Truro News

An affordable place to call home

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When Dorothy wanted to leave the Land of Oz and return to the comfort and safety of home, all it took was a phrase – “there’s no place like home” – and three clicks of her ruby slippers. If only it were that easy for everyone else. For far too many Canadians there’s no magic that can transport them to such a home.

A place to live is one of our most basic needs. But nding appropriat­e housing, at a price they can afford, is one of the biggest challenges in communitie­s right across the country.

Twenty- ve thousand Canadians are chronicall­y homeless and 1.7 million more live precarious­ly in homes that are woefully inadequate or completely unaffordab­le, according to the national housing strategy. And the challenges for Canadians who don’t just need a decent, affordable roof over their head but also some supports to live healthy, independen­t lives are even greater.

at’s why the Trudeau government’s housing strategy, released in November, targets at least 2,400 new units specifical­ly for people with a developmen­tal disability. at’s far less than the total need, of course, but identifyin­g the need within this vulnerable group is an important start.

The question now is how to bridge the gap between identifyin­g the need and meeting it in a way that creates good community-integrated housing. And sustainabl­e over the long term.

Happily, there’s an innovative, working example of how some of this need can be met.

Field of Dreams, located in Elmira, Ont., gives people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es the opportunit­y to live independen­tly in their own homes. at’s far better than the institutio­ns they were once shut away in and the group homes with full-time oversight that have largely replaced those institutio­ns.

Their independen­t living is assisted by tenants in the same small apartment complexes who take on the role of “good neighbours.” ey’re on hand to provide a little help when needed in exchange for more affordable rent. It’s one of those all too rare win-win scenarios. A seven-unit apartment building provides four to ve homes for tenants with developmen­tal disabiliti­es and two to three homes for good neighbours. It’s a creative response that provides for a series of needs. Crucially, it fosters independen­t living and maximizes abilities. at’s something many Canadians with a developmen­tal disability have long and shamefully been denied.

And the enhanced social network in these buildings is far from a one-way street.

In the beginning, the innovator behind the Field of Dreams homes, Greg Bechard, expected the good neighbours would be the ones always providing the support and the other tenants the ones who were always in need of it. Turns out, that’s not how it goes. “It’s interestin­g,” he says, “how that has changed and the relationsh­ips are reciprocal.”

at is the very essence of any healthy community. If all that weren’t reason enough to celebrate this model, there’s a nal factor. It’s low cost. is type of mixed housing operates for a fraction of what it takes to keep a traditiona­l government­funded group home going.

A group home for a handful of residents with 24-hour staffing can easily run to $400,000 or more per year. is mixed housing model costs just $45,000 to $60,000 a year – and that’s paid entirely through rent revenues.

Canada’s national housing strategy is a 10-year, $40-billion plan to reduce chronic homelessne­ss by half and give half a million more Canadians a decent place to call home. It’s desperatel­y needed. It will build new affordable housing, renovate existing stock, and eventually provide a housing bene t to help families pay the rent. As big a number as $40 billion sounds, inevitably it won’t go far enough.

Creative, community-led housing models like Field of Dreams help ensure that the money goes as far as it can. And, just as importantl­y, that the housing is something Canadians can be proud of far into the future.

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