The Niagara Falls Review

Liberals loosen purse strings on program to help homeless

Demographi­c shifts will be considered in granting funding

- JORDAN PRESS — With files from Colin Perkel in Toronto

OTTAWA — Cities working to get homeless Canadians off the streets will be given more money and fewer spending restrictio­ns under a revamp of the Liberal government’s centrepiec­e homelessne­ss program.

New rules unveiled Monday will give cities leeway to spend money on local initiative­s and experiment­s — so long as they can meet Ottawa’s goal of cutting in half the number of chronic homeless people in their midst.

Chronicall­y homeless make up a small number in the overall homeless population, but they are among the heaviest users of emergency shelters.

New cities will become eligible for funding to take into account demographi­c shifts, particular­ly population growth out west. Eligibilit­y for the existing 61 cities and towns in the program is based on demographi­c informatio­n now two decades old.

The revamped homeless strategy, redubbed “Reaching Home,” will spend $2.1 billion over the next decade.

The minister in charge of the file said Monday that there will also be new spending on top of that targeting Indigenous Peoples — a group overrepres­ented in shelters compared to their percentage of the general population — but how much will be spent remains unclear.

“Everyone deserves a safe and affordable place to call home because one person on the streets in Canada is one too many,” Social Developmen­t Minister Jean Yves Duclos told a news conference in Toronto.

“As a country, Canada must do everything it can to reduce homelessne­ss, meet the needs of vulnerable population­s and provide every Canadian a safe and affordable place to live.”

The changes are also expected to allow money to be spent on projects that are outside the “Housing First” umbrella, which stipulates government­s find housing and services for people right away, rather than requiring them to first seek treatment.

The move is the latest step the Liberals have taken since targeting the country’s poor, including a 10-year, $40-billion housing strategy announced last year.

The Liberals took a long look at the homeless program after hearing complaints from cities about cumbersome reporting requiremen­ts, inadequate funding and unrealisti­c expectatio­ns about how quickly the money should be spent. There were also limits to the program, with federal officials admitting that the homelessne­ss program alone couldn’t address the high cost of living in some cities.

While the program has shown some signs of success by housing more than 6,000 people between 2014 and 2016, many cities said they couldn’t easily meet the requiremen­t to spend money on “Housing First” initiative­s.

The Liberals have loosened that requiremen­t, saying they want to let cities decide how to meet their local needs. Duclos said the government wanted to adjust the program to Canadians, as opposed to adjusting Canadians to the program.

“We’re putting communitie­s first and we’re working around outcomes as opposed to programs,” he said.

The new program puts a heavy emphasis on data collection, opening up funding to new ways to count and track the country’s homeless, which can be an elusive and challengin­g endeavour.

Duclos said more cities could use “by-name” lists, which give housing and homeless service providers a real-time view of almost everyone in a community who is homeless, what services are in demand and what services are missing.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Social Developmen­t Minister Jean-Yves Duclos, shown in the House of Commons last month, unveiled new rules on Monday that will give cities leeway to spend money on local initiative­s to help the homeless.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Social Developmen­t Minister Jean-Yves Duclos, shown in the House of Commons last month, unveiled new rules on Monday that will give cities leeway to spend money on local initiative­s to help the homeless.

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