The day before the 75th anniversary of D-Day, House of Commons Veterans Affairs Committee Chair MP Neil Ellis announced a motion calling on the federal government to end veteran homelessness by 2025. The motion is supported by opposition parties and will be debated in the House on June 11th. 91èÏÈÉú to End Homelessness is in Ottawa today for the announcement along with VETS Canada, the Royal Canadian Legion and Old Brewery Mission.
Tim Richter, CAEH President & CEO, is in Ottawa this afternoon to support MP Neil Ellis’ Motion M-225, which calls on the federal government to end veteran homelessness by 2025. Ìý
Read Tim Richter’s statement below:
Good afternoon everyone.ÌýÌý
My name is Tim Richter. I lead the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness. I’m thrilled to be here today to speak to you in support of motion M-225.
First, I want to thank Mr. Ellis for his leadership on this motion, and to Ms. Benson and Ms. Vecchio for their support – and to thank all three for setting aside partisanship so that Parliament can be united in calling for action on veteran homelessness.ÌýÌý
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Read the motion
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Read the press release on the motion, HERE
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Listen to Tim Richter on CBC’s The House,
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Watch the announcement on CPAC,
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Watch Tim Richter on CTV’s Power Play,
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Read the Globe & Mail article,
Veteran homelessness in Canada is readily solvable. The number of homeless veterans is relatively small, we know what to do and how to do it. and there are . To put the scale of that achievement in perspective, there are approximately 40,000 American veterans homeless on any given night now, compared with all Canadian homelessness at about 35,000 people per night. Overall, estimates of veteran homelessness range from about 3,000 to 5,000 total. This is a solvable problem.Ìý
And we know what to do. My colleagues here from , the and are already on the ground doing the work. 91èÏÈÉú is working with communities who are having success in reducing chronic and overall homelessness – cities like Edmonton, who have reduced overall homelessness 43% in the last 8 years and Guelph Wellington who reduced chronic homelessness 24% in just 7 months.Ìý
Canada has strong veteran networks, solid expertise in communities and proven models to follow. There is strong public support – and what we see today and through this motion, is that there is strong political support as well. What91èÏÈÉú been missing is federal leadership and decisive action.ÌýÌý
It’s time for the federal government to a make a clear and unequivocal commitment to ending veteran homelessness, to put in place a plan to meet that objective and invest what modest additional resources may needed to get the job done.Ìý
I’m asking all Members of Parliament to give this motion unanimous consent on June 11th.ÌýÌý
And I’m asking the federal government to listen to Parliament, and act.Ìý
We have a duty to these men and women. This is a solvable problem. Let91èÏÈÉú get on with it.Ìý
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