As New Toronto residents prepare for a public meeting with City officials about a potential homeless shelter, another community fighting shelters say it has been a terrible experience.
Members of the Midtown area held a virtual meeting on August 19 in regards to three temporary shelters in their area that are the subject of protests and angst.
Residents told the meeting they are being vilified or called anti-homeless for not wanting the shelters in their area. Some suggest crime in the area has increased.
Councillor Mike Colle, who represents Ward 8, Eglinton-Lawrence, says residents were not notified.
“This has been a total screw-up, a total lack of communication of informing people,” Colle told the CBC.
Colle said the City failed to consult the community before it opened the shelters and even his office was not consulted.
“People are afraid to walk on Yonge Street. They’ve been broken into,” he told the meeting. “There are physical threats.”
He said the Uptown Yonge BIA has had to hire private security to protect shopkeepers and their staff when they go to work. He said he has had to rely on the private security for information.
Residents in the New Toronto area still in the dark about when public consultation will take place for the homeless shelter planned at Lake Shore Blvd. W., and Eighth St., the site of an empty office building and BiWay store.
City Council is slated to make a determination on the shelter on September 30.
News of the shelter has split residents of New Toronto into those who want the shelter and the home and business owners who do not.
In Midtown, the City has leased three properties, the Roehampton hotel and two adjacent buildings on Broadway Ave. for use as shelters. A site at 55/65 Broadway Ave. is closing at the end of this month, but the city has a two-year lease for the Roehampton.