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End Homelessness Winnipeg

End Homelessness Winnipeg

Together we can end homelessness in Winnipeg

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EHW Media

Posted: March 24, 2026 Filed Under: Media Releases

Winnipeg, MB — End Homelessness Winnipeg welcomes the Government of Manitoba’s coordinated investments in housing, supports, health, and affordability in Budget 2026, while emphasizing that additional scale and sustained action will be required to meaningfully reduce homelessness.

Budget 2026 adds $12.8 million in new grant funding expecting to support the creation of 215 additional homes. It also includes $8.2 million for tent-to-housing supports and the continued expansion of transitional housing with 24/7 wraparound supports.

“Manitoba is taking important steps to stabilize people who are already in crisis,” said Jennifer Moore Rattray, CEO of End Homelessness Winnipeg. “Investments in supportive housing, outreach, and system coordination are essential and will improve outcomes for many individuals. At the same time, sustained and scaled efforts will be critical to ensure these gains translate into measurable reductions in homelessness as quickly as possible.”

The Province is expanding affordability and income supports, including a $28.6 million increase to Rent Assist and disability supports, enhancements to Employment and Income Assistance (EIA) for families, and increased renter tax credits. Additional investments in Community Living disABILITY Services are a positive step in supporting Manitobans living with disabilities, who remain at heightened risk of housing instability.

The budget strengthens system flow through targeted measures, including 32 alternate level of care (ALC) beds at Siloam Mission and the discharge coordination with the Downtown Community Safety Partnership, which helps connect individuals leaving hospital to housing and supports. Other key pathways to homelessness include the Child Welfare system and the Justice system. 

The Manitoba 2026 budget introduces measures to reduce the cost of living for low-income Manitobans. These efforts support accessible public transit, including free bus service for eligible riders, and expand affordable early learning and childcare, with targeted supports to help lowest-income families access care at reduced or no cost.

End Homelessness Winnipeg also notes the planned review of the Mental Health Act and changes to the Residential Tenancies framework. These signal important opportunities to strengthen protections and better align systems with the realities faced by people experiencing or at risk of homelessness. Ensuring these reforms lead to tangible improvements will be an important next step, and their implementation will require close attention.

However, the scale of need remains significant. In 2025, more than 7,500 individuals were recorded in Winnipeg’s homelessness response system, including more than 4,000 experiencing chronic or repeated homelessness. The addition of 215 new social and affordable units, while meaningful, highlights the ongoing gap between current investments and overall need.

End Homelessness Winnipeg emphasizes that rent supports remain one of the most effective tools for reducing homelessness. Programs such as the Canada–Manitoba Housing Benefit (CMHB) enable individuals to access housing in the private market and are critical for both prevention and housing stability. While CMHB remains funded for current recipients, it has been closed to new applicants for a year, limiting access for many individuals seeking to exit homelessness. Reopening access to CMHB would represent a significant opportunity to build on current progress.

“As we know, ending homelessness requires coordinated action across housing, income supports, and services,” Moore Rattray added. “We will continue working with government and partners to ensure investments are aligned with the scale of need and lead to measurable reductions in homelessness.”

End Homelessness Winnipeg is calling for continued focus on:

  •       Expanding rent supports, including reopening CMHB
  •       Accelerating deeply affordable and supportive housing development
  •       Aligning income supports with the cost of housing
  •       Protecting and expanding low-cost housing stock
  •     Supporting Indigenous-led organizations to lead solutions and drive system change grounded in community knowledge and lived experience

End Homelessness Winnipeg remains committed to working alongside governments, Indigenous partners, community partners, the private sector, and the broader community to advance a coordinated, data-informed response focused on prevention, housing stability, and lasting system change so all Winnipeggers can live in safety and dignity.

About End Homelessness Winnipeg

End Homelessness Winnipeg coordinates systems, policies, and investments to prevent and end homelessness in Winnipeg and works to create a world where everyone has a home and the supports they need to belong.

