Chilliwack City Council urges B.C. govt. to better address homelessness, mental health issues
CHILLIWACK – Chilliwack City Council members are calling on senior levels of government to better address how homelessness, mental health and addiction are dealt with in B.C., based on the $5.2 million it spent in 2025 for costs related to street people.
According to a statement issued Tuesday (Jan. 27), Chilliwack councillors reviewed this ongoing challenge at its last meeting on Tuesday, January 20, taking note of Chilliwack’s massive increase in the number of street people in just one year. Chilliwack’s unhoused population grew from 642 people in 2024 to 738 in 2025, according to the latest figures from the most recent Point-in-Time homelessness count.
“Even though the responsibility for providing housing and health services is not within municipal jurisdiction, municipalities across BC continue to pay the price and manage the strain of a system that is failing,” the city said, citing the $5.2 million figure. “That number is anticipated to continue to grow each year if senior levels of government do not make any changes.”
The city says the Chilliwack Community Safety Plan recognizes that homelessness, mental illness, and addictions, which affect community safety and public perceptions of safety, cannot be adjudicated through policing and enforcement alone.
