url2: http://newsformal.com/us/news-30350357Mayor applauds provincial investment to address homelessness, addiction | United States

Mayor applauds provincial investment to address homelessness, addiction

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The government of Alberta committed almost $200 million to fight homelessness and addiction, a move hailed by Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek.

Premier Jason Kenney announced the province’s commitment of $63 million to help reduce homelessness and

$124 million that’ll go towards fighting the addiction crisis in Calgary and Edmonton, both spread over the next two years. The announcement is multi-faceted, containing multiple new facilities and refreshed approaches that are recovery- and housing-oriented to help connect people experiencing homelessness and addiction with resources.Sign up to receive daily headline news from the Calgary SUN, a division of Postmedia Network Inc.

The homelessness funding comes through the province’s new Homelessness Action Plan, based on a report by the Coordinated Community Response to Homelessness Task Force the province established last year. The plan will see provincially funded shelters operate 24/7 and introduce a pilot of a “service hub” model for shelters in Calgary and Edmonton. The province says such a model will “connect clients directly with supports and services such as recovery, housing and emergency financial support.

“On the homelessness side, expanding shelter service 24/7 is huge. That’s very significant for both cities,” said Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek. “ going make sure that we are not warehousing people, which is so inhumane. We are allowing people to have a dignified approach to getting them out of situations they find themselves in by having all of those supports co-located in the shelter.”

The addictions funding includes $65 million earmarked for constructing two “recovery communities,” which will offer long-term treatment in Calgary and Edmonton, and $8 million to fund harm reduction and recovery outreach teams. Another $28 million was set aside for new hybrid health and police hubs in the province’s two largest cities, though details on how those facilities would operate remain in the works.

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Since when did the Provincial Cons start caring about citizens?

Homelessness is not a drug focused problem as this article suggests. It also includes economics, mental health and education—or rather a lack thereof. Sometimes some ppl need a hand up to get their economics, mental health and education back on track is all.

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