Toronto Star

Councillor pitches after-school spaces

Matlow proposes city operate facilities in areas lacking youth programs

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO

The city can fill in the gaps in the availabili­ty of after-school youth spaces in neighbourh­oods from Etobicoke to Scarboroug­h — putting almost every Toronto youth within two kilometres of such a safe environmen­t — at a cost of $3.1 million, a new proposal from a city councillor shows.

The pitch, developed as one of the planks in Josh Matlow’s reelection platform released Friday, comes at a time when violence continues to escalate across the city. On Tuesday, it claimed the life of a 15-year-old boy in Regent Park, Mackai Bishop Jackson, who loved basketball and who frequented a city-run community centre that was closed to the public when he was killed.

Matlow mapped 21 existing youth spaces to find the gaps. Those include what are called enhanced youth lounges run by the city and youth hubs run by the public library. Both models employ consistent staff in dedicated spaces with snacks and equipment like computers, video games and other technology to make them youth-friendly. The spaces are open five to six days a week.

The city runs other drop-in programs without those enhancemen­ts.

Looking at the areas not covered by those sites and existing city facilities, Matlow says 20 additional locations, doubling what’s available, should be created. That would include creating spaces in what city has deemed “neighbourh­ood improvemen­t areas,” such as Kingsview Village—The Westway in Etobicoke, and Scarboroug­h Village.

“Every young person should know there is a space available for them,” Matlow said.

In November 2008, the province was presented with a seminal study on the roots of youth violence by former Ontario chief justice and Progressiv­e Conservati­ve attorney general Roy McMurtry and former Liberal cabinet minister Alvin Curling. Using a comprehens­ive literature review, original research and consultati­ons with youth, it made several recommenda­tions for tackling sys- temic barriers and influences that lead to youth violence.

“Indeed, the lack of space was one of the loudest messages we heard: youth and those working with them repeatedly expressed a need for youth-specific space within their communitie­s,” the 2008 report says. “Far too many disadvanta­ged neighbourh­oods lack space for youth to play sports, engage in the arts, dance or just hang out.”

The shortage of space, the report noted, leaves youth on the streets and exposed to negative peers and interactio­ns. It also “deprives them of the positive developmen­t that comes from engagement in sports or arts or involvemen­t with positive peers, youth workers and community leaders in activities that would build their skills, confidence, optimism and belief in their futures.”

Matlow kick-started Toronto’s youth equity strategy, which council approved in 2014. After years of inaction on the 2008 report, it laid out specific steps based on the work of McMurtry and Curling. The progress of the strategy is currently under review.

In recent months, council and Premier Doug Ford’s government have reacted to violence that has made headlines by committing or applying for additional funding for some community programs and policing, including controvers­ial new technology that is said to be able to detect the sound of gunshots.

Matlow said the money allocated for that unproven technology, combined with money council approved for additional CCTV cameras — totalling $2.6 million — is “wasteful” and could be better used to cover most of the expense of the new youth spaces.

“Every time we lose another kid, there’s another blue-ribbon panel announced or another report that’s going to be devised, and then those recommenda­tions end up in the dusty archives of history,” he said. “We no longer need to ask what we have to do. We need to follow through with what we know we can do.”

The youth spaces that exist now have proven to be wildly popular. A briefing note released by library staff earlier this year showed the number of visits to its youth hubs nearly doubled from 2016. That bump, staff said, is because new hubs became available — meaning the more youth hubs the city built, the more youth showed up.

Youth lounges cost $179,000 each, including one-time $10,000 startup costs to make the spaces more youth-friendly. That funding includes a fulltime, dedicated staff person.

The library spaces cost $130,000 with one full-time staff member, who is a librarian, and support from other library staff and volunteers.

Matlow reached the $3.1-million estimate by using an average cost of $155,000 per space.

 ?? MITCH POTTER TORONTO STAR ??
MITCH POTTER TORONTO STAR

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