Canada has received both a sharp reprimand and a strong call to action in the preliminary observations of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Adequate Housing, Miloon Kothari , in his preliminary observations at the end of his fact-finding mission to Canada (October 22, 2007).
Mr. Kothari’s preliminary observations are a devastating indictment of almost two decades of funding cuts by governments in
- a comprehensive national housing strategy, co-ordinated with the provinces and territories;
- a “large-scale” building of social housing units;
- an immediate extension of the federal government’s affordable housing programs, which are due to expire at the end of fiscal 2008;
- immediate steps to fully recognize international economic, social and cultural rights in all Canadian domestic laws; as part of a national housing strategy, specific initiatives directed at groups forced onto the margins, including women, Aboriginal people, elders, youth, members of racialized communities, immigrants and others;
- an immediate extension of the federal housing renovation program that is due to expire at the end of fiscal 2008;
- a comprehensive fix for the subsidy erosion faced by s.95 housing co-operatives; funding and resources to ensure that all Canadians have access to potable water and proper sanitation;
- an immediate extension of the federal homelessness program, which is due to expire in fiscal 2008;
- a consistent framework of tenant protection and rent regulation laws across the country that meet the standards set by international housing rights laws;
- additional housing allowances as part of a national housing strategy;
- inclusive zoning and planning practices across the country;
- a comprehensive and properly-funded poverty reduction strategy at the federal level, and with provinces and territories; measures to address the urgent, short-term and long-term needs of women;
- progressive legislation to address violence against women;
- creation, funding and implementation of programmes and policies to support women in the area of housing and domestic violence;
- funding and resources to a national Aboriginal housing strategy, on and off-reserve, that ensures that Aborginal housing and services are under Aboriginal control;
- a moratorium on oil and extractive activities at Lubicon until a settlement is reached with the Lubicon Lake Nation;
- specific targets and strategies, and independent monitoring, of the Vancouver Olympics;
- funding and programmes to sustain non-governmental organizations over time;
- the development of proper statistics and indicators for homelessness and housing insecurity.
Over the next four months, Mr. Kothari will continue to monitor the activities of the federal, provincial and territorial governments, and will work with non-governmental organizations in
Michael Shapcott, Senior Fellow
The Wellesley Institute
Tel. - 416-972-1010, x231
Fax - 416-921-7228
www.wellesleyinstitute.com
2 comments:
As a resident of the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, I know that Mr. Kothari speaks the truth. An organization I belong to, the Downtown Eastside Safety Initiative (DESI) challenges all levels of government to provide land for the homeless in an area that does not leave them stranded from the services and resources they need to survive yet houses them in a dry, warm, safe environment. I propose that the city of vancouver could have a yurt building competition on these pieces of land and let those places be homes for the homeless. When the city houses all the homeless (by 2010 it promised) the yurts can be used to housed the visiting athletes, etc.
If the mayor would do the right thing, he would organize and sponsor a yurt building competition in Vancouver, immediately so that the homeless who are facing an unsafe winter can have homes for Christmas as the yurts do not take long to build. I can't think of a more suitable building structure for an earthquake zone.
Please write to Sam Sullivan and encourage him to take me up on this great idea.
Terri Williams
I'm not sure about vacancy rates in Vancouver, but in Toronto there are plenty of market rent vacancies. all we need to end economic homelessness is is a decent minimum wage and livable social assistance rates that reflect the current market rental rates.
A realistic approach to addiction and mental health issues would take care of most of the rest.
Post a Comment