Waterloo Region Record

Can $11 billion end homelessne­ss in Canada? It’s a good start

- Jino Distasio Jino Distasio is an expert adviser with EvidenceNe­twork.ca, an associate professor of Geography at the University of Winnipeg and director of the Institute of Urban Studies. Distribute­d by Troy Media

We’ve grown accustomed to seeing homeless people walk among us in countless North American cities. They’re often in the shadows, and often show visible signs of duress from addiction, mental illness or basic hopelessne­ss. We’ve become desensitiz­ed to their experience­s.

Many cities in Europe and Australia share North America’s inability to address chronic homelessne­ss through policy, programs or funding that offer long-term solutions to improve well-being and improve housing stability. But change is possible. The federal government’s Budget 2017 earmarked a whopping $11 billion for housing and homelessne­ss across Canada. This will have a big impact. However, these funds must not only build affordable housing. They must align with existing poverty reduction strategies, and mental health and recovery initiative­s, if we’re to truly reduce longterm homelessne­ss.

Meaningful impact requires funding a broad range of supports to ensure fewer Canadians are among the estimated 35,000 who have no place to call home on any given night. Perhaps this historic funding and the pending release of the National Housing Strategy (NHS) give reason for hope.

There’s little doubt this federal investment will change lives simply by reinvestin­g in a depleted affordable housing stock that, from a national standpoint, has had little attention since the 1990s. In the same period, Canada’s homeless population increased rapidly in cities that failed to address the root causes of poverty So why are we slow to end homelessne­ss?

We’ve done a good job with new policies and organizati­ons tasked with ending homelessne­ss in Canada — but strongly-worded plans have often been weakly supported with money and resources.

The erosion of the welfare state, austerity measures, deinstitut­ionalizati­on, increased globalizat­ion, and the growing wage gap that so profoundly skewed income inequality in Canada have all increased homelessne­ss and poverty in our country.

Indigenous Canadians also remain disproport­ionally represente­d among the homeless population. We know that the impacts of colonizati­on, residentia­l schools, and interactio­ns with child and family services have greatly influenced the circumstan­ces of indigenous communitie­s. These are deep wounds. Let’s acknowledg­e that the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission provided “the calls to action to advance reconcilia­tion in Canada.” So where do we go from here? The budgeted $11 billion can go a long way toward healing the lives of those most in need in Canada. With these funds and a strong National Housing Strategy, we can make change happen.

Let’s not allow the global political shift toward austerity to derail our efforts to be forward thinking and caring.

We have evidence and no lack of effort. So let’s use this investment for housing and to improve health, end poverty and put us on the path to reconcilia­tion.

Let’s end homelessne­ss, one Canadian at a time.

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