The Welland Tribune

‘WE NEED HELP’

- NICOLE THOMPSON

Toronto mayor says city can’t accommodat­e waves of asylum seekers and refugees in its shelter system, seeks assistance from Ottawa, Queen’s Park

TORONTO — Toronto can no longer accommodat­e new waves of refugees and asylum seekers in its shelter system and needs federal and provincial help dealing with the situation, the city’s mayor said Tuesday as he called for immediate support.

John Tory asked for financial and housing assistance, saying he detailed his requests in an “urgent” letter sent to Ottawa this week.

“We’ve been seeing an increasing number of refugees and asylum seekers looking for somewhere to live temporaril­y within our shelter system while they get settled,” he said.

“And the city has gone to what I would very genuinely describe as heroic efforts to help.”

But Toronto has reached its limits, Tory said.

“We need help,” he said. “We just don’t have the resources to do it alone.”

According to a report from the city manager, the number of refugees and asylum claimants using the shelter system went from 459 in 2016 — accounting for 11.2 per cent of the total system — to 3,209 as of June 20, 2018 — 45.8 per cent of the system.

Some of those people are being housed in hotels, but that program intended to expand the shelter system is now also at capacity.

Some 600 people are also being housed in college dormitorie­s as an expansion of the system — with another 200 expected to join them — but they will be forced out on Aug. 8, as schools prepare for students to return.

Without increased support, Tory said, there will be nowhere for those refugees and asylum seekers to go.

He said he hoped his federal and provincial counterpar­ts will help find other places refugees and claimants can temporaril­y stay while looking for a more permanent home.

He noted that the southweste­rn Ontario town of Leamington, for instance, had said it was open to welcoming newcomers.

Tory added that neither provincial nor federal government­s have provided the city with direct funding to assist with the cost of housing asylum seekers and refugees, though Toronto is expected to receive recently announced federal funding for the matter.

“Whatever timetable they’re on now, we need the government­s to speed up notifying us of tangible, actual steps they’re going to take to be in partnershi­p to look after these people,” the mayor said.

In a written response to Tory’s letter, Minister of Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Ahmed Hussen reiterated the federal commitment to providing $50 million across Canada toward temporary housing for asylum seekers — $11 million of which is earmarked for the province of Ontario.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada