Showing posts with label British+Columbia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British+Columbia. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

We all benefit by tackling homelessness

New research shows kindness can also cut taxpayer burden
Brian Lewis, The Province
Published: Tuesday, April 29, 2008


The results of a comprehensive study released yesterday in Abbotsford clearly show that homelessness is not just a big-city problem in B.C.

In fact, despite increased social programs, the number of homeless people in the Upper Fraser Valley during a recent 24-hour snapshot count increased by 13 per cent over a count in 2004.

Read the rest here

THIS WEEKEND: STANDs Go Province-Wide

Eighty “STANDs for Housing” slated for Saturday; Homelessness demos will span Province

Vancouver, BC. -- Eighty street-corner “STANDs for Housing” will be held in about thirty towns and cities across British Columbia this Saturday, May 3rd from 1-2pm.

The colourful blue-themed demonstrations have grown since February this year from a single Stand in Vancouver’s residential Little Mountain neighbourhood. By March there were fifteen Stands across the city, each coordinated by neighbourhood advocates.

Now, after only ten weeks, the blue banners and scarves of “STAND for Housing” will appear in most parts of BC – from Prince Rupert in the north to Sooke on the Island, to Kimberley in the southeast.

The approximate regional breakdown as of April 27th is:
Vancouver Island, 18
Lower Mainland, 40
Interior & North, 24

The spread of “STANDs for Housing” around the province reflects similar growth in the twin crises of homelessness and an affordable-housing shortage. The two issues are directly related and no longer limited to big cities, or to neighbourhoods of the poor and addicted.

Vancouver housing advocates point out that only one Vancouver Stand occurs in the Downtown Eastside. They say half the STANDs are in upscale residential neighbourhoods on the west side of the city, where the rattle of shopping carts is now heard with increasing frequency.

Background
The first Stand began last year in response to the BC government’s decision to sell Vancouver’s 15-acre Little Mountain social housing site to a private developer. Two hundred twenty-four social housing apartments are to be demolished and replaced with up to 2,000 luxury condos. The BC government says the developer will be required to promise replacement of all 224 social housing apartments. Completion of the sale has been delayed, though negotiations continue.

Advocates want city and senior governments to work together to resume construction of non-profit and co-op housing for low and moderate income singles and families. For decades, all governments cooperated to build tens of thousands of such homes every year.

The BC and federal governments cancelled those programs, 1993 to 2001. The resulting cascade of low-income people seeking down-market housing results in poorer people becoming homeless.

Permanent social housing is also what’s needed by graduates of ‘transitional’ and ‘supportive’ housing programs, who presently leave those programs only to face near-zero vacancy rates for affordable rental housing. Permanent non-profit and co-op housing would dramatically slow the increase in homelessness by freeing up low-income rentals.

Apart from pressuring politicians, Provincial STANDers will also be paying respects to hundreds of dead and dying homeless women, men, and children— victims of legislated poverty and punitive welfare rules. They wander our streets and lanes, huddle in parks and encampments, burn to death in service alcoves, are crushed in laneway garbage bins.
Homelessness cannot be solved without using the surplus billions in federal and provincial economies to build non-profit and co-op housing for a range of incomes.

For Stand materials: CALMhousing@hotmail.com
List of Stands: http://www.my-calm.info/

See also Housing vigils grow across the province, From the Vancouver Sun

Friday, April 25, 2008

Welfare system ineffective, study concludes

Poorest people in B.C. left scrambling to survive, move out of poverty
Frances Bula, Vancouver Sun
Published: Tuesday, April 22, 2008


VANCOUVER - The province's welfare system makes people homeless, sometimes forces women to turn to prostitution and relies on food banks and charities to help provide the basics to its clients, according to an unprecedented in-depth study of welfare recipients.

The two-year study, partly funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, tracked a small group of people who are part of what the provincial government decided in 2002 was a serious problem that had to be tackled - people who stay on welfare a long time but are classified as "expected to work."

Researchers found that, contrary to government claims that its new welfare policies helped people get out of poverty, almost none of the 45 welfare recipients they tracked between 2004 to 2006 ended up better off.

