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Homelessness, Addiction and Mental Health

It's definitely not easy, and it's not a complete solution, but if you eliminate the element that needs more than housing, then efforts can be more directed towards people who would benefit the most from housing, as well as being the most sustainable and efficient group to help.

Would also likely increase public support towards increased housing initiatives, so would likely have a compound effect.
 
It's definitely not easy, and it's not a complete solution, but if you eliminate the element that needs more than housing, then efforts can be more directed towards people who would benefit the most from housing, as well as being the most sustainable and efficient group to help.

Would also likely increase public support towards increased housing initiatives, so would likely have a compound effect.

Wondering if there's a good model *another city to point to that would support this type of approach.
 
There is no support for proper addiction and mental health issues. Lake of funding has created the issues. and will continue to be a problem. Yah it will take a lot of money, something no level of government is will to do.

Heard this morning that EFR and Bylaw responded to 13000 opioid calls last year.
 
Dumb, but serious question.
If a person is homeless and on drugs, and then truly wants to go to rehab to clean up, are the support services available ? Eg, place to stay, room to sleep, shelter, food, detox, and basically supports to get your life back on track, such as a job, help with education and such ?
 
Dumb, but serious question.
If a person is homeless and on drugs, and then truly wants to go to rehab to clean up, are the support services available ? Eg, place to stay, room to sleep, shelter, food, detox, and basically supports to get your life back on track, such as a job, help with education and such ?
Yes and No.

There are supports, but its a patchwork of supports with massive gaps. The likelihood of making it through everything fully supported is very low. You can go through a couple of different channels, detox/treatment or housing first. I will summarize them both but there are huge asterixis because there are so many small programs/gaps that experiences vary wildly. But in general:

For treatment: There are detox facilities, but availability is wildly variable. Not uncommon to request detox and then wait weeks, at which point new barriers have arisen. After detox, there are treatment centers but it is very hard to sync the transition from detox to recovery, so you may end up going from detox to back on the street for a few days before your treatment bed is available, a very common place for people to fall off. Treatment beds are unregulated with no standard of care/inspection so the quality you get could range from awesome to downright abusive, and very few are forgiving of mistakes, if you mess up you are likely kicked out immediately.

Then assuming you get clean and sober you are discharged and on your own. You likely have to cut all the social connections you have as most of your family/friends likely played a role in you being addicted to begin with. And you get to do that on Alberta Works which provides you with $824 a month to pay rent, utilities, food, transportation, etc. The wait for social housing is now measured in decades, so you have to find a place to live on the private market. There are employment programs, but most are just a few classes a week with a one or two week practicum. And if you have a criminal record/long term employment gap you almost certainly will never get a job. As soon as that criminal record check comes in your probation period will end with you let go. We have zero guaranteed jobs programs.

For housing first, you are placed with a worker IF you have been chronically homeless for at least 6 months. You will get a housing subsidy that pays for rent for a One Year period and access to support programs like employment coaching, financial management courses, etc. However, your worker has a caseload of around 30-50 people and will at best touch base with you once a week. You are expected to managed your own attendance to programs. Then, after the one year is up you will "Graduate" as being "housed" and the subsidy/supports will end (except in some very specific circumstances). You are then on your own living on $824 a month when the place you were set up in with the subsidy likely costs 800-1200 a month. Our "Housing First" program does not do check in's after the subsidy ends so we have no idea of its effectiveness long term, but anecodately its not very good. IMO, we have a "Rapid Re-Housing" program that is misadverstised as housing first because of our lack of social housing supply at income support rates. If you managed to make it to self-sufficiency from likely decades of trauma/addiction in that 12 month period you are amazing and I am in awe of your tenacity.

Basically, there are supports but they require you to be superhumanly perfect at making zero mistakes, living with almost no money, and supports that start and disappear at arbitrary times with out any cohesion or support during transitions. And you will likely go through this journey alone with new people entering/exiting your life as your time with their program ends.
 
I heard Nenshi say today that in Calgary that when people call 911, they hear "police, fire, ambulance or mental health".

Does anyone know if that is the case in Edmonton?

He says it has been "cheap" to implement (fewer than 20 people hired) to manage the many mental health based calls without necessarily involving police, fire etc).
 
I heard Nenshi say today that in Calgary that when people call 911, they hear "police, fire, ambulance or mental health".

Does anyone know if that is the case in Edmonton?

He says it has been "cheap" to implement (fewer than 20 people hired) to manage the many mental health based calls without necessarily involving police, fire etc).
I don't know if we have anything that specific. We do have the PACT team which has its own direct number.

From personal experience, the PACT team is absolutely amazing, if you can get them. There are only 2 active teams for the whole city so 3/4 times when you call you end up getting a beat cop because the team is unavailable, and most of the time the beat cop makes things worse. Another one of those "pilot" projects that is awesome but is never expanded to its true need/potential.
 
Yes and No.

