Waterloo Region Record

Advocates split on housing plan for people with disabiliti­es

Project to turn old Jesuit college into mixed use seen as institutio­nalization

- Alex McKeen

GUELPH — A proposal by a not-forprofit organizati­on to turn an old Jesuit college into a residence and community centre aimed at people with disabiliti­es has drawn the ire of some advocates who fear the plan will marginaliz­e the building’s future residents.

Angel Oak Communitie­s submitted a proposal to Ignatius Jesuit Centre in March for a “self-sufficient” community with about 70 residentia­l units, the “majority” of which would be occupied by adults with disabiliti­es, and the rest rented out as affordable housing units.

The Orchard Park building, just outside Guelph, would also house day programmin­g for disabled adults, a bakery and a greenhouse (where the population could gain skills and earn an income), and its own renewable energy system.

Mark Enchin, real estate sales and marketing director of Angel Oak Communitie­s, said that concerns about the project evoking institutio­nalization are unfounded, and that interest has been widespread in the Guelph community.

“We’re building a community centre that focuses on helping people with disabiliti­es,” he said in an interview this week.

Enchin plans to sell about 50 lifetime leases on units for about $250,000 to $300,000 each to pay for the building costs. The preliminar­y budget for the building renovation­s totals roughly $15 million, he said in an interview. Money from the remaining rental units will pay for the ongoing operationa­l costs in the building.

Community Living Ontario, a 70year-old organizati­on that oversees 100 local offices aimed at supporting people with disabiliti­es within their communitie­s and homes, is denouncing the proposal.

The organizati­on cites concerns that it will segregate people with disabiliti­es from the community and leave residents vulnerable to the kind of mistreatme­nt and neglect that was common in historical institutio­ns.

Yvonne Spicer, a Milton resident who is the past-chair of Community Living Ontario’s council of individual­s with intellectu­al disabiliti­es, said she is outraged by the plan.

“Institutio­ns are not safe places for us,” Spicer said. “I’m for inclusion. I’m for people with disabiliti­es being included in the community.”

Enchin, whose 24-year-old daughter is autistic, said he is trying to build a living situation for people with disabiliti­es that can give aging family members peace of mind about how their loved ones will get by after they pass away.

The brief describes a “vision for an integrated, diverse community to enrich and support the core resident population.”

Enchin said that some of the plans described in the design brief may change based on consultati­ons the not-for-profit has done in the community, including the proportion of residentia­l occupants with disabiliti­es.

The Jesuit Province of Canada has agreed in a letter of intent to enter into a rental agreement with Angel Oak Communitie­s.

Lisa Calzonetti, operations director for the Ignatius Jesuit Centre, said her organizati­on would not be entering into the agreement “if we thought it was anything even remotely akin to any form of institutio­nalization.”

Chris Beesley, CEO of Community Living Ontario, said that despite Enchin’s intention to oversee a project that is different from historical institutio­ns, his organizati­on is certain that the proposed model won’t have the positive effect Enchin is hoping for.

“It’s not because they’re trying to say, ‘Let’s denigrate and let’s try and do them harm.’ But they don’t know of the 150-year history that we’re aware of,” he said, referring to Ontario’s long history of institutio­nalization and the many stories of abuse that followed from it.

Enchin said that his project differs fundamenta­lly from institutio­ns because of its focus on community building.

“I’m not just putting this out for sale and taking the first 70 buyers,” he said.

Proposed building plans show dedicated spaces for “Staff/Guest/Short term occupant” in addition to residentia­l suites at the site. Seven of the proposed units are set to be barrierfre­e.

Beesley said that he would feel differentl­y about the project if Enchin succeeds in creating an “intentiona­l community,” meaning one that demographi­cally mirrors that of Guelph. He says he does not see that aim in Enchin’s talk about the project’s business model.

The proposal comes amid a housing crisis for people with disabiliti­es in Ontario. A 2014 Ontario auditor general’s report says that the province’s waiting list for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es would take 22 years to clear.

“If the choice isn’t between a rock and a hard place — and parents right now, that’s what they feel — this is the only option they see that might be feasible,” Beesley said.

The Ontario government closed its last government-run residentia­l institutio­n for people with disabiliti­es in 2009, marking the end of a decades-long transition to a community-based support model.

Enchin said that, if all proceeds as planned, renovation­s on the building should begin later this year.

 ?? HANNAH YOON, THE TORONTO STAR ?? Mark Enchin and his stepdaught­er Carly Hatton walk around the Ignatius Jesuit Centre just outside Guelph. Enchin wants to use the space to build a sustainabl­e and affordable community hub for various groups of people to live and work together. But...
HANNAH YOON, THE TORONTO STAR Mark Enchin and his stepdaught­er Carly Hatton walk around the Ignatius Jesuit Centre just outside Guelph. Enchin wants to use the space to build a sustainabl­e and affordable community hub for various groups of people to live and work together. But...

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