(LoveCry) Fw: Daily digest for Homeless Reality

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freez...@yahoo.ca

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Jan 29, 2005, 5:30:06 PM1/29/05
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Please read these essays below and forward.
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Angel
 
----- Original Message -----
From: MSN Groups
Sent: Saturday, January 29, 2005 7:00 AM
Subject: Daily digest for Homeless Reality

Daily Digest of Messages on Homeless Reality

  Today's New Messages
Toronto Council vs. Homeless (1 new message)

 
 
Toronto Council vs. Homeless

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 Recommend  Message 9 in Discussion
From: DLynn6

Thu, October 28, 2004

We can end the homeless mess

By SUE-ANN LEVY

For the Toronto Sun

Yesterday, after three months of foot-dragging, the city's six-figure bureaucrats finally produced their "plan" to get the homeless off Toronto's downtown streets this winter.

It was anything but a plan. What council got was a predictable piece of pap that proposed more of the same stopgap measures -- more outreach vans delivering warm soup, cigarettes and words of cheer, extended hours at drop-in centres and more temporary shelter beds similar to those offered at the Fort York Armoury last winter (which cost $156 apiece, per night).

The city's shelter officials even had the chutzpah to suggest the $190 million that will be spent on the homeless industry this year wouldn't be enough to handle the few hundred people now parked in spots like the financial district, under the Spadina Ave. bridge and Nathan Phillips Square.

But this time several councillors weren't buying the same old bleeding-heart, blind-eye party line. They'd clearly had enough.

Coun. David Shiner moved a motion asking that the police and the city's bylaw officers "more strenuously" enforce bylaws against people causing obstructions on public sidewalks and that these people be asked to move.

He told his colleagues he was "embarassed" to see a young man camped on a sidewalk that morning near City Hall, where people had to walk out into traffic to avoid stepping over him. This happened, he said, as a police officer ticketed a nearby car.

Shiner said he was also "really embarassed" that in the seven years since amalgamation the problem has become so much worse -- even as the budget has increased. "I don't want to spend any more money," he said, adding that is up to the mayor to "champion" this cause.

(Mayor David Miller, who was nowhere to be seen during much of the morning debate, turned up just before noon.)

Coun. Case Ootes had a similar motion. He proposed that the mayor ask the Police Services Board to "demand" that the police, in a humane and civil manner, do everything legally possible to discourage people from panhandling, squeegeeing and sleeping on the streets.

"All I hear is excuses (from staff)," Ootes said. "The mayor has to take a leadership role and I haven't seen it."

Coun. Mike Del Grande suggested if safety is an issue in shelters, that staff regularly conduct surprise inspections and build enclosed cubicles in shelters to ensure a safer environment.

"There are so many (homeless) fighting for corners downtown that they've set up great franchise locations where they park themselves in Scarborough," he said.

Coun. Bill Saundercook held up his motion (passed at council in April after hours of debate) which asked city staff to keep public spaces clear for pedestrian traffic by removing homeless paraphernalia from the square and downtown street corners. That request has been ignored. "Where's the compassion in stepping over these people on walkways?" he asked.

So it went -- interrupted only by some badgering from the usual council handwringers like Olivia Chow -- until council broke for lunch, leaving the debate to be finished today.

After countless columns suggesting it is inhumane to leave


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 Recommend  Message 9 in Discussion
From: DLynn6

By SUE-ANN LEVY -- For the Toronto Sun

SUE-ANN LEVY wrote:
Taking a regular census of people living on the street is the first crucial step for any city truly serious about dealing with its homeless problem.

That's the advice from two New Yorkers in Toronto yesterday at a Homes First Foundation symposium to talk about the Big Apple experience with homelessness.

"If we're committed to reducing the numbers (of homeless), we need to know what the numbers are," said Linda Gibbs, commissioner with NYC's Department of Homeless Services.

Roseanne Haggerty, president of Common Ground Community, which has developed 1,826 units of innovative supportive housing, said all the cities that have seen gains in getting homeless people off the streets -- New York, Philadelphia, London and others -- began with a census.

When I told her the 59 shelters in Toronto still do a manual count of those who stay there each night, she called that "insane."

"You can't understand the dimensions of the issue without tracking it," said the soft-spoken Haggerty, who's been featured on 60 Minutes for her transformation of the decrepit Times Square Hotel into supportive housing.

Gibbs, whom I first interviewed in 2002 during a trip to NYC, says this will be their third year conducting a count of the street homeless. "Until you guys do a count you aren't going to know 100% either what your numbers are," she said.

One wonders if our suave socialist mayor dares to listen. He was absent from the symposium yesterday, having flown to Regina for an Federation of Canadian Municipalities meeting with the federal finance minister.

