Thank you.
I'm from the Salsbury Community Society. It's an organization that grew out of the Grandview Calvary Baptist faith community in east Vancouver.
I want to tell you a story about Jeff. Jeff is a man who struggled with depression and drug addiction most of his adult life. We met Jeff ten years ago, when he first came to Out of the Cold, our weekly meal and overnight shelter at our church building in east Vancouver. Jeff slept overnight and we started to get to know him better. He returned the following week.
About two months later, some folks who were participating in the Out of the Cold shelter invited Jeff to live with them in one of the community houses that had started. We have six of these houses in our neighbourhood where people live together and seek to welcome others to live with them who are poor or vulnerable, like Jeff. As Jeff became part of this supportive community his abilities started to come to life.
However, Jeff had many barriers to employment and struggled for a couple of years to find work. Jeff was one of the reasons that we started Just Work, an organization that develops social enterprises, including businesses in pottery, gardening, catering, and repairs. Jeff eventually found meaningful work and employment through both the gardening and catering businesses, and his life is in a very different place today. Jeff has come to life, you might say.
I think Jeff's story illustrates what we have discovered at the Salsbury Community Society. Through a supportive community that offers emergency help, long-term housing, employment, and resources, transformation can happen in people's lives and in our neighbourhoods.
Through the Salsbury Community Society, an umbrella organization that brings together seven different initiatives offering housing, employment, and community support to the poor and the vulnerable, over the last ten years we have seen that if these resources are available for people, if they have the opportunity, a change can occur. With a budget of just under $1 million for Salsbury, very little of which comes from any government source, we've seen the possibilities when these resources are available.
We've become convinced of two things. One thing is that the federal government has a greater role to play in developing homes and employment for those with barriers to meaningful work. We've had to rely on private funding for most of these ventures because there's very little public funding available. Secondly, we need to be investing in communities with a track record of welcoming those experiencing discrimination and developing resources that lead to transformation. Some of those groups have already spoken today. We believe the federal government is the only body in Canada to bring this comprehensive, big-picture view to reducing poverty and homelessness in Canada.
As a society, we've noticed that we seem to be afraid of the costliness of restoring people to the Canadian family. We're afraid that somehow it will cost too much in our own lives. This is especially true in times of economic uncertainty. In many ways, as a nation, we've lost our sense that people who are poor and homeless are part of our corporate identity. Sadly, this is often true in churches, government, and society, sometimes even within our own work.
As a follower of Christ, I believe that social justice should be one of the core goals for all of us, including government, and that providing adequate resources and opportunities for our poor lies at the core of this vision. What it takes to put people at the centre, to welcome people of all kinds to the heart of who we are in Canada, without qualification, is really important. Choosing to help only those who “deserve help” and leaving behind those whose barriers we may disapprove of is prejudicial and not biblical.
I'm also standing here today to represent StreetLevel. Salsbury is one of 11 members of StreetLevel, the national round table on poverty and homelessness. StreetLevel is a self-commissioned, self-directing partnership that was created in June 2003. It's composed of experienced leaders of significant Canadian Christian organizations and programs from across the country that work among our nation's poor and homeless. They're dedicated to addressing systemic sociological, economic, cultural, and spiritual defects that contribute to poverty and homelessness in Canada.
We've put forth four proposals for the federal government. I want to focus on two of those proposals today in the short time I have.
One proposal is that we believe the time has come for the Government of Canada to establish a national poverty reduction strategy. We appreciate the steps that have been taken by this committee to put forward the motion to Parliament. We believe it needs an array of measures, targets, and timelines that are very concrete. I hope this committee will move that to the next step, and I hope they will see social enterprise as a key aspect of that national poverty reduction strategy.
Secondly, we believe the Government of Canada, in cooperation with the provinces, territories, and indigenous communities, must establish a national housing strategy. We must establish a national housing strategy with clear targets and timelines aimed at ensuring that every resident of Canada has access to housing that is safe, healthy, dignified, and truly affordable. We've seen the difference that housing makes in people's lives. If we don't have housing, I don't see how we're going to be able to reduce poverty in Canada. We're really looking for leadership from our federal government to establish a national housing strategy.
I think Canadians need and want to hear a vision from our federal leaders. We need to hear that the federal government and all parties unanimously believe in creating a legacy of justice for all Canadians. We need to hear this commitment not only in words, but in budgets, programs, and polices that demonstrate this commitment to justice. We need the federal government to engender a sense of solidarity with other levels of government, and other sectors of society, to build a legacy of justice.
We're convinced that addressing issues of poverty and homelessness ought to be a top budgetary and policy priority for the federal government at this time, and we hope you will ensure that this takes place.
Thanks for hearing my submission.