Ontario to invest $90M over 3 years to help Toronto deal with homelessness - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario to invest $90M over 3 years to help Toronto deal with homelessness

Ontario's housing minister says the provincial government will invest $90 million in Toronto over three years to help the city deal with homelessness.

Toronto Mayor John Tory says: 'This is money, to be clear, that the city did not have before'

Toronto Mayor John Tory, left, and Ontario Housing Minister Peter Milczyn, right, speak to reporters on Monday. Milczyn has announced that the province will invest $90 million over three years in Toronto to help the city deal with homelessness. (CBC)

Ontario's housing minister says the provincial government will invest $90 million in Toronto over three years to help the city deal with homelessness.

Peter Milczyn said Monday that the money, part of the provincial Home for Good program, is expected to help more than 1,880 Toronto households.

He said the funding is designed to help the government move closer to its goal of ending chronic homelessness in the province by 2025. He described the goal as an "ambitious" target.

"To reach our goal, we'll need a bold approach that will address the root causes of chronic homelessness and leverage the innovative ways that many communities are keeping their citizens off the streets," Milczyn told reporters at the Woodgreen Homeward Bound Campusin Toronto.
A homeless woman sits on the sidewalk holding a sign which reads 'Homeless please help' in Toronto. (David Donnelly/CBC)

"For too long, the problem of chronic homelessness has been treated as an isolated problem of simply lacking shelters. Yet those at most risk of homelessness face unique challenges in finding long-term, stable shelter. And the right kind of wrap-around supports are what they urgently need."

Milczyn said some people, to stay housed, need extra support because of their physical and mental health issues and that support includes access to social workers, treatment for addictions and life-skills training.

"This is about helpinglead people to permanent housing. It's not about fundingmore shelter spaces," he said.

Toronto Mayor John Tory said the investment is welcome because it will provide a "direct, tangible" benefit to some of Toronto's most vulnerable people.

"This is money, to be clear, that the city did not have before," Torysaid Monday.
A homeless man lies sleeping on the sidewalk of King Street in Toronto. (David Donnelly/CBC)

Tory said he remembers debating the issue of homelessness in Toronto when he ran for mayor in 2003. "This is probably the single most significant investment that has been made in this area since that time. And that is a long time ago."

The mayorsaid the city told the province that it needed $90 million to work on the issue of homelessness and to divert vulnerable residentsfrom the emergency shelters. He said shelters are "no place" for people to live long-term.

"This is all about fairness for people who are struggling," he said.

Coun. Ana Bailao, chair of the city's affordable housing committee, said in a statement that she is pleased at the amountbecause it will help to break the cycle of homelessnessin the emergency shelter system by keeping people housed. She said she will ask city staff to report to council at itsOct. 2 meeting on how the city can take part in the Home For Good program.

"This funding will make a real and immediate difference," she said in a statement. "It is crucial that these funds are activated immediately to provide much needed supports."

According to the ministry, chronic homelessness is defined as the state of being homeless for six months or more in the past year.

Home for Good, a program focused on chronic homelessness, is designed to help people find stable housing. It is aimed at youth, Indigenous people, the chronically homeless, and those moving out of provincial institutions, such as jails and hospitals, and into communities.