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Marketwired
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The Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness: New Alliance Champions End to Homelessness in Canada / Pitches 10 Year Plans to End Homelessness proven successful in reducing homelessness

CALGARY, ALBERTA -- (Marketwire) -- 04/05/12 -- The Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness (CAEH) today released "A Plan, Not a Dream: How to End Homelessness in 10 Years," aiming to start a national movement to end homelessness in Canada. The CAEH will champion an end to homelessness in Canada by mobilizing communities and governments across the country to develop and implement their own 10 Year Plans to End Homelessness (10 Year Plans).

"It's estimated that as many as 300,000 Canadians make their homes in emergency shelters or on the streets," said Alex Himelfarb, Chair of the CAEH Board of Directors. "The challenge may seem daunting but we have seen progress wherever there has been the political will and community engagement. A national solution requires leadership from the federal and provincial governments and grassroots participation.

"We will seek to make progress one community at a time, building on the proven success of communities like Calgary."

Currently, the response to homelessness in most communities focuses on crisis responses like emergency shelters. The 10 Year Plan is a community plan that shifts focus to permanent solutions, specifically housing and support services, and creates a comprehensive system of care that prevents and ends homelessness.

The CAEH will work with communities and engage governments to mobilize resources and make needed policy changes to implement 10 Year Plans in our cities, provinces and territories. The model originated in the US and has been successful in cities across Canada.

"'A Plan, Not a Dream' is a declaration that we, as Canadians, are no longer willing to accept as inevitable the homelessness of any of our neighbours," said Tim Richter, incoming President and Chief Executive Officer of the CAEH. "The 10 Year Plan model has proven successful in reducing homelessness in Canada, and now we are challenging our fellow citizens, communities and all levels of government to take the initiative to end the unnatural disaster of homelessness in Canada, once and for all."

Canadian cities with plans to end homelessness have already seen marked progress. Edmonton has seen a 21 per cent decrease in homelessness from 2008 to 2010 and in Lethbridge, street homelessness has decreased by 53 per cent in the same period. Calgary has gone from having the fastest growing rate of homelessness in Canada to an 11.4 per cent reduction in four years. The Province of Alberta has Canada's first and only provincial commitment and plan to end homelessness.

The CAEH's mandate includes raising awareness about homelessness amongst Canadians, offering tools, knowledge and coaching to communities developing 10 Year Plan, and proactively seeking provincial and federal policy change to support ending homelessness. Please visit www.caeh.ca or join the conversation at www.facebook.com/endinghomelessness.

Backgrounder

About the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness

The Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness has been formed to build a national movement to end homelessness from the community up.

Vision

To end homelessness in Canada.

Mission

To create a national movement to prevent and end homelessness in Canada through the development of 10 Year Plans to End Homelessness in communities across the country.

Work of the CAEH

The CAEH will have four core activities:

1.  Raise awareness of homelessness in Canada
2.  Mobilize communities and government to commit to ending homelessness
    with 10 Year Plans to End Homelessness
3.  Provide communities with the information, tools, knowledge and coaching
    necessary to develop and implement those plans
4.  Proactively seek provincial and federal policy change to support ending
    homelessness

A Plan Not a Dream: How to End Homelessness in Ten Years

'A Plan Not a Dream' shows Canadian communities how to end homelessness in ten years by outlining the four core elements and the Ten Essentials in a 10 Year Plan to End Homelessness.

Contact Information

Calgary                               Toronto
c/o Calgary Homeless Foundation       c/o The Wellesley Institute
925 7th Avenue SW, Suite 308,         10 Alcorn Ave Suite 300
Calgary, AB, T2P 1A5                  Toronto, ON, Canada M4V 3B2

Phone: 403 718 8526
Web: http://www.caeh.ca/
Facebook:
www.facebook.com/endinghomelessness

Organization

The Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness is a Canadian non-profit corporation. It will have a small staff of less than three full time employees with satellite offices in Toronto and Calgary hosted by the Wellesley Institute and the Calgary Homeless Foundation.

Board of Directors

Chair: Alex Himelfarb

Director, Glendon School of Public and International Affairs, York University

Secretary: Stephen Gaetz

Director, Canadian Homelessness Research Network

Associate Professor, Faculty of Education, York University

Treasurer: Michael Shapcott

Director, Housing and Innovation, Wellesley Institute

Brock Carlton

CEO, Federation of Canadian Municipalities

Maria Crawford

Executive Director, Eva's Initiatives

Blaine Favel

President and CEO, One Earth Oil and Gas Inc

Mark Guslits

Principal, Mark Guslits & Associates Inc.

Director, Canadian Housing & Renewal Association

Arlene Hache

Executive Director, Centre for Northern Families

Roch Hurtubuise

Directeur

Departement de service social

Universite de Sherbrooke

Dr. Jeffrey Turnbull

Chief of Staff, Ottawa Hospital

Janet Yale

Strategic Philanthropy Consultant

10 Year Plans to End Homelessness

A 10 Year Plan to End Homelessness is a community based plan that shifts a community's focus from managing homelessness to ending it. The 10 Year Plan model began in the United States by the National Alliance to End Homelessness, and was first introduced in Canada in Alberta.

