A look inside the pet-friendly homeless shelter at the old Royal Victoria Hospital - Action News
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A look inside the pet-friendly homeless shelter at the old Royal Victoria Hospital

Rooms abandoned when the Royal Victoria moved to the Glen site four years ago have been outfitted for a new clientele: people with nowhere else to sleep on cold winter nights and their pets, as well.

'It's an experiment, but we think it's one that is going to work,' says CEO of Welcome Hall Mission

Sam Watts, CEO of the Welcome Hall Mission, said everyone worked together to turn a floor of the old Royal Victoria Hospital into a shelter in record time. (CBC)

A historic hospital, transformed.

On the third floor of the 103-year-old greystone Ross Pavilion, rooms abandoned when the Royal Victoria moved to the Glen site four years ago have been outfitted for a new clientele.

People with nowhere else to sleep on cold winter nights and their pets, as well, have a new place to stay.

Montreal's newest emergency shelter opened Tuesday night.

Thirty-one people were there the first night,and 62, the second but no pets, so far.

The expectation is those numbers will increase as word gets out that all men, women, trans people are welcome here, and as the temperatures turn colder, said Sam Watts, CEO of the Welcome Hall Mission.

The cots in the rooms were provided by the Red Cross. (CBC)

"It's an experiment, but we think it's one that is going to work because we're working with all our partners," he said.

The project is a joint effort between the CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'le-de-Montral, the City of Montreal,the Quebec government, the Welcome Hall Mission, the Patricia Mackenzie Pavilion, Acceuil Bonneau, Maison du Pre, the Old Brewery Mission, the SPCA, the Red Cross and others.

Watts said the partners regularly work together on other projects, which made it easier to band together and get the shelter up and running in 30 days.

Watch: Welcome Hall Mission CEO Sam Watts explains how the shelter will be used.

Old Royal Victoria Hospital converted into pet-friendly homeless shelter

6 years ago
Duration 1:11
When Montreal's homeless shelters are full, there's now somewhere else to go. The old Royal Victoria Hospital has beds for 80 homeless men, women and transgender people. Their pets can come in and get warm, too

How it works

The shelter is open every day from 9 p.m. until 7 a.m. until mid-April.

The shelter is for overflow only so when one of the downtown locations is full for the night, people are transported on the Old Brewery Mission's shuttle bus to the site on Mount Royal.

A security guard greets the users at the front door, and there are four guards working on the floor where everyone sleeps every night, regardless of how many people show up, said Bruce Lapointe, chief of security at the CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'le-de-Montral.

The Ross Pavilion originally opened in 1916 as a wing for private patients. (CBC)

Weapons and alcohol aren't allowed, but those who show up intoxicated aren't turned away.

A social worker from the Welcome Hall Mission is on site as well.

Each room has one ring on the wall, so that people who arrive with their pets can tie them up to sleep in the room with them. (CBC)

The setup is minimalist each room has a few cots, on loan from the Red Cross, and a ring on the wall.

Dog owners can tie the animal's leash to the ring, ensuring their companions can sleep nearby. There are also cages available, if needed.

It's not just dogs that are welcome any pet, in theory, can accompany its owner to the shelter, Lapointe said.

There are cages available for animals, if needed. (CBC)

The rooms aren't designated for men or women specifically everyone is housed on the same floor, but at different ends.

"We always keep a distance between the men and the women, and there is always a security guard between them," Lapointe said.

There is a defibrillator, as well as two naloxone kits, the medication administered in cases of opioid overdoses.

The SPCA also trained the security guards to recognize signs that the animals are in distress and how to intervene.