Woman's outdoor birth sparks calls to address Quebec homelessness - Action News
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Woman's outdoor birth sparks calls to address Quebec homelessness

The incident, shared by Gatineau, Que., Mayor France Blisle at a meeting of Quebec municipalities, has generated a new wave of talkabout how to tackle homelessness in both the city and province.

Gatineau paramedics took homeless 27-year-old to hospital this summer

A woman sits holds papers while sitting at a table and speaking into a microphone.
Earlier this week, Gatineau, Que., Mayor France Blisle shared a story at a meeting of Quebec municipalities of a local woman who'd had her baby outdoors this summer. (Alexander Behne/Radio-Canada)

A remark by the mayor of Gatineau, Que., that a localwoman gave birth outside earlier this summeris generating a new wave of talkabout how to tackle homelessness in both the western Quebec cityand province.

Mayor FranceBlisle'scomment came Thursday during a meeting of Quebec municipalities on the need for increased provincialfunding to cities.

At that meeting, Blislespoke aboutan overflowing local shelter and a camp housing 80 people, as well as a young woman who recently gave birth alone outside. She called on Lionel Carmant, Quebec's minister responsible for social services, to increase provincial investment to prevent such incidents.

Local paramedicsconfirmed to Radio-Canada that they took a homeless 27-year-old womanto a Gatineau hospital on June 29after she had given birth.

Property taxesare no longer enough to address problems such as homelessness and the housing crisis, local leaders have said.

Yves Sguin, general director of the Drug Addiction Intervention and Prevention Center of the Outaouais, September 2023
Yves Sguin, general director of the Drug Addiction Intervention and Prevention Centre of the Outaouais (CIPTO), says more supports are needed for people who lived without a fixed address or in campsites. (Radio-Canada)

'A horror story'

Meanwhile, those workingon the front lines to combat homelessness say the story shared byBlisle is only the tip of the iceberg.

"It's a horror story [and] we're going to continue to hear it," saidSasha Yakimichan, a worker at theOutaouais Drug Addiction Intervention and Prevention Centre(CIPTO)in Gatineau.

Cathy Michaud, who works at the Maison Ru'Ellesshelter in Gatineau, said many women who are victims of abuse often hesitate to seek help.

"Healing people who live or have lived in a situation of homelessness is far from easy," Michaud said. "These women carry wounds, losses, mourning, trauma."

The general director of CIPTO, Yves Sguin, saidBlisle's story illustratesalack of necessary services and resourcesfor homeless people in the Gatineau area.

"We need to think in the longer term with social housing. Let's not stop talking about affordable housing, but let's also think about social assistance," Sguin said.

"To think that a shelter with a few other intermediate resources can meet the needs is really to be blind to a crisis that is taking place throughout Quebec, not just in Gatineau."

Several tents in a parking lot.
Tents and other temporary edifices are seen outside Le Gte Ami, a shelter in Gatineau, Que., in July 2023. (Radio-Canada)

Lise Paradis, the general director of LeGte Ami, another local shelter, said people set up 30 tents near their building last spring. Today, there are more than 150 tents, she said.

The organization is looking for a temporary solution for the winter andthen a lasting solution for the future, including a warming centre, Paradis said.

Mathieu Lacombe, Quebec'sminister responsible for the Outaouais region, also reacted to the mayor's comment and the issue of homelessness, calling ita delicate subject.

"We have taken a lot of action," Lacombe said. "We must work as a partner, and that is what we will continue to do."

With files from Radio-Canada