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I call the meeting to order.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), as per the decision voted upon by this committee back in June, we are continuing our study on poverty and poverty reduction.
I'm very pleased to be in Maple Ridge, B.C., and to be hosted by my colleague and sometime friend, Dan Ruimy. It's really a pleasure to be here. We drove by and saw his office on the way in, which was very nice, very well placed.
I do apologize for being late. We were at a shelter this morning. I'm going to blame Wayne just because it's easy. He just kept asking questions, but we learned a lot.
We have a fantastic full list of witnesses here today. We have Stephen Elliott-Buckley from Simon Fraser University's labour studies department. He is appearing as an individual. Welcome, sir.
From the City of Maple Ridge, we have Nicole Read, mayor. Welcome. Nice to see you again, Your Worship.
From Covenant House Vancouver, we have John Harvey, director of program services. Welcome.
From Maple Ridge/Pitt Meadows Community Services, we have Vicki Kipps, executive director. Welcome.
Last but not least, from the Township of Langley, we have William R. Storie, senior adviser to council, corporate administration. That's quite the business card, sir. Welcome.
Each of you will have about seven minutes to provide an introduction. After everyone has had a turn to do that, I'm sure many of us will have a series of questions. They are timed. If you see me put the mike on, it's an indication that we're either out of time or will very soon be out of time. Often I will have to cut off my colleagues.
Without further ado, we're going to start with Stephen Elliott-Buckley from Simon Fraser University. The next seven minutes are yours, sir.
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Thank you very much for your invitation to speak with you today.
While I grew up and taught high school in the Tri-Cities down the street, I now live in East Vancouver, on the unceded traditional territory of the Coast Salish people, and particularly the Squamish, Musqueam, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples.
For the last four years I've been teaching a third-year undergraduate labour studies course at Simon Fraser University called “The Politics of Labour”. I spent much of the time in the course exploring the nature of precarious work among public sector support workers in B.C. and how intersectionality aggravates an already difficult labour market. I also have the privilege of sitting on the steering committee of the BC Poverty Reduction Coalition in the only province or territory that has no poverty reduction plan.
Today I'd like to share four ideas with you that are framed by something Stuart McLean once said in an interview: “When I’m not writing my stories, that’s what I think about all the time—the politics of this country and what we have done together.”
The first idea I have for you today is about what we do together, and that's building a better Canada through the federal government's demonstrating strong advocacy and tangible leadership. Generally, I'm pleased to hear about the federal plans for a national poverty reduction strategy as well as a national housing strategy, as well as collaboration with all levels of government, but in 1989 the House of Commons voted unanimously to eliminate child poverty by the year 2000; that was a noble goal, but we didn't solve child poverty by then or by today. Strong federal advocacy and leadership mean doing more than making a pledge.
When the finance minister said Canadians need to get used to job churn, we feel demoralized that even the federal government has given up on pursuing an economy that works for people, where people have hope and faith in stable, rewarding work, instead of precarious work in a world of increasing income and wealth inequality.
The second idea is about collaboration and inclusion. Our country is at an inflection point right now in a world threatening to move away from multilateral co-operation. Instead of creating bilateral plans with provinces, territories, regions, or cities, leadership from the federal government means hosting broad multilateral dialogue and goal-setting with all levels of government. Now is the time for the federal government to facilitate a pan-Canadian approach to poverty reduction, with universal targets and financial support to the provinces and territories, to avoid inconsistent approaches to poverty around the country.
While the committee is including an analysis of the impact of gender on poverty, I expect you'll need to broaden your lens to examine intersectionality more fully. Oppression, domination, and discrimination affect people differently not only because of gender but also because of race, ethnicity, indigeneity, class, sexuality, geography, age, disability, ability, migration status, religion, etc.
As a university-educated white male from an upper-middle-class upbringing, I'm uniquely unqualified to speak on behalf of people who experience intersections of power relations and discrimination. Beyond having people who have lived with poverty on your advisory committee, you need to include people who are still living in poverty. The Single Mothers' Alliance BC has been running listening projects to hear from people's real experiences. The committee should establish listening projects in all parts of the country if you truly wish to hear how poverty is affecting people.
The third idea is to manifest collaborative and co-operative principles in building more robust and democratic homes, communities, and economies. I know that some CMHC representatives have spoken to the committee and that the executive director of the Co-op Housing Federation of BC will be here this afternoon. Reinvesting in renewable, existing co-op housing, as well as helping finance new co-op housing, will create more economic and human stability even in places not experiencing the affordability crises happening in Toronto and Vancouver. The federal government can also support co-housing developments that build community resilience right inside a community housing model.
There are other poverty-fighting economic models that deserve federal government support. Worker co-operatives, for instance, provide a structure for economic empowerment for individuals as well as democratic workplaces. The Canadian Worker Co-op Federation's Tenacity Works revolving investment fund helps new and expanding worker co-ops, and with the large generation of business owners in the midst of retiring, the federal government can educate owners to consider selling their businesses to co-operatives made up of their workers.
Unions also play a key role in fighting poverty and creating stronger community and economic resilience. The federal government has a unique role to fight the demoralization of job churn and rising income inequality by being a tangible leader and a model for the rest of the country by protecting defined benefit pensions, organizing and collective bargaining rights, and successorship rights.
The fourth idea is to make reconciliation tangible. That's part of what Stuart McLean spoke of when said he thought about what we have done together. The physical and social infrastructure deficit on reserves is appalling because we have not yet fixed this together. Again, the federal government must lead us all by engaging in multilateral collaborations with first nations communities. Funding for homes, schools, health care facilities, community centres, and other physical and social infrastructure on reserves cannot wait for a future generation that feels sufficiently compelled to tackle our complicity in their poverty.
I'd like to end with another way of looking at collaboration. The BC Poverty Reduction Coalition has a seven-pillar approach to a poverty reduction plan: higher wages, welfare, housing, child care, health, education, and structural barriers that marginalize people. All the pillars are connected. Reducing and eliminating poverty means looking at all these policy areas through a poverty reduction lens. We can no longer afford to address poverty in a disjointed manner.
Thank you very much.
I'd like to start by acknowledging that we're here today on the unceded territory of the Katzie First Nation and Kwantlen First Nation, with whom we have strong partnerships.
In planning for coming here today, I did touch base with one of our chiefs, Chief Susan Miller, and they are concerned about funding for post-secondary education for their band members. I wanted to carry that forward, but I have no doubt that you will be hearing from many first nations on this issue of poverty in our country.
As you have noted, I am mayor of the city of Maple Ridge. I'm also the co-chair of the metro Vancouver regional task force on homelessness. I am a Canadian historian who has worked for almost 20 years in the area of aboriginal issues, most notably as the former project manager for document collection for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian residential schools. I'm also mother to two children, and I try to instill values of social conscience in them every day.
I grew up in a cycle of poverty. I broke that cycle of poverty through post-secondary education. While I will not be focusing my talk today on post-secondary education, it is something that our community needs. Our citizens need very close access to post-secondary education. Post-secondary education, as we all know, breaks the cycle of poverty. I'm going to come back to that in a different play a little later.
I'd like to thank you for your renewed interest in poverty reduction and for the work being done by the federal government on the national housing strategy. I had the pleasure of meeting again with . This is the third time I've had the opportunity to engage him on issues of housing. He is a wonderful representative for the government on this issue.
I'd like to note the 2010 report of the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities. I've reviewed that report in full. It is a road map.
I appreciate that everybody is here engaging the public again. It's been seven years since that was delivered. It's a good time to check in with the public. However, I strongly encourage you to get moving on some of the things that were identified in 2010.
I don't really have a lot new to say, which is an indication that there was some extensive public engagement. We do have a sense of the levers to alleviate poverty in our country.
