Out in the cold
ONTARIO NEWS / Experts say government cuts have created a 'crisis' for homeless queer youth
Lee Marshall / Toronto / Thursday, December 06, 2012
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Drastic budget cuts in Ontario will make life more dangerous for homeless queer youth this winter, experts say.
 
The province’s Community Start Up and Maintenance Benefit will end in January 2013. The $114 million benefit supports 200,000 individuals a year, including youth living in unhealthy or abusive home environments. Ontario will give $62.6 million to municipalities so they can address emergency housing at a local level – but this is only half of what the province currently allocates for the benefit.
 
The cut coincides with an exploding need for housing assistance in Toronto. Evergreen Yonge Street Mission, a Toronto charity, helped 811 people find housing in 2011, up from 213 people in 2010. Fourteen youth shelters in the city have a total capacity of 525 beds. But a report from Covenant House, a downtown youth shelter, estimates that 1,500 to 2,000 youth are homeless on any given night in Toronto.
 
I Alex Abramovich, one of the only Canadians studying queer youth homelessness, says “cutting this benefit is a very very bad idea.” Approximately 25 to 40 percent of homeless youth are lesbian, gay, bisexual or trans, and “it is a crisis that is definitely on the rise,” Abramovich says. This estimate doesn’t include the “hidden homeless” who avoid shelters or queer youth who are afraid to come out due to violence in the system. An American study from 2011 estimates that as many as one in four lesbian or gay teens are homeless.
I Alex Abramovich says that 25 to 40 percent of homeless youth are lesbian, gay, bisexual or trans.
 
A number of day programs provide food, healthcare and support for Toronto’s homeless queer youth, but Abramovich says they still need a specialized shelter. “LGBT youth avoid the shelter system because it is an extremely dangerous place for them . . . This benefit is helping them maintain some sort of housing or helping them stay away from a system which they have said is dangerous. Cutting this benefit is going to make it even more dangerous for them.”
 
Teal-Rose Jaques, 23, is a trans woman who left home when she was 18 years old. Jaques was in the shelter system for five years and says that staff at one shelter wouldn’t recognize her chosen name, making it difficult to receive phone calls. They also didn’t let her go to the dining room wearing feminine clothing.
 
Beyond feeling unwelcome, Jaques didn’t always feel safe. She found that an X had been cut with a knife on the Positive Space sticker on her bedroom door. She was called a “fag” and was verbally threatened by another resident. Staff did not respond to either incident, she says.
 
Jaques is much happier living in her own apartment. “There is no way that I would have been able to get the apartment that I’m in now without Start Up,” she says. 
 
She also used benefit money to buy a computer so she could attend school. This summer, she graduated from George Brown College.
 
Evergreen housing worker Victoria Clarke says that cutting the benefit will be “catastrophic” for all street youth. Clarke wants the community to participate in the fight against homelessness. Even as little as $3 for transportation will help; Clarke sees between 12 and 17 clients a day but has only 10 transit tokens to hand out. This means half her clients have no way to get to meetings with potential landlords.
 
Beyond financial support, Clarke thinks street youth need more compassion because many are victims of severe abuse and simply have nowhere else to go.
Evergreen housing worker Victoria Clarke says cutting the provincial benefit will be 'catastrophic' for all street youth.
 
The Spectrum Youth Needs Committee launched an initiative to build a shelter for homeless queer youth in 2010, but the project has been on hiatus for a year. Michael Erickson, a former NDP candidate for Etobicoke-Lakeshore who led the initiative, says he hopes to revisit it in the new year.
 
Meanwhile, this summer, Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti, who leads Toronto’s Homelessness Task Force, announced plans to shut down the shelter system and force homeless people off the streets and into transitional housing. “When it comes to talks about opening up a specialized shelter, I think people are really reluctant to be open to these ideas – because of these plans,” Abramovich says.
 
Councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam (Ward 27) says the cuts are “very problematic” and a “grave concern.” But she says the city will champion specialized transitional housing over a specialized shelter.
 
Wong-Tam says transitional housing is more economical and has a more lasting effect on the community. She is “very, very supportive” of working with the community to provide specialized transitional housing once the real estate and operating funds have been secured.
 
But this winter, queer youth will be out in the cold.
 
  