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Media Contact:
Oraye St. Franklyn
Manager, Communications and Community Relations
End Homelessness Winnipeg
ofranklyn@endhomelessnesswinnipeg.ca
(431) 323-8896

Posted: November 26, 2025 Filed Under: Community Blog, Media Releases

End Homelessness Winnipeg Releases 2025–2026 Winter Weather Response Plan

Winnipeg, MB — End Homelessness Winnipeg has released the 2025–2026 Winter Weather Response Plan, outlining a coordinated citywide approach to help protect people experiencing homelessness during periods of extreme cold, hazardous weather, and seasonal service pressures.

The plan brings together information from emergency shelters, mobile outreach, drop-ins, warming centres, youth hubs, and women and gender-diverse safe spaces to ensure people can find support throughout the winter months. Services across Winnipeg increase capacity or extend hours during cold alerts, providing warm spaces, food, transportation, wellness checks, and safety monitoring.

The Extreme Weather – Winter Resource Guide lists these resources in detail, including citywide mobile outreach teams, day drop-ins with food and washrooms, youth services, overnight warming spaces, and emergency shelters that activate expanded winter hours and capacity where possible.

This year’s plan reflects the ongoing work of the Homelessness Emergency Response Committee, which brings together community agencies, governments, outreach teams, shelters, and sector partners. Their collaboration helps ensure effective planning for extreme weather, climate-related risks, public health concerns, and unexpected service disruptions across Winnipeg’s homelessness-serving network.

The plan also highlights cold-weather safety guidance for the public. Frostbite, hypothermia, and other winter-related health risks are explained in clear terms, with directions to seek warmth, remove wet clothing, warm up gradually, and access help immediately. The guide directs residents to 211 Manitoba for additional information and real-time resources.

“Winter heightens the risks faced by people without stable housing,” said Nick Procyshyn, Interim CEO of End Homelessness Winnipeg. “This plan supports community-wide readiness by bringing essential information into one place and reflects the dedication of our sector partners who work through every season to keep people safe.”

The full Winter Weather Response Plan and accompanying materials are available on the End Homelessness Winnipeg website through the following links:

  1. 2025-2026 Winter Weather Response Plan
  2. The Extreme Weather – Winter Resource Guide
  3. 2025-2026 Winter Weather Response Plan (social media)

Media Contact


Oraye St. Franklyn

Manager Communications & Community Relations

End Homelessness Winnipeg

Phone: 431-323-8896
Email: ofranklyn@endhomelessnesswinnipeg.ca

Posted: October 4, 2024 Filed Under: Uncategorised

Thank you to everyone who attended the “Housing and Homelessness: The State of Housing in Winnipeg” presentation. Your engagement and thoughtful contributions made the event a success. We appreciate your dedication to addressing the critical housing challenges in our community.

You can access the presentation PDF document here.

For those interested, we’ve included additional resources to further explore the issues discussed. We look forward to continued collaboration in creating a future where everyone has access to safe, affordable housing.

End Homelessness Winnipeg’s Mission, Vision, and Values

End Homelessness Winnipeg’s Team

The Plan to End Homelessness in Winnipeg

The 2022 Winnipeg Rental Housing Supply Scan

The 2022 Street Census Report and Recommendations

Reaching Home

Services and Supports

Research and Reports

https://endhomelessnesswinnipeg.ca/3183-2/

Posted: October 4, 2024 Filed Under: Uncategorised

Block Funding: Manitoba Housing’s New Funding ModelDownload

Posted: September 18, 2024 Filed Under: Uncategorised

BrainInjuryMB_PublicReportDownload

In November 2023, a World Cafe on Brain Injury was held in Winnipeg which consisted of people with both lived and work experience in the area. As a first step in identifying and advocating for change, in 2023-2024 our community-engaged research team completed Phase 1 (Winnipeg Region) of the Brain Injury in Manitoba (BIMb) Project. 

Currently, there are tens of thousands of Manitobans living with unmet needs after brain injury, with brain injury being one of the most prevalent health & living conditions in our province and around the world. However, brain injury supports and services across Manitoba are severely under-resourced to meet needs and to prevent cascading harmful consequences for many people affected by brain injury.  Further, recent studies indicate that between 70-90% of people experiencing homelessness had a least one brain injury before becoming homeless, with the first injury often occurring in adolescence.

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Contact Us

Email: info@endhomelessnesswinnipeg.ca

Phone: 204-942-8677

Address: 200 – 1065 Portage Ave., Winnipeg, MB, R3G 0R8

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