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Nova Scotia urged to address ‘pathways’ that lead people to losing their homes

HALIFAX - One major step that Nova Scotia can take to reduce homelessness is by addressing the “pathways” that lead vulnerable people to end up on the street, the head of a shelter for women and children said Tuesday.

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Nova Scotia urged to close 'pathways' that lead people to losing their homes

The head of a Nova Scotia shelter for women and children says the province can reduce homelessness by addressing the “pathways” that lead people to end up on the street. A pallet house camp is shown in Lower Sackville, N.S., on March 13, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Kelly Clark


HALIFAX - One major step that Nova Scotia can take to reduce homelessness is by addressing the “pathways” that lead vulnerable people to end up on the street, the head of a shelter for women and children said Tuesday.

Fixed-term leases and so-called “renovictions” are two of those pathways, Sheri Lecker, executive director of Adsum for Women and Children, told a legislature committee in Halifax. A fixed-term lease allows a landlord to raise the cost of rent well beyond the province’s five per cent cap, and a renoviction is a term to describe when a tenant is forced to leave their unit for renovations.

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