Because of the tight time frame, I'm going to focus on homelessness. This is an issue that has significantly impacted us in our city and definitely in metro Vancouver. I understand that you will be taking a tour of the shelter, and I'm going to speak to that in a few minutes.
Metro Vancouver has over 60,000 households in the region that spend over half of their income on housing. Over 100,000 people accessed food banks here in 2016. Close to 65,000 people in metro Vancouver received income assistance in 2016. Income assistance has not increased in nine years, while the average market rent has increased every year since 2010. These are significant issues that we face. Our homeless numbers are increasing. In the 2014 homeless count, we had just under 3,000 people who were homeless. We expect these numbers to be at or over 4,000 people in our count, which is coming, with statistics being reported at the end of March.
For metro Vancouver, one of the most significant parcels of funding we are allocated is the homelessness partnering strategy funding. It's important funding for our region, and it's money that we are able to allocate ourselves. I have heard mention of this money potentially being run through the province, and I'm here to say that it's very important that metro Vancouver be able to maintain control over that funding.
There are some challenges with the funding. There is 65% of the funding that is allocated to Housing First. That is great; we know that Housing First works. However, Housing First doesn't work alone. There are health supports that are needed. Youth do not fit well into the 65% Housing First allocation. We would like to see some greater flexibility around the allocation of funding for homelessness in our region beyond that 65% allocation to Housing First.
In addition to that, we are not able to roll over money. We used to be able to roll over money from year to year. I think it's really important. To be able to roll over any unused funding would be a quick win for us to deal with homelessness in this region.
To speak to the issue of unused funding, which is very important, it usually happens because service providers spend an awful lot of their time just writing applications for grant funding. The grants are short in their time span. It doesn't give them enough real ability to plan and wrap good programs and systems around things. We have some real concerns when we find a program is undersubscribed and we know that the numbers within the region should be saying otherwise. I think we need to create strategies that allow for service providers, who are absolutely critical in this area, to have better long-term planning ability on longer-term contracts.
We have very significant gaps in the housing continuum, so the national housing strategy is obviously critical for our area. We need housing. We need it built yesterday, so we're going to have some real time catching up. We need affordable housing for seniors. We need affordable housing with three-bedroom apartments for children. We know that we're dealing in metro Vancouver with Syrian refugee families who have upwards of 10 children, and we're putting them into two-bedroom apartments. That's not working. The faster we can get housing built, the better.
We also want to see incentives for the market to be able to build rentals. Rentals are really important. In Maple Ridge we are looking at around $900 for a one-bedroom basement suite. That is not affordable. The shelter allowance, as you well know, is $375 a month. Without a rent supplement that is high enough and for a long enough term, we can't easily get people into housing.
In Maple Ridge and in metro Vancouver, we have a significant number of gaps. You can build all the housing for people who are poor and people who are homeless, but at the end of the day, we're seeing a massive increase in the number of entrenched, chronically ill, homeless street people. We need health supports for that, especially mental health supports in this province, which are badly lacking in the region covered by Fraser Health. In their strategic plan, they note themselves that we have roughly 50,000 severely addicted mentally ill people, a percentage of whom are on our streets every day, and not nearly enough beds to support that number. We would like to see a funding commitment from the federal government around mental health, and we would like to see some standards from a leadership perspective from the federal government out to the provinces. We need our province to have a poverty reduction strategy, but we also need our province to honour their commitments in the area of mental health.
We know that preventing homelessness is a lot cheaper than trying to reverse it, so I need to speak today to the issue of children. For example, 40% of homeless youth have been part of the child welfare system. We have an awful lot of children in care. In Maple Ridge, among our homeless people, the greatest number were formerly children in care. The children are not getting the attention they need early on. We're seeing it every day.
I know that education is not within the purview of the federal government and that it's a provincial issue. However, as Canadians and as a federal government, we set standards for the treatment of our children across the board everywhere in this country. We have so many children, my own included, who are twice-exceptional—gifted and with a learning disability—who are in our school system and struggling every day, be it with anxiety or be it with undiagnosed, unsupported learning disabilities. These children struggle into their teens. Then they are subject to entering pathways that lead them to homelessness.
We also have a lot of children in our schools here in Maple Ridge who are in foster care. They need extra support. A lot of times, those in our education system are front-line identifiers for some of the challenges that children are struggling with at home. We need to be able to create programs that actually identify and are able to support our children.
Sadly, in our city we needed to reduce the number of children who were unable to access quick psychological or psychiatric care and who needed people to talk to, so our community and its citizens have paid for a youth mental wellness facility. I don't think it's the responsibility of our citizens, as wonderful as they are, or our city, as wonderful as I think it is, to have to pay for mental health care for our youth. We need that youth mental wellness centre funded, and we don't really care who funds it. We'd like to see funding from both levels of government. We have reduced the wait times in our city. It's been an extremely successful pilot, something that could probably be carried out in other cities. Our kids are able to walk in off the street and speak to someone when they need that. That's a really significant issue for us.
The shelter that you will visit today does not meet the standards of our commitments as Canadians under the United Nations conventions. We have a very significant announcement coming at one o'clock. We have had two commitments from our provincial government to build supportive housing for these people. Eighteen of the people who are in that temporary shelter that you will be visiting are from a Cliff Avenue homeless camp that resolved in October of 2015. Those people have been in that shelter for a year and a half. Five more are over at the Salvation Army. They were also in that camp. These people suffer from very significant mental health and addiction issues. We've been told by the experts in our provincial government that these people must be given supportive housing.
Two proposals that have been brought forward for supportive housing have failed because our citizens are uncomfortable having people with this magnitude of a problem living in their neighbourhood. We have to work as governments to reduce the stigma so that we're able to build the services that people need to get well.
I think that when you visit the shelter, you need to keep in mind that we have commitments under these international human rights conventions for housing, treatment, and displacement of people, and it's very significant that this is the situation we find ourselves in after two years of dealing with our provincial government. Thank you.
I would like to thank the standing committee for this opportunity to participate in this consultation process for the study of poverty reduction strategies.
I would like to briefly provide some context on Covenant House Vancouver and the work that we do as it relates to the subject matter of the committee.
We've been in existence since 1997. We serve approximately 1,300 youth, ages 16 to 24, and we provide a continuum of services ranging from outreach and drop-in services to short-term residential crisis beds and supportive transitional housing. We also provide professional, outcome-focused case management services for mental health and addiction, clinical assessments and referrals, life skills, housing support, education, and employment readiness.
We are privately funded. Over 90% of our funding is private, and every public dollar that we receive is leveraged nine to one by private funding. Last year we turned away 314 individual youth because of not enough beds, and we are on track to exceed that number this year.
Having read the poverty reduction plan, it is my view that many of the recommendations within the report will go a long way to resolving poverty within our nation. That said, I'd still like to comment on a few of the recommendations and focus on a couple of things that I believe will be particularly transformational and impactful if adopted.
With respect to defining and measuring poverty, it was noted in the report that the conceptualization and measurement of poverty is complex and continues to be a source of debate among poverty reduction advocates, social policy analysts, and policy-makers. The Parliament of Canada website states that in Canada the federal government has endorsed no official measurement of poverty. The question then arises, how do we meaningfully talk about poverty if we don't have a common language around poverty and a set of metrics to measure the impact of any and all of our efforts toward reducing poverty?
In Canada, policy, research, and program development are informed by several different metrics. While all of these metrics serve a purpose in understanding poverty-related issues at some level, they are all focused on societal deficits that serve to direct our attention to what is not working. Another way to measure would take a strength-based approach that would direct our attentions to building upon the strengths of our society that are known to reduce poverty and improve our quality of life. The report highlighted the Canadian index of well-being as an example. Regardless of what methods we adopt, the axiom “you can't fix what you don't measure” rings true here.
