The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Vulnerable women end up on the street or behind bars

- ASHLEY AVERY EMMA HALPERN Ashley Avery is executive director of Coverdale Courtwork Society. Emma Halpern is executive director and regional advocate — Atlantic, of the Elizabeth Fry Society of Mainland Nova Scotia.

Together, our organizati­ons have offered countless solutions to this crisis and have been turned away and ignored at every turn.

National Housing Day (Nov. 22) has come and gone, and where are the most vulnerable women? Locked up in cages because they are homeless.

Currently women in our community are silently suffering. These women are warehoused in crowded jails with no access to visitors, programmin­g, supports or community resources.

Most have complex mental and physical health issues and histories of trauma and addiction. Many are there because they have no fixed address and the majority of them are Black or Indigenous.

In Nova Scotia, we imprison people who are presumed innocent at alarming rates. Black and Indigenous Peoples, specifical­ly women, are over-represente­d in these figures, which increased by 192 per cent in a 10-year period. These are some of the consequenc­es of a racist justice system, which the premier acknowledg­ed, and the outcomes of historic and present-day systems of colonialis­m, sexism and prejudice.

When COVID-19 hit, Nova Scotia’s provincial prisoner population was reduced by 41 per cent between February and April — more than any other province. This was due to the extraordin­ary efforts of people from the courts, correction­s and community who came together to protect this highly at-risk population.

When people leave jail, they need housing, health care and income. Our community wasn’t equipped for these prompt releases, and nonprofit organizati­ons scrambled to quickly mobilize resources.

With support from the Affordable Housing Associatio­n of Nova Scotia, temporary hotel spaces and 24-7 staffing was made available through a collaborat­ion between Coverdale, The Elizabeth Fry Society of Mainland Nova Scotia, and The John Howard Society of Nova Scotia. The United Way Halifax also stepped up to fund this work. Although highly successful, with few breaches of bail conditions, it was ultimately shut down when money ran out. The initiative provided services to 55 people and the women’s unit at the jail was down to just seven prisoners.

Now all of that work has been undone.

We are in a homelessne­ss crisis. Of the 477 actively homeless people in Halifax, 241 are women and non-binary. This is a record for women experienci­ng homelessne­ss here. Again, Black and Indigenous people are over-represente­d (59 per cent and 71 per cent respective­ly).

We stand in solidarity with shelter providers who are pleading with this province to respond immediatel­y to the housing and homelessne­ss crisis. There is a close relationsh­ip between homelessne­ss and criminaliz­ation. People who do not have safe, secure, affordable shelter are more likely to interact with state systems. With shelters at capacity, the jail ends up housing vulnerable people by default.

As we enter a second wave of COVID-19, calls to “stay home,” maintain healthy habits and socialdist­ance, are voiced by health experts. These directives assume that everyone has autonomy over their choices. They presume that our options are uniform. These orders do not reflect the realities of those experienci­ng homelessne­ss or locked away in jail, where social distancing and adequate hygiene are impossible.

Because of a lack of housing, women are released to sit in 24hour fast food restaurant­s, return to abusive homes and sleep outside. Others are seen as a public safety risk because of their homelessne­ss and denied release.

Because of court backlogs due to COVID-19, it could be months before their matters are heard.

These women are the most neglected, most forgotten, most stigmatize­d and most marginaliz­ed in our communitie­s. Even the federal definition of homelessne­ss, that governs the provision of supports for homeless individual­s, doesn’t recognize jail as a period of “homelessne­ss,” thereby further limiting access to resources for this population.

Without resources for housing and community support, it’s no wonder that as we move into the second wave of the pandemic, jails are again filling up.

The only COVID-19 strategy to address overcrowdi­ng in jails is ankle monitoring, a practice that requires a fixed address. Some people with ankle monitors are living in emergency shelters. This is a tragic misuse of the shelter system. This “solution” will not address the root cause of criminaliz­ation and will not assist in the release and support of the most vulnerable women who do not meet the basic condition for release — an address.

Together, our organizati­ons have offered countless solutions to this crisis and have been turned away and ignored at every turn. We have collective­ly submitted four proposals for supportive, transition­al housing for this vulnerable population — housing that would keep women out of jails long-term — and been denied. We have cobbled together our resources to do whatever we can to minimize harm and respond. But the resources in our small organizati­ons are dwindling fast.

We need community-based alternativ­es to remand. These women are currently imprisoned in provincial jails awaiting court dates without having been convicted of a crime.

It’s time to bring our most marginaliz­ed community members home and give them resources, respect and dignity.

They deserve better. We can do better. The time is now.

To learn more, please visit www. efrymns.ca or www.coverdale.ca.

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