The Province

Feds to spend $1B on homelessne­ss battle

Liberals say money for cities, housing providers will create 3,000 new affordable housing units

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The federal Liberals plan to spend $1 billion over the next six months so cities and housing providers can buy properties being sold because of the COVID-19 pandemic and use them to keep people from becoming homeless.

The details of the program unveiled Monday fill what was seen as a gap in the Liberals' decade-long national housing strategy.

The Liberals say the program will create 3,000 new affordable housing units across Canada, and want all the funds committed by the end of March 2021, when the federal fiscal year finishes.

Municipali­ties, provinces, territorie­s, Indigenous governing bodies and agencies as well as non-profit organizati­ons can tap into the money that for now appears to be a one-time program.

Social Developmen­t Minister Ahmed Hussen said the program will only take applicatio­ns for projects to quickly build or buy units that would also serve vulnerable population­s like women fleeing domestic violence, or people at immediate risk of becoming homeless.

He said he expects most of the money to go out the door before the federal fiscal year closes, and promised quick turnaround times on applicatio­ns.

“It's the right thing to do, but it's also the economical­ly smart thing to do,” Hussen said in an interview. “All the costs associated with the services provided to people on the street, the criminal justice costs, the health costs, policing — all of that is way more than the cost of that project. So we have to be smart as a country to always look for more innovative solutions to house people rapidly.”

Hussen wouldn't say if the money would become an annual commitment, but it came two days before the Liberals unveil their throne speech that is expected to include new pledges on affordable housing. The government considered the property acquisitio­n program for months as a way to keep people from falling into homelessne­ss heading into the winter, with temporary shelter measures for the COVID-19 pandemic set to expire.

Some cities like Toronto and Edmonton have rented hotel rooms to accommodat­e people while shelter capacity is reduced to allow for physical spacing, but they're badly stretched financiall­y.

On top of the money for purchases, Ottawa plans to sink an additional $237 million into the federal homelessne­ss strategy that could be used to find additional emergency shelter space.

Tim Richter, president of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessne­ss, said the increased risk homeless people face in contractin­g COVID-19 could become worse with a second wave of the pandemic. The two funding announceme­nts give communitie­s the resources they need to move quickly to purchase buildings they've been using, like hotels, or possibly convert shelters into permanent housing, he said.

Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties president Bill Karsten said in a statement the overall funding is a good foundation, calling for “rapidly scaling up” from what he called important first steps.

What's needed is a retooling of existing programs to refocus the national housing strategy toward the shortterm strains caused by the pandemic, said Leilani Farha, global director of the Shift, a housing-rights group.

She joined a group of municipal leaders, who call themselves the Right to Home Municipal Working Group, that asked government­s on Monday to better protect renters in arrears and facing eviction, and small landlords who have borne much of the economic impact from the pandemic.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Social Developmen­t Minister Ahmed Hussen said he expects most of the money to go out the door before the federal fiscal year closes.
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Social Developmen­t Minister Ahmed Hussen said he expects most of the money to go out the door before the federal fiscal year closes.

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