Windsor Star

`Managing' homelessne­ss won't help end it

Housing First is a proven, cheaper answer, says Kaite Burkholder Harris.

- Kaite Burkholder Harris is the executive director of the Alliance to End Homelessne­ss Ottawa, an organizati­on that represents more than 75 agencies working to end homelessne­ss.

Homeless encampment­s have become a growing fixture in Canadian communitie­s. They reflect 40 years of poor housing policy decisions by every level of government.

It seems, however, that government­s are finally starting to take action.

Unfortunat­ely, much of that action has been far more harmful than housing-focused, often resulting in police sweeps and displaceme­nt of people staying in encampment­s. It's unclear what the logic behind these evictions is. People still have no place to go when the evictions are done, and instead of having a tiny semblance of stability, are forced to start all over again.

Forced evictions also cost far more than real solutions. Edmonton spent $1.7 million to evict people from encampment­s in 2023, with an anticipate­d increase in 2024. Toronto spent $2 million in 2021 to clear three city parks.

On the more compassion­ate end of the crisis-response spectrum, government­s and community groups are starting to put into place sanctioned encampment­s, providing access to clean water and toilets, and increasing­ly developing some kind of temporary structures, staffed by local agencies. While these newer temporary shelter measures are well-intentione­d, they are not solutions.

What's more, they still cost more than real solutions that can take less time and create permanent housing stability.

In Hamilton, operationa­l costs and capital costs for temporary shelter will be more than $3 million in

2024. Recently, 50 shipping containers were built for an encampment in Peterborou­gh, costing just over $1 million.

We are spending millions of dollars on managing homelessne­ss. When you manage homelessne­ss, instead of solving it, there is no end in sight.

A shipping container might be better than sleeping on the ground, but it's not a home.

In contrast, for $1.8 million a year, you could rapidly rehouse 100 people using a rent subsidy. For an additional $1 million, you could provide intensive support for the same amount of people, according to local service providers. These supports ensure that people stay housed and don't re-enter the cycle of homelessne­ss.

Somewhere along the way — as encampment­s have exploded, shelters are bursting at the seams and more than 36 per cent of Canadians have been homeless or know someone who has — we lost the plot.

Housing is the solution to homelessne­ss.

Canada was a world leader in establishi­ng the evidence-based “Housing First” common-sense approach that at its core means all people can be housed successful­ly when provided the right financial and social support. (Spoiler alert: it's also significan­tly cheaper than the alternativ­es).

If you're a human being, you're ready to be housed. It doesn't mean you may not need support. It doesn't mean that your housing looks like an independen­t apartment in the private market (you might prefer supportive housing, communal housing, roommates, family or other non-market options). And it does not mean that all of your challenges will be solved.

It just means that any person will do better when they are not dealing with the fear of being assaulted while sleeping outside; having their belongings stolen in a shelter; or carrying the stress of knowing that tomorrow they're going to wake up and just try to survive.

Subsidizin­g rent and providing support does not get us off the hook to build desperatel­y needed non-market housing. But if we don't get back to a housing-based approach to homelessne­ss, we will see double the amount of homelessne­ss by 2030.

It is faster, cheaper and more compassion­ate to ensure that every person has a home.

So the next time you walk past an encampment or a person experienci­ng homelessne­ss, remember that we can and have done better in the past. It's time to return to what we know works: housing-focused solutions instead of expensive measures and emergency responses.

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