
Main Street Project gets exclusive contract for Winnipeg homelessness outreach
The Main Street Project has been awarded an exclusive contract from the City of Winnipeg to do outreach work with people living in encampments.
The city previously funded three organizations — Main Street Project, St. Boniface Street Links and Resource Assistance for Youth — for the work. Now, all calls about encampments will be forwarded to Main Street Project.
The non-profit will take the lead on helping to implement the provincial homelessness strategy, which focuses on moving people out of camps and into housing.
The contract provides $275,000 for July 1 to Dec. 31, with the possibility of extensions for two years, with $550,000 available in each year.
In an interview Thursday, Main Street Project executive director Jamil Mahmood said the organization is one of the few with the capacity to do 24/7 citywide homelessness outreach.
"The amount of money in the award isn't enough to do that, and so we're fortunate we have partnership funding from End Homelessness Winnipeg … that allows us to leverage other money to put a full outreach team on the road," Mahmood said.
The new contract comes six weeks after people in Point Douglas raised concerns after a team of Main Street Project outreach workers was seen helping set up an encampment in the area.
On May 20, a Selkirk Avenue resident recorded a video of workers carrying supplies down to the riverbank.
Several Point Douglas residents who spoke to CBC News said they're not happy that Main Street Project was awarded the new contract.
Province, city clarified 'other options': MSP
Speaking to CBC News about the incident for the first time, Mahmood said police officers asked their outreach workers to help move the people in the camp over fears about riverbank flooding, but no housing options were immediately available.
"[Firefighters] may deem that because of life safety issues, [a] camp needs to be moved or dismantled," he said. "Ideally, we have places to house people from those places, but that's not always the case."
Mahmood said Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham and Manitoba Housing Minister Bernadette Smith spoke to him about the May incident, and explained there are other options when safety concerns force camps to move.
"I think what's different now, and what was clarified in the [provincial] Your Way Home strategy — and thanks to the mayor and the minister for clarifying that — is that now they're going to provide more resources," Mahmood said.
The provincial homelessness strategy allows for "flex funding" for temporary accommodations in emergencies.
"So we have other options, versus just moving encampments from one location to another."
Gillingham has previously said anyone doing outreach work for the city must be "fully committed" to the province's strategy — a point he says he made in meetings with Main Street Project.
"And they're committed to the Your Way Home strategy," Gillingham said in an interview Thursday. "Nothing's moving fast enough for anybody, I don't think. We need to see more progress faster, but everybody's working toward that end."
'Short-sighted' decision: Street Links
As part of its application for the contract, Main Street Project committed to partnering with Resource Assistance for Youth, or RAY, as a subcontractor, handling calls regarding homeless youth.
As for St. Boniface Street Links, Mahmood says he hopes there will be opportunities to partner with the other organization, which responds to calls about encampments on the east side of the Red River.
Street Links executive director Marion Willis, however, isn't sure the two groups can work together.
"We have a different philosophy than Main Street Project," Willis said.
Her organization emphasizes moving people into housing first, she said, whereas Main Street Project prefers a "rights-based approach" that works with people "where they're at."
She called the city's decision "short-sighted," and said officials didn't consult with people in the area about the impact the loss of funding to Street Links would have.
Mahmood disputes the idea the two groups have different philosophies.
"Housing first is meeting people where they're at, right?" he said.
"I think there's maybe a slight difference in approach. There's a difference obviously in how each organization functions, but we've always been there to support folks, and our goal has always been to house folks."
In an emailed statement, Housing Minister Smith said Main Street Project is "working in alignment" with the province's strategy.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
What's in store for the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Ottawa
Ottawa Watch We going to give you a sneak peek into what you can expect once those doors open to the public.


CTV News
6 hours ago
- CTV News
Crews respond to house fire in North Central Regina
Regina fire crews responded to a blaze at a house on the 1400 block of Retallack Street on July 3, 2025. (Donovan Maess / CTV News) Several crews responded to a house fire in North Central Regina on Thursday evening, having responded to a fire at the same house the night before. Around 6:35 p.m., crews were called to the 1400 block of Retallack Street for a report of a house fire. According to a post on X from Regina Fire, the blaze was quickly controlled, limiting extension to neighbouring houses. No injuries were reported and the fire is under investigation. About four fire trucks, police, and paramedics were on site, according to a reporter on scene. Regina fire crews responded to the same house just before 11 p.m. on Wednesday for a report of a basement fire. According to a post on X, light smoke was visible when crews arrived. Crews were able to contain the fire to the basement and no injuries were reported. - With files from Donovan Maess


CTV News
6 hours ago
- CTV News
Sim says Vancouver has pitched 5 supportive housing sites to province, but won't say where they are
With a club located under a supportive housing complex and heavy drug use on the street, desire to hit the Granville Strip is waning, say club owners. Vancouver's mayor says his office has provided the province with a list of five city-owned sites that could be used for supportive housing, but he won't share any of the locations publicly. In a statement released Thursday, Ken Sim said the five unnamed sites could be used to replace the three 'inadequate' supportive housing facilities currently located in the city's Granville Entertainment District. Those facilities – the St. Helen's Hotel at 1161 Granville St., Luugat at 1176 Granville St. and Granville Villa at 1025 Granville St. – have a total of 283 units between them, but account for a disproportionately high number of calls for police and fire service, according to the city. In 2024, there were a total of 1,364 calls for police service at those three Granville Street addresses. 'This meant that those three buildings were responsible for one in every 125 police calls in the city, despite only housing one out of every 2,500 residents of Vancouver,' Sim said in his statement. The mayor added that there were 74 fires and 2,203 calls for Vancouver Fire Rescue Services at Luugat and St. Helen's between January 2020 and May 2025. 'The sites submitted to the province by the City of Vancouver are for five smaller-scale facilities, each with 55 to 65 units,' Sim said. 'This model is consistent with best practices, allowing for more focused care and better outcomes, in contrast with the warehousing approach that we have seen with the existing three sites.' The mayor's statement does not specify any of the five locations submitted to the province for consideration. When CTV News asked the mayor's office for the list, a spokesperson declined to provide it. 'The locations are confidential at this point in time,' the spokesperson said in an email, adding that the purpose of the mayor's statement was 'to put it on the public record that responsibility for the next steps of transitioning supportive housing out of the Granville Entertainment District now sits with the provincial government.' Last month, Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon committed to moving supportive housing away from the Granville strip, but no timeline for doing so has been made public. 'The City of Vancouver has done its part to provide viable sites for future facilities and the responsibility to transition these units out of the GED now sits with the province,' Sim said in his statement. 'We look forward to hearing from them on a plan for carrying this work out quickly.'