'With lives on the line this winter,' faith leaders urge Toronto to open more warming centre spaces
CBC
Faith leaders are calling on the City of Toronto to open more spaces in its warming centres this winter, saying unhoused people should not be shut out in the cold.
"This is a very easy fix," Rev. Alexa Gilmour, founder and national director of the Stone Soup Network, told CBC Toronto this week.
"There are buildings empty downtown. There are churches empty downtown. There are government spaces empty downtown. Most of us are working from home. We could do this."
On Jan. 5, two days before an unhoused man died in a fatal fire in Liberty Village, about 150 faith leaders delivered a letter to Toronto Mayor John Tory and city councillors demanding an emergency meeting in January about homelessness.
The demand comes as the city's own data shows nearly 9,000 people were using its shelter system as recently as Monday and that the system turned more than 100 people away nightly over the month of December. It also comes as a city council committee is to meet Wednesday to consider shutting down up to five shelter hotels in 2023.
The leaders want the warming centres to be open around the clock and have started an online petition to gain support.
"With lives on the line this winter, people are depending on the city to do more," the letter reads. "We need more room in our hearts for the poor and unhoused."
Tory has not yet said if he will meet with the faith leaders about warming centres.
Alexa said deaths of unhoused people are unacceptable and the letter is a call to action.
"This kind of weather causes injury, causes mental distress, causes death," Gilmour said.
The call for more warming centres is also one of five demands that will be presented to the Toronto Board of Health on Monday in the form of a separate joint open letter by two advocacy groups, the Shelter Housing and Justice Network and Health Providers Against Poverty. The letter is addressed to the city's board of health, economic and community development committee, city council and Tory.
Lorraine Lam, an outreach worker and a member of Shelter and Housing Justice Network, said advocates have collected more than 900 signatures for the open letter in less than 24 hours.
"People have literally nowhere to go," she said. "We're at a breaking point and the city needs to do something different. We are really pushing for the warming centres to open 24/7 all winter. People have no options."
Lam said the advocacy groups want the city to ensure there are 250 spaces at its Metro Hall warming centre, located at 55 John St., which now has 45 spaces. The other two warming centres are at the Scarborough Civic Centre, 150 Borough Dr., and Mitchell Field Community Centre, 89 Church Ave.