There are supports, but its a patchwork of supports with massive gaps. The likelihood of making it through everything fully supported is very low. You can go through a couple of different channels, detox/treatment or housing first. I will summarize them both but there are huge asterixis because there are so many small programs/gaps that experiences vary wildly. But in general:

For treatment: There are detox facilities, but availability is wildly variable. Not uncommon to request detox and then wait weeks, at which point new barriers have arisen. After detox, there are treatment centers but it is very hard to sync the transition from detox to recovery, so you may end up going from detox to back on the street for a few days before your treatment bed is available, a very common place for people to fall off. Treatment beds are unregulated with no standard of care/inspection so the quality you get could range from awesome to downright abusive, and very few are forgiving of mistakes, if you mess up you are likely kicked out immediately.

Then assuming you get clean and sober you are discharged and on your own. You likely have to cut all the social connections you have as most of your family/friends likely played a role in you being addicted to begin with. And you get to do that on Alberta Works which provides you with $824 a month to pay rent, utilities, food, transportation, etc. The wait for social housing is now measured in decades, so you have to find a place to live on the private market. There are employment programs, but most are just a few classes a week with a one or two week practicum. And if you have a criminal record/long term employment gap you almost certainly will never get a job. As soon as that criminal record check comes in your probation period will end with you let go. We have zero guaranteed jobs programs.

For housing first, you are placed with a worker IF you have been chronically homeless for at least 6 months. You will get a housing subsidy that pays for rent for a One Year period and access to support programs like employment coaching, financial management courses, etc. However, your worker has a caseload of around 30-50 people and will at best touch base with you once a week. You are expected to managed your own attendance to programs. Then, after the one year is up you will "Graduate" as being "housed" and the subsidy/supports will end (except in some very specific circumstances). You are then on your own living on $824 a month when the place you were set up in with the subsidy likely costs 800-1200 a month. Our "Housing First" program does not do check in's after the subsidy ends so we have no idea of its effectiveness long term, but anecodately its not very good. IMO, we have a "Rapid Re-Housing" program that is misadverstised as housing first because of our lack of social housing supply at income support rates. If you managed to make it to self-sufficiency from likely decades of trauma/addiction in that 12 month period you are amazing and I am in awe of your tenacity.

Basically, there are supports but they require you to be superhumanly perfect at making zero mistakes, living with almost no money, and supports that start and disappear at arbitrary times with out any cohesion or support during transitions. And you will likely go through this journey alone with new people entering/exiting your life as your time with their program ends.

Thank you for the excellent answer
 
I heard Nenshi say today that in Calgary that when people call 911, they hear "police, fire, ambulance or mental health".

Does anyone know if that is the case in Edmonton?

He says it has been "cheap" to implement (fewer than 20 people hired) to manage the many mental health based calls without necessarily involving police, fire etc).
This sounds great, I'd like to know how it works. If the call is for mental health, do police or ambulance show up ? What happens if the person is mentally unstable, but then a few mins later starts to hurt other people. It will never be perfect, and unfortunately there will be cases when the wrong type of professional shows up and there will be consequences. I suspect we need to recognize that these situations are volatile, and anything can go wrong.
Not easy decisions for people calling 911, not easy for the dispatchers. Overall, never going to be %100 correct %100 of the time.
 
Dumb, but serious question.
If a person is homeless and on drugs, and then truly wants to go to rehab to clean up, are the support services available ? Eg, place to stay, room to sleep, shelter, food, detox, and basically supports to get your life back on track, such as a job, help with education and such ?
If someone is homeless and dealing with addiction but genuinely wants to get clean, there are services out there, but it's not always easy to access them. It can vary a lot depending on where you live. Some places have shelters offering rehab programs, including detox, food, and a place to stay. From my experience, though, you must be persistent and sometimes navigate a complicated system. Job training and education help are available, but they're not always guaranteed immediately.It's a long road, but it's definitely possible if the person stays determined and finds the proper support. If anyone's trying to quit smoking or vaping while going through recovery, options like Geek Bar Pulse X 25000 might be something to look into. They're readily available online, so they could be worth considering.
 
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If someone is homeless and dealing with addiction but genuinely wants to get clean, there are services out there, but it's not always easy to access them. It can vary a lot depending on where you live. Some places have shelters offering rehab programs, including detox, food, and a place to stay. From my experience, though, you must be persistent and sometimes navigate a complicated system. Job training and education help are available, but they're not always guaranteed immediately.
Talking with some, the prospect of going to a religious based treatment centre is what keeps them from getting help. Another issue is the time frame in treatment. once you are done you are sent away most times without support. I think the FN treatment facilities may be better suited for long term treatment.
 
Alberta has gone to a recovery model. In 2019 the ministry of Metal Health and Addition was created with a budget of $5m, now has an annual budget of $1.5B. 10,000 recovery spaces have already been built around the province. $1200 entrance fee to treatment centres has been waived and you can stay for up to 24 months, with 9-12 month post-recovery group housing afterwards. $328m in treatment centres will be build this year, $99m for indigenous communities.

This government believes this is the way forward, whether right or wrong. The drugs on the street are 200x stronger than heroine and will kill you in a matter of months.

 
Was at a facility I do volunteer work with. Over the past year we have seen a constant increase in people needing assistance. The facility is slightly outside the areas that are heavily used. so If we are seeing the increase the other services are probably getting slammed more.
 

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