Yet the mayor's new homeless strategy, which goes before council next week, merely pays lip service to a census. It suggests a "method to determine" the number of street people be presented to the community services committee. When? Who knows?

Last year in New York, during a count conducted in every borough but Queen's and the Bronx, Gibbs said they found 2,700 homeless people on the streets. The next count starts at midnight on Feb. 28, using 2,500 volunteers.

"Our count is extremely cheap," she said. "We didn't even ask for a budget."

The idea of a census is "still fought" by the homeless advocates, she noted. They used the same arguments I've heard in Toronto from the likes of the Toronto Disaster Relief Committee -- that the city can never do it accurately enough or will understate the actual numbers on the streets.

"It can turn counterproductive when they undermine the very efforts undertaken to tackle the problem," said Gibbs, who noted that some advocates resist a count because their funding depends on keeping the homeless problem alive. Hmmm.

And contrary to popular rumour -- often perpetuated by the homeless handwringers here in Toronto as well -- New York's "tough love" approach to getting the homeless off the streets has not been abandoned by Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Rather, it's been enhanced with a dose of "compassion," Gibbs said.

Their approach is still "forceful" and "persuasive" and when the homeless are impeding someone else's use of space, they'll be arrested if necessary, she noted.

However, she said NYC officials try to strike a balance

 

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Jan 29, 2005, 5:30:09 PM1/29/05
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----- Original Message -----
From: MSN Groups
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 7:08 AM
Subject: Daily digest for Homeless Reality

Daily Digest of Messages on Homeless Reality

  Today's New Messages
Extreme Cold Weather Alert (1 new message)

 
 
Extreme Cold Weather Alert

Reply
 Recommend  Message 4 in Discussion
From: DLynn6

Dec. 20, 2004. 09:37 AM
RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR
Angelo Vinci helps serve a roast beef dinner to homeless people yesterday at his brother’s King St. E. eatery, Biagio’s Ristorante. “It’s fantastic,” said one happy man.
 
Shelters fill up as chill grips city
100 extra beds made available
Extreme cold weather alert in effect

JORDAN HEATH-RAWLINGS AND ANDREW MILLS
STAFF REPORTERS

It was minus 22C and Jim Snow wouldn't leave the blue tarp shelter — his home — in a field along the Don Valley Parkway.

"Nope. Won't go," he told the Street Help workers pleading with him to come inside last night.

"I know," Snow said. "I'm freezing. I'm freezing."

Had he come with them, and so many wouldn't on the first night of an extreme cold weather alert — the season's first — they would have had to scramble to find a place.

All spaces in the Out of the Cold program were full. The city's newest shelter, at 110 Edward St., which opened Thursday by referral only with dormitories and beds still under construction, took in people on an emergency basis and let them sleep on the floor.

The Maxwell Meighan Centre on Sherbourne St. was the only other place taking people in last night. And as temperatures dropped, those beds were filling up quickly.

Earlier in the day, about 300 of the city's homeless were able to escape the deep freeze of the streets for a warm restaurant setting for a few hours in the afternoon. At Biagio's on King St. E., owner Biagio Vinci opened his doors for the restaurant's seventh annual Sunday Christmas Brunch for the homeless.

Word spread quickly on the frigid streets, and by 2 p.m. Vinci, his family and friends and restaurant staff had served more than 250 meals of minestrone, roast beef, mashed potatoes and fresh vegetables with an English trifle dessert.

"It's fantastic — best meal I've had in a long time," said John Sterjovski, who didn't have a rooming house lined up for the night and was planning to "go from one place to another, just trying to keep warm."

Vinci was not the only one throwing open his doors. Out of the Cold, a coalition set up to open public facilities like churches and synagogues to help the homeless, opened three temporary shelters yesterday afternoon. All were filled last night. Drop-in centres and other soup kitchens were also preparing for a very busy evening.

The forecast high of minus 18C for the city yesterday prompted Toronto's Hostel Services Unit to declare the extreme cold weather alert, swinging the city's emergency shelter plans into action.

The night's low of minus 22C would make yesterday the second-coldest Dec. 19 on

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 Recommend  Message 4 in Discussion
From: DLynn6

Jan. 24, 2005. 06:51 AM

Homeless bed down on frozen city streets


Some refuse to use shelters
Temperatures rising this week

CHRISTIAN COTRONEO


STAFF REPORTER

When it's really cold, Gavin Singh can hear it.

A deafening, almost painful-sounding shriek rises from the stairwell outside the office building where he works.

Like a pigeon-alarm at an airport, the system is designed to drive away unwelcome guests with sheer racket. In this case, it keeps homeless people from camping in one of the myriad nooks and crannies surrounding the Standard Life Building at King and York Sts.

These days, the alarm goes off more than usual, as more homeless people seek refuge from nature's bitter onslaught.