Read the rest here

See also Poverty Built into BC's System

Friday, April 18, 2008

BC's Homeless Death Toll: 56 or More in Two Years

Tally of homeless deaths released to Tyee by chief coroner.
By Monte Paulsen and Tom Sandborn
Published: April 17, 2008
TheTyee.ca


At least 56 homeless British Columbians died during 2006 and 2007, according to provincial statistics obtained by The Tyee.

B.C.'s homeless died at a rate that's at least 19 per cent higher than the general population, according to the office of the chief coroner.

"These deaths were preventable," said MLA David Chudnovsky, a New Democrat who serves as the opposition critic for homelessness. "These are people who would still be alive if they'd had someplace to live."

The report tallies 31 homeless deaths in 2006 and another 25 in 2007. But housing advocates criticized the coroner for excluding the deaths of some formerly homeless people who died in hospital.

"Our governments are culpable for these preventable deaths," said David Eby, an attorney at Pivot Legal Society. "People are literally dying in the streets."

The office of the chief coroner prepared this report in response to requests from The Tyee. Among its findings:

The death rates among homeless persons in 2007 was 21.3 per 10,000 people, while the rate among the general population in 2006 was 17.9 per 10,000. So using the coroner's indirect comparison, B.C.'s homeless population is dying at a rate 19 per cent higher than the general population.

Two thirds of the homeless dead were living on the street, while the remaining third lived in a homeless shelter. Thus the (uncalculated) rate of death among street homeless is higher than 19 per cent above average.

Poisoning by drugs or alcohol was the leading cause of death, followed by blunt injuries (e.g., hit by a car), hangings and stabbings. One drowned and one died of smoke inhalation. Another nine deaths are either undetermined or still under investigation.

All of those counted were found in B.C.'s cities: 13 in Vancouver, 11 in Victoria, four in New Westminster, three each in North Vancouver and Surrey, and two each in Chilliwack, Kelowna and Nanaimo.

Read the rest here
See also Overdoses, disease cause of half the deaths of B.C. homeless people

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Youth emergency shelter to expand

Premier says government has stepped up to address housing crisis all over the province
Randy Shore, Vancouver Sun
Published: Tuesday, April 15, 2008


B.C. doesn't need the United Nations to tell us we have a homelessness problem, Premier Gordon Campbell said Monday.

"I think all of us understand that there is work to be done," Campbell said at a press conference announcing the expansion of Vancouver's youth emergency shelter.

B.C. is already in the midst of a huge expansion of social housing, Campbell said. "That's why [the province] has acquired 28 single room occupancy hotels and upgraded them."

A group of activists from the Downtown Eastside announced over the weekend that they will take a human rights complaint to the United Nations complaining that the federal government is in violation of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights by failing to provide citizens with adequate housing.

With the 2010 Olympic Games and the international media scrutiny that comes with the Games now less than two years away, advocates for the poor are ramping up the pressure on governments to reverse the growth of Metro Vancouver's homeless population.

The official homeless count released last week found 2,600 people in Metro Vancouver living in shelters or sleeping rough outdoors, up about 25 per cent since 2005.

Read the rest here

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Cost of homelessness in millions, report finds

JUSTINE HUNTER
With a report from the Canadian Press
March 24, 2008


VICTORIA -- The federal government could easily bring some relief to B.C.'s homeless population by restoring incentives to the construction industry to build rental housing, the province's Housing Minister said yesterday.

"Governments can't build this stuff fast enough," Rich Coleman said in an interview. "We need tax incentives back in the marketplace to build more rental housing."

Mr. Coleman was responding to a new study that concludes providing shelter for homeless people with severe addictions and mental illness throughout British Columbia could save taxpayers millions of dollars.

The paper, commissioned by Simon Fraser University and released this month, found that providing non-housing services for such people costs the public system more than $55,000 a year per person.

Providing adequate housing and supports could reduce this cost to $37,000 a year, the study found.

It put the cost of failing to act in excess of $200-million each year.

Read the rest here
See also Coleman disputes homeless estimate from the Vancouver Sun

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Homelessness Petition

To: BC Legislative Assembly

END HOMELESSNESS
BC NEEDS AFFORDABLE HOUSING NOW

More than 10,500 British Columbians are homeless. This crisis is province-wide. In every city and town homelessness is a shame and an embarrassment.

