More than 200 unhoused people died in Toronto last year, city data shows - Action News
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More than 200 unhoused people died in Toronto last year, city data shows

A total of 216 people experiencing homelessness died in Toronto last year, according to new data from the city.

Advocates say city should be held to account; City says it is working on creating more housing

The Toronto Homeless Memorial contains the names of people who died while experiencing homelessness. Toronto Public Health says 216 unhoused people died in the city last year. (CBC)

A total of 216 people experiencing homelessness died in Toronto last year, according to new data from the city.

Figures released on Friday by Toronto Public Health (TPH) indicate thatthere was an average of4.2deaths per weekof unhoused peoplelast year.

The city says the number of deaths in 2021 rose significantly from 2020. Seventy-two more people died last year than in the previous year, when 144 unhoused people died. The number of deaths has more than doubled since 2017the first year that the city collected such statistics when 101 people died.

A full 55 per cent of the deaths in 2021 were due to drug toxicity, the data shows. Other causes of death include heart disease, accidents, complications from diabetes, hypothermia, liver and lung disease, organ failure, suicide and cancer.

The city says 132 out of the 216 people who died were residents of homeless shelters.

For Gru, a shelter hotel resident whose legal name is Jesse Allan, the numbers are "awful" to hear.

"There are no words," he said. "There is just a deep, deep sense of loss that these are people like you or I who ended up in a position where they couldn't afford rent or they couldn't afford their mortgage. Homelessness in Canada is a death sentence, really."

Homeless advocates say the numbers are staggering, but not surprising. They say the city has enforcedpolicies that have created unsafe conditions for unhoused people. And they say the solution is permanent housing and harm reduction supports, not policing and clearing encampments.

'It's a crushing number,' homeless advocate says

Doug Johnson Hatlem, a street pastor at Sanctuary Ministries of Toronto, said on Saturday that Mayor John Tory, the city's Shelter Support and Housing Administration (SSHA), and city councillors should all be held to account for their policies on homelessness, given the "unacceptable" number of deaths of unhoused people last year.

"It's a crushing number," Johnson Hatlem said.

"All three council, Toronto mayor's office and SSHA spent an incredible amount of their time and their political capital insisting that they were in the right to beat people into submission to get inside for what they were calling safe indoor shelter. Their priorities were completely out of whack."

In 2020, the first year of the pandemic, there was more of a spirit of "we're all in this together," but in 2021, Tory's attitude was "we're going to do what we want to do and we're not going to listen to people," Johnson Hatlem said. The city failed to engage with people who were unhoused and their advocates and instead chose to act on behalf of wealthy people and those who don't want to see homelessness in their backyards, he said.

"The problem will not just ever go away until people are housed. And so, we saw a 50 per cent increase in deaths and it's an enormous number that somebody has to take account for," he said.

"It's not an acceptable number. I think a great majority of these deaths were preventable," he added. "It's always been a crisis that we have people who died homeless on the streets of Toronto. At this point, it's a five-alarm fire, and the people who should be treating it as a five-alarm fire are not doing so."

Johnson Hatlem said the city, for example, put a lot of effort into clearing encampments, which displaces and scatters unhoused people, increasing their vulnerability. He said the city should sit down with unhoused people and advocates to figure out what needs to be done to reduce the number of deaths and violenceand to reduce the number of overdose deaths.

Doug Johnson Hatlem, a street pastor at Sanctuary Ministries of Toronto, says: 'It's always been a crisis that we have people who died homeless on the streets of Toronto. At this point, it's a five-alarm fire, and the people who should be treating it as a five-alarm fire are not doing so.' (Jason Cipparrone/Vimeo)

Rafi Aaron, spokesperson for the Interfaith Coalition to Fight Homelessness, said it is important to remember that each number represents a human being.

"They were wonderful people. They loved and were loved. They had people who were close to them. They were fathers, wives, brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, in some cases grandparents. They were our neighbours or your neighbours. They were people who were vibrant and generous and who we miss dearly and who didn't need to die," Aaron said.

