Saint John develops 'Housing for All' plan after dangerous winter for homeless people
CBC
After a deadly winter for homeless people in Saint John, a city council committee approved a three-year strategy Wednesday for responding to what staff say is a crisis.
"As we know, homelessness is visible in Saint John, and it is growing, like it has across North America," CAO Brent McGovern said as the strategy, titled "Housing for All," was presented to the public safety committee.
Encampments of homeless people have popped up in unsafe locations near schools, daycares, parks and highways, McGovern said.
"These sites can become not only unsightly, but a risk to those who are unhoused and a risk for public health and create concerns for public safety and wellbeing."
The strategy, aimed at making homelessness "rare, brief, and non-recurring," was accepted after a sometimes tense debate and now goes to city council for final approval.
The document addresses co-ordinating the city's response to homelessness, and streamlining resources and planning around an issue that is ultimately the province's responsibility.
The 28 actions in the document are broken down into four categories:
City data shows Saint John has 344 chronically homeless people, while 663 individuals experienced homelessness for at least one day in the past year.
Use of emergency shelter had increased by 62 per cent in the past two years, and Saint John firefighters responded to almost 200 calls related to reports of smoke, outside fires and tent fires in the first six months of 2024. Three people died in encampment fires and one man lost a leg to frostbite.
The homelessness strategy outlines objectives and necessary co-operation with the provincial and federal governments and with local groups already offering support to homeless people.
It describes a hub for the homeless population to access supports, and calls for a warming shelter to be operated annually during winter.
There would also be an increase in shelter beds, and designated parts of the city where tent encampments would be allowed.
Under housing, the strategy calls for the province to fund transitional housing for 25 people and the construction of new public housing for an unspecified number of people.
There would also be a rent supplement program from the federal government and skill development for people once they are in housing.