[Opinion] Gatineau fails to meet its homelessness obligations

The Second portrait of homelessness in Quebec, published by the Ministry of Health and Social Services (MSSS) in 2022, states that between 2018 and 2021, there was a “significant increase in the number of people in homelessness, particularly in Montreal and Gatineau”. In Gatineau, according to the MSSS, this increase was substantial during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the demand for emergency accommodation increasing by 18%.

Despite this notable increase, there is only one shelter in the region, Gîte Ami, which has only 59 places in emergency accommodation. There is no emergency accommodation specifically for homeless women.

Until 2021, the City of Gatineau, assisted by its police department, dismantled camps organized by homeless people. For two years, this dismantling would have been replaced by a “cleaning up” carried out using mechanical shovels and trucks and during which the personal effects which are not removed from the site are destroyed or thrown away.

For the Canadian Human Rights Commission, this cleanup poses the same problems as dismantling. Indeed, in the absence of sufficient places in shelters, this practice is a violation of the rights to life, liberty and security of the person protected by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and recognized by decisions recent court cases in several provinces.

Faced with the lack of places in emergency accommodation, the City and the Outaouais Integrated Health and Social Services Center (CISSSO), in collaboration with community organizations, opened a heat drop-in centre. However, the place does not meet people’s needs, in addition to being unsanitary.

During the month of January, the toilets were clogged, and no plumber agreed to intervene; a situation that the City and the CISSSO have chosen not to remedy. An unbearable smell of excrement was the daily life of users and workers at the drop-in center for more than a month. To remedy the lack of functional toilets, chemical toilets were installed outside, in winter conditions that reached minus 40 degrees.

On February 13, a water leak forced the evacuation of people at the heat drop-off. A bus from the Service de transport de l’Outaouais was chartered to temporarily house the evacuees. The authorities claimed to have found no other solution, despite suggestions from organizations in the region. This deplorable situation, which contravenes the most basic human rights, ended on February 15.

Previous experiences of natural disasters in Gatineau demonstrate, however, that the City and the CISSSO can mobilize resources quickly. Since 2017, these authorities have managed one tornado, two floods, in addition to the COVID-19 pandemic. In these unexpected situations, these authorities have quickly found solutions that do not jeopardize the life, liberty and security of individuals. Should we conclude that in the eyes of public authorities, some lives are worth more than others?

The City of Gatineau announced the closure of the heat shelter next May without presenting a plan for reopening in other premises, let alone a plan for the construction of social housing, which would nevertheless constitute a lasting solution. The CISSSO disclaims all responsibility, referring it instead, as is often the case, to community organizations, which already lack resources and means. In the absence of a viable solution, homeless people will have no choice but to sleep on the streets or set up new camps, which threatens their survival and increases the risk of their going to court.

The lack of will on the part of the City and the CISSSO to find lasting solutions and to offer conditions that do not infringe on the rights of people experiencing homelessness indicates obvious discrimination based on social status. It also reveals the disturbing disengagement of the State with regard to its own obligations in social matters, which it is our duty to denounce.

*Co-signed this text:

Marie-Eve Sylvestre, Civil Law Section of the Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa

Suzanne Bouclin, Associate Professor, University of Ottawa

Bellot Celine, University of Montreal

Mathieu Déziel, citizen

Malorie Kanaan, Master’s Candidate in Law and Social Justice at the University of Ottawa

Adréanne Provost-auger, BRAS Outaouais

Nicolas Renaud, CIPTO

Kamie Ouellette, addiction prevention educator, CIPTO

Alexandre Gallant, CRIO Mobilization Officer

Melissa Laporte

Mathieu Déziel, The Tureen of Friendship of Gatineau

Janick Allyson, CIPTO

Angelique Maurier, Envol SRT

Tiffany Kabasele, Center Mechtilde

Catherine Dubé, Outaouais PSI Network

Cathy Michaud, citizen and community worker

Denis Ritchot

Mathilde Robichaud, BRAS Ouataouais

April Bergeron, Outaouais Bras

Marie-Pier Goyette

Noemie Dompierre, Bras Outaouais

Micheline Morin, citizen

Eugène michaud, citizen

Tania Cretes

Alexandra D. Miller, citizen

Nancy Malette, Adojeune Inc.

Sandra Poulin, street worker in Bras outaouais

Rachel Desjardins

Ann-Esther Lehman, Intern at CIDSO

Erika, Demers, CIDSO

Laurent Paradis-Charette, Sociology teacher, Cégep de l’Outaouais

Louise Saumier

Emilie Grenon, citizen and resident of Old Hull

Zoe Lafontaine

Chantal Léon, community social worker

Annie Castonguay, lecturer in social work at Collège Universel

Jeanette Plante

Sophie Lepin

Jean-François, community worker

Cynthia Estenssoro, worker at BRAS Outaouais

Marie-Pier Lacroix

Emilie Corneau, student researcher, Uottawa, CIDSO

Éliane Laprade, socio-artistic worker (LAB)

Myriam Gauthier, Speaker

Bianca Reitano

Erica Leblanc Deschatelets

Etienne Proulx, CIPTO

Marianne Gagnon

Marie-Eve Parent

Gabrielle Fillion

Melika Saidane

Tanya Dykstra

Arianne Pittet

Melanie Parent, citizen

Jade Rancourt

Guillaume Vermette

Janie Yelle, former head of the HC of Hull and Gatineau

Simon Chartrand-Paquette

Elsa Gauthier, street worker CIPTO

Camille McCooeye

Patrick C. Pilotte, sociologist, Cégep Outaouais

Sara Lambert, Research Manager, CIDSO

Yannick Boulay, Coordinator, Entre-Nous Community Center

Léonie Couture, Speaker at the Lab (Cipto)

Emmanuelle Beaudry-Plouffe, Citizen

Alex David

Sylvie Trudel, Mobilization Officer, Aylmer Sector Partners

Josee Dubeau

Emilie Laframboise

Jennifer Lynn Parent, gcd

Nadia de Grandpre

Marie Helene Bellemare

Melissa Barrette intervener

Audrey kingsbury, speaker

Yves Séguin, Managing Director, CIPTO

Geneviève Gratton, Director, Outaouais Community Justice Center

Étienne Senécal, social work student, University of Quebec in Outaouais

Alexis, citizen

Étienne Pichet (Speaker at Mon Chez Nous)

Rebecca Labelle, Rights-Access Outaouais Coordinator

Gabriel Pallotta, president of the Quebec roaming SOLIDARITY network

Marc Beauchamp, General Manager, Les Oeuvres Isidore Ostiguy

Veronic St-Pierre

François Roy, coordinator, Logemen’occupy

Sasha Mia Yakimishan

Cassandra Lafrenière, Avenue des Jeunes

Pierre-Luc Baulne, Gatineau Adds

Jean Cebastien Baulne

Michel Kasongo, Soup Kitchen of Hull Inc.

Gabrielle Turner, resident of the island of Hull

Nathaniel Oliveri-Pilotte, street work

Hélène Gélinas-Surprenant, Member of the Board of Directors, Soupe populaire de Hull inc.

Thomas Côté, Tenant Committee

Bernard St-Jacques, Rights Ahead Clinic

Sandra Hebert

Mario Come

Céline Lefebvre, Maison Libère-Elles

Coco Simone Finken, Resident of Gatineau

Patricia Fortin-Boileau, volunteer

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