Northern shelters seek bigger cut of funds
• Canada’s Far North is getting the short end of the stick on a major federal investment aimed at reducing gender-based violence, advocates say, because the money is being meted out based on the size of a region’s population, rather than need.
“When I go to meetings with shelters in southern Canada, I am hearing about all these shelters being built (or repaired) with the renovation money and I’m thinking, 'Holy cow! What happened to the North?”' said Lyda Fuller, executive director of the YWCA Yellowknife.
The Liberal government committed $89.9 million over two years in the 2016 budget for building or renovating shelters and transition houses for people escaping family violence. The investment was also highlighted in the recently launched federal genderbased violence strategy.
The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., through which the money flowed, split the money up among the provinces and territories, which were not required to match the funds.
But the money was divvied up according to the usual per-capita funding model, which means each share of the pie was determined according to the number of people who live there.
Ontario — home to about 14 million people — got about $28 million over the two-year period.
Meanwhile, each of the three territories, which have a total population of about 120,000, received just under $500,000 over two years.
Lise Martin, executive director of Women’s Shelters Canada, said the money was welcome, but the relatively small sums provided to the territories would make it difficult to build any shelters there, never mind maintain them.
“It’s more than needed, but it’s not going to have a huge impact on capacity in terms of creating new spaces,” she said.
Martin has been among those calling for a national action plan on gender-based violence, which would go farther than the federal strategy by ensuring equal access to comparable services, no matter where someone lives.
The northern territories have the highest rates of family violence in the country.
According to Statistics Canada, there was an average of 241 incidents of policereported family violence in Canada per 100,000 people in 2015.
Nunavut had the highest rate, with 2,504 per 100,000 people, followed by the Northwest Territories at 1,938 and Yukon at 731.
Ontario, at 150, had the lowest rate that year.
Jonathan Rotondo, a spokesman for the CMHC, said that as of March 31, the $60 million set aside for the first year of the investment had been used to create 325 new units or beds in shelters and transition houses across the entire country.
There were repairs or renovations impacting another 4,006 spaces.
The Northwest Territories Housing Corp. said its share of the money for fiscal 201617 amounted to $315,789, which the territorial government used to make “urgent repairs and renovations” to four of the five shelters in the territory.
Another $157,368 has been committed for this year.
That included renovations to reconfigure a surplus unit the territorial housing authority donated to one of the shelters after it realized the existing building was essentially beyond repair and would not last much longer.
NUNAVUT HAD THE HIGHEST RATE OF FAMILY VIOLENCE, AT TEN TIMES THE NATIONAL AVERAGE IN 2015.