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City of Thunder Bay proposes new site for temporary shelter village
City of Thunder Bay proposes new site for temporary shelter village

CBC

time03-04-2025

  • Politics
  • CBC

City of Thunder Bay proposes new site for temporary shelter village

Thunder Bay city administration is proposing a new site for a temporary shelter village, which would provide stability and support for the city's unhoused population. The new site is located at 1111 Fort William Road, across from the CLE grounds, on a parcel of land owned by the Lakehead Region Conservation Authority (LRCA). "There's two main factors that went into recommending this site," said Rilee Willianen, encampment response lead with the city. "First being that we did an assessment of municipally-owned options, or reassessment, and it failed to really yield any strong options," she said. "And it was also mentioned a couple of times in the public engagement survey." "So those two reasons got us to talk about the property internally, and it aligns really well with our site selection criteria and it represents the most viable move forward." City council has not yet made a final decision on the site; a report recommending council approve it as the location for the temporary shelter village will go to council on Monday. The report to council lists a number of advantages to building the village at the Fort William Road site. They include: its proximity to support services; available space; readiness for construction (the property is flat and clear, and close to existing services like power, water, and sewer); emergency access, and safety considerations (a fence would be built to limit access to the Neebing-McIntyre floodway, and create a barrier between the village and a residential property just south of it). In addition, Willianen said the site is within view of one of the city's Eye on the Street cameras, and staff and security would be on-site 24/7. However, even if councillors vote in favour of the new spot, there would still be work required before the initiative can move forward. Since the site is owned by the Lakehead Region Conservation Authority (LRCA), a lease agreement between the LRCA and city would need to be in place. In addition, the project may require the approval of the Minister of the Environment, Conservation, and Parks, the report to council states. At its March 26 meeting, the LRCA board approved the city's request in principle, subject to a lease agreement, ministerial approval, and a final approval by the LRCA board, said board chair Donna Blunt. "The Lakehead Region Conservation Authority recognizes that collaboration and cooperation are required to effectively address the needs and concerns of the community, unhoused members of the community, and those experiencing housing insecurity," Blunt said. " As such, the LRCA is prepared to assist the City of Thunder Bay should it be determined that we are able to do so." "So we will make those considerations as we move forward, and we've just approved in principle going forward and gathering more information." The report states the city has budgeted $5 million for the project — that would include any lease payments and the possible construction of a pedestrian crosswalk on Fort William Road — and the city has been approved for about $2.8 million in external funding if certain milestones are hit. Those include completing "at least 80 units and ancillary structures by December 31, 2025," the report states. Willianen said the site is large enough to hold up to 100 mini-cabin units, and the process by which residents would be allowed to move in to the village is still to be determined. If council approves the site on Monday, "our next steps will be some collaborative public engagement with the LRCA and then also our own engagement with service providers and community partners," she said. As long as the city starts construction by July, Willianen said, they'll be in a good position to meet the Dec. 31 deadline and receive the extra funding. "We need to support our citizens," Willianen said. "We've seen year-over-year increases in people experiencing homelessness, increases in encampments in public spaces. We have a duty to care for all of our citizens and to manage public health and public safety risks." The city had previously recommended a site on Miles Street East, but councillors voted that suggestion down in the fall, instead directing city administration to look at other potential locations for the village. "I'm in favour of this particular site that administration is putting forward," Westfort Coun. Kristen Oliver said. "I think that it provides an opportunity to support people living in crisis, to create a space where we can phase in some temporary village housing to get people into more-secure housing with a roof over their head." McKellar Ward Coun. Brian Hamilton — the proposed new site is in the McKellar Ward — said the village is intended to provide people with more than simply shelter. "This is to provide people with the sanctity and the dignity of actually having a home, actually having an address, actually having a place to put their things and to not be uprooted every single night and cast out into the street," he said. "This is much more than what the current capacity provides." Hamilton said he wasn't opposed to the Miles Street location. "I still think, actually, the Miles Street may be the better of the two sites," he said. "It's just, for that scale, I think this site could probably work a little bit better." "I have yet to reach out to partners to find out that their thoughts on the site," Hamilton said. "The fact is though, too, there is not going to be a perfect site." "There's going to be green flags and red flags on just about any site that we choose. I think this site and the Miles Street are both good, but I think maybe our work is to explain to the public exactly what we're doing here, that this is going to be a secured site and it's going to be done in partnership and coordination with a number of external organizations that will be assisting us in providing these very, very critical stabilization services."

