'A colossal humanitarian failure': MPs hear about impacts of northern housing shortage
CBC
The ongoing shortage of accessible, affordable, high-quality housing in northern Canada comes as no surprise to the people who live here.
Now, the federal government's Standing Committee on Indigenous and Northern Affairs (INAN) is exploring the effects of this housing shortage on Indigenous people.
On Tuesday, March 22, the N.W.T.'s minister responsible for the Northwest Territories Housing Corporation and homelessness, Paulie Chinna, was one of the witnesses. She spoke to the committee about the state of the housing shortage in the N.W.T., its disproportionate impact on Indigenous people and what the federal government could do to help.
"I see the effects of the housing shortage on Indigenous people in the North every day — whether this is looking at the long waiting list for public housing in most small communities or meeting underhoused people on the streets of Yellowknife," said Chinna.
Chinna told the committee that the N.W.T. faces particular challenges when it comes to public housing.
There are constraints on the building season due to the short seasonal window for building and shipping supplies, and extra costs that come with the "remoteness of communities, harsh weather conditions and limited reliable transportation infrastructure" in the North.
All told, she said the territory's reliance on public housing is the second-greatest of any Canadian jurisdiction, after Nunavut.
Chinna told the committee that there are 2,600 public housing units spread through the N.W.T.'s 33 communities — but most of them are decades old. Some suffer from environmental damage, like erosion and mould. Many are also overcrowded, which has been a concern with COVID-19.
"While important progress is being made in adding new public housing units, with the help of the federal government in recent years, the need is vast and requires sustained effort," said Chinna.
Chinna asked committee members to consider various federal policies that could help solve parts of the housing crisis.
This could include "sustained, multi-year capital funding to increase the stock of new public housing," reversing the federal decision to wind down operational funding for public housing and giving local and territorial governments more say about how to spend the money.
"Federal government housing funding to the [Government of the Northwest Territories] must be flexible enough for the GNWT to determine its own priorities, which may be different than those of southern jurisdictions," said Chinna.
She also said the federal government needs to make it easier for communities to access the funding that has been set aside for public housing. Right now, she says they face "significant barriers" to getting money that has already been earmarked to help them.
"We've got Indigenous organizations and representatives that are trying to access this funding, and they don't have the capacity to be submitting these proposals going forward," she said.