Windsor's plan for a shiny and new downtown has advocates hoping it remains a place 'for all of us' - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 21, 2024, 10:39 PM | Calgary | -10.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
WindsorFuture of downtown

Windsor's plan for a shiny and new downtown has advocates hoping it remains a place 'for all of us'

Downtown Windsor is grappling to deal with an increase in homelessness and people facing substance use and mental health challenges among the issues the southwestern Ontario city's revitalization plan hopesto address. But questions are being raised about what this means for vulnerable individuals.

Ontario city's revitalization plan raises questions about impact on vulnerable people

A man wearing a cap looks off into the distance.
Jayson Brooks, 50, is now about 100 days sober, the longest he's gone without using since his addiction to drugs and alcohol started about 30 years ago. For Brooks, an ideal and revitalized downtown Windsor, Ont., is a space that's 'cleaner, safer' for those struggling with addiction. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

CBC Windsor airing a half-hour show focused on the future of downtown Windsor at 6p.m. Tuesday. Watch it live at cbc.ca/windsor, or on our YouTube channel.


On the southwest corner of WyandotteStreet and OuelletteAvenue in Windsor, Ont., Jayson Brooks points out a building's doorways,an areawhere he often sees people who are homelesssleeping.

Just a few months ago, he was one of them.

Often drunk or high on cocaine,he'd huddle into the building's crevices, away from the busy street or harsh weather, Brooks said.

"Sometimes I'd close my eyes and feel like I slept for a whole day and it's only been for a couple hours."

Once the drugs wore off,he was back to the "grind" of figuring out how to get his next fix.

His experiencesas a drug user and someone struggling to make ends meetaren't unusualon Windsor'sdowntown streets. For years, the core of the border city has been grappling to deal with an increase in homelessness and people facing substance use and mental health challenges

They're among issues the city's revitalization plan, "Strengthen the Core," hopestoaddress.

"I mean, of course they want to clean up downtown ... but I mean what do we do with these people?" Brooks said. "They're human beings. There's overdoses every day. There's people that need help."

One part of the seven-pointrevitalization plan focuses on"healthy spaces," which includes asking upper levels of government to "support wrap-around relief programs for vulnerable community members."

You can't just throw things in the garbageyou have to fix them.- Ashley Shepley, outreach worker

Under the plan, the city is also looking to make the streets safer by hiring more police officers, discouraging loitering and panhandling, andrelocating benches away from empty businesses so people don't stay in those areas.

But while the project aims for a shiny and new downtown, some question what this means forvulnerable individuals.

A man walks across the street, as a Windsor Police car sits in the foreground of the image.
A man walks across Pelissier Street in downtown Windsor. The city's revitalization plan aims to hire several new police officers to patrol parts of the city. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

Around the same timethe plan wasannounced, the city confirmed a new location forits Homelessness and Housing Help Hub (H4). In the next few years, the support centre willmove further out of the downtown area.

And, the Downtown Mission, the city's largest shelter, says it plans to follow suit.

The most recent statistics, from 2021, counted 251 people who were homeless on any given night in Windsor. In February, the city's acting manager of homelessness and housing support, Kelly Goz, told CBC News there were at least 700 householdsfacing some type of homelessness in Windsor-Essex.

Cityto lobbyOntario, Ottawa for supports

The city's plan outlines multiple ways it could improve social services to better help those in need.These expansionswould relyon the city seekingfunding from upper levels of government as"municipal governments don't have the fiscal capacity to solve the challenges alone."

Key points in the plan include:

  • Securingprovincial funding for a "low-barrier, transitional-care facility," for those experiencing a mental health or addictions crisis.
  • Long-term provincial funding to make Windsor police's and Windsor Regional Hospital's nurse and police team pilot permanent and extend their hours of operation.
  • Increase H4's hours of operation,something the city has already done.
  • Reduce barriers faced by people accessing H4.
  • Continue to implementthe strategies outlined in the city's 10-year housing and homelessness master plan.
  • There needs to better data sharing and communication betweenmental health and addictions service providers.

'Overloaded with this problem'

Downtown Mission addiction counsellor Chris Thibert said"rampant" drug use is a major challenge facing the downtown.