"Sometimes they try to cover the sensor with newspapers," said Singh, the building's lone security guard yesterday.

It doesn't work. Every hour, Singh patrols the building, from its enormous concourse to parking garages and outside stairwells.

For those who refuse to check in to a local emergency hostel even on the coldest nights, there is finally some good news.

After falling as low as -23C over the weekend, the temperature is expected to rise to -6C today. In fact, with daytime highs of -7C tomorrow and -5C Wednesday, the next few days are looking relatively balmy.

That comes as a relief, not only for those who avoid the hostels, but also to Singh. The colder it gets, the more people he has to banish from the building. "I tell them, `There are shelters, why don't you go there?' Their answer is that shelters are no good. There are bedbugs and lice."

Just outside the Standard Life building, a man calling himself Alex was camped on a heat vent — a cardboard box over his head, a tarp over the rest of his body and a newspaper in his baby blue-gloved hands.

`There is that population that just will not come in no matter how cold it is.' Elaine Smyer, emergency planning department

"It's survival," said the bespectacled 54-year old.

As a refugee, Alex says he has no status in Canada. He can't receive any benefits. So he cut open a cardboard box, taped garbage bags to it to keep moisture out and built a cocoon of blankets and tarp for the rest of his body.

It is, Alex declares, an all-weather solution.

His system is better than what the grey-bearded man sleeping on the grate next to him is using. Surrounded by an aura of melted snow, the sprawling man was oblivious to passers-by and screeching streetcars. Steam from the giant vent beneath swirled over his body.

There's a big difference between sleeping over a heat vent and sleeping over a steam vent, he added.

Sure enough, his neighbour's entire body, from the sleeping bag tangled between his legs to his jacket, was slick and glistening from the steam bath. "There is that population that just will not come in no matter how cold it is," said Elaine Smyer of the City of Toronto's emergency planning department.

She works with ho


 

freez...@yahoo.ca

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Jan 29, 2005, 5:30:11 PM1/29/05
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----- Original Message -----
From: MSN Groups
Sent: Friday, January 21, 2005 7:11 AM
Subject: Daily digest for Homeless Reality

Daily Digest of Messages on Homeless Reality

  Today's New Messages
Toronto Council vs. Homeless (2 new messages)

 
 
Toronto Council vs. Homeless

Reply
 Recommend  Message 8 in Discussion
From: DLynn6

Thu, October 28, 2004

We can end the homeless mess

By SUE-ANN LEVY

For the Toronto Sun

Yesterday, after three months of foot-dragging, the city's six-figure bureaucrats finally produced their "plan" to get the homeless off Toronto's downtown streets this winter.

It was anything but a plan. What council got was a predictable piece of pap that proposed more of the same stopgap measures -- more outreach vans delivering warm soup, cigarettes and words of cheer, extended hours at drop-in centres and more temporary shelter beds similar to those offered at the Fort York Armoury last winter (which cost $156 apiece, per night).

The city's shelter officials even had the chutzpah to suggest the $190 million that will be spent on the homeless industry this year wouldn't be enough to handle the few hundred people now parked in spots like the financial district, under the Spadina Ave. bridge and Nathan Phillips Square.

But this time several councillors weren't buying the same old bleeding-heart, blind-eye party line. They'd clearly had enough.

Coun. David Shiner moved a motion asking that the police and the city's bylaw officers "more strenuously" enforce bylaws against people causing obstructions on public sidewalks and that these people be asked to move.

He told his colleagues he was "embarassed" to see a young man camped on a sidewalk that morning near City Hall, where people had to walk out into traffic to avoid stepping over him. This happened, he said, as a police officer ticketed a nearby car.

Shiner said he was also "really embarassed" that in the seven years since amalgamation the problem has become so much worse -- even as the budget has increased. "I don't want to spend any more money," he said, adding that is up to the mayor to "champion" this cause.

(Mayor David Miller, who was nowhere to be seen during much of the morning debate, turned up just before noon.)

Coun. Case Ootes had a similar motion. He proposed that the mayor ask the Police Services Board to "demand" that the police, in a humane and civil manner, do everything legally possible to discourage people from panhandling, squeegeeing and sleeping on the streets.

"All I hear is excuses (from staff)," Ootes said. "The mayor has to take a leadership role and I haven't seen it."

Coun. Mike Del Grande suggested if safety is an issue in shelters, that staff regularly conduct surprise inspections and build enclosed cubicles in shelters to ensure a safer environment.

"There are so many (homeless) fighting for corners downtown that they've set up great franchise locations where they park themselves in Scarborough," he said.

Coun. Bill Saundercook held up his motion (passed at council in April after hours of debate) which asked city staff to keep public spaces clear for pedestrian traffic by removing homeless paraphernalia from the square and downtown street corners. That request has been ignored. "Where's the compassion in stepping over these people on walkways?" he asked.