A large focus within government policy over the years has been to eliminate and control the burden of debt and avoid passing debt to our children and future generations, and rightly so. In the same way, why would we not share the same urgency and concern of not passing on the burden and cost of unaddressed homelessness and poverty for future generations?
Costly public policy issues and negative impacts that are associated with poverty include homelessness, welfare costs, increased unemployment, child poverty rates, social exclusion, mental health problems, addictions, and crime. We must look at the solutions to poverty as having economic opportunities that will also pay social dividends because they are both related. By investing in our human capital, we can increase workforce participation and production, which will have a corresponding impact on our tax revenues.
For example, we know that if a child is educated to post-secondary, the long-term economic impact is profound. It is estimated that over 40% of homeless youth have been involved with child welfare services. We know that in excess of 50% of homeless youth did not complete high school. The Conference Board of Canada has estimated that a child aging out of the foster care system will earn $326,000 less income over the course of their lifespan compared with the average Canadian. Further in the same report, it was estimated that by investing in the education of the estimated 2,291 youth who aged out of government care in 2011, the government would save $65.5 million in social assistance payments and raise an additional $169 million in income taxes, as well as another $54 million in consumption taxes.
We also know that poverty is intergenerational. Changing the trajectory of a homeless youth through education will work to stem the future intergenerational impact of the individual youth's children.
The youth we see at Covenant House have hopes and dreams for a better quality of life and future. When given the opportunity to pursue their ambitions, which includes becoming educated, they take advantage of it and pursue careers within business, the hospitality industry, trade work, culinary arts, engineering, film and media, the arts, and emergency and medical services.
It is time to focus on a different perspective and approach to dealing with poverty. In addressing poverty, we must pursue a holistic approach and address the root causes of the issue and not just the symptoms. We cannot continue dealing with the acute symptoms on a short-term basis and expect to achieve long-term success. Rather, we must commit to identifying and treating root causes on a longer-term basis in order to find sustainable solutions.
We need to move into generational thinking on this issue, thinking 20 or 30 years out. We need to take a balanced and sustainable approach that employs all the strengths of our society and not just see government as responsible for creating the solutions. We will need long-term leadership and champions who will find a way to manage political changes, economic conditions, and shifts in policy priorities. We must continue to develop ongoing targets in performance metrics that are continually measured and provide accountability.
Where do we start? To my mind, we will need to take a balanced approach that will choose initiatives having an immediate impact in reducing poverty as well as initiatives that will take longer to realize a return on the investment. However, our priority should be to get upstream of poverty, which will work to alleviate the economic and social costs associated with managing the crises of poverty.
Relative to our experience at Covenant House Vancouver, these might include things such as programs and initiatives that will keep at-risk youth from dropping out of school; investments and incentives to afford post-secondary education and training to all Canadian youth and untapped labour pools; effective family supports to mitigate and reduce the need to put children in care in the first place; for youth who do end up in care, ensuring that they are effectively supported to exit out of care successfully and transition into healthy adulthood; adopting a systems approach within our mental health and addictions services to ensure immediate, effective, and ongoing support to reduce the demoralizing effects of relapse; a national housing and homelessness strategy; and developing a common understanding and measurements of poverty.
Thank you.
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Thank you very much for including me in today's presentation to the committee.
I represent a multi-service social services charity called Maple Ridge/Pitt Meadows Community Services. We have a charitable history of serving the communities of Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows for over 46 years. On an annual basis, we serve approximately 12,000 individuals by offering more than 31 different programs that address needs in the community. Our client-centred services support the various ages and stages and circumstances of life, including child development, parenting, victim services, mental health services, support for people with developmental disabilities, youth and parents in conflict, aboriginal services, and seniors services.
Our programs and services embrace five key values: community, compassion, excellence, growth, and respect. For the most part, our organization serves as a safety net for individuals and families who strive to live successful lives despite overwhelming obstacles, including risks relating to homelessness, poverty, food security, mental health, isolation, and struggling to cope. A high percentage of our clients live in poverty, facing complex needs and challenges.
According to the United Way of the Lower Mainland's free helpline, the top areas of need identified by Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows residents were housing and homelessness, substance use, health, mental health, and government services.
As stated by Ontario's minister responsible for poverty reduction strategy, poverty has many faces and there are countless circumstances that lead to poverty, but we know there is one overarching path out of poverty, which is realizing human potential. Maple Ridge/Pitt Meadows Community Services has a mission to support and empower individuals and families to realize their potential and achieve self-reliance.
I'd like to highlight our work with young victims, youth, and seniors. With the help of community partnerships, we offer a program called “Alisa's wish”. Alisa's Wish Child and Youth Advocacy Centre provides a child-friendly environment for children and youth who experience sexual and physical violence. They receive support services at one location from one integrated team of professionals. The reason I'm raising this particular program is that Alisa's Wish and other advocacy centres like it have received federal funding, which is critical to the development and sustainability of these valuable community programs. I want to stress the positive impacts that this centre is having in our community, such as improved forensic interviewing, improved case information presented to crown counsel, and improved outcomes for young victims and their non-offending family members. For example, by offering trauma-informed services that are time sensitive and accessible, we're aiding the prevention of isolation, anxiety, substance use, and other at-risk behaviours that may develop when trauma is not properly supported and addressed.
In addition to service outcomes, I also want to make the business case that when the federal government invests in grants to non-profit organizations, the overall financial investment can have two or three or more times the value because of our ability to harness other professionals within an integrated model and our ability to fundraise and engage donors and volunteers—all of this compounding the government's investment in our community's children and youth.
Another preventive initiative that we're leading is the Youth Wellness Centre. Again, this is a community collaboration that focuses on the needs of young people with mild to moderate mental illness and substance use. Our community came together identifying the growing number of children and youth with anxiety, social anxiety, and substance use, including self-medicating and self-harm, and the list goes on. We envisioned a barrier-free, youth-friendly location where parents and youth could access responsive services and, based strictly on community donations and in-kind space provided by the City of Maple Ridge, we opened the Youth Wellness Centre this past April. We have provided psychiatric assessment, mental health, and primary care services for more than 120 youth between the ages of eight and 24 years.
I want to stress the urgent need for funding for this project, which represents innovative clinical and medical practices. We have moved away from the notion of “do more with less” to an approach of “do differently.” Innovations such as the use of telehealth capability, digital communication, and clinical assessment tools and corporate sponsorships are the way of the future.
Finally, I'd like to speak to the vulnerability of seniors in our community. According to Fraser Health reports, incidents of dementia, depression, and anxiety among our older adults in Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows are higher than the region's average. We also have more seniors living alone, 36% compared to Fraser Health's overall of 26%. According to our community partners, a temporary shelter run by RainCity Housing reports 10% of its clients are seniors, and the food bank reports that seniors make up 22% of its regular users.
The impact of poverty on seniors is overwhelming. We hear from seniors who share the daily meals on wheels delivery because they can only afford a meal for one, or who have to make the choice between food and medication in their monthly expenses due to the high housing costs.
Living in poverty impacts the rate at which an individual's circumstance can quickly decline. For example, a senior accessing our community law advocacy program rapidly went from having a stable home environment where he was living meagrely on Canada pension and a small private pension, as he had worked his entire adult life, to living in a shelter. In this situation, he faced challenges with an unethical landlord and an issue with the delivery of his pension cheques. Without a cushion of savings, he completely lost the security of his home in a matter of days.
We find there is a gap that exists between the services that are available to seniors and seniors actually being aware of and accessing the benefits that are intended for them. I want to stress the importance of community-based programs that provide accessible, face-to-face programs, such as the poverty law advocacy program and seniors outreach programs that reduce barriers to access. Online applications cannot be the only option.
