part of Health Sciences North.

All I needed was a set place that was┬аsafe for me. I don’t have to be around anybody if I don’t want to. It just makes it a lot easier to to be off drugs that way.– Colin Beaudry

At the time of his first arrest, Beaudry was living at a group home in Sudbury, Ont. During one summer, staff took the kids to┬аa camp┬аand┬аBeaudry used the┬аopportunity to break into nearby cottages and steal alcohol. That event marked the beginning of many years spent in and out of jail┬аfor offences mostly related to breaking and entering.

“I was┬аhooked on drugs. I┬аhad to support a habit, so you do crime to┬аget the drugs you need,” he said.

Beaudry also served┬аthree separate federal sentences,┬аspending four years behind bars for the last one.┬аAt that point, being on the inside was easier than being out, said Beaudry.

“I feel more comfortable inside because it’s where you spend all your life,” he said.┬а“It’s easier in there for me than it is out here on the street. I find it difficult sometime because I feel like I can’t relate to people.”┬а

Beaudry has enrolled in an addictions and community service worker program at Willis College. He hopes to graduate in the spring. (Rebecca Zandbergen/CBC)

Tragedy delivers another blow

When Beaudry┬аwas┬аreleased┬аfrom prison in 2012, he worked on himself, he said. He met a woman and two years later they had a baby named Autumn Wendy.

Sadly,┬аAutumn┬аdied at seven weeks after contracting group B streptococcus, which turned into pneumonia. She died from sepsis, Beaudry said. Two years later the couple broke up.

“It led me back to being on the street again,” he said.

In 2020, Beaudry moved to Ottawa and met Shawna Thibodeau, a woman who had escaped abuse in 2008 and fled to Ottawa to begin a new life.

“When I got here with my child I needed help, just like many of us do,” Thibodeau said.

Once she was back on her feet, Thibodeau started volunteering with different service agencies and began distributing bags of toiletries and┬аsnacks to vulnerable people, including Beaudry. By 2023 he was homeless, living on the street and sometimes sleeping at the Ottawa Mission.

“It wasn’t very good … it’s always full there. Hard to get┬аto bed and stuff,” Beaudry said of the downtown shelter. Beating a drug┬аaddiction is nearly impossible when you don’t have a safe and private place to live, he said.

“When you’re homeless, it’s always around you and it’s hard to get away from it,” said Beaudry.┬а“So you end up using. It’s always in front of you.”

Eventually,┬аBeaudry ended up in the Mission’s┬аlive-in treatment program, which doesn’t require clients to be abstinent. That kick-started his road to recovery, he said.

“You can stay in your room all day if you want, so that kind of helped me out till I got my place,” said Beaudry.

A woman looks into the camera in the foreground. Behind her a man also looks into the camera.
After escaping an abusive partner, Shawna Thibodeau began helping people who live on the streets of Ottawa. (Rebecca Zandbergen/CBC)

It took getting a home to get clean

This past April, with the help of a Canadian Mental Health Association┬аworker, Beaudry was offered an apartment, paid for monthly through the Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP). Today, for the most part, he’s clean, he said.

“All I needed was a set place that was┬аsafe for me,” he said.┬а“I don’t have to be around anybody if I don’t want to. It just makes it a lot easier to be off drugs that way.”

It’s a sentiment┬аhousing advocates┬аhave long echoed.

“In order for you to get clean, in order for you to get your life back together,┬аyou need a house first, you need a base,” said┬аAustin Ward, who is M├йtis from Manitoba and a housing specialist with Options Housing, a non-profit that runs supportive housing in Ottawa.┬а

A man holding a feather looks into the camera
Austin Ward is with Options Housing and helps people experiencing homelessness find places to live. He is M├йtis from Manitoba and visits Dundonald Park every Tuesday to meet with people in a sharing circle. (Rebecca Zandbergen/CBC)

Though Beaudry isn’t currently working, he hopes to. He’s enrolled in the one-year addictions community services worker program online at Willis College, a private career college. He hopes to graduate in the spring.

“I figured I want to help out, too┬атАФ┬аmaybe help someone like me that┬аwas addicted before,” said Beaudry. He also recently reached out to Thibodeau┬аto see if he could help her distribute her bags.

“It’s like a proud mama bird and your bird just flew from the nest,” said Thibodeau.┬а“I bawled my eyeballs out. It’s a wonderful story.”

“I feel good, pretty┬аmuch,┬аday to day,” said Beaudry.┬а“Not every day is peaches and cream, whatever, but I’ll make it through.”

Ottawa Morning8:01First came the apartment. Then he got clean. Now he’s giving back

Colin Beaudry, 47, lived on Ottawa’s streets for a year before finally finding a home.

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