Toronto Star

Homeless shelter at Don Mills sparks outcry

Temporary respite centre is set to open next week

- WENDY GILLIS STAFF REPORTER

Amid what the city has called an “unpreceden­ted demand” for emergency homeless shelter beds, some North York residents are raising concerns about a temporary respite centre set to open its doors next week — an outcry others call “NIMBYism.”

Starting May 22, the Don Mills Civitan Arena, at Don Mills Rd. and Eglinton Ave. E., will host a 24-hour respite centre with 120 shelter beds. City-owned and used in the winter for hockey, the arena sits empty once the ice melts, making it a good candidate for a temporary and much-needed respite centre, said Patricia Anderson, who is with the city’s shelter division.

“We had, pretty much, two choices. One was to perhaps open in a community centre and disrupt programmin­g, or identify city buildings that were available in the summer with no programmin­g,” Anderson said.

Created to provide emergency temporary housing during the winter months, the city’s respite centre program was slated to end last month. But due to continuing high demand, city council earlier this year opted to prolong the program.

That required finding new space for shelter beds, as some of the current respite sites — including at Exhibition Place’s Better Living Centre — are set to close. In addition to the Civitan Arena, another respite centre has been establishe­d at the Lambton Arena at 4100 Dundas St. W.

Some Don Mills residents are expressing concerns about the shelter. Last week, a flyer began circulatin­g in the community urging concerned residents to reach out to their local representa­tives to stop the respite centre from coming.

“This is the WRONG location! Say NO to 24-hour homeless shelter approved for Don Mills Civitan Arena,” read the flyer.

Doris Bies, who is with Don Mills Residents Inc., acknowledg­ed she has heard some negative responses from residents, but said it was mostly stemming from the feeling that the city had failed to provide informatio­n or notice. City representa­tives have since come to the Don Mills Residents Inc. annual meeting last week and gave a detailed presentati­on about the respite centre, including that it’s a temporary situation, Bies said.

“I know there are people that don’t want it in their backyard, but we’re all empathetic to the needs of the homeless,” Bies said.

Yogi Acharya, an organizer with the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty, says the negative response “reeks of NIMBYism” and displays theassumpt­ion that poor and homeless people are criminal.

If the residents who are opposed to the respite sites are serious about not wanting such services in their neighbourh­ood, “then what they should fight is poverty, not poor people.”

Acharya adds that the ongoing shelter crisis in Toronto is due to “years of negligence.”

Jeff Simpson, a lifelong resident of Don Mills who is the president of the Don Mills Civitan Club, said it’s important the community help those in need.

“I’m a citizen of Toronto, Toronto has problems, and Don Mills has to take its fair share of being part of the solution,” he said.

 ?? RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR ?? Don Mills Civitan Arena, the site of a planned temporary shelter, has residents angry over potential influx of homeless people.
RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR Don Mills Civitan Arena, the site of a planned temporary shelter, has residents angry over potential influx of homeless people.

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