Liberals promise $638M for urban Indigenous housing
OTTAWA — A federal plan to spend $638 million on housing for Indigenous people living in cities and urban areas won’t provide enough money or address the basic causes of Indigenous homelessness, say people who work on programs in the field.
“It’s not enough,” said Marc Maracle, the executive director of the Gignul Non Profit Housing Corporation, an Indigenous housing co-operative in Ottawa.
About two-thirds of the money is meant for programs that serve people who are currently homeless. The other third is for renovations and improvements to existing units that house Indigenous families in urban areas.
Maracle said the biggest housing challenge for Indigenous people is affordability and that the focus on homelessness in the funding ignores the real root of the problem, especially since half of the Indigenous population in Canada lives in urban centres, according to the latest census data, where housing is often expensive.