Toronto Star

City buying prefab crisis shelters

The temporary structures have washrooms, laundry facilities and HVAC systems built in

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO EMILY MATHIEU CITY HALL BUREAU AFFORDABLE HOUSING REPORTER

The city is purchasing four “highly sophistica­ted,” temporary structures as demand for emergency shelter and 24/7 respite sites remains high even after winter temperatur­es have subsided.

The prefabrica­ted structures, manufactur­ed by Canadian company Sprung Instant Structures Limited, cost $2.5 million each, not including operating costs.

They are meant to serve as temporary sites where anyone in sudden need of a place to stay can rest, access food, showers and support services.

“We are currently working to secure appropriat­e, vacant city properties that will be used for these structures,” Paul Raftis, the city’s general manager of the shelter, support and housing administra­tion division, told reporters on Wednesday.

Each structure is expected to house 100 people, costing on average about $100 per person per day.

Two of the four sites are planned to be opened as soon as August, to replace two city-run, 24/7 respite sites at the Don Mills Civitan Arena and Lambton Arena. The city is looking at sites downtown and east and west of the core, Raftis said. No decisions have been made on locations, but Raftis said they are considerin­g sites that are solid and level like parking lots and not parks.

Winter respite services, available 24/7, typically end April 15 with warming temperatur­es, but because of the high occupancy in the city’s emergency shelter system and a clear need for additional places for people to go, council directed staff to continue providing respite spaces.

The Sprung structures have been used in North America as temporary housing, emergency shelter, aquatic centres and classrooms, the city says, and could be repurposed when not needed as respite sites. They will have washrooms, showers, laundry facilities and HVAC systems. They are also accessible.

The city has been working toward implementi­ng permanent standards for all respite sites, or rules around cleaning, the type of beds and the amount of space people need. Over the winter, health-care providers and activists visited multiple sites, documented crowded conditions and spoke to people who reported feeling unsafe or concerned about theft as well as verbal and physical violence and not having adequate access to showers and toilets. City staff boosted inspection­s at the sites over the winter and pledged that interim standards would also be put in place, until a full plan could be devised.

At last count, 433 people stayed in eight existing respite sites and an additional­115 women sought refuge at two 24/7, year-round women’s only drop-ins. One drop-in site is Sistering, where women line up to sleep on about a dozen re- clining chairs and the rest are left to find mats or free space on the floor.

“This place should not have to exist. These women should have proper places to live,” the agency’s executive director, Patricia O’Connell, said to the Star last year about the dire need for better services for vulnerable people. “The only thing you can say is it is better than a woman sleeping on a grate or in a park.”

Since January, the city has seen the number of people stay- ing in the permanent shelter system continue to climb, from 5,663 people on average in January to 6,630 in May.

Raftis said the new structures are not meant to help with the city’s current challenge of housing refugees, who are arriving in increasing numbers, many from Quebec. With shelters for families and motel spaces full, the city is currently housing refugees at Centennial and Humber college dorms for the summer months. Those spaces are filling up, Raftis said. Centennial is full and Humber is a quarter full, he said.

“We really need to work towards that regional strategy with the provincial and federal government­s,” he said. He acknowledg­ed a longer-term solution is addressing the lack of affordable housing in the city.

Earlier this month, the federal government committed $50 million, including $11 million for Ontario, to help house refugees.

Mayor John Tory earlier requested help, noting the city’s costs would be $64.5 million by the end of the year. He called the federal commitment a “start toward the federal government meeting its responsibi­lities to cities.”

 ?? CITY OF TORONTO ?? The temporary shelters have skylights, showers, toilets, dining areas and common areas with TVs.
CITY OF TORONTO The temporary shelters have skylights, showers, toilets, dining areas and common areas with TVs.

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