Thousands of British Columbians are one paycheck away from homelessness; one illness away from homelessness; one family emergency away from homelessness.

Homelessness is not the fault of the homeless. There have always been people in our province who were less privileged than others. There have always been people in BC who have mental health and addictions challenges. But we have never had a crisis of homelessness like the one we face now.

Homelessness results from a lack of affordable housing. It results from wages and social assistance rates which are inadequate. Solving the problem of homelessness in our province is about political will and public policy choices.

BECAUSE children deserve an opportunity to succeed in school and life, and a child�s success is tied to having a stable home,
BECAUSE people should be able to afford housing and still have enough money for groceries and basic necessities,
BECAUSE homeless people are not the cause of homelessness,
BECAUSE everyone in BC deserves a safe, decent place to live,
BECAUSE we support diverse, tolerant and caring communities and reject communities that are divided into haves and have-nots,

DECLARATION:

  • We will do everything we can to protect existing affordable housing units. While many of these require significant upgrading, it�s wrong to renovate them just to raise rents or turn them into expensive condominiums.
  • We will oppose the demolition of affordable housing so that it can be replaced with homes accessible only to the wealthy.
  • We will work at the local, provincial and federal levels to secure the capital funding needed to build the thousands of units of social housing, co-op housing and affordable housing our province needs.

Sincerely,

The Undersigned
(Click to sign petition)

Friday, February 22, 2008

B.C. buys 6 more hotels for homeless in Vancouver

Last Updated: Thursday, February 14, 2008 | 5:23 PM ET
CBC News

The B.C. government has purchased six more rooming houses on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside to house the homeless, Premier Gordon Campbell announced Thursday.

"The acquisition of these buildings means a brighter future for people who will be able to have housing with support services to stabilize their lives and regain their independence," said Campbell.

The six buildings were all current or former single-room-occupancy hotels, and three were vacant buildings, said the Premier.

The purchase brings the total number of hotels bought by the province over the past year to provide housing to 16.

"This is the latest in a series of investments we are making to provide new hope and opportunities for people through increased affordable housing options in Vancouver," said Campbell.

The province paid a total of $23.7 million for the six buildings.

The next step will be assessments to determine the physical condition of each building and develop renovation plans, said the premier. Then the province will select non-profit agencies to manage the buildings and provide support services to residents.

"With today's announcement, we have committed to more than 2,400 new provincially-subsidized units in Vancouver since last April," said Rich Coleman, the minister responsible for housing.

At the Vancouver news conference, Campbell also denied rumours the government has plans to redevelop the Riverview hospital site in Coquitlam.

An article in the Vancouver Sun on Thursday outlined detailed plans to fund the redevelopment of the psychiatric hospital with the development of up to 30,000 residential condo units on the 98-hectare hospital grounds site.

Link to article

Thursday, February 14, 2008

B.C. buys 6 more hotels for homeless in Vancouver

Last Updated: Thursday, February 14, 2008 | 5:23 PM ET
CBC News


The B.C. government has purchased six more rooming houses on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside to house the homeless, Premier Gordon Campbell announced Thursday.

"The acquisition of these buildings means a brighter future for people who will be able to have housing with support services to stabilize their lives and regain their independence," said Campbell.

The six buildings were all current or former single-room-occupancy hotels, and three were vacant buildings, said the Premier.

The purchase brings the total number of hotels bought by the province over the past year to provide housing to 16.

"This is the latest in a series of investments we are making to provide new hope and opportunities for people through increased affordable housing options in Vancouver," said Campbell.

The province paid a total of $23.7 million for the six buildings.

Read the rest here

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Opinion - Our homelessness crisis (Diocese of New Westminster)

When I moved to Vancouver in June of 1981, I had no difficulty in finding an apartment I could afford, in the neighbourhood I chose. A year later, I moved again-to a different neighbourhood that would allow me to walk to work. Not only did I have no difficulty in finding that apartment, but the work colleague who had encouraged me to move to her building, received a reduction in rent for some months, as a thank you.

