she called it a “rapidly escalating crisis” exacerbated by continued gaps in saskatchewan’s support net, resulting in a 255-per-cent increase in unhoused individuals since regina’s first count in 2015.
“this is not just a housing crisis. it’s a health crisis, it’s an education crisis, it’s a crisis of inequality and systemic neglect,” she said.
lisa workman from the namerind housing corporation presents the results of a 2024 point-in-time homelessness count on wednesday, december 18, 2024 in regina.
kayle neis
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the report says that compared to previous data, more individuals are living completely unsheltered in regina, with seniors and newcomers at increased risk of homelessness.
of those encapsulated in the data, 63 per cent had no shelter available to them whatsoever and just 20 per cent were sheltered in an emergency bed that night. more than half were identified as being chronically homeless.
seventy-five per cent identified as indigenous. more than 70 per cent reported having substance use challenges and 54 per cent reported mental health conditions, but only 17 per cent were accessing mental health services.
nearly half of those included in the count said they had interacted with saskatchewan’s foster-care system and 23 per cent said they became homeless within three months of leaving care.
the report says impacts of the covid-19 pandemic continue to play a role, along with insufficient coverage under the provincial saskatchewan income support (sis) program and regina’s 1.4 per cent housing vacancy rate.