After engaging key stakeholders, people with lived experience, and thousands of Edmontonians, Homeward Trust and the City of Edmonton have released A Place to Call Home – Edmonton’s Updated Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness.
The updated plan sets priorities to 2026. It is founded on three key goals: eliminating chronic and episodic homelessness by 2022; preventing future homelessness; and developing an integrated systems response to homelessness. Each key goal has its own associated targets and strategies.
Ending and preventing homelessness will require renewed leadership and strategic investment across stakeholders and partners. The Plan calls on Edmonton’s homeless-serving system to maintain focus on responding to immediate needs of vulnerable Edmontonians experiencing homelessness, and enhance integration with affordable housing, prevention, and poverty reduction supports and efforts, such as EndPoverty Edmonton.
Since the Plan’s inception in 2009, the Edmonton community has made strong progress. More than 6,000 people have been housed and supported under the Plan and partners have gained a better understanding about the scope of homelessness in our city and what is required to end it.
“During the past eight years, we have deployed proven interventions across funded programs, developed evaluation frameworks and unitized data that has allowed us to course correct in real-time to maintain a high level of performance across those programs, and improved the coordination and integration of the homeless serving system as a whole,” said Susan McGee, CEO of Homeward Trust Edmonton. “Over the next three years, we will house and support 4,000 more people experiencing homelessness through the Housing Support Program throughout our city. We will also have the systems in place to ensure everyone who seeks shelter or services will be connected to housing and supports within 21 days.”
The updated Plan recognizes and responds to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action through an explicit acknowledgement that Indigenous homelessness is a colonial legacy. In addition, it is anticipated to yield cost avoidance of at least $230 million in reduced usage of health, justice, and other systems.
Read the report in its entirety at endhomelessnessyeg.ca.
LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
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.