10 Year Plans to End Homelessness are proven to reduce homelessness in Canada:

--  Edmonton: 21% decrease from 2008 to 2010
--  Fort McMurray: 42% decrease 2008 to 2010
--  Lethbridge: 53% street homeless decrease from 2008 to 2010
--  Calgary: 11.4% decrease from 2008 to 2012

Research in Canada and the United States has shown homelessness is cheaper to fix than ignore:

--  Pomeroy estimated it costs $66,000 to $120,000/person/year for
    institutional responses to homelessness (e.g. prison, psychiatric
    hospitals) vs. $13,000 to $18,000 for supportive housing
--  Simon Fraser University estimated it costs $55,000/person/year to leave
    someone homeless in BC vs. housing and support costs of $37,000
--  The Calgary Homeless Foundation estimated that on average chronically
    homeless people consume $134,000/person/year vs. housing and support
    costs at $10,000 to $25,000/person/year

Homelessness in Canada

Homelessness as an extreme form of poverty and social exclusion characterized by the instability of housing and the inadequacy of income, health care and social supports. This includes people who are absolutely homeless and are living on the streets or in shelters, the 'hidden homeless' who are staying with friends, relatives or in institutional settings, and those 'at risk' of homelessness, whose current economic and housing situation is precarious.

In 2007 the Government of Canada estimated 150,000 Canadians were homeless (in shelters or sleeping rough); other estimates place the number as high as 300,000(1).

There are several reasons why we have homelessness in Canada:

--  Federal government budget cuts in the 1990s resulted in deep cuts to
    provincial transfer payments and the cancellation of the federal
    affordable housing program.
--  Faced with Federal transfer payments cuts and their own debt problems,
    the provinces were forced to make sweeping cuts in everything from
    health care to welfare that impacted vulnerable Canadians.
--  Provincial reductions in welfare payments not only reduced the amount of
    support but the number of people that could receive it.
--  At the same time, investments in affordable housing stopped or slowed in
    many provinces. With insufficient affordable housing in the system,
    vulnerable Canadians were forced to rely on the private rental market.
    Incomes afforded by social assistance were, and still are, nowhere near
    sufficient to support private rental housing.
--  Further compounding these problems are public systems like child
    welfare, health care and corrections that can inadvertently contribute
    to homelessness either by directly discharging people into homelessness
    or allowing people to fall through the gaps in and between those
    systems.
--  Another major contributing factor to homelessness in Canada is deep
    poverty, substandard housing and the lingering impact of residential
    schools on Aboriginal communities in Canada. Aboriginal people are
    dramatically over-represented among homeless populations in Canadian
    cities.

Partners

--  Canadian Housing & Renewal Association
--  Canadian Homelessness Research Network
--  Federation of Canadian Municipalities
--  National Alliance to End Homelessness
--  International Alliance to End Homelessness
--  Wellesley Institute

Resources

On homelessness in Canada:

--  The Homeless Hub, Canadian Homelessness Research Network
--  Shelter: Homelessness in a Growth Economy, Gordon Laird, The Sheldon
    Chumir Foundation for Ethics in Leadership
--  Precarious Housing in Canada, Wellesley Institute

On Canadian 10 Year Plans to End Homelessness:

--  A Plan for Alberta
--  Calgary Homeless Foundation
--  Homeward Trust Edmonton
--  Grand Prairie
--  Lethbridge
--  Medicine Hat
--  Red Deer
--  Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo
--  Greater Victoria Coalition to End Homelessness

On U.S. Plans to End Homelessness:

--  National Alliance to End Homelessness - Community Plans
--  United States Interagency Council on Homelessness

On the cost of homelessness and cost-benefit of ending homelessness:

--  USICH: Cost effectiveness of ending homelessness
--  Steve Pomeroy: The Cost of Homelessness: Analysis of Alternate Responses
    in Four Canadian Cities
--  Simon Fraser University: Housing and Support for Adults with Severe
    Addictions and/or Mental Illness in British Columbia
--  Calgary Homeless Foundation: Report on the Cost of Homelessness in the
    City of Calgary
--  U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development: Costs Associated with
    First Time Homelessness for Families and Individuals

On Housing First:

--  National Alliance to End Homelessness - Housing First
--  Housing First: Wikipedia
--  See Housing First in action: Home at Last? PBS Now
--  At Home/Chez Soi: Canadian Mental Health Commission

On effectiveness of Housing First:

--  The Applicability of Housing First Models to Homeless Persons with
    Serious Mental Illness: U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development
--  Pathways to Housing: Supported Housing for Street-Dwelling Homeless
    Individuals With Psychiatric Disabilities: Sam Tsemberis, Ph.D.; Ronda
    F. Eisenberg, M.A.

(1) Gordon Laird, 2007, Shelter: Homelessness in a Growth Economy. The Sheldon Chumir Foundation for Ethics in Leadership.

Contacts:
Calgary Homeless Foundation: English
Tim Richter
President and CEO
403 718 8526
tim@calgaryhomeless.com

Universite de Sherbrooke: French
Roch Hurtubise
Directeur, Departement de service social
819 821 8000 ext. 62969

© 2012 Marketwired
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