Toronto Star

1,000 beds in 3 years added to budget plan

Advocates say that adding 240 beds in 2018 won’t be enough to help space crisis

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

Toronto’s budget committee voted to fund a plan to open1,000 shelter beds in three years while keeping respite centres open beyond the winter as needed.

That plan, presented by staff at the final committee meeting before the budget is forwarded to council for approval, was endorsed in a motion from Mayor John Tory’s handpicked budget chief, Gary Crawford, on Tuesday. It adds 240 beds this year, ramping up to 880 in three years.

The preliminar­y budget presented by staff already had funding for 121 new beds in 2018. But funding for the 880 additional beds has to be directed by council.

“Our residents want us to build a city, but they also appreciate that we strike the right balance — that we tighten spending, that we find the efficienci­es and we don’t hike taxes sky high,” Crawford told reporters at a lunch break.

As part of striking that balance, Crawford vowed: “We’re committing to trying to increase shelter spaces . . . We are doing our best to ensure that we are meeting the need.”

But in order to include that and other unfunded items in the budget, motions approved at committee rely on reserve funds, a hot housing market and stretched tax revenue that critics say creates an ongoing unsustaina­ble situation in a growing city.

Adding an additional 240 beds in 2018 won’t be enough, advocates say.

Though Tory voted against an urgent motion in December to open 1,000 beds as soon as possible, he signed onto a Jan. 16 open letter with other council members requesting council consider just that.

The open letter signed by Tory also requested that operations of the necessary respite centres and drop-ins remain open beyond the scheduled April 15 closing. Funding that would allow respite centres to stay open as needed was also included in the budget approved by committee Tuesday.

Advocates have long been ringing alarm bells over the lack of space in the shelter system. The city has never met the council-backed target of 90-per-cent capacity, which would ensure no one is ever turned away.

With all the new beds the committee agreed to fund put in place by the end of the year and if the occupancy rate remains at today’s levels, capacity in the system would be 89.6 per cent — just at the city’s target.

Those numbers do not include some 700 respite spaces that are full nightly — winter drop-ins and warming centres where people sleep on the floor, on mats or rest in chairs.

When those spaces are included in the count, the permanent shelter system is often operating beyond 100-per-cent capacity and would be even with the new beds.

On Monday night, the city’s 5,686 shelter beds were at 95-per-cent capacity and there were an additional 771 people using winter services.

Crawford continued to call the 2018 plan a “good news budget” that keeps taxes at the rate of inflation without significan­t cuts. Funding largely comes from $13.8 million pulled from reserve funds, relying on an additional $10 million forecast to come from the Municipal Land Transfer Tax and $8.8 million in increased assessment growth. City staff have explained that the city’s services are not growing with its ballooning population, which critics of Tory’s administra­tion say leaves the city trying to do more with less.

“Once again we’ve seen the way we’ve done it is unsustaina­ble,” Councillor Gord Perks said. “We’re falling behind in the critical things we need to do.”

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