B.C. Housing conducts review on supportive housing deaths, but falls short of investigating their cause - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. Housing conducts review on supportive housing deaths, but falls short of investigating their cause

In a report published last Tuesday, B.C. Housing said it had hired two external consultants to conduct a review to find out whether Goodacre Placeis a safe place for Indigenous people to live not an investigation of the deaths that occurred.

First Nations leaders have demanded the province to probe deaths of 6 Indigenous residents at Goodacre Place

In an April 2021 press release, the BCAAFC said the lack of culturally safe services at Goodacre Place, pictured, had led to what they believed was the highest number of residents to die at a single supportive housing facility in a year. (Nicole Oud/CBC)

The province says it hasnotinvestigated the cause of deathof six Indigenous residents at a northwestern B.C. supportive housing complex, despite demands from First Nations to do so.

In a review report published last Tuesday, B.C. Housing said it had hired two external consultants to conduct a review in responsetothe B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres (BCAAFC)'s April 2021 press release,which said the lack of culturally safe services had led to what theybelieved was the highest number of residents to die at a single supportive housing facility in a year.

However, the review was conducted to find out whether Goodacre Placeis a safe place for Indigenous people to live, B.C. Housing said in the report not an investigation of the deaths that occurred. "This is beyond the scope of the review," reads the report.

It adds that the consultants, one of whom is Indigenous,"did not observe direct linkages between the cultural safety practices employed at Goodacre Place and the deaths, and therefore could not substantiate any of the allegations indicated in the noted press release."

No'common definition' of cultural safety in housing

Goodacre Place is a three-storey supportive housing building in Smithers, B.C.,jointly developed by B.C. Housing, the Town of Smithers, and the non-profit Smithers Community Services Association (SCSA). It has22 singleoccupancy units, and residents pay a monthly fee of $375 for shelter and receive breakfast, dinner, and support services.

In its 2021 press release, Dze L K'ant Friendship Centre, a member of the BCAAFC, saidthe SCSA rejected its offer in 2020 to provide support services to First Nations residents at Goodacre Place, because this would duplicateservices already being provided by the association.

This rejection is not addressed in B.C. Housing's report. However, the report notes that the SCSA has adopted a variety of cultural safety practicesbased on consultations with local Indigenous communities.

It addsthat at the time of the review, the SCSA "was not required by B.C. Housing to provide cultural supports."

It also says there is currently "no common definition of cultural safety in the housing sector, although the AMHA[Aboriginal Management Housing Association] is in the process of developing a framework and definition for cultural safety."

Staff at the Dze L Kant Friendship Centre, pictured, says the Smithers Community Services Association rejected its offer in 2020 to provide support services for Indigenous residents at Goodacre Place. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

Although B.C. Housing did not investigatethe causes of death of Goodacreresidents, it saysin the report that anti-Indigenous racism andillicit drug toxicity are serious in Smithers.

The agency recommends the SCSAto continue its engagement with local Indigenous communities to ensure cultural support is adequately providedfor Indigenous residents at Goodacre Place.

It also recommends the SCSAto partner with Northern Health and First Nations Health Authorityto provide a regularly scheduled on-site health-care professional at the supportive housing facility.

More Indigenous staff needed

The report mentions that since BCAAFC issued its press release, SCSA has lost a significant proportion of its staff at Goodacre Place, due to distress over the deaths andthreats from the local community.

SCSA executive director Cathryn Olmstead says a total of seven employees, including four Indigenous workers, have quit, and B.C. Housing's report has helped exonerate her staff.

"We spent [over] 40 years as an organization trying to address those injustices while our staff are deeply grieving, they're being thrown under the bus," Olmstead told host Carolina de Ryk on CBC's Daybreak North.

BCAAFC executive director Leslie Varley says the report doesn't go far enough to address the issue of systemic racism against First Nations in northern B.C.

She also says the SCSA should have hired more Indigenous people.

"For an organization that supports 50 per cent Indigenous people, you would expect to have 50 per cent employees who are Indigenous and 50 per cent representation on the board," Varley said on CBC's The Early Edition.

BCAAFC executive director Leslie Varley says B.C. Housing's report doesnt go far enough to address the issue of systemic racism against First Nations in northern B.C. (Submitted by Leslie Varley)

According to B.C. Housing's report, more than half of Goodacre Place residents are Indigenous, but only about a quarter of SCSA's staff are Indigenous.


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With files from Kate Partridge, Daybreak North and The Early Edition