CBC Edition

City looks to federal budget for millions to house, support asylum seekers

- Elyse Skura

The City of Ottawa is look‐ ing for $32.6 million from the federal government to build and operate a new welcoming centre, which would provide support to refugees and asylum seek‐ ers amid an unpreceden­ted strain on the city's shelter system.

It's near the top of Mayor Mark Sutcliffe's wishlist for Tuesday's federal budget, which also includes money for the city's cash-strapped public transit service and ail‐ ing downtown.

The city is facing chal‐ lenges in housing the rising number of people seeking asylum in Canada, Sutcliffe explained to reporters on Friday.

"We'd love to hear from the federal government on funding for a welcoming cen‐ tre for those individual­s who are arriving in the city," he said.

Staff outlined the cost of the new reception centre in a response to a councillor in‐ quiry attached to the agenda for next week's community services meeting.

The proposal suggests a fulsome series of "wraparound" supports, with a goal of diverting asylum seekers from the traditiona­l shelter system and transition­ing single asylum seekers into supportive, long-term hous‐ ing within six months.

The city has requested $12 million from Immigratio­n Refugee and Citizenshi­p Canada (IRCC) for capital costs, and another $20.6 mil‐ lion over two years to cover operations. But staff noted they're working on updates.

Long-term solutions needed, say advocates

Shelters have been over‐ flowing for months.

The issue gained wide‐ spread attention last year when the Ottawa Mission re‐ ported a surge that filled the shelter well beyond capacity, forcing many newcomers to spend their initial nights in Canada perched on plastic chairs or curled up on the floor of waiting areas.

The storm "continues to gather," according to CEO Pe‐ ter Tilley, who also told CBC's All in a Day his staff have never seen so many people sleeping on the streets.

"Everything ends up on the plate of the municipali‐ ties," said Tilley. "And that lower level of local govern‐ ment ends up scrambling to find short-term solutions when what we really need are long-term solutions com‐ ing from the other two levels of government."

Tilley would also like to see an end to different levels of government "punting" the political football, by eliminat‐ ing the difference in services provided to newcomers who don't have the same status.

IRCC differenti­ates be‐ tween asylum seekers and resettled refugees. Its web‐ site notes that asylum seek‐ ers are not eligible for federal settlement services, but may be able to access services funded by the province.

Provincial dollars on the line

Ottawa is far from the on‐ ly city to face a strain on re‐ sources that it could not predict.

Toronto has been promised $162 million of a $362 million top-up to the In‐ terim Housing Assistance Program (IHAP), which the city said still falls short of what it requires.

Ottawa city staff say they've submitted a $33.9 million applicatio­n through the program, of which it's re‐ ceived an interim advance payment of $5 million.

"Although this funding will help the City to address some of the funding shortfal‐ ls experience­d throughout 2023, it does not provide the vital, ongoing funding that is needed to support the longterm capital and operating requiremen­ts to house new‐ comers or migrants," the re‐ port reads.

It went on to say that it's "difficult to project" the total cost of providing short-term shelter and long-term hous‐ ing supports, but noted that adequately addressing re‐ quirements for newcomers will require ongoing funding from both the federal and provincial government­s.

When Premier Doug Ford visited Ottawa earlier this month, he announced up to $120 million dollars in sup‐ port for shelters and home‐ lessness over the next three years.

But the money is condi‐ tional.

City staff later told coun‐ cillors that unlocking the funds will require federal op‐ erating funding for refugee and asylum seekers of $80 million in 2024 and 2025.

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