Affordable housing for homeless tops Ottawa's wishlist for national housing strategy - Action News
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Ottawa

Affordable housing for homeless tops Ottawa's wishlist for national housing strategy

The City of Ottawa and local housing advocates hope a new, national housing strategy will help address an urgent need to provide affordable options for people who find themselves homeless.

Government to report on feedback about promised national housing strategy at 11 a.m. ET Tuesday

Ottawa Community Housing rebuilt Hayley Court townhouse complex and reopened it in 2016 more than two years after the original complex burned to the ground. (CBC)

The City of Ottawa and local housing advocates hope a new, national housing strategy will help address an urgent need to provide affordable options for people who find themselves homeless.

The federal government, led by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, spent severalmonths asking Canadians what they would like to see in such a strategy.

On Tuesday, Nov. 22 National Housing Day MP Jean-Yves Duclos will share what the government heard.

National plan 'urgently needed,' city says

In the City of Ottawa's submission to the federal government, staff described a "housing affordability crisis" that sees people on low incomes havingto choose whether to pay bills, buy groceries or pay rent.

"With over 6,800 residents who experienced homelessness last year, more than 10,000 households on our wait list for affordable housing and a $22 million annual deficit for repairs to social housing, a national action plan that will support our local initiatives to address housing and homelessness issues is urgently needed," staff wrote in October.

The city asked the government for enough funding to keep up with social housing repairs in the long term, something that has been a struggle formunicipalities in Ontario the only province where the responsibility for housing was downloaded to cities.

Ottawa staffalso argued offering social supports to help people stay housed costs lessthan paying for shelter visits, and suggested the governmentoffertax incentives to developers so they will build more rental housing.

Effort to no longer putgood money into bad buildings

With about two-thirds of the city's 22,500 social housing units, Ottawa Community Housing is by far the city's biggest landlord.

In a bid to deal with the persistent lack of funding for repairs, the city has decided to no longer throw good money after bad, aging buildings, said board chairCoun.MathieuFleury.

"At OCH we don't want to drop the amount of units we have overall, but we accept that at any given time we might have to sell properties, we might have to demolish, we might have to purchaseland elsewhere," said Fleury.

Under this approach, the housing agency has managed to build some new, modern-day units.

Ottawa is a leader in this kind of thinking, said Fleury, and he wants a national housing strategy to also think about which units deserve renovations.

"But I'm concerned that they're just going to blanket and sprinkle money into repairs," he said.

Youth, families, Indigenous people most vulnerable

MikeBulthuisof the Alliance to End Homelessness in Ottawa also wants the federal government to offer options, such as portable housing allowances, to help the manytypes of people who find themselves homeless.

The city is seeing more families, youthand Indigenous Canadians having to roomwith friends orturning to shelters, he said.

Bulthuissaid Canada is the only G8 country without a national housing strategy, and he and othershave been pushing for one since the early 1990s, when the federal government cut back on its support for social housing.

He doesn't expect the government to lay out its spending plans forhousinguntil the next federal budget, but he does know what he wants to hear today from the government:

"A commitment to take action based on twenty years of, certainly, insufficient action," Bulthuis said.