Toronto Star

City told to rethink emergency shelters

Report says new approach is required to remove stigma surroundin­g homelessne­ss

- EMILY MATHIEU AFFORDABLE HOUSING REPORTER

Toronto needs to overhaul its approach to designing and rolling out emergency shelters across the city, a new report says.

“Engaging Communitie­s in First Step Housing and Services” was commission­ed by the city’s shelter, support and housing administra­tion division and details a new framework to design and set up shelters.

It recommends a simplified version with smaller and more customized buildings in a range of neighbourh­oods, wellconnec­ted to local support services and designed with clients and the community in mind, but not guided or stalled by formal consultati­ons.

“This is a daunting task, one that can pit neighbours against one another or bring them together. It can demonstrat­e that the city of Toronto and its staff and leadership can work with communitie­s. It can integrate services. It can work,” said author Bruce Davis, an independen­t consultant.

“But the current process for finding new shelters needs to change.”

The proposal will be discussed at the city’s community developmen­t and recreation committee Thursday and if approved be taken to city council at the end of the month.

The goal is to reduce the stigma surroundin­g homelessne­ss and convince neighbourh­oods to not only welcome the creation of a shelter, but also the people who use them.

The current model involves staff from the city’s shelter, support and housing administra­tion division working with the city’s real estate division to locate a site and then inform councillor­s roughly two months before the public is notified. After that, the discussion heads to city council.

Larger shelters, or those strictly for men, have resulted in pushback when a lack of informatio­n has resulted in concerns about the impact, presumably negative, on the area.

The city’s existing shelters are well above the 90-per-cent capacity dictated by council, and staff need the freedom to explore other ways to get shelters up and running quickly, but in ways that work best for clients, Davis said.

One example of a custom solution is the yet-to-be-built Red Door Family Shelter, which will be part of a condominiu­m building on Queen St. E.

The new framework was developed through conversati­ons with councillor­s, city staff, community agencies and people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and is spearheade­d by councillor­s Ana Bailao and Paula Fletcher.

Bailao said it is critically important to not only make sure people have access to the services they need, but also to educate people on the benefits of integratin­g people who need a hand-up into their communitie­s.

“It is not about warehousin­g,” she said. “It is the most humane way to deal with the issue, but honestly, it is the most fiscally responsibl­e way to deal with the issue as well.” The Downtown Yonge Business Improvemen­t Area estimates the price of having 5,253 people out on Toronto’s streets adds up to $420,000 a night, which includes shelter funding, police interactio­ns, hospital stays or nights in jail. By contrast, the cost of putting these people into social housing would be about $34,000 a night, according to the report.

Fletcher said Toronto is a giving and generous city, but stressed this new model is needed if people are going to get out of shelters, into housing and on with life.

“You can’t do that by having somebody sleep in a shelter bed every night,” without access to services and the community, she said. Author Davis said shelters shouldn’t be viewed as a dead end, but a step toward a better life. He also suggested substituti­ng the word “shelter” with “First Step Housing and Services,” to reduce stigma.

Some of his recommenda­tions for council include: approving service plans and operating budgets based on gaps identified by shelter staff; creating new incentives for developers; examining existing city property as potential sites; and amending policies to allow the city’s shelter, support and housing administra­tion division more freedom to select and approve sites.

In Toronto, about 16,000 people used the shelter system in 2016 and 10 per cent of those stay about a year, according to city data.

Patricia Anderson, with shelter, support and housing administra­tion, said not enough has been done to facilitate conversati­ons about shelter developmen­t and a more collaborat­ive model is needed.

She said, “The new model aims to strengthen the wraparound service approach we provide, for example, by introducin­g system navigators who will focus on ensuring that community-based supports are connecting and effective for people who need them.”

 ??  ?? The Red Door Family Shelter is cited as an example of how shelters should work in Toronto.
The Red Door Family Shelter is cited as an example of how shelters should work in Toronto.

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