Toronto Star

Hamilton to study free AC plan

- MAY WARREN METRO

For Kemba Robinson, an air conditione­r is not a luxury, but a lifesaver.

Robinson has asthma, as do her son and daughter, and having AC in their Jane and Finch apartment means fewer attacks and a better night’s sleep for everyone during sweltering summers.

“The heat along with the smog, it makes the air quality unbreathab­le,” said Robinson, a member of tenant advocacy group ACORN. “The AC doesn’t have to be too high; it’s just to bring the temperatur­e down to a manageable state.”

About 500,000 people in Toronto live in older apartment buildings, and most lack central air, according to a recent Toronto Public Health report.

Meanwhile, in Hamilton, council voted this week to study providing air conditione­rs to low-income people with health conditions exacerbate­d by extreme heat.

“It’s a medicinal tool,” said Hamilton Councillor Sam Merulla, likening it to a prescripti­on as people would have to get a doctor’s note to receive one.

Toronto Public Health recently declined to recommend a bylaw that would have forced landlords to prevent extreme heat. About 60 per cent of people in older apartments reported losing sleep or feeling thirsty during summer heat waves, according to the agency.

Carol Mee, manager of healthy public policy at Toronto Public Health, wrote in an email Thursday that the agency’s approach focuses on access to cool spaces in the community and retrofitti­ng buildings to make them more energy efficient.

She added that recent consultati­on found older apartments lack proper insulation and duct work for window AC units to work effectivel­y as a widespread solution.

Hamilton’s approach is borrowed from New York state. Last summer, 4,000 people there benefited from free air conditione­rs.

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