Housing subsidys end may leave family of 7 homeless - Action News
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EdmontonGO PUBLIC

Housing subsidys end may leave family of 7 homeless

An Edmonton single mother is facing homelessness as a decades-old federal subsidized-housing program comes to an end.

End of federal program blamed for loss of subsidized housing

Lorraine Catholique has to leave the house she's rented for five years because the rent is longer subsidized. (CBC News)

An Edmonton single mother is facing homelessness as a decades-old federal subsidized-housing program comes to an end.

Lorraine Catholique has been told to move out of the rental house she has lived in for more than five years.

Theyre just going to toss me out like that, me and my family? Catholique asked.

Catholique cares for three of her own children, two in high school and one in elementary, along with three grandchildren under the age of three.

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For 35 years, theMtis Urban Housing Corporation (MUHC) received a subsidy from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), allowing it to set rent at 25 per cent of the tenants income.

Catholique receives about $2,200 a month from income and child support payments, so shepaid $586 a month about $900 less than what she believes the home would rent for on the open market.

It meant that I can provide for my kids. It meant that I can have a stable home. It was everything for us, Catholique said. It was a safe haven, Im telling you.

The CMHC subsidy ended June 1and MUHC says it can no longer afford to keep the rent as low.

Catholique has had no luck finding a suitable home and is afraid she will have to go to a shelter, which may split up her family.

Theres no way Im going to let my grandkids go (into government care), especially with all the stories that are going on, she said.

Very, very tough situation

Its a very, very tough situation for our families out there, said Marilyn Gladue, Edmonton and Rural Housing Manager for MUHC and theMtis Capital Housing Corp.

Gladue said when the subsidies began expiring, MUHC was initially able to move families like Catholiques to other homes.

"Metis families need to move with the times," says Marilyn Gladue with Metis Urban Housing Corporation.
"But it's now come to the point where we have no other (subsidized) units," she said.

MUHC once operated 739 homes under the program. Gladue said that as the agreements expire, the homes are turned over to a sister company, Mtis Capital Housing Corporation. (MCHC).

Both companies are owned by the Mtis Nation of Alberta.

MCHC renovates the houses, then rents them for a profit to qualified tenantsat 80 per cent of the market rateabout $1050 a month, plus utilities.

It sells the homes that arent worth renovating, Gladue said.

Nothing affordable, mother says

Catholique said she was unprepared for the letter she received in April 2013 telling her to be out by the end of May 2014.

She calls the notice generous, but said theres nothing in Edmonton she can afford. She has notebooks in which she keeps a record of all the places shes called and all the programs she applied for.

Metis Capital plans to charge rent 20 per cent below market rents, nearly double what Catholique paid. (CBC News)
Its not like I havent been looking. I have been looking, Catholique said.

Gladue said 365 days notice was ample warning.

Weve had other families in the past that have, if not more children, less income, and they had to relocate and theyve done so. And as far as we know theyve been successful for them, Gladue said.

Since April, MUHC has conducted monthly inspections of the home, which Catholique calls an imposition.

She refused to leave on the deadline and has stopped paying rent, which she says is to save money for a deposit on a new apartment.

Gladue said Mtis Capital will now go to court to have Catholique evicted.

"I truly hope that Lorraine was very wise with the rental money that she should've been paying and she should have ample funds available for her to relocate," Gladue said.

Evictions common and a tragedy, lawyer says

Catholique turned to the Edmonton Community Legal Centre for help.

Staff lawyer Sarah Eadie says its a real possibility Catholiques family will be split up and the grandchildren put in government care.

There are no shelters for families in Edmonton, Eadie said. If you cant care for your children and grandchildren appropriately, theres a real risk you will lose your children to child welfare.

Eadie called Catholique the poster child for who needs Mtis Urban services.

Its a tragedy if we have these people who are already in social housing and continue to need it, and we evict them, she said.

Eadie said thousands of people in Edmonton are living on low incomes and cant find proper housing.

She said she believes the City of Edmonton is doing its best, but the money isnt there to meet a growing need.

In a society as wealthy as we are in Edmonton I just cant fathom why we cant provide housing for someone like Lorraine, she said.

NDP MP Linda Duncan said Catholiques case is proof the loss of the CMHC program is hurting families.

These are real-life stories, so it is a real-life problem and we need the federal government to address it.

Subsidized housing to be financially-viable,' feds say

CMHC says the federal government has spent more than $16.5 billion on housing since 2006, and about $114 million a year for aboriginal people living off-reserve.

In a statement, CMHC spokesperson Karine LeBlanc said the end-date of the subsidy was known when the agreements were signed.

The majority of non-profit housing projects ... are expected to be financially viable and mortgage-free when the agreements expire, the statement says.

Housing providers will find themselves with valuable real estate assets and a decrease in operating expenses that can be used to continue to offer affordable housing.

Need to move with the times, Mtis families told

Gladue said the housing offered by MCHC, at 20 per cent less than the market rate, will be still be affordable, just not subsidized.

She said the end of subsidized housing will put people on the street.

It is unfortunate. It is going to show in the homeless count.

But, Gladue said, subsidized housing programs were holding her people back.

We need our families to grow, she said.

We need them to move with the times, we need them to move ahead, plan ahead. Life at Mtis Urban Housing for the last 30 years is over.

Catholique said she hopes that telling her story might help her family and others.

I just have to survive on a day-to-day basis. Thats how Ive been brought up. Be grateful. Be thankful. And when I lay down I say thank-you and start again the next day.