Indigenous organizations can apply to lead new national housing centre in new year - Action News
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Indigenous organizations can apply to lead new national housing centre in new year

The federal government will be choosing an Indigenous-led organization to lead a National Indigenous Housing Centre in the new year and some housing advocates are cautiously optimistic about the new plan.

Request for proposals expected in January

A condo building is seen under construction surrounded by houses in Vancouver, B.C.
According to the metro Vancouver homelessness count, Indigenous people are 13 times more likely to be homeless than non-Indigenous people and are homeless longer, younger and have more health conditions. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

The federal government will be choosing an Indigenous-led organization to lead a National Indigenous Housing Centre in the new year and some housing advocates are cautiously optimistic about the new plan.

On Wednesday, the government announced it will put out a request for proposals (RFP) in January for Indigenous-led organizations that are "national in scope" to apply to lead the newcentre.

The processfor choosing an organization will be managed by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC).In an email to CBCNews, CMHCsaid the process "will offer an open and transparent opportunity for interested Indigenous-led organizations."

CMHC said what the National Indigenous Housing Centre will look like will be at the discretion of the organization that is successful in the RFP, but it will "provide funding to address core Indigenous housing needs in urban, rural and northern areas."

More details on the RFP requirements will not be made public until it is open in the new year.

WATCH | Indigenous-led housing centre to launch in 2024:

Indigenous-led housing centre to launch in 2024

10 months ago
Duration 2:44
Federal Housing Minister Sean Fraser announced plans for a new Indigenous-led housing centre, which will look at tackling the housing crisis faced by Indigenous people in rural, urban and Northern communities.

Sim'oogit Saa-Bax Patrick Stewart, a hereditary chief of the Nisga'a Nationand senior director of designated homeless services for Lu'ma Native Housing Society, said the RFP makes this a competitive process, and notinclusive.

"Having Indigenous groups compete against each other for this federal program ...is not the best way to do it," said Stewart.

"We have national [Indigenous] political organizations, but not a national housing organization."

TheNational Indigenous Housing Centre is a step in the creation of the Urban, Rural and Northern Indigenous Housing Strategy.

The federal government allocated $300 million in 2022 towardthe development and launch of the strategy. An additional $4 billion over seven years starting in 2024-25 was committed in the 2023 budget.

"It is a step and it's a much-needed step and I think it needs to go further though," said Stewart.

A bald man wears tinted glasses and a blue and white shirt.
Simoogit Saa-Bax Patrick Stewart is a hereditary chief of the Nisgaa Nation and senior director of designated homeless services for Luma Native Housing Society. (Megan Williams/CBC)

He said there's aneed for billions of dollars to construct homes amid the continued rise in the number of people experiencing homelessness, as shown in the 2023 Metro Vancouver homelessness count.

In March 2023, 4,821 people were counted as experiencing homelessness in metro Vancouver, up 32 per cent from 2020.Of individuals counted this year, 821 people 33 per cent identified as Indigenous.

Themetro Vancouver homelessness countsaidIndigenous people are 13 times more likely to be homeless than non-Indigenous people and are homeless longer, younger and have more health conditions.

According toCMHC housing needs statistics on urban, rural and northern Indigenous people,Indigenous households represent five per cent of Canadian households but account for sevenper cent ofhouseholds in housing need.

Winnipeg has the greatest prevalence of Indigenous households in housing needat9,000, followed by Vancouver at8,000, according to CMHC.

"I think it's solvable," said Stewart.

"You look at the housing issues and it's people that created the housing issues.We have to now figure a way to solve those."

NICHI to apply for RFP

A coalition of Indigenous-led housing organizations in urban, rural and Northern communities, called the National Indigenous Collaborative Housing Incorporated (NICHI), created in 2022, will be putting its name in for the RFP, according to its board of directors chairJocelyn Formsma.

A woman in a red scarf smiles at the camera.
Jocelyn Formsma is executive director of the National Association of Friendship Centres and chair of the board of directors for the National Indigenous Collaborative Housing Incorporated. (Submitted by National Association of Friendship Centres)

The organizationhas over 50 organizations as members, includingthe National Association of Friendship Centres (NAFC), of which Formsma is the CEO.She said NAFC wants to see NICHIleadthe new National Indigenous Housing Centre.

Formsma said the individual organizations withinNICHIhave been advocating for decades for a national housing initiative.

"Now the time is right," she said.

Formsma said besides the need to build more homes, there needs to be wrap-around servicesthat are culturally informed and help people being housed to keep up with the costs of maintaining a home.

Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, Pauktuutit Inuit Women in Canada, and the Assembly of First Nations did not respond to a request for comment by time of publishing.