Mr. Chair, members of the committee, thank you for inviting me to testify today as part of your study on homelessness in Canada.
I am the executive director of Zone Libre Memphrémagog, a community-based organization located in a very vulnerable neighbourhood in Magog. Although our primary mission is addiction prevention and harm reduction, we must recognize that our living environment is an important gateway for people living with issues of addiction, mental health, housing insecurity or homelessness.
This proximity enables us to observe, every day, the close ties that exist between these various realities and to develop on-the-ground expertise based on direct support for these people. We can also foster partnerships with community, institutional and municipal partners, as well as with police forces, all while contributing to better coordination of interventions in our area.
In the Memphrémagog RCM, we have no organization whose specific mission is homelessness intervention. However, over the past several years, we have seen a significant increase in housing insecurity and homelessness, both visible and hidden. Like many rural communities, our area faces the same challenges as major urban centres: the housing crisis, addictions, mental health issues and poverty. However, we have to address them with fewer specialized resources over a larger area and often with a more limited range of services.
It was in this context that we adapted our mobile community response unit into a mobile warming centre to provide a response tailored to our more rural region. This project, supported by the federal government's unsheltered homelessness and encampments initiative, enabled us to reach out directly to the most vulnerable people in the Memphrémagog RCM.
During the period from November 2025 to March 2026, we recorded 462 visits and carried out more than 2,310 interventions with people in vulnerable situations. These interventions focused mainly on psychosocial support, as well as raising awareness about addiction and harm reduction. We have also been able to support people with their administrative, government and legal procedures, as well as with their access to health care and public programs. That has also enabled us to direct them toward specialized resources and to support them in managing complex issues related to addictions, mental health and socio-economic precarity.
Beyond the service itself, this initiative has enabled us to see first-hand the lived realities of people experiencing homelessness or those at risk of becoming homeless. It has enabled us to understand the factors that contribute to rural homelessness and the barriers that some people may face in their efforts toward housing stability.
One of the key insights we gained from this experience is that addiction, mental health, housing and homelessness are interconnected. The people we have supported were not just looking for housing or a place to warm up. Instead, they needed support to regularize their administrative situation, take legal action, secure an income, maintain housing or get support in their recovery journey.
This approach has proven particularly relevant for an area like ours, where there are fewer specialized resources and many people remain far away from traditional services. These people have little access to transportation.
However, changes to the management of funding under Canada's homelessness strategy, Reaching Home, have posed a significant challenge for our area. We have found that the realities and many needs of rural communities would have benefited from getting more consideration in the discussions surrounding these changes. Organizations that work every day with the people affected have knowledge of local challenges, and they can make significant contributions when it comes to setting priorities.
We have also observed certain situations related to the flow of information around calls for proposals and new directions for funding. In our case, we were unable to take part in the call for proposals process as we would have liked. That limited our ability to present the expertise developed over the years and the needs observed in our area.
This situation had a real impact. The end of funding led to the closure of local services that helped support people experiencing issues of addiction and vulnerability. Beyond the funding itself, it's a capacity to intervene, the trust built with people and the locally developed expertise that have been affected.
Our experience leads us to believe that increased participation of rural communities in consultation and planning mechanisms would provide a better understanding of the diversity of lived realities across the country.
Investments in infrastructure are really essential, but they benefit from being paired with local services and support that make it possible to reach people, prevent situations from deteriorating and promote access to existing resources.
In light of our experience, we have identified several promising areas for improvement.
First, it's important to better recognize rural communities' expertise in identifying needs and developing homelessness strategies.
Second, it's important to provide stable and predictable support for local services, which are instrumental in preventing homelessness, maintaining housing and supporting people with complex needs.
Third, it's important to foster regional consultation spaces that bring together urban and rural stakeholders. This makes it possible to share knowledge, gain a better understanding of everyone's specific realities and guide investments in a complementary way.
Fourth, it's important to support rural communities in developing solutions tailored to their reality, whether that means local support, supervised emergency housing, transportation to resources or local coordination of homelessness measures.
Our lived experience in the Memphrémagog RCM shows us that when a community has the necessary resources and is recognized as a full-fledged partner, it can design responses that are effective, humane and tailored to the reality on the ground.
Rural communities don't just want to be supported; they also want to actively help develop the solutions. We believe this co-operation is an opportunity to strengthen the efforts to prevent homelessness in Canada.
Thank you for listening. I am ready to answer your questions.