Ottawa to spend over $3M on mental health, addictions support in northwestern Ontario
Ottawa to spend over $3M on mental health, addictions support in northwestern Ontario

CBC

time03-03-2025

  • Health
  • CBC

Ottawa to spend over $3M on mental health, addictions support in northwestern Ontario

Funding split across 4 projects in region The federal government says it will spend more than $3 million to support mental health and addictions outreach efforts in northwestern Ontario. Ya'ara Saks, federal minister of mental health and addictions and associate minister of health, made the announcement on Friday in Thunder Bay, Ont., at city hall. The city has the highest opioid-related death rate in the province, according to the latest information from the Office of the Chief Coroner. At a rate of 78.16 deaths per 100,000 population in the first half of 2024, that's more than five times the provincial average of 15.7 deaths per 100,000 population. As the region's only supervised consumption site, Path 525, closes at the end of March in Thunder Bay, a new Homelessness and Addiction Recovery Treatment (HART) Hub is slated to open in its place. "I know how much this community cares about saving lives and being on the front and centre in northern Ontario of the overdose crisis in the illicit toxic drug supply that is harming so many communities," Saks said. "There's too many Canadians who lost their lives to this tragic and unrelenting public health crisis that has touched the lives of too many families, friends, neighbours and loved ones." $237,960 for the City of Thunder Bay and NorWest Community Health Centres (NWCHC) to expand mobile outreach services and create an encampment response team. $1,909,367 for Marten Falls First Nation to provide a mobile response unit for crisis outreach, counselling, culturally-relevant programming, and connections to treatment. $141,875 for Beendigen Inc. to purchase a community mobile unit to offer harm reduction services. In all, the Emergency Treatment Fund includes more than $11 million for 14 projects across Canada, Saks said. More than 350 project applications were received, over 70 per cent of which came from Indigenous communities. "Meeting people where they are at with programs and projects that make sense, that open doors, that help people when they need it in that moment," said Saks. "Because if it's not today that we help them, if it's not today that we don't talk, that we don't reach out to them, what will happen tomorrow?" Outreach work and on-site support Rilee Willianen, the city's encampment response lead, said the new encampment response team will allow the city to lead outreach efforts in tent communities, supporting its human rights based approach to homelessness. "[It] will connect with the folks who are living in the encampments and build relationships with them so eventually, they can be in a place to improve their circumstances," Willianen said. "This funding will help support us to do that, which will help us then to address encampments, which also then helps to address public health and public safety concerns." While a number of organizations provide support at the city's encampments already, Willianen said having the city partner with NWCHC allows it to expand its involvement in an effective and appropriate way. "One of our benefits as a smaller community is that we all work really well together, so this is just a further demonstration of how important it is to work together and to continue doing that work in a good way." As for the EFSNWO, executive director Lindsay Martin said the funding is supporting the operational costs of hiring more staff; namely, a substance use health co-ordinator, two full-time peer support workers and one part-time peer support worker. The organization supports women and gender-diverse people involved in the criminal justice system, many of whom are experiencing homelessness, mental health or addiction issues. The staff members will be at EFSNWO's transitional housing units to provide on-site support, Martin said. "It will be really impactful to help support the key population of those leaving incarceration and those who are unhoused and to be able to support them on their substance use journey in an alternative sort of non-clinical type of way," they explained. The organization takes a harm reduction approach to addiction, which means supporting people who are in active addiction by reducing the harms around substance use. Examples of this are providing new needles, sterile drug equipment, and naloxone kits which are used to reverse the effects of an opioid overdose. While the province has scaled back harm reduction with the upcoming closure of supervised consumption sites — as HART hubs will not allow supervised drug consumption, needle exchange or safer supply programs — Martin said it's an integral part of addiction services. "It's really key to be able to support them wherever they're at on their journey and not always directing somebody into a formatted, prescribed, forced recovery process when they're not necessarily ready," said Martin. "It's not about what a government's looking for. It's not a public health directive. It's individual."

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