Friday, May 28, 2021

UCP KILLS
'Costing lives:' Iveson pins deaths of four vulnerable Edmontonians on lack of provincial housing supports


© Provided by Edmonton Journal Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson.


Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson is holding the Alberta government responsible for the deaths of four vulnerable residents within the last week.

Last Friday, three men died in a central Edmonton park of suspected overdoses. The exact cause of the deaths haven’t been released and may never be released publicly. On Wednesday, a 26-year-old woman was killed and a man seriously injured when they were lifted from a garbage dumpster into a garbage truck.

Addressing the tragedies for the first time Thursday, Iveson said he puts them “squarely at the feet” of the province because of a lack of investment in permanent, supportive housing which the city has long called for. Iveson said the city has tried to bridge the gap on its own, by funding affordable housing developments outside its jurisdiction, but can’t do it alone.

“These are the consequences of the gaps in the overall system. The city has tried our best to help plug those gaps in what is ultimately the Government of Alberta’s failing system,” Iveson told reporters Thursday. “The recalcitrance of the Government of Alberta on our housing objectives is now costing lives.”


More than 2,250 people are currently experiencing homelessness in Edmonton, up from 1,800 at the end of last year even though 759 people have found housing within the last six months. Iveson said the current shelter system isn’t the long-term solution and is calling on the province to fund supportive housing projects to move people into more suitable accommodations and in turn reduce costs in the health care and justice systems.



The city didn’t receive any funding for supportive housing in the latest provincial budget. Also a lack of commitment from the province to provide operational funding for 480 planned units resulted in a loss to the city of additional federal support of up to $68.8 million through the rapid housing initiative.

“People have been left to often fend for themselves in ways that are unconscionable in this province for far too long, which is why we have consistently called for supportive housing so that people would have a safe place to be where their addictions can be managed towards a goal of recovery and where their housing needs can be met,” Iveson said.

Iveson said this lack of housing support is the top of many issues he has had in trying to work with Premier Jason Kenney and his government over the last two years, but is not getting a “willing partner.”

“I think I’ve shown working with five premiers and two different prime ministers that I can work with anybody who is prepared to be a willing partner to build a great city for Edmontonians. I just don’t have that in Jason Kenney’s UCP government,” he said. “I’m not alone in my frustration with a number of decisions that have been made that are not what the City of Edmonton would have liked and certainly not what we have constructively advocated for.”

In response to the mayor’s comments, a spokesman for the province, Justin Marshall, said the Alberta government has maintained funding to Homeward Trust for housing and also became the first province to eliminate user fees for publicly-funded residential addiction treatment.

“This means that all Albertans regardless of their ability to pay will have access to lifesaving treatment,” Marshall said in a statement to Postmedia. “The province is a clear leader in supporting those struggling with addictions.”

Video: EPS investigating four suspicious deaths in the last week (Edmonton Journal)

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