Emergency shelter use in Saint John jumps 25% - Action News
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New Brunswick

Emergency shelter use in Saint John jumps 25%

With a new report showing emergency shelter use jumped 25 per cent in Saint John last year, an advocacy group has set a goal to eliminate homelessness in the city within 10 years.

Group hopes to eliminate homelessness within 10 years

The number of people who used an emergency shelterin Saint John jumped by 25 per cent last year, a report released by the Human Development Council on Wednesday shows.

The group, which hopes to eliminate homelessness in the citywithin 10years,is now calling on the community and common council to help reach that goal, said executive director Randy Hatfield.

A total of 341 people relied onthe Salvation Army's Centre of Hope for men, the Coverdale Centre for women and the winter Out of the Cold program in 2012, up from 272 people the year before, according to the report.

Of those, 67 were youth, between the ages of 16 and 24.

"The Salvation Army is nowhere an 18-year-old or 19-year-old should be," saidHatfield, noting the need for a youth shelter.

Hesuspects the actual number of homeless people is even higher because the statisticsdon't reflect those who "couch surf" by staying with friends, reside in boarding houses, or make other temporary rental arrangements.

The average length of stay at the city's two year-roundshelters, which have a combined37 beds,is also lengthy, said Hatfield.

The Salvation Army's is the highest in the province at 31 days.It also has the highest occupancy rate of the province's eight emergency shelters at 88.5 per cent.

The Coverdale Centre's average length of stay was 19 days, with an occupancy rate of 61 per cent.

Meanwhile, Saint John's apartment vacancy rate is 9.7 per cent the highest in the country, said Hatfield.

"So you combine that piece of information and you think, 'How can we connect these dots?'"

Hatfieldcontends there should be a way to work with landlordsto get homeless people away from shelters and into those vacant apartments, providing them with a place they can call their own.

He also wants city council to support affordable housing by allowing mixed residential developments.