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Ottawa

Ottawa homelessness programs need greater scrutiny, report finds

A new University of Ottawa report says that millions of dollars being funnelled into local homelessness initiatives are not being properly tracked to see if the money's been well spent.

Analysis asks whether billions spent on homeless programs in Canada work

A new report from the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy calls for governments to take stock of housing programs to see if the public is getting value for money. (Ashley Burke/CBC News)

A new University of Ottawa report says that millions of dollars being funnelled into local homelessness initiatives are not being properly tracked to see if the money's been well spent.

The study from the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy has also foundthat theCity of Ottawa's housing programs have been less successful than others in the community.

"We can do better," said Kevin Page, the institute's presidentand co-chair of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness.

"The impact is so important. It changes the future of people."

Kevin Page, president of the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy, and his team put out a report today calling for an evaluation of government housing and homelessness programs. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

In his former role as Canada's parliamentary budget officer, Page was charged with seeking value for money for federally-funded programs.

Page's team at the university has done something similar by analysing the money spent battling homelessness in Canada, usingthe city of Ottawa as an example.

In the last federal budget, the government committed to approximately $4 billion over the next 11 years to housing and homelessness programs.

Cities and provinces also contribute money to get people into proper homes.

"When we spend these billions of dollars annually, on issues like homelessness [and] anti-poverty reduction, what is the impact? Are we following the best practices?" Page said.

"That really was the motivation [for the report]."

Lack of follow-up

The report which comes out later Monday morning was co-authored by fourth-year economics studentAlannah McBride and Randall Bartlett, the institute's chief economist.

It found there was alack of tracking or follow-up to assess the outcomes of homelessness initiatives.

Results could be good, bad, or ugly. And the money seems to flow just the same."- A quote from Monday's report

The report found that best practices across the country are not being shared, and that at the local level "the trail between money and performance can get disconnected."

"Results [of homelessness initiatives] could be good, bad, or ugly. And the money seems to flow just the same," the study found.

Theresearch comes ahead of the federal government's expected announcement of a national housing strategy this week.

In order for any strategy to be successful, the federal government "must ensure that funding is tied to the desired outcomes, taking into account demographic, geographic and other confounding factors," the report notes.

Nearly $83M spent in Ottawa

In the capital in 2016-17, almost $83 million was spent on homelessness initiatives.

This money came from all levels of government, including affordable housing programs, the Community Homelessness Prevention Initiative and the Local Poverty Reduction Fund.

There are currently several "housing-first" programs run by various agencies in Ottawa, including those run by the city,the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) and the Sandy Hill Community Health Centre.

Those programsprovide homes as well as other supports for tenants' health and well-being.

But as the institute pointed out, the varying outcomes of the three programs are "striking." The CMHA program achieveda 93 per cent success rate, the Sandy Hill program 81 per cent and the City of Ottawa program only 66 per cent.

Success is measured by how many people stay off the streets after accessing housing.

Ottawa landlord Nitin Mehra's fridge was crawling with maggots and rotting food after the city's housing first program failed him. (Ashley Burke/CBC News)

The institute isn't the first group to criticisethe City of Ottawa's program and call for closer scrutiny.

The program was put under the microscopelast month when an Ottawa landlord complained to CBC that a tenant had trashed his apartment.

Since then, there have been calls for the city to conduct a "fidelity assessment" to ensure the housing-first program is following its stated values.

At the time, the city confirmed toCBCNewsit had not conducted an "official fidelity assessment" on the program.

Nor is there a requirement to do so from either the federal or provincial governments that provide the money to get people into homes, the city said.