From the CBC:
“Rural Canada's 'visible homelessness' problem driven by pandemic, high cost of housing”
('It feels like life has been
pulled to an absolute, grinding halt,' says Allison George, with partner
Stephanie Elliott. The Goderich, Ont., couple and other rural Canadians are
part of a visibly homeless demographic that some experts say is growing.)
Stephanie Elliott and Allison
George are right on the edge, not knowing if they'll spend this winter housed
or in a tent. They live in Goderich, Ont., a small town north of London with
postcard-worthy views of Lake Huron and a hot housing market. The couple are
among the many rural Canadians, the new visible homeless, who face a second
pandemic winter outside. "Housing is an absolute crisis," says
George, 34, who grew up in Blyth, Ont. "There is absolutely nothing."
Together they can afford their monthly $500 rent, a low rate that's becoming
increasingly rare in small-town Ontario and beyond. George has a part-time job
cleaning at a grocery store; Elliott survives on the Ontario Disability Support
Program. Their choices are limited: to purchase a winterized tent or stay in
the only apartment they can find, one they both describe as unsuitable. They
spend a lot of their time outdoors in Goderich's Courthouse Square along with
their friend Candy Middelkamp. Elliott said she scans Kijiji and other online
sites daily, but most of the one-bedroom units listed are $1,300 to $1,600,
well beyond their budget. For now, they are stuck in a county where the average
home price more than doubled in the last five years, from $264, 000 to to
$594,000, according to data from the Canadian Real Estate Association. It
jumped by $150,000 in a one-year period from 2020 to 2021.
Homelessness no longer hidden "We're
seeing more tent encampments pop up, and more visible homelessness in the rural
areas," said Natasha Pei, manager of cities with Tamarack Institute's
Communities Ending Poverty. In the past, homelessness was more hidden, with
people couch surfing, sleeping in cars or living in buildings without heat or
running water. The pandemic revealed
pre-existing problems and worsened others, such as rising rent, addictions,
lack of diverse housing, heightened mental health demands and transportation
barriers faced by rural communities. Then,
an unexpected trend began: urban buyers started fleeing the city in search of
wide open spaces. "We're seeing
more people from the cities creating a boom on housing prices in rural communities,"
said Pei. "Because they're going
remote, they're able to move into these communities without needing to commute
anymore and they're just driving up the costs." This has contributed to the disappearance of
rental stock, squeezing out vulnerable people who depend on cheaper rent. "It seems like there's lot of evictions
happening where landlords are selling their rental stock, which is typically a
bit more affordable, said Erin Schooley, homelessness program supervisor for
the County of Huron. "And they're not being re-entered back on the market.
"It's also even more complex for folks who may be more vulnerable, or
compromised in any way, to be taken on by landlords when their complexities are
significant."
Rural people staying at home
(Stephen Webster drives a truck
part time when his health allows. He says he supports his father in a long-term
care home in Clinton, Ont., and the money left is only enough to live outside.)
Another trend is also taking
shape, with people from rural areas staying close to home and not leaving for
major cities, according to Pei. "Goderich is my home," said Stephen
Webster, 59, who has lived in shelters across Ontario, including Toronto,
Windsor and Brampton. He drives a truck part time, when his health allows, and
uses that money to support his father in a long-term care home in nearby
Clinton, Ont. What's left is enough to get by on the street. "I know people. I have places I can
sometimes couch surf for two or three days," he said.
(Shawn Walker is executive
director of Huron Turning Point in Exeter, Ont. It has received 66 applications
since opening five years ago and housed 33 men.)
It's a trend that Shawn Walker
thinks could help the problem. For years, people experiencing homelessness in
rural areas have left for cities to access services, support and shelter.
Walker runs Huron Turning Point, a transition home for men in Exeter, Ont. "There's probably a better chance of them
getting to permanent, stable housing in a community that they understand and
know, and can be supported by, as opposed to sending them off to another city
and a whole different area where they may not have connections," Walker
said. The home has helped 25 men move from the street to stable housing in the
past five years. While it may be better for people experiencing homelessness to
stay in their communities, it doesn't solve the problem of a lack of affordable
rentals. "Our stays are now longer
than they have been in the past, because there's guys that are home right now
that are ready to go to into an apartment," said Walker. "They've got
the services they need, they're doing well, everything is good. It's just
finding that apartment that doesn't exist."
Call for urban-rural
anti-homelessness strategy
(Middelkamp draws a picture in
Courthouse Square in Goderich. The 41-year-old moved to Ontario from Alberta
while in a relationship that's since ended. She's been experiencing
homelessness for two years.)
"All of rural Canada has
these issues and they're really working in isolation trying to deal with
it," said Dee Ann Benard, executive director of the Rural Development Network.
She's calling for an urban-rural
strategy that addresses the problem across the country, firstly by sharing data
to get a clear picture of migration patterns. The Ontario government directed counties and
regions to count the number of people who are homeless in their areas by Dec.
15, in order to help develop a list of each person's individual needs. Elliott, who has struggled with addiction and
family violence, has a more personal request. "I just wish people would
have more compassion and understanding toward people who have less than them.
They don't understand trauma is what causes this," she said. "We've
all been through things out here. Nobody chooses this."
^ In a way I’m glad that the
homeless (in Canada, the US and other countries) are no longer being “hidden-away.”
That way the rest of us can no longer act as though we don’t see them. Of course
I want there to be no homeless people and think there needs to be a lot more
done on every level to help feed and clothe them and help them get jobs. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/london/homeless-rural-ontario-huron-county-1.6204515
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