As an example, if you're a senior and you want to access the online Canada Pension Plan disability application, you would need to fully understand and complete not one, not two, but six separate online booklets. If you're referred by the ministry, you complete an additional one. That's seven booklets in total. A task such as this is simply overwhelming for vulnerable seniors.
In closing, I'd like to summarize the valuable role that non-profits serve in poverty reduction strategies, particularly when focusing on prevention and resiliency. We support important preventive and responsive services such as Alisa's Wish and a youth wellness centre, which enhance a child's and youth's potential for stability, growth, employment, and ultimately contributing to society. Also, it must be made a priority to support vulnerable seniors by offering community-based programs and systems and processes that close the gap for seniors to access and benefit from the programs that are intended for them.
Thank you.
First I'd like to thank the committee for allowing me the opportunity to come and present.
Poverty is an issue that affects all of us, particularly now with the rate of homelessness and the price of housing throughout the Lower Mainland. People of all ages are at risk, but our seniors and youth are particularly vulnerable.
Our residents need services, programs, transportation, housing options, and support to break the cycle of poverty, and we have a role to play. With the co-operation of the Township of Langley, that means working to provide a variety of affordable housing options that meet the needs of residents of all ages, incomes, and stages of life.
Living on a fixed income is a concern for many of our senior citizens, and two years ago, the Township of Langley was formally recognized as an age-friendly community by the Province of British Columbia. We have adopted an age-friendly strategy that features 52 initiatives that encompass everything from social inclusion to employment to health services to housing. Langley township's age-friendly strategy promotes aging in place and creation of adaptable homes. We encourage builders to think about offering these features when they are creating homes in our community.
Until about three years ago, the Township of Langley had no suites within it that were legal, and council adopted and allowed illegal suites. We estimate that currently we have approximately 6,000 suites being registered. Through that registration, they have to meet the building code safety requirements and everything else. It's just one more form of allowing people to find suitable residency at a fair market price.
Secondary suites also provide a great format for affordable housing. The township has put in a licensing fee and strict bylaws to ensure suites are legal and safe.
Manufactured home parks are another option for those needing affordable housing. For those of you who are not familiar with the township, we have six communities within our jurisdiction, six mini-cities, and we have six manufactured, large, modular mobile parks.
A couple of years ago, in an effort to protect them, council created a policy that is more restrictive than provincial regulations for manufactured parks, so they will work with the.... If somebody wanted to sell that property, I've created the packages and the policies that say what the person has to do for the residents of the park, to subsidize them and pay for certain things if they are going to sell it, if they are going to rezone the park.
As well, the creation of additional manufactured home parks would be considered by council if someone were to come forward with such a proposal.
Rental housing is becoming more in demand, and more units are being built. In the package I've put up, this is phase one. This is already completed, and it's in Willoughby. It's all rental units. Phase two will be the same, and it will all be rental units too.
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Absolutely. I think there has to be prevention in any housing solution that we're dealing with. The Housing First money is spent under a very good principle: we invest in housing first because people can't think about getting their lives forward without having safe housing, a shelter, a roof over their heads. However, a number of the people we're trying to house through the Housing First model in metro Vancouver need other things. The other things are not being provided. We need some means of bringing together resources to provide solutions such as outreach.
Vicki Kipps mentioned the number of forms. We see this across the board with people who are in poverty—the number of forms they have to sign to get access to services. We need resources that can work with people, sit with them, and transition them into the different services that they need through the continuum.
In this province, if we put people in housing under Housing First and those people need health care, there is an expectation that they will be able to make it to appointments. Things like that are simple for all of us, for you and me, but some of these people who are really struggling need help. They need assistance, and it's ongoing, and it's beyond Housing First.
The other thing is that Housing First doesn't fit well for youth, who are within the provincial system of care, yet we see them on our streets. Just a couple of weeks ago, we were notified about a youth who was sleeping in McDonald's. We were trying to mobilize food cards because McDonald's was willing to have the child sleep overnight in their restaurant as long as he was buying food.
This is not something that fits well within the 65% allocation for Housing First. We need to have a bit of flexibility around that 65% so that we can allocate it, as a region, into the areas that we feel.... We'll try to invest the 65% in Housing First because we are working under Housing First principles—there is no question about that—but we do need a little more flexibility in terms of the proposals we accept.
:
Absolutely. We know our community well. We work together, especially in this community, where we have a very connected environment of service provision. We have eyes on the ground all of the time. We know what we need in this community. We shouldn't be subject to higher levels of government making decisions about what we need in this community, decisions that are partisan-based or steeped in politics.
At the end of the day, when we have kids in need and we have vulnerable adults in need, we need to get in and support them. We do need a stronger voice, but we don't have power in the voice. lt's sad, because right now....
Fighting for vulnerable people in this community as I do comes from a long history of working with some of the aboriginal communities across our country and understanding that sometimes you have to stand in a tough pocket to make change, but at the end of the day, I shouldn't have to scream. I shouldn't have to get angry. I shouldn't have to leverage the media in order to get the resources I need for vulnerable people in this community. It's wrong. I should be able to have a conversation, which I've done with my MP, and have conversations with my MLA, and know that as Canadians, with values that support vulnerable people, we will drive the resources that we have available to make those changes.
That's not what's happening in this community. In this community, when I need services brought to something.... When I had a tent city on a residential street, I had to scream in the media. I had to bring in the opposition.
It's wrong. It's just wrong. It's a waste of my valuable resources that could be going into other things in our community, like making sure that we are driving the messages up to higher levels of government about our seniors and our kids.
:
I understand that there are concerns about the jurisdictional nature of funding and how we make decisions, but the reality is that our Canadian values trump politics. They have to, because that's who we are as people. That is what we're known for internationally.
For me, my re-election does not matter when I have a mattress shop full of people sleeping next to each other on cots with no privacy and no dignity. For me, that has to be the paramount issue for why I'm here and what I use my voice for. Unfortunately, we do step into the jurisdictional issues when we make the decision.
We're told by the experts in the province, for example, that these people are so ill that they need to be in a congregant model of care, so we work together to try to deliver the congregant model of care. Then the public stands up and says they don't want the congregant model of care in their backyard, so the provincial government says there's no more congregant model of care.
How can that happen when we as Canadians have signed international human rights treaties to say that we will make sure our vulnerable people are housed and are not forcibly displaced, that we will take care of people with disabilities in this country? We have a very obvious example of how that is not happening right now. It shouldn't just be me as a Canadian who's concerned: this is the value system for all Canadians.
We had provincial experts telling us the things we need to do, so then why aren't we doing them? If we have experts tell us how we need to deal with cancer in this country, we don't have citizens stand up and say, “I'm sorry; I don't agree with that.” We have to take care of people who have mental health issues. The only way we can deal with stigma in this country around mental health and addiction is to say, as leaders, that we will support these people because as Canadians that's what we have to do.
:
Thank you, Chair, and welcome to everybody. These are wonderful presentations this morning.
One thing I think the government tends to do at the federal level is to try to alleviate situations. For example, I think we've done some good things with the Canada child benefit. I think that is something that will be transformational over time. There is an increase in the IAH, investment in affordable housing. Those things are great programs, though they're certainly not the solution.
I'm going to shift gears a little bit and start with Mr. Elliott-Buckley.
We're a committee that is travelling the country. We're going to advise the minister on coming up with a national poverty reduction strategy. As we know, there are lots of different pockets and bubbles, whether of shelters, housing, or mental health. We need, obviously, big support in all of them.
Strategically, what would you do over the long term to get upstream of poverty, as Mr. Harvey said, especially generational poverty, in Canada? I do have an answer in mind, but I want to hear what you say. What would you do?
Thank you to the witnesses for being here.
