With demand rising for cheaper housing, some seniors have nowhere to go - Action News
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With demand rising for cheaper housing, some seniors have nowhere to go

People who work with seniors in Newfoundland and Labrador say there is a growing and urgent need for affordable and accessible housing for our aging population.

New facilities opening, but there's a growing need for affordable options

Don has been living at a shelter called Connections for Seniors on Prince of Wales Street in St. John's. (Paula Gale/CBC )

Don never thought he'd end up homeless, but that's what happened to the 58-year-old earlier this year.

The St. John's man CBCis withholdinghis surname said that for most of his adult life he had steady employment and a place to live.

But Don got divorcedand had difficulty holding down a job due to mental illness.When Newfoundland and Labrador went into lockdown in March, he had just moved out of his apartment.

"I was about to move from a rental property I had, and at the time, with the pandemic," he said. "I really had nowhere to go. I was never homeless in my life until this year."

Don has been living in a shelter for seniors on Prince of Wales Street in St. John's since then.

Mohamed Abdallah is the executive director of Connections for Seniors, a shelter in downtown St. John's. (Paula Gale/CBC )

It's called Connections for Seniors and it's a shelter for people over the age of 55. Co-founder and executive directorMohamed Abdallah said the eight-bed facility has been full since it opened in early 2018.

Abdallah said he and his co-founder saw a need in the community and went into action.

"I remember we said, 'Let's not complain about it and let's start to do something about it.'"

To date, the organization has helped more than 450 people, and running it has become Abdallah's full time job.

The people who come to the shelter are also given meals and transportation to appointments.Abdallah called it a "wrap-around service" to help people navigate the health-care system and find permanent housing.

For him, helping seniors is also about respect.

"We still need our seniors' experience. We still need their wisdom, we still need to respect our elders," he said.

Demandrising

Older adults, like Don,withoutproper housing are not alone.

Thousands of seniors in the St. John's area are in need of more affordable, and accessible, housing, says Elizabeth Seigel, director of information and referral services at Seniors NL.

Seigel saidin 2019 she got about 500 calls from people who needed a place to live, some of them urgent.

"Quite often it does mean that people are living in 'not great' situations. Sometimes they go into rooming houses. We've heard cases of elder abuse because people are sort of forced into situations that they wouldn't otherwise be in."

Elizabeth Seigel is the director of information and referral services at Seniors NL. (Paula Gale/CBC )

When people get older their housing needs change, said Seigel. Income can change, especially if one loses a spouse. "They can't live in their house anymore because of accessibility, mobility. It's hard keeping up with snow clearing, that sort of thing," Said Seigel.

After January's massive blizzard, Seigel's office got even more calls.

"We heard from so many people who said, 'I just can't do it anymore,'" she said.

Many new options

There are a number of new facilities being built and opening up this fall specifically for seniors, on the Northeast Avalon.

Seigel said that proves the need is rising, but added some of them come at a great cost probably $3,000 to $4,000 if you include food, she said.

"People have to realize that that's for a certain segment of the population, and the other segment of the population probably doesn't have a place to go."

The wait for these affordable cottages at St. Luke's can be long, says Seigel. (Paula Gale/CBC )

Seigel said many of the lower-cost and subsidized options have significant wait times. For example, she said, the 54 independent living cottages at St. Luke's in the west end of St. John's can have wait times of up to 10 years.

Subsidized units from Newfoundland and Labrador Housingcan be a one- to two-year wait said Seigel, but seniors don't have that kind of time. "When people decide to move, it's because they need to immediately," she said.

Shelter expansion

Abdallahhopes to help more seniors who need immediate shelter. Connections for Seniors is working with the City of St. John'sto provide more supportive housing units in the near future.

That's the kind of solution that Deputy Mayor Sheilagh O'Leary is pushing for. She said the city operates more than 450 units in its non-profit housing division.

O'Leary told The St. John's Morning Showthat many of those are geared towardseniors, such as the two-bedroom apartments at Riverhead Towers on Hamilton Avenue, 11 units on Campbell Avenue and a newer building on Convent Square.

Riverhead Towers on Hamilton Avenue has 64 two-bedroom units, which are geared toward seniors. (Paula Gale/CBC )

She said there is an application process and that wait times vary, but it's longer for the most affordable units.

O'Leary said demand for affordable housing is rising.

"We have a long way to go in terms of serving the needs of people with housing insecurity in the community and with the pandemic, we are seeing more and more people moving in this direction."

She said the city is working to make land available and hopes to partner with more organizations, and the private sector, to build moreaffordable homes.

As for Don, he said things are looking brighter.

He said he's close to securing a unit from NL Housing thanks to Abdallah and the staff at Connections for Seniors.

"It looks like I'm on the road to recovery and finding my own place through them helping me," he said."They don't turn their back on you. I think it's amazing."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador