For homeless people trying to stay safe in pandemic, federal housing program is a lifeline, say advocates - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:42 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

For homeless people trying to stay safe in pandemic, federal housing program is a lifeline, say advocates

Reduced access to homeless shelters during the pandemic has made an already vulnerable population more so, but advocates say a federal housing program that finds homes and support for people living on the streets offers respite for some.

With shelter space limited during pandemic, need for permanent housing is even greater

Steven Ledoux holds his cat, named Covid, at his home in Regina. Ledoux began drinking heavily after a workplace accident and lived on the streets until the Housing First program provided him with a home and other supports allowing him to stay inside throughout most of the pandemic. (Bonnie Allen/CBC News)

In the past year, the word "stay" has been repeated over and over as Canadians have been urged even ordered at times by public health officials and governments to stay apart and stay home.

And yet that isn't realistic for people who have nowhere to stay.

Homeless people have becomeparticularly vulnerable this winter as they riskexposure tofreezing temperatures dipping into the 30s and 40s onthe Prairies as well as the novel coronavirus,with more limited access to shelter spaces due to COVID-19restrictions.

"Keeping people housed is a key way to limit the spread of COVID-19 as people need to have a secure place to self-isolate," according to the federal government.

Steven Ledoux, a 50-year-old former construction worker who lived on the streets of Regina for years,knows the daily grindof searching for food, boozeand a bed.

Ledoux broke his neck in a construction job accident in 2012, then began drinking heavily. Soon, he was homeless, digging in dumpstersand couch surfing or passing out in parkades. He said he was often "drunk and disorderly, just staggering around the city" and would get arrested and spend the night in police cells or the brief-stay detox centrein Regina.

That all changed three years ago, when he was referred to the federally funded Housing First program in the city. A case worker helped him apply for disability benefits and found him a rental house in the north central area.

Lisa Beaudry, intensive case manager, left, and housing support worker Emily Huzil visit Ledoux at his home. He's been in the Housing First program for three years. The federally funded program operates in several Canadian cities, including Edmonton, Vancouver, Hamilton and Fredericton. (Bonnie Allen/CBC)

Sowhen the pandemic began early last year, Ledouxhad no trouble following the public health recommendations.

"I mainly stay home, trying to stay away from downtown,"he said.

He said hehas also managed to stayout of trouble with police and staysober most of the time.

'We can bring the supports to them'

Over the past decade, Housing First programs have become common in severalCanadian cities, touted for their simple philosophy: provide people who are chronically homeless with permanent housing,without preconditions, and then work on other challenges.

In addition to Regina, other cities with the program include Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver, Victoria, Hamilton and Fredericton.In Edmonton, for example, the city's Housing First program has helped more than 12,000people since it started in 2009. It currently serves 1,100 people.

"It doesn't matter if people are sober, it doesn't matter if they have bad records of tenancy nothing matters as long as they are homeless and in need of supports," said Kendra Giles, manager of innovative housing programs atPhoenix Residential Society in Regina.

"We put [housing] in place first, and then you can work on everything else after."

Giles oversees the Housing First program in Regina, which began with six clients in 2016and currently serves30 clients on a budget of$800,000 a year. Her agency released statistics in 2018 that showed it was cheaperto support chronically homeless people in housingthan to have them constantly cycle through police cells,jails, hospitals and detox centres.

She said she'sconvinced the pandemic has revealed that Housing First has even more merit.

"You couldn't get a more perfect setup," she said."Given that everyone has their own safe place to call home, people can actually be in a safe place to isolate, and we can bring the supports to them."

Every day, housing support teams make the rounds in the city, checking in on clients to deliver medication, groceriesand even alcohol.

Ali McCudden, a managed alcohol program support worker at Phoenix Residential Society in Regina, makes three deliveries a day to 10 Housing First clients. (Bonnie Allen/CBC)

AliMcCudden, a support worker with the managed alcohol program (MAP),opens the rear compartment of her greyminivan and grabs two tallboy beers beforewalkingup the snow-covered sidewalk to a client's house.

She makes three deliveries a day to 10 clients, bringing them "what they like beer, vodka, whisky or wine."

All are safer to drink than mouthwash or hand sanitizer, she says,and the home deliveries stop people from going to the bar or liquor store.

People who test positive can stay home

Phoenix received additional moneyfrom the federal Reaching Home program this past year to expand its managed alcohol program. The funding subsidizes the cost of alcohol, which usually costs too much forclients on provincial social assistance.

Support teams provide all kinds of services, including driving clients to medical appointments, teaching them how to cook and clean, providing addictions counsellingand managing their finances.

A couple of Housing First clients in Regina have contracted the virus and self-isolated at home. Case workers called them several times a dayand helped ensure they had everything they needed to stay home.

Rudy McCuaig, a 57-year-old army veteran, sits by his window, smoking a cigarette and waiting for the Phoenix team to arrive.

"They come check on me, make sure I'm doing OK," he said. "They're very protective."

Rudy McCuaig waits for a visit from the Housing First team with Phoenix Residential Society. They deliver his medication and groceries and check in on him a couple of times a day. (Matt Duguid/CBC)

McCuaig, who got shot in the leg when he was serving in the army, shuffles into his kitchenwitha walker. Before the pandemic, he slept in a tent in the bush near the Golden Mile Shopping Centrein Regina.

In a two-year period, he spent 246 nights in the brief-stay detox centre, which admits intoxicated people for one-night stays. He says a lot of those nights were in the winter, when temperatures turned freezing.

Homeless shelters have been forced to cut capacity

As the bitter cold hit Saskatchewan, people who are homeless have beendesperately searching for spots in shelters or warming places temporary indoor locations that allow people to briefly escape the cold.

There have been two freezing deaths in Saskatoon so far this year.

Agencies that help the province's homeless and precariously housed populations have had to cut capacity to allow for physical distancingand at times even closetemporarily due to outbreaks.

WATCH | Pandemic drives home importance of Housing First program:

Pandemic shows importance, effectiveness of Housing First programs

4 years ago
Duration 4:12
Housing First programs allow homeless people to access housing regardless of addictions or employment and those involved say the pandemic has highlighted the importance of people having somewhere safe to stay.

Jason Mercredi is executive director of Saskatoon's Prairie Harm Reduction, which offers services for vulnerable people and runs a supervised injection site. It's one of the12 designated warm-up spacesin the city but is allowing only nine people insidewhen it would normally have room for about 20.

"Pretty much every day where the temperature drops below 15, we have people begging us to let them in the building," Mercredisaid. "We've had people crying; we've had people quite upset."

Mercredisaid the city needs a 24/7 warm-up location.

Steven Ledouxsaid he doesn't miss the life-or-death struggle of being homeless in the winter.

Now, his biggest challenge is boredom.

"The more you sit around, the more you want to drink," he said.

Ledoux plays with his cat, Covid. A Housing First worker gave him the kitten before Christmas to help him get through the holidays at home alone. (Matt Duguid/CBC)

A Housing First social worker gave Ledoux a kitten before Christmastokeep him company over the holidays.Ledoux named the cat"Covid" and jokes that he hangs out with Covid instead of getting it.

He's proud of himself, though.

When public health officials urge people to stay home, it's something he can finally do.