We began today by visiting The Gateway of Hope in Langley.
There was a call for consideration of possibly more witnesses. Mr. Storie, you came to mind immediately. To get it through the cycle of approval within the township and the committee took a few days, so you have our apologies for a last-minute request to have you here, but I'm glad you are.
It provides a unique perspective, in that north of the Fraser River you have Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows, while south of the Fraser River you have Langley city and Langley township. They have similar populations—Langley is just a little larger, about 10%—and they are facing very similar issues. They have similar climates, similar topography. Maple Ridge is a little more mountainous, but they're very close and facing similar issues.
In 2005 the community came together with all levels of government and leaders throughout the community who represented everything from fire rescue and police to school boards. All levels of government and all the leaders came together and said, “What is the number one issue we want to work together on?”
I believe you were there in 2005. From that we said, as leaders, that the number one issue was homelessness. It was a growing problem. I know you were involved with that whole process, and you continue to be involved with the homelessness issue and also taking care of seniors and the drug issues. From that 2005 meeting, we had a couple of people in the community who said they would take the leadership on that issue. We ended up a couple of years later with The Gateway of Hope, funded by all levels of government participating in it.
When we say things are underfunded, it means more taxes. Either taxes need to be increased to provide the extra funding or we change how those funds are allocated. That's the challenge of every level of government, whether it's municipal, provincial, or federal. You don't want to raise taxes unless it's absolutely necessary.
What was unique in Langley was that Langley provided the land, and in the different examples you gave, there was no request for additional funding. There were some grants provincially and federally to help pay for that, and the land came from local government.
You've been right on the front line and now you're the senior adviser to council. In the years that you've been involved with these issues, what has worked and what hasn't worked? I think we have very different results north of the Fraser and south of the Fraser. All levels of government have worked together. We haven't solved all the problems south of the Fraser, but what has worked and what has not?
:
I think I should back up a bit and explain how he's talking about my being front line.
Starting in 1990, I was involved with the bylaw department, oversaw the bylaw department, started out my career with the bylaw department, and dealt with many homeless people on a daily basis. I'd instruct staff and I helped staff follow the rules that I set down. I always believed, whether we saw a homeless person for the first time or the thousandth time, that we'd treat them with dignity and respect and try to put them in touch with resources. In the township, I worked really well with Fraser Holland. He started with an outreach program from Stepping Stone, and we worked really closely together.
Over the years, I have thought that what works well is forming a relationship with these people. I think that there's an element of mistrust when you first approach them, and over time that kind of subsides. If you can get a rapport with them and get them looking at alternatives....
Mayor Read brought up a good point in saying that to house somebody and not have the other elements to go with it to support them is just doing a disservice to them. I've seen the failure of putting people into a residence who then get evicted the following month because all of a sudden they have a few friends they socialize with out in the encampments, and now they're housing there, and pretty soon they've got shopping carts full of stuff. I think the success is in forming the relationships.
I think Mayor Read also touched on something that's very difficult. I've been in politics or around politics for many years, more than I'd care to remember sometimes, but I find that Nimbyism really.... You have a plan, you put it in place, you're looking toward getting a structure built that's going to help these people, and all of a sudden the placards go up, the petitions go up, and they say “Not in my neighbourhood”. It has to be somewhere, right?
I think if it's done correctly, you have to take a stand and say, “This is where it's going to be built. This is for the betterment of the community; it's for betterment of mankind, womankind, childkind, whatever.” You have to make a point somewhere along the line, and politics does seem to get in the way provincially, federally, and municipally sometimes. There are people looking toward the next election, so things don't always go the way we want to see them go.
I hope that answered you.
What a great opportunity to highlight some of the successes that are happening in our community. Really, it's a short answer to say that those successes are derived from engaging people in the solution.
When we talk about the value of engaging stakeholders, I wholeheartedly encourage that. It's engaging people with lived experience, either living in situations of poverty, raising a child with a developmental disability, having a teenager with a mental illness, or having a senior who is living at home and being in that sandwich generation. The situations of life that we find ourselves don't matter; it is engaging people in the solutions.
We have had tremendous success in our communities of Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge by bringing people together. We have an organization called the Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows-Katzie Community Network. It's not a stand-alone organization, if you will, but it's a co-operative of faith-based organizations, government organizations, social services organizations, and citizens who come together and brainstorm solutions for our community.
Because of that, we've made a commitment to each other not to compete for funding when there are those provincial or federal grant opportunities, but rather to partner to see which organization has the competency to do that well. We support each other. We partner. We have found that we serve far more citizens and we address far more needs in our community when we work collaboratively through that community network, through things such as Alisa's Wish and the youth wellness centre to support dire situations that we know of on the street. We are all connected via email; obviously we're respectful of ethics and confidentiality, but we do not hesitate to reach out to each other to say, “There is this youth” or “There is this senior” or “There is this family”, and what can we do?
I would encourage some bravery to continue to look at wish number one—that there would always be new funding—but reality number two would be the courage to look at the reallocation of funding, at innovative solutions, and look at some of those initiatives across the country and some of them right here locally.
Dr. Matthew Chow, the psychiatrist, is a leader who is turning psychiatry on its head. We are providing psychiatric services to more youth in our community than in Vancouver, because of his approach from a community-integrated model. The idea is to be innovative.
Thank you.
:
I can barely remember yesterday, let alone....
I'll draw on the numbers as they come to mind, and our experience at Covenant House.
We know that 30% of the homeless youth we serve have acute mental health issues. About a year ago, we had a change in our model for the crisis program, the short-term residential beds, and we went to gender-specific programming. At any given time, historically, about 25% of our population would be female. Since we made that change, we've brought it up to about 50%. In the female population, no less than 60% of the time will we have an actual diagnosis of mental health issues. The diagnosis of mental health issues in the homeless population is significant.
We do know, and the research bears it out, that if you put somebody inside a house, with a roof and four walls, safe and clean, you will find the mental health issues stabilize, even if you did nothing else.
Of course, doing nothing else is not enough. I want to make this point here. We are in a crisis with respect to homelessness, and it's been a long time coming, but homelessness is only a symptom; it's not the actual crisis. That's where our attention is drawn to, and rightly so, but we got here over the course of 25 years, and we have an opportunity right now, again....
In 1968 we started a very similar conversation, and we're going to keep having this conversation until we actually say, “What is our responsibility?” The question we're going to ask with respect to housing is this: “Is housing is a right, or is housing a privilege? Are timely medical supports a right or a privilege? Is education for our youth a right or a privilege?” Those are fundamental. If you go down the rabbit hole, you're going to come out in different places on different answers. It's how you choose to answer that question.
I also want to point out what Mayor Read pointed out earlier: Housing First is great—we need to get people into buildings—but it has to come with the accompanying resources to support the individual to stay. In terms of evidence, Housing First is only for mental health and addictions. For everything else there's a lot of evidence informing us that it's promising, but we only have the evidence to know that if you put individuals who have mental health issues and addiction in housing and support them, they are going to have a good outcome.
These are nuances, technical questions. I'm going to go back to what I said before: what do we believe to be true of our citizens?
:
You know, I would be remiss to not say that we have a very bad history as Canadians in dealing with some of these issues with aboriginal people, most notably taking kids away from their families and putting them in residential schools. That's created a huge fracture that's multi-generational, and it's going to take time to heal.
I believe first nations in this country need to be engaged on the issues to speak to what kinds of resources they need and how to use funding. Clearly, we need to make sure that aboriginal children are connecting to education, that we are really supporting aboriginal children in our public education system and giving them opportunities to access post-secondary education.
We have reserves in this country that don't have proper housing or safe water. We're dealing with, on some of our reserves, third-world living conditions. We can't do that anymore. We have to be able to engage first nations leadership across the country and look at ways to fund, with a large significant package, ways to get the reserves up to the standard the rest of our country enjoys. I think that's very important.