And there were no homeless people to be seen. This description seems like a tale ones grandparents would tell about a time long, long ago.

Twenty-five years is certainly longer than a minute, but not long, long ago. What has happened to change plentiful affordable housing and little or no homelessness to the current situation?

Read the rest here.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Up to 15,500 Homeless: Report

Tally of BC homeless by health profs far higher than housing minister's.
TheTyee.ca
By Andrew MacLeod
January 31, 2008


The number of homeless people in British Columbia may be triple the estimate Housing Minister Rich Coleman provided to The Tyee last week, according to a new report by health professors at UBC, SFU and the University of Calgary.

In B.C. there may be as many as 15,500 adults with severe addictions or mental illness who are homeless, says the 149-page report, Housing and Support for Adults with Severe Addictions and/or Mental Illness in British Columbia. The report is dated October, 2007, and was released to The Tyee on Jan. 30, 2008.

The authors are SFU's Michelle Patterson and Julian Somers, Calgary's Karen McIntosh and Alan Shiell, and UBC's Jim Frankish. The report was prepared at the request of the health ministry's mental health and addictions branch. Other partners and contributors to the report include the provincial health authorities, the Employment and Income Assistance Ministry and Coleman's own Forests and Range Ministry.

To get their estimate, the authors used data and reports from the Canadian Mental Health Association, the Canadian Senate, the provincial government and academic journals. "No single authoritative source of information is available to derive these estimates," the report says. "However, a number of recent reports offered valuable insights into various levels of housing need."

Many at risk

The report says some 130,000 adults in B.C. have severe addictions and/or mental illnesses. About 39,000 are "inadequately housed," meaning they meet the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation's definition of being in "core housing need." Of those, about 26,500 don't have enough support to help them stay in their home.

Somewhere between 8,000 and 15,500 are what the report calls "absolutely homeless," meaning they are living on the streets, couch surfing or otherwise without shelter. The report says the authors confirmed their figures with "local stakeholders and key informants." The report also says that despite impressions that homelessness, mental illness and addiction are urban problems, interviews with front-line workers found the same problems were "highly prevalent in rural settings."

The report's number—which includes only people with severe addictions and mental illness -— far exceeds the figure used by Forest, Range and Housing Minister Rich Coleman. Last week he said there are between 4,500 and 5,500 homeless people in B.C. at any given time. He said the figure came from BC Housing. The agency told The Tyee it based its estimate only on the communities that have done official homelessness counts.

NDP housing critic David Chudnovsky called Coleman's number "bogus." His own "conservative" estimate of 10,500 homeless in the province was made last fall based on homeless counts and numbers provided by shelters and other aid agencies.

High cost status quo

While creating supported housing for everyone at risk of homelessness would be expensive, the authors found the cost of doing nothing is even higher.

"If we focus on the absolutely homeless, non-housing service costs amount to about $644.3 million per year across the province," says the report. That includes the costs to the health care and prison systems as well as emergency shelters. "In other words, the average street homeless adult with SAMI [severe addictions and/or mental illness] in B.C. costs the public system in excess of $55,000 per year."

Providing adequate housing and supports would cut those costs by $18,000 per person each year, it says, saving about $211 million in annual spending.

The authors note they did not include the amount of money that homelessness may cause to be lost by businesses, tourism and cancelled conference or convention bookings. The report says, "The inclusion of these and other cost drivers would further enhance the case for change."

'Key actions' suggested

The report offers a dozen "key actions" that need to be taken to provide housing and support to people with severe addictions and/or mental illness. They include:

* Adopting a "housing first" policy providing permanent, independent homes to people without time limits or requiring residents to get addictions treatment.

* Creating more multidisciplinary treatment teams such as the Assertive Community Teams set to launch Jan. 31 in Victoria. The teams are needed to reach the "hardest to house" and get them better access to services and treatment.

* Taking a "harm reduction" approach at housing facilities and accepting the use of drugs and alcohol on-site.

* Creating more affordable housing and protect the affordable housing that already exists.

* Continuing efforts to make it easier to apply for and receive welfare.

