A Maple Ridge senior who takes food and clothing to people on Vancouver鈥檚 Downtown East Side (DTES) had his truck, camper, and the trailer he uses for the job stolen this week.
The truck and a utility trailer with the words 鈥淛esus Loves You鈥 written on the side have since been found, with damage. The camper is still missing.
Ed Roy is an 88-year-old who feeds the homeless every week through a church-based sandwich ministry. Those who work with him see the crime as particularly malicious.
鈥淗e is an unsung hero who devotes all his time to helping the most vulnerable and needy,鈥 said volunteer Barbara Offerhaus. 鈥淲e prepare thousands of sandwiches every month, and [bring] clothing, blankets and coats.鈥
She said numerous local businesses donate to Roy鈥檚 cause on a regular basis. There are people on the streets who rely on him.
The vehicle, camper, and trailer were stolen on Saturday night from his home on 203rd Street in Maple Ridge, and Roy is asking people to be on the lookout for the camper. They were loaded with food, clothing, and toiletries for the homeless.
The truck has been found in Mission, and the trailer was left in South Bonson. It is owned by Burnett Church, and the message was mostly scratched off, but is still visible.
鈥淚鈥檝e got what I need to keep going,鈥 said Roy, although he is missing the camper and supplies inside.
Some are special items in the camper 鈥 requests. He had a pair of steel-toed boots for a DTES resident, who told him he needed work boots for a job, but couldn鈥檛 afford them.
There is a lot of damage to his 2003 Dodge diesel, including an ominous knocking in the front end, and there were weeds underneath that suggest some hard off-roading.
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Roy said the group has been supporting street people on the DTES for 29 years, and he joined them about 15 years ago.
He had retired from the Hammond Cedar Mill, just down the street from his house, then spent the next decade and a half as a snowbird, wintering in Arizona. That鈥檚 where he first found satisfaction in charity work.
He got involved locally as a volunteer sandwich maker with the Food and Clothing Ministry to the Needy. Once he saw their charity work up close up, on the streets of Vancouver, he had to help.
鈥淧eople come to you in the middle of the rain, shivering and shaking in a T-shirt, and they鈥檙e soaking wet, and they鈥檝e got no socks,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople should spend one day on Hastings Street, and they would see the need.鈥
Now he is the coordinator of the ministry, and works about four days a week. He picks up footwear at local shoe stores that leave boxes out for public donations, and makes the rounds to businesses like Cobs for day-old bread, and Starbucks for unsold sweets.
As his 90s loom, Roy鈥檚 only thought of quitting is 鈥淲hen I physically can鈥檛 do it anymore.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 something that needs to be done. People have to care.鈥
When his truck was stolen, the thought of giving it up flashed in his thoughts, 鈥渕aybe for a few seconds.鈥 Then he started to think about solutions.
He had praise for the Ridge Meadows RCMP, noting that after he reported his vehicle and trailer missing, it was only a matter of hours before they had located them. Officers even stayed with the trailer until he could retrieve it.
鈥淭he police did a fantastic job. Kudos to the RCMP,鈥 he said.
If anyone has information regarding the missing camper, they are asked to call the Ridge Meadows RCMP at 604-463-6251.
Anyone with donations for the ministry can call Roy at 604-465-4339.
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