Also on the issue of health care, I watched on the news—and I'm sorry I can't recall the actual aboriginal community that had a suicide pact most recently—and saw that a private donor came forward and donated over $300,000. Why is a private donor having to donate $300,000 when aboriginal children on reserve have a suicide pact and parents are losing their children? That's not acceptable. We need to support these communities.
We have gone through litigation for years to reach a settlement agreement and to get an apology on residential schools. But the whole taking away of children from a family.... The children didn't get parented in residential schools. They didn't learn how to be parents. Then they came out of the schools and they had their own children. There's so much residual pain that's connected to the history of that system that it is going to take many generations to heal. In that healing journey, we need to make sure that we're supporting people emotionally with mental health resources and parenting resources. I think that's really important.
Many good recommendations came out of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission around these issues, and we have very good leadership in Canada from aboriginal people who have some really good ideas about the things that we can do to reduce poverty and to give our aboriginal children of the future the best chance they can get.
:
Good afternoon, everybody.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), the HUMA committee is continuing its study on poverty reduction.
We're very pleased to have our second round of witnesses here in Maple Ridge, B.C., hosted by the venerable MP Dan Ruimy.
I apologize for getting started a bit late. We will get started immediately and hear from all of our witnesses.
From the City of New Westminster, we have Lorrie Williams, councillor. From the Community Education on Environment and Development Centre Society, we have Christian Cowley, executive director, and Teesha Sharma, youth services director. From the Co-operative Housing Federation of British Columbia, we have Thom Armstrong, executive director. Finally, from the Multicultural Helping House Society, Marius Alparaque, program coordinator, pre-arrival and post-arrival programs. Welcome to all of you.
I will be giving each of you seven minutes to introduce yourselves and tell us why you're here. Once we're done that, we'll have questions, obviously, for everybody.
To start us off, from the City of New Westminster, we have Councillor Lorrie Williams. Welcome.
:
If you come to our town, we'll shake our umbrellas at you if you do that.
Thank you for this opportunity to address you today. I think this is a very important task force and I'm awfully glad that the government has set it up.
A few months ago a man came to our council to speak at the open delegation segment of our meeting. Our citizens are afforded five minutes. It's a risky move, but I'm proud of my city's courage in allowing an open mike.
This man was almost in tears as he described his situation. Both he and his wife had low-paying jobs and had been managing until he became a victim of a rent eviction. His rent was going to be almost double and he could not find any other affordable accommodation in our city. He desperately wanted to stay in New Westminster, near his work as he had no car, and where his children went to school. This is an example of some of the challenges facing the working poor. This is why New Westminster has made a real effort in poverty reduction, and this is why we have developed a real poverty reduction initiative.
We were the first municipality in Canada to institute a living wage bylaw in 2011, and we are considered to be a municipal leader in the areas of child care, homelessness, and housing affordability. Despite these efforts, however, poverty remains a pervasive issue in New Westminster. We cannot do it alone. We need the support of senior levels of government.
I will share with you our numerous strategies because you have asked specifically for suggestions on how to reduce poverty.
It started, as all municipal things do, with the formation of a committee tasked to develop a strategy. As a result, 29 municipal actions were identified as directly addressing the needs of people, including families, who are living in poverty and with low incomes. These actions include, first, a living wage bylaw that ensures that municipal staff and contracted workers are paid enough to meet basic, locally calculated expenses.
I'm going to give all of these to the committee so I'm hoping that you'll be able to use them. We're very proud of them.
Second is an affordable housing reserve fund and two small sites for affordable housing projects. Third is a secure market rental housing policy. This is to prevent people from changing our rental units into condos. It's not allowed in our city. Fourth is a tenant relocation policy in 2015, and a rent eviction action plan.
Fifth is a rent bank program, and I'll just stray a bit to tell you that Judy Darcy spoke yesterday in the legislature about the rent bank that New Westminster has set up with the help of our local credit unions. This, of course, is to allow people who are going to be late on their rent to come and get money to cover their rent.
Sixth is a child care grant program and a reserve fund. Seventh is having a community and social services asset map for people in need to find out where to get help. Eighth is a newcomer's guide that acts as a resource to newcomers during the first six months and after arrival. There's even a parks and recreational subsidy program and an affordable active living.... We give very cheap swimming lessons, skating, whatever.
Now, this is the thing that we're most proud of. Our full poverty reduction strategy contains 70 actions, which you can find in the reports that I have shared with you. I have made copies for the entire committee.
In addition to the strategies, a chief consideration is to raise community awareness regarding poverty and its impact. As a means of building support for its implementation and to reduce the stigma associated with poverty, the committee prepared “Poverty Mythbusters”, a document. Each week we put one of the myths into our local paper so that people can read and understand what poverty is really about.
Given that I now have the ear of the federal government, I will say what an important role you have to play, as you are best positioned to reduce systemic barriers contributing to poverty. You have the resources to initiate policies, programs, and services, to raise people, including families, out of poverty.
Many of the issues are beyond the jurisdiction or the scope of municipal government and its community partners. We have only eight cents of every tax dollar. That's all that's going to municipalities. You're asking too much of us. We are struggling with infrastructure deficits, provincial downloading, and an aging population.
Please, develop a national housing strategy, and give us more money. I assure you, we will spend it wisely. We interact daily with the problem. We know what to do. Just help us to do it.
Thank you.
:
We have 16 youth on the street here who are living as sex slaves or gang tools. Usually the story is that they have trauma at home, usually abuse, or torture in some cases, and they are brought to the notice of a provincial ministry that then tries to put them into foster care. That usually fails because sometimes the foster care homes are also traumatizing for these youth. Then, they are offered services that they're not able to use because of their trauma.
We often hear the terms “trauma-informed approaches”, or “trauma-informed care”. It seldom actually takes place.
I've met with the ministry and they've given me a long list of wonderful programs that these youth are supposedly given, and then there are the youth who refuse these services. The reason they refuse them is that the programs do not take into account their trauma and the things they've faced.
It could be something as simple as going to a ministry psychological counsellor and being asked by the counsellor to close their eyes in a room with a person of the same sex as their abuser, and then being cited as being non-compliant and told, “Don't come back.”
Abandoning youth.... Even when we do give them housing, the list on the website indicates about six or eight different services that they get. They don't get those services. This is the situation that these youth face.
The typical story we have in writing for you. We were able to get that done. It wasn't in time for translation, so we hope you do get this document later.
A typical pathway for one of these youth...and we have eight girls and eight boys. Teesha is in direct contact with all of them.
The typical path is that a youth experiences significant trauma at home. This can be anything, including torture—literally. People take bets with their friends on torturing their kids. This goes on. This is true. The scars and bruises finally get noticed. A good teacher can find them. The ministry gets notified about the youth, and the ministry lets them down in many ways. The youth becomes homeless and is thrust into survival mode. They hit the street at the age of 13 or 14. They are then targeted by a predatory adult who gives them clothing and warmth and food for about a month before they switch the youth into being a sex slave by grooming them.
The youth encounters multiple barriers to accessing resources and support. Their need for belonging and protection continues to increase, and is actually exacerbated by their ongoing trauma. They are groomed by that predatory adult. They are usually introduced to illegal substances and then become dependent on them. They become dependent on that predatory adult for some aspects. They are also literally imprisoned by them. They are blindfolded when they are transported to clients' homes. You'll see them wearing sunglasses. There's a blindfold under those sunglasses.
Their mental capacity diminishes under this kind of treatment. They've long lost any kind of trust in adults. Anybody coming to them with services is not likely to be believed. They don't have the skills or resources to have the capacity to change their circumstances individually.