* Hospitals and prisons should set policies so they no longer discharge people with "no fixed address" without knowing where they will go. "No one should be discharged from an institution directly to the street or a shelter without prior arrangement and follow-up."

Finally, the authors recommend immediately building or creating supported housing for the 11,750 or so people with severe addictions and/or mental illness who are already homeless. The number likely underestimates the need, they write, and should be taken as a starting point.

BC Housing's current goal falls far short of the need. The agency's most recent service plan says 1,462 new units of supported housing for homeless people will be added by 2009-2010.

"Without adequate housing and support, people with SAMI who are homeless often cycle through the streets, prisons and jails, and high-cost health care settings such as emergency rooms and psychiatric inpatient units," the Health Ministry's report says. "This is ineffective and costly in both human and financial terms." With help, it adds, they can stay in stable housing. "It is time to implement these evidence-based solutions for British Columbians in need."

Link to the article

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Homelessness Declaration

• We will do everything we can to protect existing affordable housing units. While many of these require significant upgrading, it’s wrong to renovate them just to raise rents or turn them into expensive condominiums.

• We will oppose the demolition of affordable housing so that it can be replaced with homes accessible only to the wealthy.

• We will work at the local, provincial and federal levels to secure the capital funding needed to build the thousands of units of social housing, co-op housing and affordable housing our province needs.

Read more and sign the petition at Finding Our Way Home

Saturday, January 12, 2008

PROVINCE INVESTS $4.9M TO PROTECT AFFORDABLE HOUSING

For Immediate Release
2008FOR0001-000009
Jan. 10, 2008
Ministry of Forests and Range and Minister responsible for Housing


NEW WESTMINSTER – The Province is purchasing the 59-unit College Place Hotel in downtown New Westminster for $4.9 million to protect affordable housing for British Columbians in need, Minister responsible for Housing Rich Coleman announced today.

“This is a good opportunity to preserve a much-needed housing option for people on low incomes in New Westminster who might otherwise face the possibility of being homeless,” said Coleman. “Current residents can continue living in the building as long as they want, and we will be doing repairs and upgrades to make it a better place to live.”

On Jan. 11, the Province will assume ownership of the building, located at 740 Carnarvon Street. An experienced non-profit organization, Lookout Emergency Aid Society, will manage and operate the building. Some of the existing units will be converted to allow for the establishment of 15 emergency shelter beds, starting on April 1. This will be done over time as vacancies arise through natural attrition.

“This is good news as we continue work to address the issues surrounding homelessness and affordable housing for the residents of the city who need assistance,” said New Westminster Mayor Wayne Wright, a member of the Premier’s Task Force on Homelessness, Mental Illness and Addictions. “It is important that New Westminster residents have access to subsidized housing, and this initiative will help the City to reach those goals.”

“Our experience operating the Cliff Block transitional housing development in New Westminster has identified a clear need for shelter beds and other housing options for people facing homelessness,” said Karen O’Shannacery, executive director of Lookout Emergency Aid Society. “This purchase will make a real difference in people’s lives, and we are looking forward to making sure the College Place Hotel is a good place for people to live.”

The purchase is being made under the Provincial Homelessness Initiative, an integral part of the provincial housing strategy, Housing Matters BC. The strategy includes a commitment to create more than 2,300 supportive housing units as a continuation of the ongoing work of the Premier’s Task Force on Homelessness, Mental Illness and Addictions.

The Province’s 2007/08 budget for shelters and affordable housing is $360 million, triple what it was in 2001. Copies of the housing strategy can be downloaded from www.housing.gov.bc.ca.

Link to press release

Friday, December 14, 2007

Panel raps B.C.'s 'social condition'

Number of poor 'most troubling indicator' to premier's advisers
Jonathan Fowlie, Vancouver Sun
Published: Friday, December 14, 2007


VICTORIA - B.C. is lagging behind in economic growth, crime-fighting and caring for the province's most vulnerable citizens, a group of Premier Gordon Campbell's handpicked advisers warned Thursday.

In a report released Thursday, the B.C. Progress Board -- 18 business executives and academic leaders -- for the second year in a row named B.C. the second-worst province in the country on a number of social indicators.

