The Daily Courier

Working together to address homelessne­ss

- STEPHEN FUHR

As our communitie­s grow and change, so do the challenges. Homelessne­ss, which has a social and economic impact on every community in Canada, remains one of the most urgent.

Recently, I received a copy of Journey Home, the City of Kelowna’s strategy to address homelessne­ss. The report provides a five-year framework that will ensure a coordinate­d and accessible system of care for those in Kelowna who have lost, or are at risk of losing their home.

As noted in the report, Kelowna is home to many excellent services run by dedicated people and is a community ready and willing to collaborat­e to be effective.

I want to commend the City of Kelowna and all those who contribute­d to this comprehens­ive and well thought-out plan.

From the outset, our federal government has recognized the strain on communitie­s to maintain safe, stable and affordable housing and to end homelessne­ss.

In response, our government created Canada’s first-ever National Housing Strategy—a 10-year $40-billion plan to lift hundreds and thousands of Canadians out of housing need.

The federal government has also responded with a redesigned homelessne­ss strategy, Reaching Home, which will double support for communitie­s to address the needs of those experienci­ng or at risk of experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

Throughout the engagement process, the government heard that the greatest asset of the current homelessne­ss strategy is that it is a community-based program.

Building on the successful adoption of Housing First as a best practice, decision making will remain at the local level.

This will give communitie­s greater flexibilit­y to address local priorities, including using programmin­g designed to meet the needs of different vulnerable population­s including youth, women and children fleeing violence, seniors , indigenous communitie­s and veterans.

With Journey Home supporting local strategies and Reaching Home giving communitie­s greater fiscal resources and more programmin­g flexibilit­y, our communitie­s are now better equipped to provide independen­t and permanent housing to those who need it most.

We have arrived at a place where all three levels of government agree on the magnitude of this problem and we will now work together to take the steps required to drive better outcomes on homelessne­ss in our community.

For my part, I will continue to work directly with our government to ensure our community has access to the funding and support it needs to reduce the risk of homelessne­ss, help our most vulnerable citizens, and achieve our shared goal of building a more equal society for everyone.

Stephen Fuhr is the Member of Parliament for Kelowna-Lake Country and the Chair of the Standing Committee on National Defence.

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