I’ve written an assessment of the 2014-2019 St. John’s Community Plan to End Homelessness. The full assessment can be found here. Points raised in the assessment include the following: -Newfoundland and Labrador has the highest unemployment rate of any Canadian province. This pulls people into homelessness, while also making it more challenging for the provincial government to finance policy asks (such as subsidized housing with social work support). -People interviewed as part of the assessment process expressed concern over the fact that nearly 40% of emergency shelter beds in St. John’s are run by for-profit providers (but paid for by the provincial government). -The Trudeau government increased annual federal funding for homelessness (beginning with the
Topics:
Nick Falvo considers the following as important: addiction, budgets, child benefits, cities, Employment, federal budget, fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income, income support, inequality, labour market, municipalities, Newfoundland and Labrador, Poverty, public services, social policy
This could be interesting, too:
Angry Bear writes The economy is actually doing great — unless you want to make a change in your life.
NewDealdemocrat writes Housing construction rebounds in February, as permits and starts are stable and rebounding
NewDealdemocrat writes Real incomes and Presidential approval: most measures did not surpass pre-pandemic levels until 2023, or this year!
NewDealdemocrat writes Repeat sales house price indexes continue to increases on par with past expansions
I’ve written an assessment of the 2014-2019 St. John’s Community Plan to End Homelessness. The full assessment can be found here.
Points raised in the assessment include the following:
-Newfoundland and Labrador has the highest unemployment rate of any Canadian province. This pulls people into homelessness, while also making it more challenging for the provincial government to finance policy asks (such as subsidized housing with social work support).
-People interviewed as part of the assessment process expressed concern over the fact that nearly 40% of emergency shelter beds in St. John’s are run by for-profit providers (but paid for by the provincial government).
-The Trudeau government increased annual federal funding for homelessness (beginning with the 2016 federal budget) and this has been helpful at the local level in St. John’s (just as these increased federal funding levels helped other communities across Canada address homelessness).
-One promising development in Newfoundland and Labrador has been new child welfare legislation allowing youth to continue receiving care until the age of 21 (it used to be 18).
Nick Falvo is a Calgary-based research consultant with a PhD in Public Policy. He has academic affiliation at both Carleton University and Case Western Reserve University, and is Section Editor of the Canadian Review of Social Policy/Revue canadienne de politique sociale. You can check out his website here: https://nickfalvo.ca/.