:
Good afternoon. Thank you very much for the opportunity to be here.
I am with the Co-op Housing Federation of B.C. I'm also the CEO of Community Land Trust foundation of B.C. There are 14,500 non-profit co-op homes in the province. We're tied into a national network of 92,000 non-profit co-op homes. Our Community Land Trust holds about 226 million dollars' worth of assets in land and housing. We welcome the work of the committee and hope to contribute some practical suggestions for your consideration, which will be followed by a written brief with a few more facts and figures.
I guess I don't need to spend very much time on the link between the cost of housing and poverty. That's been pretty well established by some of the briefs I've seen. I was struck by some of that material when it dealt with the notion of how expensive poverty is. One estimate I saw was that it is over $7 billion a year to the health system. Imagine investing half of that amount in an affordable housing strategy.
In Canada today, we have four million renter households whose median income is less than $36,000 a year. One in five of those renter households spends more than half of their gross income on housing, which means they are foregoing other necessities of life and not disposable income. In B.C., we have just over half a million renter households. The median income in that cohort is just under $39,000 a year, and almost a quarter of them spend more than half of their income on housing. That's because the disconnect between housing markets and household income is systemic. In Vancouver, between 2001 and 2014, wages went up 36%; homes values went up 211%. In the last three years, the median wages for renters have increased on average 6.5%, and rents went up 11%. This situation is not improving. This is a structural issue. I haven't even included the cost of homelessness in those numbers, which some people estimate at more than $7 billion a year.
No wonder there have been repeated calls for a national housing strategy. The traditional response to that has been either capital grants or operating subsidies into new development or existing housing, either directly delivered by CMHC, or in a call to shovel money to the provinces with few or no strings attached. It might seem odd for someone from a co-op, a non-profit housing community, to be saying this, but I'm not here to ask for a return to the 1980-style housing expenditures. That just creates legacy obligations for the federal government that strand assets and equity in assets that were created 30 years ago.
What I want to suggest we do is to imagine what it would mean to redeploy the same level of investment to create better outcomes. We have a Community Land Trust foundation today that has 358 homes under construction in the city of Vancouver on land that we've leased for 99 years. When those homes are available within the next year, the average rent will be affordable to people whose income is 70% of median income and getting better over time. One in five of those homes will be available to people in the lowest-income quintile of our population. The outcome will be safe, secure, mixed-income housing, serving singles, families, seniors, and people with special challenges. They will be affordable in perpetuity because of our non-profit structure in our corporate charter. The best news about that development is that once it's rented up, the ongoing cost to government in subsidy to that housing will be exactly zero.
What if that model could be replicated on a larger scale? We're already making attempts to do that. We have projects in the pipeline in Surrey, North Cowichan, Vancouver, and we hope very soon here in Maple Ridge. I think there's a basis there for a federal strategy based on a social innovation that I think is quite remarkable.
I thought a bit about what I might suggest as a set of criteria that you might apply to whether or not the government should invest in housing, and I think you might want to think about these things. It should be uniquely federal. It should complement but not replicate what provinces ought to or are doing. It should be scalable. It has to respond to the real need and demand out there. You can't build a housing strategy around demonstration projects. It should create partnerships between government, community, and the private sector.
Above all, and I think this may be a real departure for the co-op and non-profit housing sector, is that we want to argue that the investment that the government makes in housing should be returned to the government over time. That's how we're going to use government capital to leverage that investment and attract private and community capital to the challenge of building affordable housing.
We think those solutions are available now. If you want to think of it this way, there are five major drivers to address if you want to have an impact on housing affordability. There are capital costs; that's the upfront equity that developers invest if they think they can make a 15% to 20% return after they've evaluated the risk of a particular development. There are financing costs, the long-term debt that's required to amortize the initial cost of building that housing. There's land, and in Vancouver that can be up to 40% of the cost of any new development. Then there are construction costs, and included in those costs, GST or HST and other levies. Finally, there is the cost of operating that housing over time.
The basic metric that I think you should bring to bear on this is that in order for a housing development to be truly affordable to people across the kinds of income cohorts that we're talking about, 40% of the equity in that housing either has to be given or lent to it over a very long period of time at a very low cost.
Of those factors, which are ripe for federal impact? I think there are two areas of low-hanging fruit here. One is land. Everyone talks about transferring federal surplus land into housing and no one ever does it, but in a community land trust, the transfer of federal surplus land for housing development would immediately reduce by 20% to 40%, depending on the market, the cost of developing that housing. And if it were vested in a community land trust, it would keep it affordable in perpetuity.
As for construction costs, I mentioned our Vancouver land trust development. By the time we're ready to rent up, we will have paid the federal government $3.6 million in GST. To put that in context, the cost of that debt is about $57,000 a year for every million dollars being paid in GST.
Access to upfront risk capital—long-term, patient, low-cost capital—those are the kinds of solutions that we think could be delivered. Say, you were ready to invest in short- and long-term equity funds, and a financing fund that would mature at around $2 billion a year, which coincidentally is what CMHC is now spending on ongoing federal subsidies for housing that has already been built. At maturity, a short-term equity fund pitched around the $2-billion mark would provide us with 40,000 to 50,000 affordable rental units a year, which is enough to address the estimated supply needs.
It's important that this asset be vested in a community land trust so that it would remain non-profit and affordable over time, something The Globe and Mail in its article yesterday called a speculation-free zone, which I think is a perfect way to describe the return on the investment to government in making that kind of housing strategy central to its focus.
I would welcome the opportunity to speak in more detail about this with you, but I think the opportunity exists here through financing mechanisms that are right now on the table to create a legacy for federal involvement in housing that's affordable across a wide demographic in perpetuity.
I want to thank you for your time today.
:
Thank you very much. I am honoured and privileged that I can share our story with you.
Mike Cayetano, the executive director and vice-president of the Multicultural Helping House Society, was supposed to be here, but late last night he sent me a message that his dad is undergoing surgery, so he cannot come. I will be winging my story with you. I might ramble a little, but I will try to share it succinctly.
The core value of the Multicultural Helping House Society is to help newcomers. We are a settlement service organization. We are located on Fraser Street and have been in operation about 20 years—20 years last year. The president and founder of this society is Mr. Avendaño. He turned 88 this year, and he's still very bright, energetic, and dynamic in dedicating his life to helping others.
Talking about our programs.... As you know, since 2014 Filipinos have been the number one source of immigrants. We have overtaken the Chinese and the people from India. We are growing in numbers all over Canada, and we're approaching a million soon. With the total population of Canada being 35 million, we're about 2.8% of the population.
Last year, the federal government, Immigration Canada, granted us some funds to start a pre-arrival program in the Philippines. At first, we tried an online program, enriching and preparing Filipino visa holders who are coming to Canada for what life in Canada is like, their opportunities, understanding employment readiness, and all that. Since we started, and up to the middle of this month, we have served about 6,480 visa holders coming to Canada. They are scattered all over the different provinces. We have 20% to 25% going to Ontario, about 20% going to Alberta, and about 15% to 18% going to Manitoba. Here, in Vancouver, it's about 10% to 12%, and Saskatchewan is a big number as well. What I'm trying to describe is that, with the effective pre-arrival program, we have a continuum of service in helping the new immigrants as they settle in Canada so that their integration is smooth and they can settle their family quickly.
We are a multicultural society, so we also help other immigrants, from different countries. We also help the refugees who come to our doors, because we have a respite unit. They can stay there temporarily until they find employment.
Over the years, the people who have come to our door and whom we have reached out to have had different stories. Our program is not only settlement, but also programs for the community: for the youth, the seniors, and the caregivers. I mention the caregivers, because it is a unique group of the population that I think we have overlooked. Over the last 10, 15, or 20 years, we have brought into Canada live-in caregivers...and the whole temporary foreign worker program.
