Saturday, June 6, 2026

Why Everything Feels Broken: Housing, Violence, and Government in Crisis

 Why Everything Feels Broken: Housing, Violence, and Government in Crisis

I don’t even know how to start this today.

Because like many people, I am trying to understand how we are living in a place where so many systems feel like they are failing at the same time.

In the City of Vancouver, in City of Vancouver, we talk about housing constantly. We hear announcements, debates, plans, disagreements, cancelled motions, and long discussions at city hall.

But on the ground, people are still struggling to find housing. Homelessness is still visible everywhere. Mental health crises are still unfolding in public spaces. And families are still being torn apart by violence, trauma, and systems that respond after the fact instead of before.

It leaves many of us confused, exhausted, and asking the same question:

Why does it feel like nothing is working?


Three levels of government, one human reality

Canada is divided into three levels of government:

  • municipal (city)
  • provincial
  • federal

Each one has different responsibilities.

In theory, this is supposed to create balance and efficiency.

In reality, it often creates something else:

fragmentation.

Because people do not experience their lives in separate government boxes.

Housing, mental health, income, policing, courts, addiction, and healthcare are all connected in real life. But they are handled by different systems that do not always move together, share data easily, or respond at the same speed.

So when something goes wrong, responsibility gets divided.

And when responsibility is divided, action becomes slower than the problem itself.


Why homelessness doesn’t go away, even with attention

Homelessness is not a single issue. It is a result of multiple pressures happening at once:

  • housing costs rising faster than incomes
  • mental health supports stretched beyond capacity
  • addiction services not meeting demand
  • income assistance not matching real living costs
  • long waitlists for treatment and housing

Most systems are still designed to respond after people are already in crisis.

Not before.

So we end up managing survival instead of preventing collapse.


Why it feels like government “argues but doesn’t act”

When you watch city council meetings, it can feel like repetition:

  • debates
  • amendments
  • disagreements
  • delays
  • cancellations

But what you are actually seeing is:

  • competing priorities
  • legal constraints
  • funding limitations
  • political disagreement
  • public pressure from different directions

Change is happening—but it is slow, negotiated, and often invisible in the short term.

And for people living the reality today, slow is not enough.


When tragedy breaks through everything else

Some days, a news story cuts through all of this noise and leaves people shaken.

When something violent happens—especially involving families—it brings forward a deeper discomfort that many people carry quietly:

“How is this happening in a system that is supposed to protect people?”

These moments sit at the intersection of:

  • mental health systems
  • legal systems
  • criminal justice processes
  • public safety systems

And they remind us that even with structure, prevention is not always happening early enough.

People are left grieving, confused, and searching for explanations that feel simple—but rarely are.


The deeper issue: systems that don’t fully connect

The real problem is not that nothing is happening.

It is that:

the systems were never fully built to function as one coordinated response to human life.

They were built in layers:

  • housing here
  • health there
  • justice somewhere else

But human reality does not separate itself that way.

So we end up with gaps between systems—and people fall into those gaps.


What this feeling of “nothing is working” actually means

That feeling is not irrational.

It is a signal.

It means:

  • the scale of the problem is larger than current systems
  • coordination is not keeping pace with need
  • people are experiencing outcomes faster than solutions arrive

It is not that nothing is happening.

It is that what is happening is not fast or connected enough to match reality.


Where this leaves us

I don’t think the answer is to give up.

But I also don’t think the answer is pretending everything is fine or that small adjustments are enough.

We need systems that:

  • talk to each other
  • respond earlier, not later
  • focus on prevention, not just crisis response
  • and reflect what people are actually living

Because right now, too many people are living between systems.

And that space is where suffering grows.


Final thought

I don’t have a simple conclusion today.

I only have this:

We are not confused because we are uninformed.

We are confused because we are watching systems that were built separately try to respond to problems that are completely connected.

And the gap between those two things is where so much pain is sitting.


#VancouverHousing #HousingCrisis #Homelessness #MentalHealthMatters #SocialJusticeBC #AffordableHousing #PublicPolicy #CityOfVancouver #UrbanIssues #CommunityVoices

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