Toronto Star

Council votes to track cases of homeless deaths

City aims to curb tragedy on streets by collecting data on fatalities inside and outside shelters

- KENYON WALLACE AND MARY ORMSBY STAFF REPORTERS

The city of Toronto will begin tracking homeless deaths with the goal of developing policy and legislatio­n to stop these tragedies in the city and across the province.

Council passed a motion tabled by Councillor Paul Ainslie on Friday, directing the city to collect all data related to homeless deaths both inside and outside shelters, and for this informatio­n to be shared with the provincial government.

“People in the city and in Canada should not be dying on our streets. If they do, we should understand why so that it never happens again,” said Ainslie. “Every person counts. Every person has a right to live with dignity, and unfortunat­ely, if they pass away, to die with dignity.”

The vote comes after a Star investigat­ion published earlier this year revealed that neither a majority of municipali­ties in Ontario, nor the provincial government, track homeless deaths fully or in some cases at all. This lack of data means government­s have very little idea of the scope of the problem and the best ways to solve it.

The city of Toronto already tracks the deaths of city-administer­ed shelter residents.

There were 217 shelter-related deaths between 2007 and 2015, according to the city’s records. Ainslie’s motion directs the city to broaden its scope of data collection to include homeless individual­s who die outside the shelter system.

“I’m very moved by council’s leadership on this issue. It’s the first step towards positive change in helping this vulnerable population,” said Leigh Chapman, whose brother, Brad Chapman, a homeless man, died last summer in hospital at the age of 43 after suffering a drug overdose in an alley near Yonge and Gerrard Sts.

Because his death was not deemed suspicious and he did not die in a city-administer­ed shelter, his name is not recorded on any official list. Effectivel­y, in death, Brad Chapman became an invisible statistic.

“I can’t help but wonder what families of other homeless individual­s who die in municipali­ties outside of Toronto will have to endure when these deaths are not tracked,” said Leigh Chapman.

Deb Matthews, deputy premier and minister responsibl­e for the province’s poverty reduction strategy, told the Star earlier this week that the province encourages municipali­ties’ efforts to collect homelessne­ss data and that such informatio­n will help establish a baseline against which to measure progress in ending homelessne­ss in Ontario.

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