Read the rest here

Sunday, December 2, 2007

NDP 'shocked' at homelessness numbers across B.C.

By Stuart Hunter, The Province
Published: Saturday, December 01, 2007

The provincial NDP say they're "shocked" and "embarrassed" by a new poll showing there are 10,580 homeless people in B.C.

Party leader Carole James and homelessness critic David Chudnovsky held a news conference on Friday where they announced the poll figures, as well as the creation of a province-wide consultation on the issue called Finding Our Way Home: A Consultation on the Homelessness Crisis in B.C.

"The figure for the province is 10,580 and that is a very, very conservative number," Chudnovsky told The Province. "Shocking is a perfect word to use and embarrassing is a word to use, too."

Chudnovsky, MLA for Vancouver-Kensington, said two things surprised him about homelessness in B.C.

"There were two surprises," Chudnovsky said. "The first is the staggering size of the number, it's shocking. The second surprise is that in B.C. it is a provincial problem - too many people think it is a Downtown Eastside problem."

Chudnovsky said the poll suggests there are about 2,300 homeless living in the Downtown Eastside - about 300 people more than a recent poll done by the city.

Read the rest here

Thursday, November 29, 2007

New Reports

Two new reports have just been added to our General Resources (on the sidebar).

2007 Child Poverty Report Card

The Cost of Easting in BC 2007

The Child Poverty Report Card is produced by First Call. They've come up with an innovative challenge for the Premier:

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

BC's Child Poverty Rate Tops Again

Or is this headline just trying to manipulate you?
By Rob Annandale
The Tyee
Published: November 26, 2007


A new report suggests that one in five B.C. children is poor, making the province’s child poverty rate the highest in Canada for the fourth consecutive year.

At 20.9 per cent, B.C.’s proportion of children living below the poverty line continues to drop from its 2002 peak but is still substantially higher than the 16.8 per cent national average, according to 2005 Statistics Canada data analyzed by First Call: B.C. Child and Youth Advocacy Coalition.

“Other provinces have already announced poverty reduction strategies,” First Call’s Michael Goldberg said in a press release. “It is time for B.C., the province with the worst child poverty rates, to wake up to reality and start taking its responsibilities seriously.”

The report shows Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland would all fare worse than B.C. if not for higher levels of government assistance.

One important step towards reducing poverty in the province, according to First Call, would be raising the minimum wage from $8 an hour to $10. The report points out that a person working full-time, year-round for the minimum – let alone the $6 training wage – cannot rise above the urban poverty line.

So far, the Liberals have argued that such an increase would be harmful to the booming economy and have blocked opposition efforts on this front.

But the question of raising the minimum wage is not the only politically divisive issue here. The very definition of poverty has become an ideological battlefield and the framing of the problem may have unintended consequences.

Read the rest here

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

BC Housing Plan

This BC Housing site provides basic info about the Memo of Understanding between the City of Vancouver and the province around the building social housing on the 12 city-owned lots.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Poverty 'deepening,' group says

Seriousness of social ills compared to Downtown Eastside
Frances Bula, Vancouver Sun
Published: Wednesday, October 31, 2007


SURREY - Surrey has problems with homelessness, poverty and aboriginal issues as profound as those in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, says a Surrey coalition of non-profit groups, businesses and government.

"There are deepening signs of poverty in this, one of B.C.'s fastest-growing municipalities," said the Vibrant Surrey coalition in its first report, issued on Tuesday.

"[There are] increasing rates of homelessness and . . . close to 20 per cent of residents without sustainable incomes."

The report notes Surrey is growing at an explosive rate and many of those moving in are poor, aboriginal, single parents, or new immigrants, which the city will have to deal with.

But the facts in the report are only part of the story.

Equally important for some is that Surrey has built a broad-based coalition that is aggressively highlighting its social problems and looking for innovative ways to grapple with them.

That's after years in which the sprawling city, three times the area of Vancouver, has been relatively silent on those topics.

"There's been a whole shift in the last couple of years," says Al Vigoda, a former community-development consultant who has worked in Asia, Africa and eastern Europe and is now the director of Vibrant Surrey. "Surrey is coming of age as a community."

Read the rest here.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Denied Assistance