Housing and Homelessness in Canada
In Canada, there is a problem with homelessness. While that is certainly not unique to the country, it is a significant issue which has to be addressed in order to facilitate changes that can lower the number of homeless people in the country. The majority of these people live in the larger cities and do have some access to resources, but the problems with homelessness have still kept growing in complexity and size over recent years. The demographics of the people who are most often seen as homeless are changing, as well, putting younger and more vulnerable people on the streets. There are estimates that 0.5% of the population does not have a home at all, and some believe that those estimates only represent about 1/2 of the actual population of homeless people throughout Canada (Fortin, 2008). Part of the problem with not being certain how many homeless people are in the country is that the definition of homeless has changed in recent years (Koyama 2002; Margaret, et al., 2001).
While the term now means that these people have no home to go to at night, it used to also mean people who were more transient, but who still had a place to live while they were in the area (Fortin, 2008). For example, it could be used to refer to people who did seasonal work and migrated to where the work was each year. While they were not, technically, homeless (as defined by not having a place to live at all), they were homeless in the sense that they had no permanent residence (Fortin, 2008). Depending on how one decided to define homeless, they could fit that description. Now that more people are not using the homeless term for people who are transient but do have a place to stay, the numbers are becoming a bit more accurate. They are more likely to reflect true homelessness, as defined by people who have nowhere to live, and must use shelters or sleep on the streets.
Homeless Families and Youth
Among the most significant problems for people in Canada today is that it is not just single men who are struggling with homelessness. Instead, there are many families and youths who are also living on the streets (Gaetz, et al., 2006; Hulchanski, 2009). Women and children make up the fastest growing subset of the homeless, putting some of the most vulnerable members of the population at risk for all sorts of issues and problems (Hulchanski, 2009). Women and children are generally not able to defend themselves as well as men, and they are also at risk for assault and other crimes when they stay at shelters, because not all shelters are closely monitored or properly staffed (Gaetz, et al., 2006). There is a stigma to being homeless that haunts many of the people who fall into that category, and as such many of them are afraid to ask for help (Fortin, 2008).
This is especially true for women who are trying to take care of their children, because they do not want the children to be taken away if they cannot care for them and provide them with a home. Additionally, youths who end up on the street because they were asked to leave their home or because they chose to leave it may not think anyone can help them or would be willing to do so (Fortin, 2008). The other concern for them is that, if they left home willingly, they may think that they are not deserving of help or must not ask for help, as it would be "weak" of them to do so (Fortin, 2008). When they feel that way, they end up not getting any assistance to protect them from the risks of living on the street, putting them at significant risk of robbery, rape, assault, and other crimes.
Because youth and families are a seriously large group in the homeless community and that group is growing, it is easy to see that something must be done for these people. As they struggle to get services they need and have trouble getting out of the issues they are mired in, they are finding that they are not getting the help they could really use (Hwang, 2001; Koyama, 2002). There are several reasons for that, and several reasons that people end up homeless. With families that end up that way, the most significant reason is a lack of income and/or an inability to pay the rent or a house payment...
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