Homeless struggle for
shelter from coming cold
More
Canadians are living on the streets than ever
By
Debra Fieguth
ChristianWeek staff

COURTESY OF THE
SCOTT MISSION
A
homeless man finds a place to sleep outside
Toronto's
Scott Mission. |
While many
Canadians are buying warmer parkas and adding
insulation to their houses to prepare for what is
expected to be a tougher-than-usual winter, an
estimated 300,000 residents of this land
dont even have a place they can call home. The homeless, especially in
Canadas largest city, are increasing in
numbers as well as kinds of people, observes
David Adcock, associate executive director of
Torontos Yonge Street Mission.
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While many Canadians are buying warmer
parkas and adding insulation to their houses to prepare
for what is expected to be a tougher-than-usual winter,
an estimated 300,000 residents of this land dont
even have a place they can call home.
The homeless, especially in
Canadas largest city, are increasing in numbers as
well as kinds of people, observes David Adcock, associate
executive director of Torontos Yonge Street
Mission.
"One of the growing concerns is
young parents without any fixed address," says
Adcock. "We see increasing numbers of young mothers
with children who are inadequately housed." A recent
study indicates that of 26,000 people who sometimes use
hostels in Toronto, 5,300 are children under 16. In
addition, there are at least several thousand street kids
in Toronto alone. Another 4,500 people are chronic hostel
users.
The shortage of adequate housing is so
critical in Toronto that a city study projects that if
2,000 units of housing were added every year for the next
10 years, it would only keep pace with the problem.
Life in a stairwell
Theresa Doucette, now 30, has lived at
Yonge Streets Genesis housing project for four
years. Before that, she spent about a dozen years on and
off the street, and recalls her experiences with mixed
feelings.
"At one point we had a stairwell
that was really cool," she remembers. "They
didnt find us for about four months." She and
her friends could get money to eat by panhandling, and
for blankets they would raid the linen closets of
downtown hotels. Then one of the squatters left the
stairwell in the middle of the night and ran into a
security guard.
"We were all thrown back onto the
street."
Living on the street
Doucette, the mother of a
two-and-a-half year-old daughter and pregnant with her
third child (the first was given up for adoption 10 years
ago), plans to get married next year. She just finished
high school and hopes to become a chef.
She has already come a long way since
she started prostituting at 14. She left home at 15
because of an abusive stepfather and ended up, like many
other young people, doing drugs on the streets of
Toronto.
Living on the street with your friends,
she explains, is easier than taking abuse from people who
are supposed to love you and care for you.
"Having nowhere to live is
different from having no home," she adds. When she
was with her friends, they would look out for each other,
"and thats like a home."
Elsewhere in Canada, Christian
ministries are preparing for the winters influx of
cold, hungry people as best as they can. Some churches in
Vancouver are following Torontos lead by
establishing an "Out of the Cold" program,
offering their basements as shelter on a rotating basis.
In from the cold
In Montreal, the Welcome Hall Mission
can accommodate 40 to 45 men in its emergency shelter,
says director Edward Raddatz. But the shelter is already
full to capacity and the mission is hoping to receive a
grant soon so it can convert single beds to bunk beds.
"We have people sleeping on the floor right
now," says Raddatz.
When the mission is full, staff refer
people to other shelters, including that run by The
Salvation Army. "Theres enough
provision," says Raddatz, "so people
shouldnt have to sleep in alleyways."
In Winnipeg, where the temperature can
sink to minus 30C and stay there for days on end, mission
staff cruise the streets at night looking for anyone left
out in the cold. The Salvation Armys Weetamah
Centre, which offers an assortment of activities for
young people, has been stockpiling hats and mitts since
last years mild winter.
"We have four or five garbage bags
[of toques and mitts] ready to go," says Weetamah
director Mark Young.
The homeless crisis has been garnering
much media attention lately, and some activists have
asked for the government to declare the situation a
national disaster. Yonge Streets Adcock sees the
crisis as an opportunity. While the government has a
responsibility to provide infrastructure for better and
more housing, that infrastructure provides the setting
for people of faith to work compassionately.
"We go about it in a sense of
relationship," he explains.
"If we as people of faith can
respond to the people that are in those situations rather
than just to the media attention, we do have the
opportunity to demonstrate in clear ways that people who
love God love people."
Theresa Doucette is grateful to be
living in a place where she knows she wont be
evicted if she forgets to pay the rent one month or
cant quite make the payment. "I think
theres a lot of buildings in Toronto that can be
turned into housing for people who still need help in
life to get along," she adds.
"The street is an easy escape from
life because you have no responsibilities there, no one
telling you what to do," she says.
"The problem is youre never
going to be happy if youre living on the
street."
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