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Tent encampments prove ‘exactly how broken’ Canada’s system is, federal housing advocate says

A woman with dark hair and glasses, with Canadian flags displayed in the background.

Federal Housing Advocate Marie-Josee Houle, who released a report Tuesday on tent encampments across Canada, wants to see the implementation of a response plan by Aug. 31. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

A new report on tent encampments across Canada calls for urgent action from all levels of government to end what the federal housing advocate describes as a “life and death crisis.”

Marie-Josée Houle said her report, released Tuesday, is the first of its kind in Canada. The report — titled Upholding Dignity and Human Rights — outlines six calls to action to address ongoing homeless encampments across Canada.

“It is a physical manifestation of exactly how broken our housing and homelessness system is from coast to coast to coast in Canada. It needs urgent measures,” Houle told CBC News.

“Government must act immediately to save lives.”

Houle launched a review into homeless encampments in February 2023 and released an interim report in October. The final report comes as communities across the country grapple with encampments and residents without safe, consistent shelter. 

According to the final report, an estimated 20 to 25 per cent of homeless people across the country live in tent encampments, affecting not just many cities but also rural regions, including northern Saskatchewan, Labrador and Nunavut.

Houle’s report calls for the implementation by Aug. 31 of a national encampments response plan that would ensures that those living in encampments have access to basic necessities, like clean water, food and health care.

It also calls for speedy solutions to permanent housing issues that are driven by federal, provincial and local governments, and that are based on people’s living experience. 

“It is an issue of life and death for a lot of people. And so we need immediate action and then we need some long-term action,” said Houle.

“Government is … really good at responding on the immediate but then they forget the last piece, which is about the permanent solutions.”

WATCH | A Toronto housing advocate says unless root causes are addressed, the problems will only get worse:

‘People are dying’: Co-ordinated response needed to housing crisis, advocate says

Lorraine Lam, a housing outreach worker in Toronto, says encampments will keep growing until systemic issues are addressed.

Housing supply not only cause of crisis

While the federal government has “really couched” housing supply issues as the main cause of homelessness, said Houle, more complex…

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