Street Help suggests 'tent city' and 'communal building' for Windsor's homeless - Action News
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Windsor

Street Help suggests 'tent city' and 'communal building' for Windsor's homeless

The growing issue of homelessness in Windsor was discussed during a meeting at city hall Wednesday attended by representatives from Street Help, police Chief Al Frederick, and Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens, among others.

Officials are talking about how to help the city's most vulnerable people this winter

Christine Wilson-Furlonger from Street Help says Windsor needs places where homeless people can stay with their loved ones.
Christine Wilson-Furlonger from Street Help floated the idea of using a large warehouse type space with facilities to support Windsor's homeless in the winter. (Jason Viau/CBC)

The growing issue of homelessnessin Windsor was discussed during a city hall meeting Wednesday attended by representatives from Street Help, police Chief Al Frederick, and Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens, among others.

The solution, according to Street Help administratorChristine Wilson-Furlonger, is the development of a municipally-ownedbuilding which would temporarily house homeless people in the winter.

"Let's get a really big building and let's prepare it for winter. Let's get it clean, turn the heat on, the hydro on. Let's get the homeless indoors for the entire winter," saidWilson-Furlonger. "We could use the additional police officers that are being hired to help to police the program. This would be a city-owned program, not a program of any particular charity."

Wilson-Furlonger said her husbandwould like to see a tent city, but some people are critical of that idea.

Shane Mitchell, with the Olde Walkerville Residents Association,thinks something more "dignified" is in order, and he worries a tent city could "become a slum."

"Obviously it's going tobe something that would be upsetting to homeowners or to business owners if that was adjacent to their property. I don't think that that type of development is adequate for the people who need it, and I think we must do much better."

Mitchell said Windsor needs more than a short-term Band-Aid solution that would warehouse homeless people with the bare minimum of support.

He suggests having the design community propose solutions such as the tiny houses that have been built in some American cities.