Tag: housing

Seniors in rural B.C. have poorer access to health care, housing: report

A new report shows that seniors living in rural parts of B.C. are experiencing a lack of resources and support.

The Office of the Seniors Advocate says individuals ages 65 or above who live in rural areas have poorer access to health care, lower average incomes and fewer options when it comes to long-term care or affordable housing.

“Seniors everywhere experience difficulties related to aging but as I’ve travelled the province and examined the data, it’s clear that people who live far from urban centres face even greater obstacles because they have fewer resources to support them,” said Isobel Mackenzie, BC Seniors Advocate.

The report also indicates rural parts of the province have a proportionately higher and faster growing population of seniors, and with fewer resources and services available when compared to seniors who live in urban areas.

“We face a geographical challenge where 86 per cent of our population is concentrated in dense urban cores on 4 per cent of our land mass,” said Mackenzie.

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“The vastness or rural B.C. makes accessing supports by aging seniors more difficult because critical services are spread over a large, sparsely populated area.”


Click to play video: 'B.C. signs $733 million ‘Aging With Dignity’ deal'


B.C. signs $733 million ‘Aging With Dignity’ deal


Seniors make up 25 per cent of B.C.’s rural population, compared to urban B.C. where seniors are 19 per cent of the population. It is expected that by 2032, seniors will be 29 per cent of the province’s rural population, compared to 21 per cent in urban B.C.


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The report also found that 17 per cent of rural seniors do not have a family doctor or nurse practitioner, compared to 13 per cent of urban seniors.

“While I am inspired and heartened by the compassionate,

P.E.I urged to press pause on immigration, while health care and housing feeling the pinch

As population growth continues to place a strain on health care and housing on Prince Edward Island, there are renewed calls for the provincial government to ease back on immigration programs to give services a chance to catch up.

For years, Canada’s smallest province has had one of the fastest-growing populations in the country. The latest estimate from Statistics Canada showed P.E.I. growing at an annual rate of four per cent, with 175,853 residents as of Oct. 1, 2023.

In the past month, both the province’s health minister and the outgoing head of the provincial health authority have spoken about the struggle of maintaining services in the face of population growth.

The most recent statistics on rental vacancies showed P.E.I. had the tightest provincial rental market in the country, with an apartment vacancy rate of less than one per cent. 


Housing starts are not keeping up with the minimum 2,000 units per year the province’s housing minister has said are needed just to keep up with population growth.

There’s nothing that can be done to place any limits on people moving to the Island from another part of Canada. But some are wondering why the province has been moving ahead full-steam with immigration programs, to encourage growth in the form of newcomers to Canada.

Ottawa’s allocation of permanent resident nominations to the province has increased 92 per cent, from 1,070 in 2018 to 2,050 in 2023.


“We’re inviting people into our province when there’s no housing for people who are here or people who are coming in,” said interim Green Party Leader Karla Bernard.

“There’s no health care for people who are here or people coming in. …So for now, all of these aggressive programs that we’ve designed, that governments have designed to get people to come here — we

Strategic Advisory Group identifies a coordinated advocacy solution to handle urgent health and housing demands in Downtown Guelph

Guelph, Ont., February 27, 2023 – The Council-endorsed Strategic Advisory Team on downtown is discovering how to assistance Guelph’s most vulnerable as a result of a coordinated advocacy approach aimed at higher concentrations of federal government.

To support the advocacy perform, the City is endeavor a gap assessment for homelessness, addiction and mental well being companies in Guelph. The analysis will take into account investments and outputs of all a few stages of government—municipal provincial, and federal—as well as non-for-profit and other aid businesses. The effects could help suggestions as element of Guelph’s multi-yr budget and advise lengthy-expression procedure transformation operate essential to address wellness and housing requires.

Community fundraising to handle homelessness is ongoing as aspect of the Property for Excellent Marketing campaign. The marketing campaign aims to cut down the quantity of people today going through chronic homelessness by 50 for each cent, total a few tasks that lead 72 supportive housing models in Guelph, and build a fund to keep on locating progressive alternatives. The advisory team encourages people to take into consideration donating.

Mayor Cam Guthrie states, “We are in the midst of a housing disaster. This is an urgent scenario that calls for coordination from all levels of government, as properly as our corporation partners location-broad and our total neighborhood. The City of Guelph and Wellington County proceed to concentrate on new housing provide, but we require fiscal help to produce lasting housing speedier.”

Shakiba Shayani, Main Government Officer (CEO) of the Guelph Chamber of Commerce and co-chair of the advisory group, adds, “Homelessness, is a intricate situation, requiring short-term solutions to meet up with urgent wants as properly as system-amount transformation for prolonged-time period achievements. Housing, psychological well being and dependancy requires in our neighborhood have developed exponentially over the final few decades

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