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Reader Comments


 
This is important to address
My experience dealing with gay men in the shelter/rooming house continuum as both a client and later a worker indicated a growing need to deal with midlife and ageing men and a smaller number of women (who seems to have better social supports, anecdotally). Not to downplay the problems faced by youth, but they aren't the only demographic of our communities who are at risk, but they always seem to be the focus. Middle aged men, often with addictions and psychoses underlying their homelessness are a little less cuddly to profile in Xtra, but no less in need of services and safety. The shelter system is difficult socially for anyone, but for gay men it can be terrifying, especially if they have mental health issues or HIV, which also presents challenges holding onto and taking medications with some privacy. The threat of violence is omnipresent. Their fear was jarring. I hope we can do more to identify ways to help them through this system. I personally went through detox and into the half-way house system and it was a nightmare. I hope Councillor Wong-Tam sticks to this file and does something with it. The last councillor had little compassion for the poor and underhoused/homeless or the problems of violence they face every days - especially if they are gay. A lot of people came through the AIDS crisis very damaged, losing partners and friends. We need some compassion. The spectrum of gay is much broader than tends to be shown in Xtra. We're not all successful real estate agents or artists. Some of us struggle greatly and live hand to mouth and depend on foodbanks. Please show a broader range of life experiences than the 28 year-old white healthy gym bunnies. The real world is a little more complex and gritty.
Anonymous, Toronto ON
12/07/12 2:37 PM EST
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Wong-Tam is way too busy
with initiatives in Africa, censoring Gay Male posters, and closing of the Schoolhouse...Gay Youth be dammed! Transitional shelter, Wong-Tam? Yea right, what exactly are they transitioning into? Where is the permanent safe secure affordable housing Wong-Tam? Are you willing to insist that Gay youth at risk, HIV positive people and Canadian citizens are considered to be priority for subsidized housing, rather than priority lavished upon "sponsored" refugee claimants/immigrants? Come clean Wong-Tam. As to "Anonymous" posting above. You are right! There is a serious and severe crisis for middle-aged Gay Men in the city. Trust what you see. You are correct. Issues of health, safe-housing, food, constant threats of violence, abuse, discrimination,lack of addiction treatment and mental/emotional health issues. These poor men, of which many are living under serious anxiety and daily fear need serious services and help. These mens lives were essentially destroyed/shifted/uprooted in many ways by the losses suffered by AIDS, and so here we are. I think some people thought a loss of such a magnitude wouldn't result in such a crisis? That's dumb. I am disgusted by the gay community for treating their HIV brothers and sisters like the Nazi's treated the Jews in the 1930's and for their continuing abusive treatment against middle-age gay men.
Anonymous, Toronto Ontario
12/08/12 12:03 PM EST
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Re: This is important to address
Thank you for that thoughtful and articulate response. Much respect to you.
Joe Manson, Toronto Ontario
12/08/12 4:18 PM EST
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All twaddle and no action?
The only way a LGBT youth shelter is going to be built in Toronto is if some enterprising entertainment headliner and supporter for LGBT rights, takes it upon themselves to donate the trust fund money to do so, as did Cyndi Lauper in Manhattan in 2011. Toronto politico Michael Erickson is a well mean individual, with his finger in too many pies. In 2010 in was going to help open a queer youth shelter, but since then, has invested his Rubles in the Glad Day Bookshop. Well good for him, we should expect no more or less. Lots of twaddle about opening a queer youth shelter, but no committee formed to do so, how come?
michel f. pare, toronto ON
12/09/12 2:30 PM EST
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nothing for mid life gay men
Anonymous, good points. One example is that mental health issues are rampant in middle aged gay men for many complex reasons yet this obvious cohort gets no services targeted to them at CAMH who only provide the "Rainbow LGBTTQIQA Services" focused on drinking and drugs amongst a group so diverse they have nothing in common but a crazy string of letters (which is a great way to reverse discriminate against mid life gay men who many of the other letters see as "privileged"). It would be a shame if anyone bothered to care.
david, Toronto Ontario
12/17/12 12:07 PM EST
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re: nothing for mid life gay men
david at one point CAMH's Rainbow Serviceproblems but that part got cut, along with a lot of other things at CAMH since they have to pay for their shiny new buildings that were never really needed since they don't add space or services but just consolidate it in one location while shutting down other locations. Rainbow Services still does provide assistance for queer people with both addiction and mental health problems though. As well despite the alphabet soup they do place people into appropriate groups, for example they have specific groups for gay men with addiction problems, gay men with addiction and mental health problems, the same for lesbians and trans people, as well as groups for whatever letter of the alphabet soup with specific types of addiction and/or mental health problems as well as more generalized LGBTQ groups. At your assessment they'll determine which sort of group would best fit your needs though often the short term intro groups are mixed the longer term therapy groups may or may not be mixed depending on the needs of the individual. If you're seeking the residential treatment program and wish to be in a specific sort of group you may have to wait for it since they don't run all types of residential groups continuously. Rainbow Services at CAMH does an awful lot with their limited budget, their staff is top notch and extremely hard working. What I wish were being talked about more is all the cuts going on at CAMH to pay for consolidating services from across the city to that one location. I'm not sure who is supposed to benefit from this, perhaps some staff and Drs who no longer have to travel to different sites in the city but it isn't helping the clients. Mind you I'm told the new residential units have more privacy and are more comfortable. I've seen the ones in the addiction building and they're pretty comfy.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
12/17/12 11:25 PM EST
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editing problem
the first line should've read "Rainbow Services did offer services for purely mental health related problems..."
Rich, Toronto Ontario
12/17/12 11:27 PM EST
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keep the focus please
rich, I work in mental health and know camh services and their new facility has not been a rob peter to pay paul situation as you claim at all. My issue was with the total lack of any mental health programming targeted to gay men as prevention and recovery -- not clinical crisis in-patient, but long-term community support for a neglected population and not a program like the former Addiction Research Foundation's rainbow focus on drinking and drug addiction. Community support groups for mid life gay men with mental health recovery needs -- where is it in Toronto? Toronto services are all based on trendy "needs" groups of the moment and trans has been the cause de jour for the past decade, so maybe middle aged gay men will come back into the "needs" picture at some point. Like when we're all dead.
david, Toronto Ontario
12/18/12 8:13 AM EST
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