City begins winding down operations at 24-hour winter respite centre at Exhibition Place - Action News
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Toronto

City begins winding down operations at 24-hour winter respite centre at Exhibition Place

Hundreds of people who have been shelteringfor almost two months at a temporary winter respite centre onthe grounds ofExhibition Placewill soon have to find a new place to sleep, as the city beginswinding down operations at the building.

Better Living Centre to close by March 15, 300 people staying there to be offered alternative shelter

Signage for a warming centre is photographed at Metro Hall in Toronto, on Feb. 17, 2023.
The city of Toronto says it will start working to find alternative housing for the 300 or so people staying at the Better Living Centre, as it prepares to close the winter respite centre there on March 15. (Alex Lupul/CBC)

Hundreds of people shelteringat a temporary winter respite centre onthe grounds ofExhibition Placewill soon have to find a new place to sleep, as the city beginswinding down operations at the building.

The city said in a news release Tuesday that it will stop accepting new admissions to the Better Living Centre immediately and startworking to transfer people to other spaces in the shelter system, hotels or permanent housing.

The centre will fully close by March 15 because Exhibition Place needs the facility for another booking, the city said.

Gord Tanner,general manager of shelter and support services, said he's confident the city will be able to find alternative shelter for the 300 or so people living there, despite the shelter system being at full capacity.

"Everyone at the Better Living Centre will be offered an option to move to another location,"Tanner said in an interview.

"That's our commitment and it's something that we'll be making sure it happens."

Homeless advocates say the closure of the centre will place additional strain on the shelter system. They'recalling for more permanent housing options for people experiencing homelessness.

Finding alternative shelter

The Better Living Centre opened its doors in late December to help meet the high demand for shelter beds, particularly in anticipation of Januarytemperatures dipping to extreme cold levels. The event spacewas originally meant to shelter 240 people, but the city said it'sbeenhousing 300 at full capacity since December.

The centre's opening was meant to supplement Toronto's winter homelessness strategy, which was unveiled following a surge of thousands ofasylum seekers and refugee claimants seeking emergency housing in city homeless shelters last year. Dozens were sleeping on the streets or being housed in churcheslast summer after beingturnedaway fromthe at-capacity shelter system.

WATCH | Why refugees in Toronto slept on the streets:

Refugees forced to sleep outside after arriving in Canada

1 year ago
Duration 2:03
Refugees and asylum seekers say they are being forced to sleep outside because of a lack of housing and adequate shelter space in Toronto. According to city officials, up to 45 per cent of newcomers who call the shelter intake system get turned away.

Around half of the people currently sleeping at the centre are refugee claimants, Tanner said. They, along with other refugee claimants, will be offered the option of moving to a hotel room in another Ontario cityfunded by the federal government.

"We're thinking that there could be a great interest in moving to another community where ... there willbe seamless supports provided with the ultimate goal of connecting people with permanent housing," Tanner said.

He saidmore than 2,000 people have been moved from Toronto sheltersto hotels in places likeNiagara Falls, Windsor or Mississauga since October.

"That will open up some space in our base shelter system to absorb some of the other individuals that are not refugee claimants," Tanner said.

Asylum seekers from Africa and other locales are seen outside of a shelter intake office at Peter St. and Richmond St. in Toronto, on July 14, 2023.
Refugee claimants and asylum seekers slept on the street in front of a Toronto shelter intake office for weeks last summer, after the city said it could no longer cope with the high number of claimants hoping to access a bed (Alex Lupul/CBC)

Some people staying at the centre will also have option of moving to a downtownwarming centre at75 Elizabeth St., which willtransition to a 24-hour respite centre between mid-March and April 15. Tanner said there will be 60 spaces available there.

Tanner said some of the city's smaller shelter programs will also start using bunk beds to increase their capacity. To date, he said the city has avoided the use of bunk beds in these programs as a precautionary measure to prevent the spread of respiratory diseases. But Tanner said hebelieves it's safe to do so now due to the low prevalence of COVID-19 observed within city shelters so far this winter. The city estimates this could provide 90 to 100 additional beds.

Finally, any beds that open up within the main shelter system will be dedicated to people from the Better Living Centre, Tanner said.

Homeless advocates express concern

Relocating 300 people will be disruptive, saidDiana ChanMcNally, a community worker and homeless advocate.She said she is particularly concerned about the use of bunk beds because it can lead to cramped settings where the risk of violence and theft increases.

Even if the people staying at the Better Living Centre find alternative shelter that meets people's needs,McNallysaid there are still many other people being turned away each night.

"I'm not entirely confident that this plan is going to shelter everybody as they need and certainly not necessarily in the kinds of situations that they would like or are used to,"McNallysaid."Those people [who are]attempting to get a shelter bed will be in a worse situation potentially, or certainly no different, where they may not be able to access shelter as they need."

WATCH | How Black-led churches stepped up to help refugees:

How Black-led churches in the GTA have helped some refugees find a home in Ontario

9 months ago
Duration 3:01
It has been nearly six months since Black-led churches and organizations in the Greater Toronto Area began sheltering refugee claimants because of the citys overburdened shelter system. Dale Manucdoc checked in on those efforts and spoke with a couple settling into life in Ontario.

Lorraine Lam,an outreach worker from theShelter and Housing Justice Network, said she wants to see a stronger focus on permanent housing options for people experiencing homelessness

"How do we stop relying on these [temporary] leases and actually have some city spaces that can be more stable and secure?" she said.

"The winter plan was inadequate and a lot of folks have been worried about what happens after April 15th."

Tanner said the city's housing plan focuses on long-term solutions that provide people with permanent housing with supports. He said the city moved almost6,000 people out of the shelter system and into permanent housing with supports last year.