Winnipeg’s homeless problem is out of control, says the executive director of a prominent outreach organization — while the mayor says taxpayers aren’t getting value for their money when it comes to managing the crisis.
There were around 1,256 people in various homeless situations in Winnipeg during the month of May 2022, according to End Homelessness Winnipeg (EHW) survey. The current estimate is 3,038 people.
“We are dealing with a level of social distress unlike anything I have seen in my 40-year career, and we don’t have the resources to address these things,” said Willis, who thinks the City and province are running low on funds to cover social programs.
“We are now living through this post-pandemic period, as though the pandemic ended and we are all just getting back to life as it was. There is no life as it was.”
Reaching Home offers housing and wraparound services to people facing multiple barriers, including a history of homelessness and mental illness.
Drug overdoses, property crime, violent crime and the homicide rate can all be connected to the 70% of people who are in survival mode, said Willis, noting a successful plan to tackle the drug crisis would keep many people from falling into homelessness.
According to Statistics Canada, Winnipeg’s crime severity index rose 20% from 2021-2022. Winnipeg Police Service data shows a 31.4% increase in violent crime over a five-year average. Firearm use, knife crime and general weapons use are up.
Out of control
Coordinating a response between agencies and government is critical to optimize financial resources, said Willis, adding she doesn’t think a law-and-order approach, building more jails for criminals, is the answer.
“There’s no stomach for that among politicians,” she said, noting many “normal” people spiralled into addiction and homelessness during the pandemic. “It’s now at the point where we can’t even seem to bring anything under control. It’s really very desperate.”
The City, according to the mayor, has budgeted over $50 million this year to support the province with various programs to help the homeless.
Willis said there is now a strong desire for the City and province to work together. Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham and delegates from the province travelled to Houston, Texas, to learn about that city’s success with a low-barrier housing first model.
During the past 13 years, Houston, population 2.3 million, has lowered its homeless population by around 64% using the model, says community organization SEARCH.
“There’s lots of discussion and a real willingness by the new NDP provincial government and Mayor Gillingham and council to move forward and launch a new approach similar to the Houston model,” said Willis. “The mayor wants us all in the same boat all rowing in the same direction (but) the greatest challenge of all is who is going to fund it?”
Progress is being made, but not fast enough for residents or those suffering on the street, said Gillingham, adding Premier Wab Kinew is making the issue a priority.
“Issues like homelessness, addiction, mental health and poverty are traditionally the jurisdiction of the provincial government,” said Gillingham. “But we as a city, by necessity, have had to step in to try to help.”
“We need to come up with a strategy to end homelessness that leaves no one behind,” she said.
St. Boniface Street Links has been using a modified Houston model for six years. Over a 36-month period, Willis and her team housed 986 people out of encampments, transit shelters, and other spaces.
“The proof is in our outcome,” she said, noting other outreach teams in the city deserve credit for their efforts.
A lack of service delivery coordination works against the problem, said Gillingham.
“When groups like the Downtown Community Safety Partnership, or our paramedics, continue to respond to the same individuals over and over and over again, what we are doing for that individual is not working,” he said, noting low-level drug dealers are poisoning vulnerable people in a cross-Canada problem.
Many homeless people who fall into crime are not oriented to living by the rules of society, said Coun. Ross Eadie (Mynarski).
“You can call for all the solutions you want for people who are struggling, but it’s not going to get better until they – they – make a move to get better.”
The Alberta strategy
The Government of Alberta has taken aggressive action to remove many homeless encampments in Edmonton and Calgary and to direct people to appropriate services, said Minister of Seniors, Community and Social Services Jason Nixon, who noted encampments are harbingers of gang activity, exploitation, abuse, violent crime and death from exposure.
“What we did was create what we call a Navigation Center here in our province, which really gives a place for people in those circumstances to go to that has wraparound services all across government — that is now working with thousands of people to get them access to more appropriate services than a cold tent,” said Nixon, noting there are special services for women.
“We have the most shelter space in the history of our province. We moved to 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week shelter spaces so that we weren’t seeing spots where people were being pushed out to the streets to impact business owners. Instead, they had a place to be, even during the day.”
“Anybody who is presenting (encampments) as an option is not really looking at the facts of what’s taking place in those encampments,” said Nixon. “Anybody thinking that putting somebody in our cold Canadian winters inside a tent with propane heaters is an appropriate level or safe level of housing needs to give their head a shake. I mean, that’s why we were seeing people burn to death.”
Need to fill the gaps
Winnipeg’s housing shortage, with an estimated 1.8% vacancy rate, is contributing to homelessness, said officials with EHW, noting landlords may hesitate about renting apartments to at-risk individuals. People are also being evicted through apartment renovations, they said.
Average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Winnipeg is around $1,360 per month according to online rental sources.
“Unless we get down really into systemic change, and really start looking at the policies and procedures and the gaps of what’s going on, we can’t solve the problem, right?” said Betty Edel, senior director at EHW.
More seniors are becoming homeless due to rising rents, said Edel. Also, young people continue to be aged-out of foster care and end up on the street.
Rather than blaming the drug crisis for rising homelessness, Edel examines the level of trauma among at-risk people.
“If you weren’t traumatized before you were homeless, you’re certainly traumatized by being homeless,” she said, noting many homeless people, living in desperation, use drugs as medicine.
“It helps them function in this situation that is not normal for any human being.”
As for the housing first model, it has been used in Winnipeg for years with an Indigenous worldview, said Edel, adding most of Winnipeg’s homeless are Indigenous.
“It’s not only the person who’s standing in front of you what’s going on,” she said. “You need to understand the generations of the people that this person is connected to.”
“There’s a recent study done where they figured 70% to 90% of the people who are houseless have acquired brain injury,” she added. “We need to be open to a lot of different options.”
More intergovernmental and interagency discussion is happening now than ever before, said Edel.
EHW is creating a community-sector roundtable for the homeless sector to fortify current efforts. The group will examine gaps and redundancy in service delivery, said Jackie Hunt, senior director of strategy and impact with EHW.
Edel wants accountable, honest and difficult conversations about homelessness. The sector needs to admit what isn’t working and what is working, she said, adding there’s no use for defensiveness among agencies.
“If we don’t actually talk about the truth of what’s going on, there is no solution that we come up with that will work,” she said.
“We did a service delivery Expo (on Sept. 13), and it brought together 70 service providers, 120 volunteers and thousands of community members,” said Hunt.