Thank you for the opportunity to speak today. I'd like to acknowledge that my presentation takes place in Winnipeg on Treaty 1 land and the homeland of the Métis nation.
My name is Jino Distasio. I'm the director of the institute of urban studies. I've been with the university since 1999. By way of background, the institute was founded by Lloyd Axworthy in 1969. I always tell him I was one year old at the time. He doesn't like that. Since that time, we have produced well over 500 reports, publications, and pieces of critical information about housing, poverty, homelessness, mental health, and the health of communities. I think we've added to the discourse.
At the institute, we are working in an applied nature to help understand some of the complexities facing our community and to dig deeper into community-based solutions. I think that the way to do that is to begin to understand how policy plays an important role in what we're trying to do, which is to shape policy and ensure that fewer Canadians struggle with poverty, mental illness, disabilities, and other challenges.
I think it's important to note that, as an academic, I've also had an opportunity to serve on a number of boards, including Habitat for Humanity, Westminster Housing Society, and our own board. As an academic, I like to tell people that I've actually built affordable housing for Winnipeggers and others across this country in a role that I'll talk about shortly. I've also had the opportunity to pen the community plan, the HPS plan for Winnipeg, and I was on the plan to end homelessness in Winnipeg. I'm trying to bring a whole bunch of different perspectives together here.
Let me start by saying one thing I noticed in some of the different points. We talk about the government's role, and I really think that education is such a key driver. There was a question related to how we support education through things like the Canada learning bond, and all these different things. Interestingly, we were given $750,000 and a three-year mandate by the feds to examine why there was low uptake among new Canadians and indigenous populations on the Canada savings bonds and all of these various programs.
At the end, we said simply that there are just too many barriers. How do we have a program that has so many families jumping through so many hoops? How can we not just make it automatic? How can we not just empower families through income tax or some other means, rather than making them take weeks and weeks to open a free account? This is painfully difficult and painfully problematic. It's such a simple solution. It just pains me that we had to spend three years telling people how to do it simply.
As I knew he would, Clark took some of my thunder. I have some statistics we all share on the number of Canadians struggling with homelessness—30,000 Canadians on any given night are estimated to be struggling. We know that last night, just outside our doors, many Winnipeggers, maybe upwards of 1,500, struggled. Many have lost hope. Many have fallen through the cracks.
We also know that on any given day there are probably—and I use this number all the time—upwards of 10,000 Winnipeggers that I call part of the hidden homeless population living in ramshackle rooming houses, in SRO hotels, in unfortunate circumstances beyond their control.
We know that the core-need model puts a spotlight on Winnipeg's challenges—single families, indigenous persons, new Canadians, not only struggling with affordability but also living in apartments three to five storeys high that have no elevators. On a day when it's 30 below, it is difficult for somebody to get into and out of their apartments. We know that accessibility remains a critical challenge in a city like Winnipeg, where almost 40% of our housing stock was built before 1960. Fundamentally, we need to find ways to improve what we have, not only to expand. We have a massive amount of old housing stock.
We know that the homeless population is overrepresented by indigenous community members, perhaps 70% or higher, so we know we need unique programs and supports to deal with that. I think you quoted Lawrence Poirier from Kinew Housing. Kinew Housing remains a showcase for Canada. It is the oldest owned, operated, and managed aboriginal-based housing organization in this country. From 1970 to now, it has transformed families. It is a model.
End-of-operating agreements, however, remain a fundamental challenge in Canada.
To me, a simple solution would be to replace that program with a subsidy, provide a gap of a couple of hundred dollars per unit per family to support the maintenance of some of this housing. A good chunk of what has been funded by that program, at least in Winnipeg, is a hundred years old. It needs help. It doesn't need just a walk-away mortgage. It needs help.
Very quickly, let me switch gears to say that over the last eight years, I have served as the principal investigator in the the At Home/Chez Soi project. The federal government provided academics and researchers with $150 million to establish the Mental Health Commission of Canada. As you know, we went from five cities in this country using the housing first approach, to now perhaps 70. Housing first and the commitment of government to fund an innovative approach was transformative.
I struggle in saying how amazing it was to see a thousand people sheltered. I think in Winnipeg the success was in localizing it, giving the indigenous community members an opportunity to grow a largely American model by understanding that the local community had the answers. Ottawa didn't, the federal government didn't, but in partnership, a whole bunch of us in this city tried for six years to do something different, and we did. I think there are a lot of things that we can gain from that.
We know too that while the housing first approach is critical, housing first and putting somebody in housing doesn't end poverty. One outcome that I always share with the folks around that table is, yes, we got somebody off the streets and into housing, but we didn't end poverty. To really be transformative, we needed to add that extra dimension.
My final comments, because I know you're going to hit the button, are on the HPS model. When I mentioned that I have had the opportunity to work on Winnipeg's community plans, I've done so for a very long time. I know the original SCPI program. I know that the $750 million helped to build shelters. But increasingly, HPS has been strangling community-based organizations with red tape, metrics, reporting, and paperwork that are killing the essence of what it used to be: a community plan. There is no community left in those plans. But let me say that HPS is critical.
I'll acknowledge too that I did work at CMHC, and they're at my heart. I think that between CMHC and HPS, CMHC brings the housing building experience. They should be building housing and HPS should be funding communities to come up with their own community-led solutions.
When we begin to think about those solutions, communities can begin to address their own needs. Whether it's mental illness and disability, and all the different challenges, what we've demonstrated in Winnipeg.... The other piece that I'm almost ashamed to say is that, for 40 years, Winnipeg has been a laboratory for every imaginable federal, provincial, and municipal intervention into poverty, urban renewal, neighbourhood change. We have spent billions of dollars experimenting, testing, and learning.
Community-based organizations that are run by the folks around this table have the answers. We just need to find a means by which to give them support funds and the ability to do the great work that they're doing, because it is being done and we've demonstrated that time and time again.
I think I'll end there. Thank you.