Actually, I'm a founder of that and also I work with the Newton Advocacy Group Society, and I'm a founding member of that.
I'm glad to see Dona here--I thought I wouldn't recognize anybody--so I'm feeling a little more relaxed.
This is something I haven't done before, so I'll read a little bit from my notes. Some of the information in my written notes has been repeated already here, so I would maybe like to be a little more descriptive of what Vibrant Surrey is and its connection to the national Vibrant Communities.
It's a model of multi-sectoral collaboration that's using and working with all three levels of government, the municipal, provincial, and federal, working with business, working with faith groups, and working with other community service agencies, non-profits, things like that, and individuals in the community. It's a unique model, in that we are looking at innovative ways of solving a problem. We realize that there's not an infinite number of dollars. We're trying to be creative. What we do is actually look at and identify some of the gaps and needs in the community. We discuss it at our table and then people bring to the table what they might be able to contribute. There's a list here of all the wonderful people who are involved with Vibrant Surrey, and I hope you will read it later.
One of the things I wanted to highlight and use as an example is that there is an issue around people who are working and homeless in Surrey. There was a count in 2005. We identified over 100 people--actually, I think it was 136 people--who were identified as day labourers and they were homeless. We started a community discussion. In that discussion, we found it didn't make sense that people could have a job and not have a house. So the Surrey firefighters, the RCMP, we all started talking about what we could bring to the table. Both VanCity and Coast Capital Savings--it's a wonderful model... There are other examples in my written submission of how they have come to the table with funding. There's been matching funding through the municipality, through United Way, and there are a number of projects we were able to put on the table.
With Project Comeback we actually went to the individuals who were experiencing homelessness and we asked them, “What do you want to do? What do you need? Do you want to be paid to go to a training program so you can get a better job?” They clearly said no, they didn't want to do that. They clearly said the only thing that makes them still feel human and normal is the fact that they can work. The fact that they're homeless, they lost their housing... There are multiple reasons about why they lost their housing, but they really wanted to continue working.
We created a program that had services beyond simply the nine-to-five Monday to Friday kind of thing. I know Dona has information. We've talked to Dona about what's happening with Project Comeback, and she's a good supporter of the Newton Advocacy Group Society. But I really want to make it clear that without the connection to Vibrant Surrey and the multi-sectoral model, we wouldn't have been able to be successful.
In the end, Services Canada did fund the program partially. It still brings in about $40,000 a year with private donations, in-kind donations, like workboots. The Surrey firefighters will often donate work gear, food, transportation. It's simply amazing how faith groups will come along and if we have somebody who needs a damage deposit or first month's rent, they will literally pass a hat on Sunday and come up with $300 for a damage deposit. We might have other fundraising we're doing. So we do it person by person.
To date, since 2005, when we started this project, we have helped over 200 people get into housing, stay in the housing, and get better employment. They're no longer day labourers. They're no longer in that vicious cycle of work today, get paid today. I won't go on and on about that, because I'm getting way off my notes here.
One of the things I did want to talk about as well is not only the model of the collaboration and seeing business partners and faith groups and community partners working together to solve the issue, but it is the fact that on a federal level... I wanted to give a little bit of a description here about some of the things that were happening or that I saw happening in the last 20 years. Originally, we had an act governing welfare; it was called the guaranteed available income for need. When it ended, the B.C. provincial government created an employment and assistance program, where we went from legislation that stated benefits were to relieve poverty, suffering, and neglect, to a short-term employment and assistance benefit.
There were some good intentions and ideas. We wanted to get people back to work, and we wanted to break the cycle of dependency. I heard that kind of language. But what ended up happening was that we took financial aid workers and we turned them into employment assistance workers. Where is the social safety net for these most marginalized persons? People were falling through the cracks.
I work on the front lines. I'm very much a grassroots advocate. I myself have been there and done that. I was on income assistance as a single mom leaving an abusive relationship. So I know it. It's what actually has given me the passion to work, over these 20 years, in this kind of environment.
But what happens is that people are falling through the cracks. There was some legislation that I think was called CAP. It was the federal legislation that got dismantled. The responsibilities were given over to the provinces. I caution the federal government when it is making changes. Who is watchdogging the provincial government so that it is not further eroding our system? Years ago, we were all talking about how we knew there would be a homelessness problem today. It's no surprise to me. And it's just getting worse. People are falling through the cracks over and over again.
I have some information here about Surrey, but I won't bore everybody by reading the stats. I want to identify some of the new initiatives that Vibrant Surrey is working on.
For example, the living wage has been mentioned here. We talk to the province, because that's whose jurisdiction it is to manage the living wage and to make changes. How can you, the federal government, influence the provinces to do the things they should be doing—having a poverty-reduction plan, having a better housing plan, or using the funds that have been allocated? What can the federal government do to guide the province or create legislation so that these funds can't be used for something else?
I had an example in here about the family bonus. Somebody mentioned it earlier. The family bonus, in my recollection, was the federal money that was given out to persons to help them deal with child poverty. When it was transferred to the province, the B.C. government deducted that from income assistance. How can an initiative that is supposed to make a difference on a federal level be given to the province? It felt like there was no follow-up.
A group of us got together—not Vibrant Surrey—and we wrote a letter asking what they were going to do with the savings now that they were deducting all the money from people who had children and who were on income assistance. They said they were going to use it for training programs. But it just disappeared. We don't know what happened to that money. It's an outstanding question to this day.
We have other payments. We're looking at the LMDA , the labour market development agreements, in which the employment and assistance funding is transferred to the province. I still remember the first meeting I went to. It was a combination of the provincial leadership and the federal leadership. These were bureaucrats, not the politicians, and they were saying they had all this money in B.C. to do all this work. The federal representative was quick to point out that people had contracts attached to all this money. So it's just an ongoing issue, an ongoing erosion of the little bit of money we have to support people who are homeless, who earn a low income.
There are a couple of things we're working on right now. One is the rent bank. This is just the municipality. We have Coast Capital Savings, Envision, and VanCity all sitting at the table with a couple of non-profit organizations, including the Newton Advocacy Group. This is fully supported by Vibrant Surrey. It is designed to create a fund so that people can get a micro-loan that they can pay back over two years, before they become homeless and have no access to crisis grants or hardship grants. This is brand new. We're going to start rolling out loans in January.
I'm not the researcher, but our researcher showed that in Toronto it was very successful. It's now province-wide. In Calgary they have a momentum rent bank model, and I believe the municipality has now taken over more and more of the actual activity of the rent bank and they have a grant bank there.
Our model is testing out the Calgary model. There is one in the valley in Abbottsford that's testing out the Toronto model and there is an aboriginal one in Prince George. So we're excited to have that go forward.