Thank you.
I'd like to start by acknowledging that we're here today on the unceded territory of the Katzie First Nation and Kwantlen First Nation, with whom we have strong partnerships.
In planning for coming here today, I did touch base with one of our chiefs, Chief Susan Miller, and they are concerned about funding for post-secondary education for their band members. I wanted to carry that forward, but I have no doubt that you will be hearing from many first nations on this issue of poverty in our country.
As you have noted, I am mayor of the city of Maple Ridge. I'm also the co-chair of the metro Vancouver regional task force on homelessness. I am a Canadian historian who has worked for almost 20 years in the area of aboriginal issues, most notably as the former project manager for document collection for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian residential schools. I'm also mother to two children, and I try to instill values of social conscience in them every day.
I grew up in a cycle of poverty. I broke that cycle of poverty through post-secondary education. While I will not be focusing my talk today on post-secondary education, it is something that our community needs. Our citizens need very close access to post-secondary education. Post-secondary education, as we all know, breaks the cycle of poverty. I'm going to come back to that in a different play a little later.
I'd like to thank you for your renewed interest in poverty reduction and for the work being done by the federal government on the national housing strategy. I had the pleasure of meeting again with Minister Duclos. This is the third time I've had the opportunity to engage him on issues of housing. He is a wonderful representative for the government on this issue.
I'd like to note the 2010 report of the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities. I've reviewed that report in full. It is a road map.
I appreciate that everybody is here engaging the public again. It's been seven years since that was delivered. It's a good time to check in with the public. However, I strongly encourage you to get moving on some of the things that were identified in 2010.
I don't really have a lot new to say, which is an indication that there was some extensive public engagement. We do have a sense of the levers to alleviate poverty in our country.
Because of the tight time frame, I'm going to focus on homelessness. This is an issue that has significantly impacted us in our city and definitely in metro Vancouver. I understand that you will be taking a tour of the shelter, and I'm going to speak to that in a few minutes.
Metro Vancouver has over 60,000 households in the region that spend over half of their income on housing. Over 100,000 people accessed food banks here in 2016. Close to 65,000 people in metro Vancouver received income assistance in 2016. Income assistance has not increased in nine years, while the average market rent has increased every year since 2010. These are significant issues that we face. Our homeless numbers are increasing. In the 2014 homeless count, we had just under 3,000 people who were homeless. We expect these numbers to be at or over 4,000 people in our count, which is coming, with statistics being reported at the end of March.
For metro Vancouver, one of the most significant parcels of funding we are allocated is the homelessness partnering strategy funding. It's important funding for our region, and it's money that we are able to allocate ourselves. I have heard mention of this money potentially being run through the province, and I'm here to say that it's very important that metro Vancouver be able to maintain control over that funding.
There are some challenges with the funding. There is 65% of the funding that is allocated to Housing First. That is great; we know that Housing First works. However, Housing First doesn't work alone. There are health supports that are needed. Youth do not fit well into the 65% Housing First allocation. We would like to see some greater flexibility around the allocation of funding for homelessness in our region beyond that 65% allocation to Housing First.
In addition to that, we are not able to roll over money. We used to be able to roll over money from year to year. I think it's really important. To be able to roll over any unused funding would be a quick win for us to deal with homelessness in this region.
To speak to the issue of unused funding, which is very important, it usually happens because service providers spend an awful lot of their time just writing applications for grant funding. The grants are short in their time span. It doesn't give them enough real ability to plan and wrap good programs and systems around things. We have some real concerns when we find a program is undersubscribed and we know that the numbers within the region should be saying otherwise. I think we need to create strategies that allow for service providers, who are absolutely critical in this area, to have better long-term planning ability on longer-term contracts.
We have very significant gaps in the housing continuum, so the national housing strategy is obviously critical for our area. We need housing. We need it built yesterday, so we're going to have some real time catching up. We need affordable housing for seniors. We need affordable housing with three-bedroom apartments for children. We know that we're dealing in metro Vancouver with Syrian refugee families who have upwards of 10 children, and we're putting them into two-bedroom apartments. That's not working. The faster we can get housing built, the better.
We also want to see incentives for the market to be able to build rentals. Rentals are really important. In Maple Ridge we are looking at around $900 for a one-bedroom basement suite. That is not affordable. The shelter allowance, as you well know, is $375 a month. Without a rent supplement that is high enough and for a long enough term, we can't easily get people into housing.
In Maple Ridge and in metro Vancouver, we have a significant number of gaps. You can build all the housing for people who are poor and people who are homeless, but at the end of the day, we're seeing a massive increase in the number of entrenched, chronically ill, homeless street people. We need health supports for that, especially mental health supports in this province, which are badly lacking in the region covered by Fraser Health. In their strategic plan, they note themselves that we have roughly 50,000 severely addicted mentally ill people, a percentage of whom are on our streets every day, and not nearly enough beds to support that number. We would like to see a funding commitment from the federal government around mental health, and we would like to see some standards from a leadership perspective from the federal government out to the provinces. We need our province to have a poverty reduction strategy, but we also need our province to honour their commitments in the area of mental health.
We know that preventing homelessness is a lot cheaper than trying to reverse it, so I need to speak today to the issue of children. For example, 40% of homeless youth have been part of the child welfare system. We have an awful lot of children in care. In Maple Ridge, among our homeless people, the greatest number were formerly children in care. The children are not getting the attention they need early on. We're seeing it every day.
I know that education is not within the purview of the federal government and that it's a provincial issue. However, as Canadians and as a federal government, we set standards for the treatment of our children across the board everywhere in this country. We have so many children, my own included, who are twice-exceptional—gifted and with a learning disability—who are in our school system and struggling every day, be it with anxiety or be it with undiagnosed, unsupported learning disabilities. These children struggle into their teens. Then they are subject to entering pathways that lead them to homelessness.
We also have a lot of children in our schools here in Maple Ridge who are in foster care. They need extra support. A lot of times, those in our education system are front-line identifiers for some of the challenges that children are struggling with at home. We need to be able to create programs that actually identify and are able to support our children.
Sadly, in our city we needed to reduce the number of children who were unable to access quick psychological or psychiatric care and who needed people to talk to, so our community and its citizens have paid for a youth mental wellness facility. I don't think it's the responsibility of our citizens, as wonderful as they are, or our city, as wonderful as I think it is, to have to pay for mental health care for our youth. We need that youth mental wellness centre funded, and we don't really care who funds it. We'd like to see funding from both levels of government. We have reduced the wait times in our city. It's been an extremely successful pilot, something that could probably be carried out in other cities. Our kids are able to walk in off the street and speak to someone when they need that. That's a really significant issue for us.
The shelter that you will visit today does not meet the standards of our commitments as Canadians under the United Nations conventions. We have a very significant announcement coming at one o'clock. We have had two commitments from our provincial government to build supportive housing for these people. Eighteen of the people who are in that temporary shelter that you will be visiting are from a Cliff Avenue homeless camp that resolved in October of 2015. Those people have been in that shelter for a year and a half. Five more are over at the Salvation Army. They were also in that camp. These people suffer from very significant mental health and addiction issues. We've been told by the experts in our provincial government that these people must be given supportive housing.
Two proposals that have been brought forward for supportive housing have failed because our citizens are uncomfortable having people with this magnitude of a problem living in their neighbourhood. We have to work as governments to reduce the stigma so that we're able to build the services that people need to get well.
I think that when you visit the shelter, you need to keep in mind that we have commitments under these international human rights conventions for housing, treatment, and displacement of people, and it's very significant that this is the situation we find ourselves in after two years of dealing with our provincial government. Thank you.