Together, we can ensure everyone has a safe place to call home.
Our goal is simple and achievable… but not easy: ending Edmonton homelessness. It takes a community working together to ensure everyone has a home and ongoing, consistent collaboration by the entire homeless-serving sector and all orders of government.
Homeward Trust-Edmonton’s System Planner
Over 18000people have been housed through Housing support and programs since 2009
Homeward Trust has been instrumental in providing leadership in how we address homelessness in our city. Working collaboratively with the entire sector, Homeward Trust is a community-based organization and system planner guiding day-to-day system operations and strategy work to advance efforts to prevent and end Edmonton homelessness.
We take a community- and data-informed approach to allocate funding from all orders of government to programs and projects based on potential impact and current priority needs. Guided by the Community Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness, we adapt to changing community needs while working towards our end goal of providing safe and stable housing for every unhoused individual while ensuring they have the needed supports to maintain housing.
Building on past work and planning for the future
2023/2024-The need for a new Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness
When the 2017 Community Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness was created, it was backed by solid research, robust engagement and a data-informed approach based on known and predicted realities. Since that time, much has changed, challenging our plans and efforts in preventing and ending homelessness. This includes a global pandemic, economic downturn, rising unaffordability, dual drug and mental health crises and changes in the houseless-serving sector itself. This has underscored the need for a new plan, continued sector collaboration, renewed strategies and enhanced governance and accountability frameworks to report on impact and outcomes.
Work is underway on the new Plan.
Homeward Trust Edmonton and the City of Edmonton have been working together since early 2023 to develop an updated Community Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness (Plan). This Plan will direct our collective approach to addressing homelessness within Edmonton’s current complex conditions. As with previous plans, it will be informed by insights gained from extensive engagement with individuals with lived experience, homeless-serving agencies, orders of government, Indigenous, First Nations, and Metis peoples, as well as various system actors.
Highlights of the plan will include:
Sector collaboration and Engagement
Investing in what works with a data and community-informed approach
Adapting & trying new approaches to respond to current need
Long-term solutions- shifting from an emergency planning focus to proactive, data and community-informed planning focussed on long-term solutions
Enhancing system integration & Accountability: to better integrate and align all efforts and systems working towards the collective goal of ending homelessness
Supportive Housing: Continuing the rapid development of supportive housing and developing new targets to account for the increasing complexity of need in the unhoused population
Housing Supports & Related Programs: continued implementation of the wrap-around supports
Affordability: a committed focus on improving housing affordability
The Updated Community Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness is scheduled for release in Fall/Winter 2024. The draft was discussed at the City of Edmonton City Council Meeting on Tuesday, May 21st, 2024.
No plan, program or response is perfect. We must continue to use a data and community informed approach to guide and measure efforts while continually trying new approaches and remaining committed to ongoing sector collaboration to adapt to current needs and priorities.
We recognize we are gathered, in collaboration and with joint purpose, on Treaty 6 territory. This territory is the traditional home and gathering place for diverse Indigenous peoples. The nêhiyaw (Cree), Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Dene, Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), Anishinaabe (Saulteaux/Ojibwe), Nakota Isga (Nakota Sioux), Inuit, and Métis, among many others cared for this land since time immemorial and continue to steward it today. As visitors in this territory, we honour the importance of the Treaty and our responsibility to these communities. Only in partnership can we create the changes necessary to end homelessness. It is vital we meaningfully engage and partner with Indigenous people and communities in this work while recognizing and addressing the conditions brought forth by colonialism. Displacement from traditional homelands, systemic racism, residential schools, the Sixties Scoop, and the ongoing overrepresentation of Indigenous people in child welfare, correctional systems, and homelessness are responsibilities we all share.