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Manitoba

Manitoba sending delegation to Houston to look at model that housed thousands of homeless people

The Manitoba government is sending a delegation to Houston as it attempts to learn from the Texas city's success in housing tens of thousands of homeless people.

Premier hints at earlier opening for supervised consumption site, expanding security rebate program

A man in a grey shirt pulls a trolley with some bags of his stuff.
A homeless person in downtown Houston is shown in a March 2024 file photo. The Manitoba government is flying a delegation to Houston to learn lessons from the U.S. city that's developed a successful model for addressing homelessness. (Gavin Boutroy/Radio-Canada)

The Manitoba government is sending a delegation to Houston as it attempts to learn from the U.S. city's success in housing tens of thousands of homeless people.

Bernadette Smith, the minister responsible for housing, addictions and homelessness, will lead the team of provincial and Winnipegofficials, along with Brandon Mayor Jeff Fawcett and Thompson Mayor Colleen Smook, flying to the most populous city in Texas this week.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinewwants the delegation to come together around one strategy to address homelessness.

While many people are already doing work in that area,there's room for collaboration, Kinew said.

"I don't know if it's fractured, or it's just that so many people with good intentions have started their own initiatives, and as a resultthey're each pursuing their own set of priorities," he told host Marcy Markusa during a Wednesday interview withCBC Manitoba's Information Radio.

"But the idea that us, as a funder and us as a convening force, as your Manitoba government, that we need to bring everyone together into one cohesive direction."

Also invited werepeople working on thefront lines of the homelessness sectorto join the delegation, including representatives withEnd Homelessness Winnipeg,Main Street Project and the Manitoba Mtis Federation, a provincial news release said.

Over two days, beginning on Thursday, delegates will meet with Houstoncommunity organizations on the ground and visit the housing navigation centreled by the Coalition for the Homeless.

Finding homes quickly

"Houston has had significant success in reducing homelessness and we're looking to learn from them to help inform an approach that's tailored to Manitoba communities and builds on the good work already happening in our province," Smith said in a news release.

The Texas city has become world-renownedfor putting roofsover the heads of 30,000 people struggling with homelessness in just over a decade.

The "Houston model," as it's known, relies heavily on a "housing-first" approach and a co-ordinated network oforganizations that all work on the same wavelength.

It has been cited by Kinew and Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham as an approach to emulate.Gillingham's officemade itsown visit to Houston last year.

Several people gather in a bus shelter with glass walls on a busy city street.
People experiencing homelessness find cover in a bus shelter in downtown Winnipeg in a 2022 photo. 'We need to just say, "We're getting people off the street, we're getting them into housing,"' Premier Wab Kinew told CBC Radio on Wednesday. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

On Wednesday, Kinew said he anticipates the provincial delegationwillspend time together, over meals and in meetings, "really coalescing around this one plan."

"We can't have turf wars. We can't have people arguing about what the right approach is," Kinewsaid.

"We need to just say, 'We're getting people off the street, we're getting them into housing, and then we're giving them the mental health and addictions support and access to health care that's necessary for them to succeed in that housing.'"

During last year's election campaign, Kinewsaid anNDP government wouldeliminatechronic homelessnesswithin eight years. They'daim toconnect individuals who've been without a home for sixweeks or longerwithhousing and mental health supports.

Supervised consumption site could open early

Meanwhile, the premier said his government could open Manitoba'sfirst supervised consumption site earlier than planned.

The province wasanticipating the facility would openin the next fiscal year, but Kinew said the supervised consumption site may open early in the next year, thanks to the quick work of Aboriginal Health and Wellness, which will steer the creation and development of the facility.

The site's opening, however, is also dependent on receiving an exemption from the federal government, he said.

Earlier this month, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, who is vying to become prime minister, said a future government under his leadership would seek to close any supervised consumption sites near schools, playgrounds and "anywhere else that they endanger the public."

Kinew said in response Wednesday he too doesn't want a supervised consumption site in those areas. He said the location of the Manitoba facilityis one of the most important decisions the province will make on this issue.

Manitoba is planning to open a supervised consumption site in our city. We ask the Premier Wab Kinew how he will make sure people living around the facility feel safe and heard. And his responds to the frustrations of Sage Creek residents who say they're seeing a sharp spike in property crime

"But we have to talk about this in a serious way," he said of the discussion around these sites.

"This is not the time for oversimplification. This is a time for nuance. This is not the time for talking points. This is the time to have a substantive discussion about how are we going to address a public health emergency."

Kinew said addictions specialists and other experts in the field are confident a supervised consumption site will save lives.

"You are going to see a decline, maybe not the biggest decline that we want to see, but you are start going to start to see overdose death numbers come down in Manitoba, if you move ahead with this plan."

Measures the NDPgovernment havetaken to combat crime have seen success, said Kinew.

Security rebate program fills up

He said the province has already exhausted itsbudget for aprogram givingbusinesses and homeowners a $300 rebate for security equipment. Applications opened inJune and "within a couple days" the program was fully subscribed, Kinew said.

The premier teasedthe government willextendthe program.

"I don't want to scoop myself, but yeah, we're gonna continue to be there because this is helping Manitobans," he told Information Radio.

The government is also looking to roll outrecentpublic safety initiatives to other areas of the province, Kinew said.

This summer, theprovince iscovering overtime costs for Winnipeg police units to focus on hot spots for retail crime, doubled community safety patrols in downtown Winnipegand expanded supports at a Winnipeg shelter takingin people under the influence of intoxicants.

Kinew said the need for an expanded public safety approach is reinforced by stories like this week's reporting thatresidents of Sage Creek, a Winnipeg subdivision usually insulated from crime, have become fed up with a sudden increase in property crimes.

"We are going to be looking at that comprehensive approachin terms of reaching out to the different regions, but we're trying to do this also in a staged manner let's try it in this targeted area. It works?OK, now let's expand it."