So it went -- interrupted only by some badgering from the usual council handwringers like Olivia Chow -- until council broke for lunch, leaving the debate to be finished today.

After countless columns suggesting it is inhumane to leave


Reply
 Recommend  Message 7 in Discussion
From: DLynn6

Jan. 20, 2005. 06:43 AM
 
RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR
Out in the cold A teary-eyed Sarah Vance listens to a committee meeting at city hall yesterday, where councillors voted to ban homeless people from sleeping in Nathan Phillips Square. About 30 protestors turned up at the meeting, many of them from the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty.
 
Homeless face icy reception
Can't sleep in Nathan Phillips Square
Mayor promises no arrests in his plan

CATHERINE PORTER
CITY HALL BUREAU

The city moved one step closer yesterday to banning homeless people from sleeping in Nathan Phillips Square, despite a public outpouring of opposition.

Mayor David Miller assured a small crowd that had gathered to protest the move the ban would only be a "little nudge" to move people along once they get the supports they need from outreach workers.

"Nobody is proposing arresting people. I don't think that's acceptable. It's not illegal to be poor in this country and it shouldn't be," he said after the city's policy and finance committee overwhelmingly approved his plan to end street homelessness in Toronto.

"However, the strategy is to get people the services they need where they are, on the street, particularly in Nathan Phillips Square, and find them housing options. And once they're offered options, to let them know they need to move on."

The report will now proceed to city council at the end of the month, where it will likely be approved.

Councillor Howard Moscoe said it's wrong for people to appropriate public space by living there full-time.

"Public space is public space. Nobody has the right to take public space and make it private space. And if the Bank of Commerce set up in Nathan Phillips Square to peddle credit cards without a licence or authority of the city, I'd be the first to throw them off," said Moscoe (Ward 15, Eglinton-Lawrence).

Councillor Maria Augimeri (Ward 9, York Centre) provided the only dissenting voice among the 10-member committee, calling the ban a way of "stomping on humanity."

Miller's plan commits $18.4 million to helping get people living on the street into homes. It sets out a four-pronged approach, including hiring six new outreach workers to provide one-on-one service to people on the street, building 1,000 new affordable housing units every year and lobbying senior governments to build more supportive housing units, issue more rent supplements and increase the number of mental health an

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 Recommend  Message 8 in Discussion
From: DLynn6

 
Jan 20/05 NOW magazine
 
NOW News, January 20 - January 26, 2005
Homeless people should be persuaded to leave the square, not forced, say supporters of Miller's ban plan.

Photo By Ethan Eisenberg
A stirring in the square
Mayor deftly corrals lefty support on plan to ban homeless from Nathan Phillips
BY Don Wanagas

Has Mayor David Miller taken a right turn on the homelessness issue? The mayor says no, but his support for a city staff report that would put an end to people sleeping in Nathan Phillips Square and other public places has some social justice advocates expressing serious concerns about Miller's motives.

"We were totally blown away," says street nurse Cathy Crowe, a leading spokesperson for Toronto's homeless. "We didn't see it coming."

Crowe maintains that the report, entitled From The Street Into Homes: A Strategy To Assist Homeless Persons Find Permanent Housing, is a "reactive one to the pressures of right-wing councillors and Toronto Sun rants that reached a frenzy last summer and fall."

Both Crowe and the Toronto Disaster Relief Committee's Michael Shapcott spent Wednesday, January 19, at City Hall trying to convince council's policy and finance committee that the report is fatally flawed and will only create more problems for the thousands who can't find affordable housing in Canada's largest municipality.

"I don't think it's fully fleshed out," Crowe says of the strategy, which goes to council in February. "This was just written up internally. None of us were consulted – not officially anyway – and there are some things that just aren't going to work."

Co-authored by chief administrative officer Shirley Hoy, community and neighbourhood services commissioner Eric Gam, acting works and emergency services commissioner David Kaufman and city solicitor Anna Kinastowski, the 39-page document proposes spending $18.4 million on a series of initiatives. They include putting more outreach workers on the street, building 1,000 new affordable housing units annually (half of them for low-income households) and lobbying the province and feds for increased financial support.

But it's a planned bylaw that would ban "camping" in Nathan Phillips Square that has really raised the ire of those who work with the homeless.

Crowe is quick with a quote from Miller's 2003 mayoral campaign that stated, "Tough love with no housing options and no support is not a policy for the homeless." She fears the proposed crackdown on the square will spread elsewhere, giving police further justification to hassle the homeless sleeping in parks and ravines and under bridges.

But the mayor is just as quick to deny he's adopting a harsh right-wing approach


 
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