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submitted 3 days ago by NightOwl@lemmy.ca to c/canada@lemmy.ca

Edmonton is considered the frostbite capital of the world. In 2024, the city reported a record-breaking 110 amputations from frostbite, with 58 percent of those cases affecting unhoused people. The rise in frostbite amputations has been attributed to Edmonton's aggressive encampment eviction policy and insufficient frostbite treatment protocol. Hypothermia and accidental fires started in makeshift attempts to get warm are common causes of death for unhoused Edmontonians.

Recent inflation and low vacancy rates have provided cover for corporate landlords to put their thumbs on the scale to jack up the rents. Demovictions and renovictions have ejected people from their homes to make way for higher-paying clientele. Corporate landlords like Boardwalk and Avenue Living collectively own about half of Edmonton's rental market, and they have implemented aggressive rent hikes to maximize profits. Last year, corporate landlord ARH Holdings imposed a 200 percent rent hike at the Annamoe Mansion in central Wîhkwêntôwin, one of Edmonton's oldest residential neighbourhoods. "It's basically, 'Read between the lines. Get out. We're going to force you out by rent increase rather than just a flat eviction,'" said one resident.

One-fifth of the Alberta legislature (18 of 87 MLAs) and nearly half of Alberta MPs (15 of 37 MPs) are private landlords. In 2023, 36 percent of Alberta MLAs and 48 percent of MPs were invested in the real estate industry. Conflicts of interest are also created by the re-introduction of corporate campaign donations into Alberta politics and the revolving door between political and lobbying careers. Even Edmonton's local elections are influenced by developers who want multi-million dollar subsidies to expand the housing market.

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[-] non_burglar@lemmy.world 12 points 3 days ago

Remember, Finland has shown us that homelessness is a policy choice.

[-] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 13 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Used to be homeless in Edmonton. It's not fun. The services are lacking, and the best decision I made in my life was to just come to Calgary on a whim with nothing to my name and a hope that things would be better despite knowing nothing about the city. I literally had to make the decision between my high school diplomas, or losing my spot in the youth shelter because I'd need to leave before the curfew ended in order to make it in time for my diplomas, but leaving before the curfew ended would result in me losing shelter for three nights, so I opted to let the diplomas go to sort out shelter.

The vast majority of my time being homeless in Edmonton was just trying to find anything to fill the time between when the shelter closed at 8 AM, and when they'd open their doors again at 9 PM. There was next to no resources you were made aware of to connect with, no employment connections, literally two housing connections, one being 2SLGBTQ+-centric, which I didn't identify as at the time, no mental health supports, you were kinda just expected to "sort it out" with no resources given to gain the skills to do so. I knew a 13 year old kid addicted to heroin there, and after he attacked me when high, he and his sister slept in the nearby ravine for the next few days in a tent since the shelter didn't care enough to tell them where else to go for addictions support or shelter that'd accommodate their risk level.

Also trying to get on Alberta Works in Edmonton was insane. Both times I tried getting on, I was waiting three hours to be seen, the first meeting I had was with a person who told me she "didn't see how I needed income support if (I) was living in a shelter". In Calgary, that process took 20 minutes to enter and leave, and I got connected with housing within a month just after receiving my first payment.

Edit: editing to federate my comment

[-] wampus@lemmy.ca -1 points 3 days ago

There was recently another link posted, noting that Edmonton is one of the only major canadian municipalities where housing costs have remained relatively affordable based on local salaries. It'd be interesting to see if their harsher stance on social services for homeless people contributes to that result...

Municipalities spend a disproportionate amount on homeless people, generally speaking. The strain the Fent users put on paramedics is an easy example -- both in terms of the availability of the service, and the amount of money paid to those workers to deal with the situation. As harsh as it sounds, Edmonton letting people die, and being inhospitable to homeless people in general, helps to keep their costs down...

this post was submitted on 20 Apr 2026
64 points (98.5% liked)

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