Nova Scotia

Halifax non-profit building to offer affordable housing for homeless people over 50

The Halifax Particular Council of the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul is constructing affordable housing for people over 50, as the demographic becomes more represented in shelters across the country.

Doctors say late-life homelessness can lead to earlier onset of age-related illness

a man wearing formal attire looks at the camera for a portrait. He is standing in front of a building and one under construction.
Ray Burke is president of the Halifax Particular Council of the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, which owns the land where Ozanam Place is being constructed on Brunswick Street. (Luke Ettinger/CBC)

A Halifax non-profit is constructing 38 affordable housing units for people aged 50 and older who are experiencing homelessness.

The Halifax Particular Council of the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul is leading the construction of Ozanam Place on Brunswick Street. The $15-million non-profit housing project is being funded through the municipal, provincial and federal governments. 

The North End Community Health Centre will manage and operate the building. It is expected to open in March 2025. 

"Seniors deserve a quality of life and to live with dignity rather than living in a tent," said Ray Burke, president of the Halifax Particular Council, which owns the land where the units are being constructed. 

Burke said rent will be calculated based on 30 per cent of the tenant's income. 

report from the Canadian Medical Association Journal said there is an increasing percentage of people over 50 in shelters. The report released in May said late-life homelessness can contribute to an earlier onset of age-related illnesses such as dementia, as well as earlier falls and frailty. 

"Just the experience of homelessness can also make it much harder to then navigate these health-care needs," said Dr. Jill Alston, a Toronto geriatrician and one of the report's authors.

"We see older adults are at a higher risk of victimization and are very vulnerable in shelter systems, and they're also at a higher risk of falls."

She said moving into appropriate housing can help those who have lived precariously have better health outcomes.

The Nova Scotia Provincial Housing Agency defines seniors as being 58 and older. It said more than 3,500 seniors were on the provincial waitlist for public housing in March 2024. The agency said seniors live in approximately 71 per cent of public housing units.

Since September 2023, the agency has added 273 public housing units — enough for more than 700 people.

Burke said Ozanam Place is being designed with the needs of its residents in mind. He said there will be longer sightlines, softened edges and a lot of open space to help the transition be "as easy as possible for folks that are coming off the street." 

"For instance, initially the laundry area was going to be quite closed off, but now it's very open. It has a glass wall so that folks, the occupants, will be able to use it without feeling restricted," he said.  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Luke Ettinger is a reporter with CBC Nova Scotia. Reach him at luke.ettinger@cbc.ca.

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