Visioning underway for gay homeless youth shelter
NEWS / Group seeks input at early stage
Rob Salerno / Toronto / Monday, December 13, 2010
Share |

An ad hoc group of concerned youth workers is trying to build support for a new homeless shelter for gay and trans youth.

The Spectrum Youth Needs Committee (SYNC) is holding community consultations around Toronto to determine what homeless queer youth need and how best to proceed with the project. One outreach meeting was held Dec 9 at Harbord Collegiate Institute and more are planned for Toronto’s north, east and west ends.

Alex Abramovich, who has been studying the homeless queer youth problem as part of her PhD thesis at University of Toronto-OISE, says that between 25 and 40 percent of homeless youth are estimated to identify as lesbian, gay, bi or trans. Most often these youth leave home or are kicked out due to physical or emotional abuse related to their sexual identity.

Some report feeling unsafe in the existing shelter environment because of homophobia and transphobia from staff and other residents, Abramovich says. This is a particular concern among trans youth, who often say they feel unwelcome in gender-specific shared environments like dorms and bathrooms.

The need for better services for homeless gay, bi and trans youth has been discussed for years, but momentum picked up this fall when city council candidate Michael Erickson made the establishment of a queer youth shelter a key part of his platform. Although Erickson lost the election, he says his support for the project acted as a “lightning rod for people who’ve been doing work on this.”

“We had an initial meeting,” Erickson says, “and a few of us took responsibility to hold community outreach meetings, so we would have a broad base of people who wanted to contribute their time and ideas to the project.”

If the first consultation is any indication, a host of obstacles must be overcome before the proposed shelter becomes a reality, not least of which is resolving the many conflicting desires and goals of the project’s boosters.

A fundamental question is whether there needs to be a queer-only shelter at all. Some participants in the most recent consultation suggested that it might be better to improve services for queer youth within existing shelters, as homeless youth might be reluctant to enter a shelter that identifies them as queer.

Erickson says that hoping to make the existing shelters queer-friendly is misguided.

“I don’t think it’s possible,” he says. “The shelter system replicates the presence of homophobia in our society. You can’t ask youth going through the most traumatic point in their lives to be on their best behaviour.”

Other questions focus on practicalities. Should it be in the Church-Wellesley neighbourhood or not? How would a shelter operate? Would it be an emergency shelter for short-term stays with fewer beds and services available, or is a longer-term transitional home necessary to help queer youth live independently? Should the shelter be run by the city or operate independently through donations from the community?

Those at Harbord seemed united on other core needs for queer youth accessing a shelter. An ideal shelter would have private, gender-neutral beds and bathrooms available for trans residents. It would also have medical, counselling and job-training services, and safe communal spaces. Many also expressed hope that there would be queer-identified staff on site.

“One of the things I’ve experienced in the past doing this kind of community work is that we’re focused on critique and consequences,” says Erickson. “But it can’t be worse than it currently is. Suicide is the number one cause of death for youth in our province, often because of identity issues. Youth are dying because they don’t have this.”

SYNC is seeking members to contribute their time, skills and ideas. Email synctoronto@gmail.com for a membership form and to find out when future consultation meetings will take place.


Share |


Reader Comments


 
good news
I'm very glad to hear that there's starting to be movement around creating a shelter for homeless LGBT folks. I can't imagine how difficult it must be to be homeless in the first but to be facing homophobia and heterosexism in the standard shelter system would just make matters so much worse. I think we need ot do a lot more to support kids who are kicked out of their homes for being LGBT so they don't find themselves having to resort to prostitution to survive, don't get me wrong, I have nothing against sex workers but doing that sort of work should be a choice and not something they get forced into out of necessity. As well a proper LGBT shelter might help reduce the likely hood of young LGBT folks getting involved in the drug scene which combined with raging hormones at such a young age is a recipe for getting HIV. I've known of too many young gay guys who were kicked out of there family homes for being gay who went the drug and prostitution route out of necessity, well the sex work came first and the drug/alcohol abuse followed and everyone I've known who went that route is now HIV positive and just barely into their 20s. Its more than bad enough they were rendered homeless when their parents found out they're gay, the rest could have been prevented if we as a society had been more attentive to their needs.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
12/15/10 7:17 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Redirecting energy and resources
In the last year, a lot of resources, energy and emotion have been spent by numerous individuals and groups in the gay community as a result of QuAIA's mission to bring poisonous Mideast politics to Pride. It's too bad that those resources and that energy and emotion couldn't instead be shifted to creating a gay homeless youth shelter. But, I doubt there will be a change: the opposing individuals and groups in the QuAIA controversy have too much invested at this point to stand down. And, since there will be a legacy of bitterness on both sides, I doubt that the opposing individuals and groups would be willing to work together on a common project. (For example, if I received a letter from one of the gay community partisans who support QuAIA asking me to give time or money to the shelter project, I would not respond to their request). So, I think the project to create a gay homeless youth shelter will have to be led by people who are not aligned with the public actors in the QuAIA controversy.
Bill, Toronto Ontario
12/19/10 11:29 AM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
rather sad
Bill that's rather sad that'd you'd prefer to see homeless LGBT youth suffer than work with someone who took an opposing view on the QuAIA issue. It rather makes me doubt you'd work with anyone to help homeless LGBT youth.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
12/20/10 5:41 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.