"We're overloaded with this problem and nobody knows what to do with it," said the 42-year-old, who also struggled with addiction before getting sober.

A man stands in front of a sign that reads, Downtown Mission.
Chris Thibert, 42, has been working at Windsor's largest shelter for seven years. He struggled with drug addiction for years and used to attend the Downtown Mission as a client. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

Though the city's plan, as well as other initiatives, are trying to tackle the problem, Thibert believesdrug use and homelessness in the core will always exist, to some extent.

"I don't really think it matters what you change or where you move the [Downtown] Mission or anything like that.I think the drug use is going to be here ... because it's central," he said, adding that's where the flow of drugs is right now.

Leaning on his own experience, Thibert saidhe'd like to have seen the plan focus on bringing in more social workers, outreach workers or peer support staff with lived experience.

He believes those roles would be more valuable in building relationships with people living on the streets.

Ashley Shepley, an outreach worker for four years, saidshe'd like a buddy system of sorts.

Shepley has been working with the Downtown Windsor Community Collaborative for more than twoyearsand officially became theirStreet Light co-ordinator this month.

Her job involves meeting people around downtown Windsorand workingto help them.

"Sometimes it's just a happy 'hello' and sit down and chat about what they're going to do that day;sometimes it's a little dance in a bus stop with someone who is dancing and having a good day and twirls me around;sometimes its crisis situations;sometimes it's an overdose," she said.

Graffiti in a downtown Windsor alley says, 'Let me out,' and then below it, it reads, 'Let me in.'
Graffiti in a downtown Windsor alleyway. The city's revitalization plan aims to make the core shiny and new. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

She said she's like to see moreroles like hers. Ideally, she said, people who are vulnerable would be paired with someone who can help them get to the next phase of their life whatever that might be.

Shepley saidsheisn't so sure that more police are needed.

"I know that it does make a certain part of the community feel safe, whereas like the community that I work with ... they feel [police are] more of a threat," she said.

"Hopefully we can somehow bridge that gap."

Who is a revitalized downtown Windsor for?

All of this begs the question: Who is this new downtown Windsor for?

"I really hope it's for all of us," said Shepley.

"It sounds like to me higher class is going to stay and lower class is going to gowhere are they going to go? We're all people. And like I've known higher-class people that have dropped to lower class, and I know lower-class people that made it high."

Moving resources out of the downtown"hurts," Shepley said.

These people, she said, are her community and she, like others, have spent time building that.

"Moving this group of people out of the way, you're only going to make the other people happy," she said.

"But we're not understanding the dominoeffect that it's going to have ... you can't just throw things in the garbageyou have to fix them."

She feels change has been slowly happening over the last few years, asservice providers are better at collaborating with each other. But she fears moving serviceswill mean they'llhave to re-establish themselves.

A woman sits on a stone wall, smiling, with trees and sunshine behind her.
Ashley Shepley, who grew up in Windsor-Essex, has been an outreach worker in the region for four years and works with the Downtown Windsor Community Collaborative. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

Brooks saidit seems the plan is being driven by the people who are "on the outside looking in."

"They judge, they look at it and go, 'Look at those bums they're acting weird,' or whatnot.You know what I mean? But they don't really know what's going on,"said the 50-year-old, who moved to Windsor four years ago.

For Brooks, an ideal and revitalized downtown Windsorisa space that's "cleaner, safer" for those struggling with addiction;it's not one that tries to remove them from the scene altogether.

The biggest challenge is getting people on the streets to realize there are resources available to help them, he said.

But he admits the issue is so complex thathe doesn't know the answers. He does, however, believe having a space, like the H4, where people on the street can make one stop to access supports will help.

Brooks ismore than three months sober it's the longest he's been clean since he started using drugs three decades ago.

Living in an apartment at WyandotteStreet West and Bruce Avenue, he recentlygraduated from the Downtown Mission's Phoenix recovery program and is looking for work.

"I feel fortunate that I can look at [where I used to sleep on the streets] and say, 'I've rebounded,'" he said.

"It's a bittersweet thing because when I see other people, I don't judge and I make sure they're OK."