Liberals loosen purse strings on cornerstone homelessness program
OTTAWA — Cities working to get homeless Canadians off the streets and into homes will face fewer spending restrictions under a revamp of the Liberal government’s centrepiece homelessness program.
New rules unveiled Monday will give cities leeway to spend money on local initiatives and experiments — so long as they can meet Ottawa’s goal of cutting in half the number of chronic homeless people in their midst.
Chronically homeless make up a small number in the overall homeless population, but they are among the heaviest users of emergency shelters.
The changes also mean cities can spend less on projects that fall under the “Housing First” umbrella, a doctrine that stipulates governments find housing and services for people right away, rather than requiring them to seek treatment first.


