Rising homelessness just one symptom of wider crisis, says street navigator
CBC
When Eric Jonsson meets someone sleeping rough, he first asks them what they need. He says many of them ask for things like dry socks or cigarettes, but what they really need is a place to live.
As part of his work as program lead with the Navigator Street Outreach Program, Jonsson conducts a semi-annual count of people sleeping outside in Halifax Regional Municipality.
The November count, released this week, showed 85 people sleeping outside. It is nearly double the number from August 2021.
But Jonsson said he and his colleagues couldn't speak to everyone who they know lives rough, and the true number is more than 110.
"If you gave people quality accommodations and the supports that they needed, then I think almost every single person that we talked to would have moved in that day if we could have given them the keys instead of the survey," Jonsson said.
According to the survey, 57 people are sleeping in tents, seven in ATM vestibules, six in Tyvek huts, five in cars, four in a sleeping bag with no tent, and two on a park bench. Others are on blankets, near buildings, hospital heating vents, the mall, and in a shed.
Most of the people surveyed were male, with an average age of 42. A disproportionate number identified as Indigenous or African Nova Scotian.
Jonsson said this survey differs from others like the point-in-time count and the by-name list, which include people sleeping in shelters, transition houses, hotel rooms funded by the province and similar situations. Those surveys showed 586 and 712 people experiencing homelessness, respectively.
"Those people are just as vulnerable and just as open to harm as people living outside, but we don't see those people," he said. "All these different ways we have of measuring homelessness are imperfect and they don't capture the true extent of it all."
Jonsson said aside from the chronically homeless people he has been seeing for years, there is a new category of people in Nova Scotia who have jobs and can't find a place to live in the middle of a housing crisis.
"A few years ago, when I was doing this kind of work, it was mostly people who faced a lot of different barriers to getting housed," he said. "They might have addiction issues and might have no income coming in.
"I think the biggest increase is ... folks that are just living outside because they've got nowhere to go."
Jonsson said the steady rise in homelessness is just one symptom of a crisis impacting all walks of life.
It is also reflected in skyrocketing demand at soup kitchens.