New Brunswick

Saint John non-profit fights homelessness with new approach

A new program offered by Housing Alternatives Inc. in Saint John is giving high-risk clients a second chance by giving them housing first.

Housing Alternative's Housing First program has no 'readiness requirements,' says outreach worker

Wayne Barthelot, 51, is the first client of the housing-first program run by Housing Alternatives Inc. He moved into his unit in May. (Submitted by Ben Appleby)

A new program offered by Housing Alternatives Inc. in Saint John is giving high-risk clients a second chance by giving them housing first.

Unlike most subsidized-housing programs, which require some sobriety and stability before accepting a client, there are no "readiness requirements" for Housing First Saint John, said Ben Appleby, an outreacher worker with the non-profit organization.

It's an approach that turns traditional models of fighting homelessness "on their head," he said.

Ben Appleby, an outreach worker at Housing Alternatives Inc., helps the non-profit organization run the first Housing First program in Saint John. (Joseph Tunney/CBC)
This gives high-risk chronically homeless individuals a safe starting point from which they can work on what made them homeless to begin with, according to Appleby.

The federally-funded initiative is a first for Saint John, although similar housing first programs have existed across Canada since the 1980s, he said.

Under the program, staff find apartments for clients first and then work toward eliminating other destructive habits in their lives, said Appleby.

The program also gives clients a choice of where in the city they want to live, he said.

Plenty of supports available

Social worker Bobby Marcel Gaudet is helping the program's first resident, Wayne Barthelot, 51, adjust. Barthelot moved into his apartment in the north end in May.

Gaudet said if he enters somebody's living space to be a mental health worker or an addictions counsellor, but the individual is worried about what they're going to eat or where they slept last night, that doesn't lend itself to therapeutic work.

Housing Alternatives, a non-profit property management organization, is located in the north end of Saint John. (Joseph Tunney/CBC)
"It would be inappropriate for me to talk about those things if they don't have any food in their cupboard," he said.

"I think that housing first really eliminates a lot of those things. The client knows that they have a place to go and it's not going to be taken away from them based on their sobriety."

Appleby said he intends to have 10 people in units by the end of March.

The goal of the program is to house 10 new chronically homeless people a year.