Syrian refugees in GTA hotels struggle to find affordable housing - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:10 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto Programs

Syrian refugees in GTA hotels struggle to find affordable housing

Three months after the first planeloads of Syrian refugees touched down in Toronto, hundreds are still living in hotels and struggling to find affordable housing in the city, including Ahmed Haj Ali, his partner, Manal Almoor, and their five children.

Newcomers wonder how they'll be able to afford a home for their family in the city

Ahmed Haj Ali and Manal Almoor say they are worried they won't be able to find affordable housing in the Greater Toronto Area. (CBC)

Three months after the first planeloads of Syrian refugees touched down in Toronto, hundreds are still living in hotels and struggling to find affordable housing in the city, includingAhmedHaj Ali, his partner, ManalAlmoor, and their five children.

The family of government-assisted refugeeshasbeen living at the Toronto Park Plaza hotel in Etobicokesince they arrived from a refugee camp in Lebanon in late January.

On CBC Radio's Metro Morning,theytalked about the struggle to find a home in the Greater Toronto Area.

Unlike the thousands of privately-sponsored refugees in Canada, government-assisted refugees arrivein thiscountry with no committee or church group waiting to helpthem get settled.

So far,1,077 government-assisted refugees have been settled into homes in theGTA, while another850 are still waiting in hotels across the city, according toCOSTI immigrant services, which helps refugees and immigrants settle in Canada.

COSTI executive director Mario Calla said "affordable housing is challenging at the best of times" in an email to CBC News.

"Ittakestime to findhousing that accommodates larger-size families and is alsowithin their budget," he said. "With 4,500 Syrian newcomers arriving in such a short time, it's taking longer for them to find their firsthome."

COSTI said refugees currently staying in Toronto hotels are not the same as those who arrived threemonths ago,adding many of them are landing on an ongoing basis.

'Everything was clean'

At least four families left theToronto Plaza Hotelto move into their new homes Thursday, thanks to the work of COSTI. Ali andAlmoor say they hope they'll be next.

They toldMetro Morning that they're grateful just to be here.Ali saidhe'll never forget his first glimpse of the city the bright lights of Pearson InternationalAirport.

"We spent two years without electricity, without TV, so the first thing we noticed was the amount of lights around us," he said through his COSTItranslator. "And everything was clean."

The difference between where they're staying now and the camp in Lebanon is like "the difference between sky and earth," he said.

Back at the camp, they had to fetch water from 200 metres away and children would die from cold exposure in the winter or heat exhaustionin the summer.

While they're glad to have arrived in Canada,they now face a new set of worries.

Ali, wholaid tiles to support his family back in Syria, has no idea how he'll be able afford to rent ahome withhis wife,their nine-year-old triplet boys and their two daughters, ages 10 and 13.

"The rent is extremely high," he said.
Ebraheem Kanaan is a Syrian refugee who works with COSTI as a translator. He says his new Etobicoke neighbourhood is starting to feel like a community. (CBC)

They're putting their hope inCOSTI, which recentlyhelpedEbraheem Kanaan find anapartment.

He moved in February to anEtobicokeneighbourhood where a numberSyrianrefugee families have settled.It's starting to feel like a community, he said.

"You feel happy when you see people in the street or in the English centres," he told host Matt Galloway on Metro Morning.

AnEnglish teacher in Syria before fleeing to Jordan,henow worksas a translator for COSTIand helps his fellow refugees. But he's excited for whatever comes next.

"I have a lot of options here,because life here is different," he said.

With files from Mary Wiens