New Edmonton supportive housing complexes ready for tenants but remain vacant - Action News
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Edmonton

New Edmonton supportive housing complexes ready for tenants but remain vacant

Several dozenapartment units in two new supportive housing complexes remainvacant,while a localhousing agency figures out how to run them without extra funds.

Homeward Trust is looking at how it can reallocate money from existing programs to help run units

A grey and orange apartment building.
The supporting housing complex at King Edward Park, shown here, with 30 apartment suites, was completed in late June and transferred from the city to Homeward Trust. (Nathan Gross/CBC)

Several dozenapartment units in two new supportive housing complexes remainvacant,while a localhousing agency figures out how to run them without extra funds from the province.

The City of Edmonton finished building a complex in King Edward Park in late June, and anotherin Inglewood in mid-July.The buildings are designed and built to house people with chronic mental health and addictions issues, with 24-7 staffing support.

Homeward Trust confirmed this week thatnobody hasmoved into the roughly 60 available units, saying they need more money from the Alberta government to operate the facilities.

"The need is very high," said Homeward Trust CEO Susan McGee. "The lack of sufficient resources to address it, certainlythere's a frustrating element to that."

The two complexesare among five in the works a total of 210 units whichthe city is paying for with $28 million of its own money, as well as$35 million from the federal government's Rapid Housing Initiative program.

Since the beginning of the year, Mayor Amarjeet Sohi has been asking the Alberta governmentto contribute $11 millionto operate the five complexes, andthree hotel conversion sites also set to openthis fall.

Coun. Andrew Knack is getting increasingly frustrated, especially now that the buildings are ready for tenants.

"We still don't have a willing partner on the provincial side to save lives and [it's] worth repeating 100,000 times saving money," Knack told CBC Newslast week.

The hardest-to-house people, who are living rough on the streets, ended up in hospital on a collective average of 200 nights a year,Knacksaid, citingstatistics from other agencies.

"The cost of that is enormous," he said, adding that it also prevents others from receiving health care they need.

Knack also wonders why the province won't use some of its recently revised $13 billion budget surplus to help end homelessness in Edmonton.

The Alberta government recognizes that the city of Edmonton has experienced an increase in homelessness during the COVID-19 pandemic, and it will work with the city to explore how to help and protect those citizens,saidCommunity and Social Services Minister Jason Luan in an email to CBC News last week.

Allocated funds not enough, McGee says

The provincegivesHomeward Trust Edmonton $29 million to operate more than 400 supportive housing units, Luansaid.

McGee, of Homeward Trust, said that budget is spent on many programs, including rental assistance to help 1,000 people on average stay in their existing housing.

"What is allocated is a lot less than any of the plans to endhomelessness ever identified and our current requirements are," McGee said.

The housing agency has been analyzing existing programs to see where they can move money around to help pay for the new supportive housing units in King Edward Park and Inglewood, she added.

Homeward Trust is also relyingon funding from the federal and municipal governments tohelp the agency operate the buildings for the next 18 months.

A few tenants could move in as early as the coming week, McGeesaid, but it will be a staggered process.

Complexes behind schedule

All five supportive housing complexes were originally slated to be completed by the end of 2021.

The city said labour and supply chain complications continue to cause delays.

The complexes at Westmount and Terrace Heights are almost finished, while the one at McArthur/Wellington is expected to be completed by mid-October, the city said.

The Alberta government spent $16.4 million onthe Westmount site through its Municipal Stimulus Program.

When constructionis complete, the city will applyfor occupancy permits and transferthe sites to Homeward Trust, who then selects an operator.

The Bissell Centre will run the complex at King Edward Park, when it's ready to open, McGee said.

The city, with fundsfrom thefederal Rapid Housing Initiative,iscreatinganother 243 units of supportive housing throughthree hotel conversion projects.

The hotels being converted include: the former Days Inn, on University Avenue and 103rd Street, operated by the Mustard Seed;the former Sands Inn and Suites on Fort Road, operated by Niginan Housing Ventures;and the Coliseum Inn on 118th Avenue.