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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
12 pages in length. Canada, like virtually every other global society, must grapple with a growing population of homeless people. While this has been a long-standing social issue for Canadians, it has quite recently escalated at such an alarming rate that government officials are being asked to answer for this present upsurge. The general consensus between and among economists seems to squarely place the blame on significant cuts to Canada's governmental spending, with a number of specific factors each working synergistically together in order to worsen the situation that much more. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
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12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCHmCan.rtf
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such an alarming rate that government officials are being asked to answer for this present upsurge. The general consensus between and among economists seems to squarely place the blame
on significant cuts to Canadas governmental spending, with a number of specific factors each working synergistically together in order to worsen the situation that much more. * Subsidized housing
cuts * Removal of rent control * Welfare cuts * Intergovernmental conflict (Anonymous, 2002). II. ISSUES AT HAND Once the social housing field was discarded, critics contend that Torontos
homeless population "became much more visible" (Anonymous, 2002). According to Colin Vaughan, a reporter on politics and urban affairs for Torontos CITY-TV, social housing funding was cut off in
1993 under Jean Chr?tiens federal government; as well, Mike Harriss Progressive Conservative Party did the same thing to Ontario in 1995. Indeed, affordable housing was the saving grace for
many homeless up until that point, inasmuch as Toronto was able to build an average of twenty-one hundred units each year. The cyclical nature of this program allowed for
those waitlisted for housing could gain access much faster as those who moved into affordable housing made available their previous accommodations. This well-oiled and beneficial program stopped in its
tracks, however, when government cutbacks took effect, underscoring the fact that social housing has all but ceased to exist in Toronto since that time. "As a result, the low-income
tenants are staying put, units are no longer recycled, and the neediest end up on the street" (Anonymous, 2002). The elimination of rent control has been credited with raising prices
and, thereby, making it that much more difficult for poverty-stricken populations to afford housing of any kind. The Progressive Conservative Party is to blame for this particular aspect of
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