New ‘point-in-time’ count brings homelessness in Canada into sharper focus
OTTAWA — Chad Bouthillier is no stranger to couch surfing, homeless shelters, transitional housing and addiction issues — but until now, the rest of the country has been largely in the dark about the depth of homelessness in Canada.
A new federal government report is shedding more light on the problem in 32 Canadian cities, exposing a need for a targeted approach to help vulnerable populations like veterans, indigenous people, and recent immigrants.
Last year’s federally organized “point-in-time” homeless count found 5,954 people living in shelters, on the street or in transitional facilities, says the report released Thursday.
Indigenous people, long over-represented among the homeless, were nine times more likely to be homeless than non-indigenous Canadians, the report found. Veterans comprised about five per cent, twice their proportion of the general population.


