Sunday, June 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Housing Advocates To Ask Ottawa To Rethink How Country Counts, Tracks Homeless

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2016 10:42 AM
    OTTAWA — The federal government is going to be asked today to trade its so-called "point-in-time" counts of the country's homeless in favour of real-time lists of people who are homeless or living in poverty.
     
    Counting and tracking the country's homeless is an elusive and challenging endeavour, but one the federal government has to tackle as part of its plans to reduce poverty and help house all those who need a home.
     
    Experts say the point-in-time count, while helpful, can be like trying to move forward while looking in the rear-view mirror.
     
    The data in a by-name list allows municipalities to better allocate limited resources based on current conditions, rather than responding to an already-dated point-in-time count.
     
    "It is live data so any time someone is assigned to a case manager, they're taken off the list and people are added when they come into our system," said Ali Ryder, housing programs administrator with the city of Kingston, Ont., which has one of the more advanced by-name lists in the country.
     
    "We're still working out the kinks, but it seems to be a process that's working pretty well."
     
    Housing providers will recommend the federal government start using by-name lists as part of a two-day meeting of a federal advisory board on the point-in-time count that took place earlier this year, with many cities taking part in a local census of the homeless population for the first time.
     
    The list gives housing and homeless service providers a real-time view of almost everyone in a community who is homeless, what services are in demand and what services are missing.
     
    People consent to have their name on the list when they register at a service provider, where the person's situation is evaluated so they can be ranked in terms of need.
     
     
    The proposal being backed by multiple homeless advocates wouldn't seek to ditch the point-in-time counts that the federal government got involved in for the first time this year, but instead would kick off a rethink of how the country uses point-in-time snapshots.
     
    "A (point-in-time count) provides a picture, but a by-name list is like live-streaming and you can actually take your live stream and snap a picture at any point to get a point in time," said Marie Morrison, manager of housing stability with the Region of Waterloo, Ont.
     
    Unlike point-in-time counts, however, the list wouldn't capture anyone sleeping on the streets or staying with friends or acquaintances — a practice known as "couch surfing" — unless they access community services.
     
    The federal government publicly announced last week that the next federally co-ordinated counts will take place between March and April 2018.
     
    The federal government put out the date well in advance in the hope more municipalities — including big cities like Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver — would join the federal count instead of doing their own at different times of the year.
     
    Quietly, those involved in the count say the federal government should hold a count in the fall, like cities in Alberta already do, to persuade the big cities to come on board and eliminate data gaps.
     
    There is also concern that when cities use different dates, it could inadvertently cause errors: homeless people counted in one city one week may have migrated to another city in a subsequent week, where they might be counted again.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Writes Surrey Parents To Warn About Student Fentanyl Use

    RCMP Writes Surrey Parents To Warn About Student Fentanyl Use
    As summer holidays approach for elementary and high school students in British Columbia, RCMP in Surrey are urging parents to keep kids safe and to speak with them about easily available and deadly drugs.

    RCMP Writes Surrey Parents To Warn About Student Fentanyl Use

    College President In P.E.I. Gets Seven Days In Jail For Impaired Driving

    CHARLOTTETOWN — The president of a college in Prince Edward Island has been sentenced to seven days in jail after being caught driving with a blood alcohol level almost three times over the legal limit.

    College President In P.E.I. Gets Seven Days In Jail For Impaired Driving

    Nova Scotia Imposes Ban On Campfires, Brush Fires In Mainland Part Of Province

    Nova Scotia Imposes Ban On Campfires, Brush Fires In Mainland Part Of Province
    The Department of Natural Resources says mainland Nova Scotia has a no-burn order, while Cape Breton has restrictions on when people can start fires.

    Nova Scotia Imposes Ban On Campfires, Brush Fires In Mainland Part Of Province

    Got Your Goat - Calgary Using Goat Herd In Pilot Project To Destroy Weeds

    Got Your Goat - Calgary Using Goat Herd In Pilot Project To Destroy Weeds
      Calgary has introduced 106 goats to a city park in an experimental effort to wipe out noxious weeds — most notably the Canada thistle.

    Got Your Goat - Calgary Using Goat Herd In Pilot Project To Destroy Weeds

    Evan Solomon to host CTV's 'Question Period'

    Evan Solomon to host CTV's 'Question Period'
    OTTAWA — Evan Solomon will soon be the new host of CTV's Sunday morning political affairs program "Question Period."

    Evan Solomon to host CTV's 'Question Period'

    Nova Scotia Cardiologist Wins $1.4 Million In 'Workplace Bullying' Lawsuit

    HALIFAX — A Halifax cardiology researcher says she feels vindicated after winning a $1.4 million lawsuit against the Nova Scotia Health Authority, in what is believed to be the largest award of its kind in Canada.

    Nova Scotia Cardiologist Wins $1.4 Million In 'Workplace Bullying' Lawsuit