A.J. Withers, a steering committee member of the Shelter and Housing Justice Network and adjunct faculty in critical disability studies at York University, said some of the deaths happened when the shelter system was more than 99 per cent full. The absence of safer indoor shelter space, the toxicity of street drugs and the dismantling of encampments wasall "deeply concerning," Withers said.

"The lack of safe supply, the lack of access to overdose prevention sites and lack of access to appropriate harm reduction really means that people die," Withers said. "As the city does things like criminalize people in encampments, people get pushed further and further away from support systems and people die."

Withers said the numbers are probably far higher because hospitals and emergency rooms don't report deaths of unhoused people to TPH. Withers noted that the median age for males who died was 49, while the median age for females who died was 40, meaning "there are many years lost" when people don't have housing.

A.J. Withers
A.J. Withers, a steering committee member of the Shelter and Housing Justice Network and adjunct faculty in critical disability studies at York University, says: 'The lack of safe supply, the lack of access to overdose prevention sites and lack of access to appropriate harm reduction really means that people die.' (Submitted by A.J. Withers)

Dr. Andrew Boozary, a primary care physician and executive director of the GattusoCentre for Social Medicine at the University Health Network, said the city cannot "go back to normal" because homelessness was already a public health crisis before the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic itself has affected unhoused peopledisproportionately, he said.

"The solution to homelessness is housing. Shelters or encampments are not solutions to homelessness, it is housing. And so, we really need to ensure that every level of government is committed to housing as the solution. And if we don't see that concerted effort, these rates will only continue to increase," he said.

"And that's on us as a society, because these rates are increasing, not because of individual failures, but because of our failure on delivering housing as a human right."

Policing poverty is also not the answer, he said.

"What is really has to be clear is that ripping down tents is not the solution to homelessness. It is delivering on housing as a human right. It is building more social housing, it is getting people more access to social housing and supportive housing."

WATCH | Advocates say the deaths were preventable. CBC's Talia Ricci reports:

New data shows more than 200 people experiencing homelessness died in Toronto last year

2 years ago
Duration 2:26
A total of 216 unhoused people died in Toronto in 2021, according to city data. More than half died of drug toxicity. There was an average of 4.2 deaths per week. The number of deaths of unhoused people has more than doubled since 2017, when the city first began to collect such statistics. CBC's Talia Ricci reports.

City 'saddened by all of the deaths'

The city, in response, said it collects the data and uses it to help it make better decisions on improving the health of people experiencing homelessness.

"The City is deeply saddened by all deaths of people experiencing homelessness both in and outside of the City's shelter system. We offer our condolences to the individuals' friends and loved ones and to our staff and clients who continue to witness these tragedies," the city said in a statement.

"While the emergency shelter system plays an important role in supporting the health and wellness of those experiencing homelessness, the real solution to improved health outcomes is permanent housing with supports."

Toronto's 24-month housing and homelessness plan aims to create more than 3,000 new affordable housing opportunities by the end of year, including 2,000 with supports, to meet the needs of marginalized and vulnerable people experiencing homelessness, the city said.

In February 2022, the city said council approved an accelerated housing plan to provide an additional 300 "housing opportunities" through partnerships with housing providers and private market landlords.

"The death of anyone in our city is extremely sad and our condolences are with the families and friends of those who have passed away," Tory said ina statement issued Saturday evening.

Tory defended the actions the city has taken to tackle homelessness and drug overdoses, including opening thousands of supportive homes, expanding the shelter system before and during the pandemic and introducing harm reduction initiatives in shelters.

"More than half a billion dollars was spent on shelters and housing programs last year by the City of Toronto this was entirely because the Mayor and City Council understood we need to do everything we can as a municipal government to provide safe shelter to people, to provide supportive housing to those who need it, and to help provide vaccinations and other pandemic safety measures," the statement from his office said.

"Notwithstanding the significantly increased level of activity especially in the area of supportive housing where the federal government has been of great help, much more remains to be done and I acknowledge that just as I continue to work hard to get the support we need to offer even more supportive housing, perhaps the single most important key to addressing homelessness."