New P.E.I. homelessness count reveals significantly lower numbers - Action News
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PEI

New P.E.I. homelessness count reveals significantly lower numbers

This year's federally-led count identified 81 individuals who were homeless in Charlottetown and Summerside. Compare that to a case review involving client surveys by Island service providers in January 2015 which identified 209 people either homeless or at risk of homelessness.

Latest count 'more representative of imminent need,' says Community Advisory Board

The latest survey confirms very few Islanders are living on the streets. (CBC)

The first ever federally-ledPoint in Time Count on P.E.I. has revealed very different numbers of homelessness in Charlottetown and Summerside than a case load reviewin 2015.

The most recentcount, organized by the Government of Canada's Homelessness Partnering Strategy,identified 81 homeless in the two centres in late March and early Aprilthis year.

Compare that to client reviews and surveys done byservice providers in the two centres in mid-January 2015, whichidentified 209 people who were either homeless or at risk of homelessness in the next couple of months.

Charlottetown's Bedford MacDonald House was part of the Point-in-Time Count that happened over a 24-hour period in Charlottetown April 6 to 7. (CBC)

Numbers cut by more than half

The P.E.I. Community Advisory Board on Homelessness, or CAB, which helped withboth initiatives,believes the verydifferentresults can be explained by how the numbers wre gathered.

This year's PiT surveyinvolved a street countbetween 10 p.m. and 2 a.m., a count of people in sheltersbetween 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., and information collectedat a three-hour event whereparticipants were offered a meal and welcomed to do a survey.

By focusing on a single day, a count will not include some people who cycle in and out of homelessness.- P.E.I. Community Advisory Board on Homelessness

"A point-in-time survey is not a measure of everyone who experiences homelessness in a community over time. By focusing on a single day, a count will not include some people who cycle in and out of homelessness," wroteCAB in an executive summary released with the PiT report.

The 2015 case review involved 103service providers in the two major citiesidentifying clients who had been homeless in thepast year, were in a living situation where housing would end within the next one or two months, werecouch surfing, or were about to be released froma mental institution or correctional facility and had no housing lined up.

'More representative of imminent need'

No one from CAB wasavailable for an interview to clarify the different findings, but the organization did offer some explanation of the different numbers in informationsent out with the PiT Count report Monday.

"It is important to note that the 2015 survey had a broader definition for survey inclusion, thus the 2016 is a more representative number of those in imminent need."

CAB, however, cautions thatthe PiT Count is also not designed to measure the extent of hidden homeless, a type of homelessness the organization has said iscommon on P.E.I. Hidden homeless staywith family and friends orat a hotel or motel temporarily.

The PiT Count found 13 per cent were housedwith family or friends versus 22 per cent in the 2015 findings. But in the PiT Count, 11 per cent were staying temporarily at ahotel or motel, compared to only two per cent in the2015 provincial review.

The PiT Count found no unsheltered homeless in Summerside or Charlottetown on the dates and times the counts were done. (Shutterstock)

Street homeless not common on P.E.I.

The PiT Count also found no unsheltered homeless in Summerside or Charlottetown on the dates and times the counts were done.

"This is not an unexpected result given the time of year and the nature of homelessness on P.E.I.," wrote CAB.

Though the count is behind us, our job is not finished; it's time to take action on what we've learned.- Wendi Poirier, P.E.I. Homelessness Partnering Strategy coordinator

The PiT Count found 50 per cent were in transitional housing, a number higher than in the 2015 review. CAB attributedthat to the challenge findingaffordable housing on P.E.I.

The split between men, at 66 per cent, and women, at 34 per cent, was fairly similar in the 2015 and 2016 findings.

ThePiT Count found14 per cent of the homeless were Aboriginal, 11 per cent seniors, nine per cent immigrants or refugees, three per cent youth and two per cent veterans.

Leading reasons very similar

The reasons Islanders said led to theirhomelessness were similar in the two reports, with the majorityattributing itto addictions and substance abuse, and about a third of people being on welfare or social assistance.

But the PiT Count showed a higher number of people employed who are homeless,at 16 per cent compared to only10 per cent in the provincial case review.

The federal government has just committed to a second coordinated PiT Count for2018. Employment and Social Development Canada writes the information can be used to direct resources to areas of greatest need and connect individuals to targeted supports to help them achieve stable housing.

"Though the count is behind us, our job is not finished; it's time to take action on what we've learned and incorporate our findings as part of our continued effort to prevent and reduce homelessness," wrote Wendi Poirier, P.E.I. Homelessness Partnering Strategy coordinator.