Toronto Star

Hamilton faces encampment court challenge

Legal conflict coincides with a shortage of shelter spaces, city officials note

- TEVIAH MORO THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR

HAMILTON—Hamilton is fighting a human rights-based court challenge that aims to prevent it from forcing people from encampment­s in the city.

The effort led by the local community legal clinic on behalf of five people who are homeless and live outside comes amid a shortage of suitable shelter and housing options, officials said Wednesday.

“Do we have enough spots for all the people that are homeless?” Coun. Brad Clark asked city staff.

No, replied housing director Edward John, who noted there are roughly 150 people who live at encampment­s in Hamilton at different times.

“We are looking for additional capacity for the winter months.”

That’s concerning, responded Clark, likening the legal squabbles over encampment­s to putting the “cart before the horse” with cooler weather around the corner.

“So if we wiped out all of the encampment­s right now, where would they go? We don’t have the beds for them.”

Efforts spent in court are “not helping” the city create spaces to keep people from freezing to death, Clark added.

Those who work directly with people experienci­ng homelessne­ss have long flagged a chronic shortage of beds in the women’s shelter system.

The judge presiding over the court challenge that was launched last week told the city to stop forcing encampment residents to move until Friday, when the case is scheduled to resume, said Stephanie Cox, a lawyer with the Hamilton Community Legal Clinic.

The short pause on the enforcemen­t of bylaws deals with encampment­s in parks that are 50 metres away from a school, playground or child-care centre, and in clusters of no more than six tents, Cox noted.

Deputy city solicitor Ron Sabo told councillor­s it’s “quite likely” the judge won’t deliver a decision on the applicatio­n for a permanent injunction Friday, which means the interim conditions could persist for a time.

The legal scuffle comes after the council abruptly voted Aug. 9 to scrap a protocol with partners in the homelessne­ss sector that emphasized finding people places to live before forcing them from city parks.

That agreement made provisions for people’s acuity, including mental health and addiction issues, and allowed tents to remain for 14-day stretches.

“It just didn’t work,” Coun. Jason Farr said Wednesday, “and we can’t be the only city to allow this to fester and grow.”

Farr has steadfastl­y aired his frustratio­n over the growing number of encampment­s in his downtown ward, citing constituen­ts’ complaints over fires, violence, garbage and drug use.

“Because we’re the only game in town,” he said, contending “in my opinion,” homeless people from other cities have flocked to Hamilton due to its lack of bylaw enforcemen­t.

A total of 440 housing placements, representi­ng 990 people from Hamilton’s by-name priority list — which is a data base of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss — were made between January 2020 and July 2021. The byname list currently has 1,390 people on it.

Specific to encampment­s, 73 of 477 people the city’s outreach program has interacted with since the start of the pandemic have been housed through support programs.

That doesn’t include people who found housing themselves or through other programs, a city spokespers­on noted.

The current court challenge echoes one in the summer of 2020 that involved an enforcemen­t injunction and led to the now-scrapped protocol, which had been in place since the fall of that year.

At the time, the coalition of doctors, street outreach workers and lawyers, including legal clinic staff, contended dispersing people from encampment­s made it more difficult to offer them medical care and other crucial services.

The new applicatio­n argues bylaws that deal with tents infringe on homeless people’s rights to “life, liberty and security of the person by preventing them from engaging in essential life-sustaining activities in public space and from creating shelter for themselves, when they have no other viable alternativ­e.”

Sharon Crowe, a lawyer with the legal clinic, told The Spectator council’s decision to revoke the protocol and encampment clearings “of great concern” in September sparked the latest court applicatio­n.

Coun. Nrinder Nann expressed optimism for a soon-to-be-announced initiative with a community partner to help fill gaps in the women’s system.

But for too long, she said, the shortage of beds in that sector, including overflow programs, has left women fleeing violence with no “safe place to go.”

After council ended the protocol, the city moved to a six-step process that designates bylaw officers as the “first point of contact” after complaints, instead of housing outreach workers. But it still calls for outreach efforts, including those of the Social Navigator, a partnershi­p between police and paramedics, to help arrange for housing or shelter.

Kelly Barnett, a manager in the city’s bylaw division, said staff know about 30 to 40 encampment­s in Hamilton.

There have been “some successes” with people at smaller encampment­s leaving voluntaril­y, but they move to another spot or return to the same one. “That’s been one of our challenges.”

Since Aug. 30, when the city resumed its pre-pandemic enforcemen­t, people at six sites left without the need for enforcemen­t, 10 sites have been issued verbal notice to clear out and four have been issued trespass notices.

 ?? ?? BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR
Frank is one of several individual­s living in tents in various locations around Hamilton. His tent, pitched on Strachan Street near Bayfront Park, is only six feet long.
BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR Frank is one of several individual­s living in tents in various locations around Hamilton. His tent, pitched on Strachan Street near Bayfront Park, is only six feet long.

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