But when we created that opportunity, it also brought with it problems. I say this because when they come in they are not allowed to bring their family with them, and that has created problems that you are now trying to fix. The people who are here first are mostly women separated from their families for five or six years. When they arrive, relationship problems surface. After five years they are able to sponsor their families, and when they come, the kids are already teenagers. The husband may or may not come. We see in this situation fractured families because of the trauma of separation.
We're looking at huge numbers of people in this situation, and right now we are seeing the effects of it. Caregivers have brought in their families. Most of those caregivers are successful, even though they have sacrificed their quality of life by working two or three jobs to bring their family. But the trauma of separation and fractured families still has to be addressed. I say this because of the need created by the mental health issues that are brought on by this situation, the economics, and the high drop-out rate of the youth from our schools. We are trying to catch up. The Multicultural Helping House Society is doing its best to do some preventive measures by enhancing our services in the Philippines and also in the settlement programs here.
Where I'm coming from is, in our society today there is a group of people who need a lot of help. Mental health issues have been brought up where counselling is a must. Areas of employment preparedness, education, and career preparedness are issues. Housing is an issue.
This is just a story that I am sharing. I'll tell the story of Edward. Edward had worked all his life as a nurse here in Vancouver. One night I got a phone call from St. Paul's Hospital and was introduced to Edward. Edward was in the hospital because he had a stroke. His family abandoned him, he had to go to a shelter, and he needed somebody to pick him up and take him to the shelter because mentally and physically he wasn't able to do that. The following day, early in the morning, I went to pick up Edward from St. Paul's Hospital and brought him to a men's shelter on Dunsmuir.
Edward then called me, and he was really upset. He said, “Marius, can you please pick me up? I cannot stay here”. I asked, “Why?” He said, “During the day, I cannot go to my room and at night I cannot sleep. There are four or six people in that room. I'm sleeping in a cot. I cannot sleep. I'm stressed. Can you please get me?”
I picked up Edward and took him to respite housing at the Multicultural Helping House Society. As soon as he got there, his whole countenance just changed and he felt at home. Edward stayed with us for about a month, and then he decided he would go to the Philippines so he could get proper care there. I'm sharing this story because what we do impacts a lot of lives in our community and across Canada.
I just came from Toronto, Winnipeg, Calgary, and Edmonton, seeking partnership and collaboration with the immigration service organizations and societies in Toronto and those areas, and I am very glad to say that we are now working well. I refer to them the clients we have who are going to Ontario and all these other places. This is the thing that I would like to see and would like to have our federal representatives look at, because it's a real problem that we need to address.
Thank you very much.
Thank you to witnesses for being with us today, particularly Teesha. Thank you so much for sharing with us a little of your experience, and I'm glad to see that you're now through that part of your life and successfully moving on and helping others.
My focus today is going to be as much as possible on seniors. We have a massive demographic change happening so quickly in our Canadian population. Over the next six years we'll go from one in six Canadians being seniors to one in five, and in 13 years it will be one in four. If we don't prepare for that, we are going to have a homeless problem like we've never seen in Canada. Seniors need to be shown respect and dignity, especially in their later years.
Another premise is funding. We've heard requests for funding throughout the study on poverty reduction. All levels of government struggle with that, and if you increase funding for a program, it has to come from somewhere, either reallocating the money, taking it away from this program and putting it to that program, or increasing taxes. To increase taxes is always the choice of last resort.
Councillor Williams, you shared the story about a senior gentleman and in that story, if I understood it correctly, the rent was about to double. Mr. Armstrong, you alluded to rents going to go up 11%. I did a quick check online and in British Columbia there is a maximum that rents can go up. In 2013, the maximum was 3.8%. In 2014, it was 2.2%. In 2015, it was 2.5%. In 2016, it was 2.9%, and this year it's 3.7%.
I have a primary residence but when planning for the future I also bought an investment property, a townhouse, and my strata fees, maintenance costs, and taxes keep going up way more than that, but the maximum I as an owner, as a landlord, can raise rent this year is 3.7% and that makes it really difficult. Each year I get a little further behind. I subsidize that even more out of my pocket. That's a struggle as a landlord and in encouraging more and more people to invest in that.
Councillor Williams and Mr. Armstrong, where do those figures of doubling and 11% come from? Because in my experience, that cannot happen. Could you elaborate?
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I think it's that we're still trapped in that old model of government-based subsidy, either capital grants or long-term operating subsidies, which were the norm for the better part of 30 or 35 years. In today's market that's absolutely the most expensive way to deliver affordable housing, because it relies on a single funder, the government. I just don't think that's realistic anymore.
We heard in the previous question a great description of the central dysfunction in the private rental market. But that math changes if the owner of rental properties becomes a non-profit or community land trust whose only purpose in existing is to keep housing affordable in perpetuity. To just put our hands out and wait for government to fill it with money is not a realistic approach to developing affordable housing anymore. Government money has to be leveraged to bring private equity and community equity into the equation.
We've spoken before about New Market Funds, which is a for-profit equity fund, the basis of which is five charitable foundations putting money into the entity. They've put $11 million into our land trust development in Vancouver. That's patience equity. It comes out in eight to 10 years, but in the meantime it makes the debt coverage ratio on the conventional debt much more attractive to a traditional underwriter, and that gets the housing built.
When the housing becomes more affordable over time because more of the initial debt is paid down, we can take the equity investor out at a reasonable, but not full, market rate of return and then refinance the property to make it more affordable.
Housing will never be more expensive than it is on the first day the door is opened. After that it just becomes more and more affordable over time. If you can overcome the need for initial risk capital through a combination of government and private equity, you can do a lot.
We put $4.5 million out, at risk, on the land trust development before we had a single shovel hit the ground, and none of those costs were avoidable. We'll spend a lot more in costs that are avoidable if something doesn't change in the equation, that relationship between government and the private and community sectors.
:
After being cycled through youth shelters and being homeless and all of that, I was put in an apartment on the ministry's agreement. I had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. I spent six years in complete social isolation because I was out of physical harm, but I was.... You know, the things that my parents and their friends did were extensive.
It was six years, multiple suicide attempts, a lot of self-harm, and then I got to this one moment where I was pretty much ready to end it for the final time. What I learned is that it's actually harder to do. Physically, it's harder to kill yourself than the media may portray. I had three methods lined up, and I was about to do it. I got to this moment, and I just realized that if I did, my parents wouldn't have just taken away those years that I had lived, but they would have taken away all the years to come.
The next day I left my apartment for the first time in I can't say how long, and looked into ways to go to school to change the way that we work with youth. I did that. I graduated as valedictorian and then literally went to every organization. I wanted long-term housing for youth. I basically knocked on everybody's door and told them my story and what I wanted to do, and then I met Christian. He was the first one who said, “I don't know how I am going to help you, but I will find a way to do that.” It was finding that support .
It was also knowing that right now there are still 16 youth on the streets in Maple Ridge who are feeling the same way. I guess, to be honest, I just wanted to find a way so that no other kid had to feel every single day like they were worthless.
When we lost Iron Horse, that was really hard. Iron Horse was the only youth shelter in B.C. that allowed you to stay for a month, 30 days. It was the only time that I actually really slept. In all the other ones, I couldn't do it because I didn't feel safe. It took a couple of weeks to start to build up trust with somebody else, but it was that long-term...and having a youth worker kind of advocate.
It's so hard now to do this job knowing how all those kids feel. I think what makes it worth it for me, though, is just having to believe beyond anything else that there is a better way to do this. We have to step up and share our stories and share the actual hard truth, even though it's hard for people to hear. I think that's the only way that things are going to change.
I think that's kind of what got me to where I am now.