Edmonton Journal

Protesters clash over housing for homeless

- JAKE KIVANC

• Two groups traded barbs at opposing protests in Toronto on Saturday, bringing to a head a simmering dispute over buildings in a midtown neighbourh­ood that have been repurposed to house the homeless.

Separated by a line of a dozen police officers, the groups chanted and carried signs near the Roehampton Hotel, which is being used as one of the housing facilities.

Protesters on one side of the issue argue the sudden implementa­tion of the city’s homeless housing strategy — which began in May and was spurred by the rapid spread of COVID-19 through the city’s shelter system — has made their community unsafe.

Residents have complained about an increase in the number of used needles lying around and an uptick in burglaries and thefts.

Police say more area residents have been calling them since the facilities opened, but said there’s no evidence at this point connecting the reported crimes with those living in the buildings.

The counter-protesters argue that the residents’ disdain is misdirecte­d at the homeless population, and they should instead focus on bolstering mental health supports and understand­ing their new neighbours.

But Tammy Mclean, who’s lived in the area since 1969 and helped organize the protest, said her health clinic down the street was broken into just days after the hotel opened its doors to the homeless.

While she said she is supportive of housing programs, Mclean also said the city has not addressed the issue of community safety.

“The analogy I like to use is the city basically pulled a pin on a grenade and just dropped it on the corner of Mount Pleasant and Eglinton, and we’ve had to deal with the fallout,” Mclean said.

Along with a two-year lease on the Roehampton Hotel, the city also acquired a temporary lease for two buildings on a nearby street.

Those two buildings, which currently house more than 100 residents, will be completely vacant by September, as the developer prepares to demolish the buildings later this year.

On the other side of the argument, counter-protesters said a number of the protest’s organizers have displayed hatred and contempt for the homeless population, which they said has made many of the people living in the buildings feel unwelcome.

Jeffrey Miles, a harm reduction worker, said area residents have a right to be concerned about community safety, but argued that the onus is on the government to address the systemic issues.

At the top of Miles’ list is a safe supply system: the government-mandated distributi­on of substances like opioids, which would help eliminate the issue of people stealing to fund the purchase of street drugs.

“It seems like the problem is misunderst­ood from the other side,” Miles said. “People don’t understand substance use issues and how they come about.”

In response to the protests, city councillor Josh Matlow has asked for support from Ontario Premier Doug Ford in providing more robust mental health care and harm reduction services in the area.

“These incidents are the result of a shelter community that has a significan­t need for mental health and addiction supports,” Matlow said in a statement.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Parks Canada archeologi­st Marc-andré Bernier says “it is quite disappoint­ing” that he and his team will not be able to travel to Nunavut this
month to continue their work exploring the Erebus and Terror, the two doomed ships from the 1845 Franklin expedition.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Parks Canada archeologi­st Marc-andré Bernier says “it is quite disappoint­ing” that he and his team will not be able to travel to Nunavut this month to continue their work exploring the Erebus and Terror, the two doomed ships from the 1845 Franklin expedition.

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