Chronic homelessness, shelter use up despite city's efforts - Action News
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Ottawa

Chronic homelessness, shelter use up despite city's efforts

Despite implementing a 10-year plan to eliminate homelessness by 2024, Ottawa has seen a recent rise in chronic homelessness and the use of emergency shelters, a new report reveals.

City off target to end homelessness by 2024

Dr. Jeff Turnbull, medical director of Ottawa Inner City Health, wants the agencies fighting homelessness in Ottawa to 'stop being risk-averse.' (Giacomo Panico/CBC)

Despite implementing a 10-year plan to eliminate homelessness by 2024, Ottawa has seen a recent rise in chronic homelessness and the use of emergency shelters, a new report reveals.

Between 2014 and 2017, chronic homelessness in the city climbedby 21 per cent, while the use of emergency shelters rose by 16 per cent.

We have a crisis in our cityandwe're not ably addressing it.- Coun. Diane Deans

The numbers are contained in a progress report released Wednesday by theAllianceto End Homelessness, a coalitionof local social services and community organizations.

"I think at best we're treading water, we're not getting the tiger by the tail," said Coun. Diane Deans, chair of the city's community and protective services committee.

The report, titled "Homelessness in Ottawa: A Roadmap for Change,"examines how the city's 10-year plan is faringand offers suggestions on how to turn the tide.

Some good news, too

While the report contains some good news 577 people were able to move into their own homessince 2015 thanks to the city's use of a housing first model Deans acknowledges Ottawa is not trending in the right direction.

"We need to take a pause and really try toreimaginethe approach in a better way, because so far we have a crisis in our cityandwe're not ably addressing it," said Deans.

Deans said the city will look to implement the report's recommendations when it refreshes its 10-year affordable housing plan in 2019.

We have a crisis we're not addressing, councillor says

6 years ago
Duration 0:23
After the latest update on the city's 10-year plan to end chronic homelessness, Coun. Diane Deans said the crisis is not being addressed.

Take risks, agencies told

Dr.Jeff Turnbull, medical director of Ottawa Inner City Health, is urging the alliance's member agencies tolook in the mirrorbefore looking out the window.

Turnbull, who contributedto the report, wants the agencies to re-examine what they're doing, thenconsider how they can form partnerships with others.

"Traditionally what we've done is we've worked within our small silos to try and address a problem that spans across jurisdictions and sectors," he said.

"You have to have new partners. You have to start to work with police services and social services. We're not used to that. We've got toget out of our usual ruts and take chances, working with different organizations."

That approach, called"intersectoral," can also include the courts, local businesses andtransit planners.

"We've got to stop being risk-averse," Turnbullsaid. "We have to be innovative, and when you do that you have to accept risk that you will fail. But that's the way forward. The more we do that, the more we're going to succeed."