[Sundaycommunity] FW: 43 street nurses are gone due to Ford government funding cuts
Dave Snelgrove
snelgrovedave at gmail.com
Tue Apr 19 19:38:18 PDT 2022
Thank you for airing this. The same exposure of the reality of
homelessness has to hit us over and over again, until tf becomes clear to
elected officials at each level of government that this IS NOT GOING TO
CONTINUE TO BE AN INVISIBLE ISSUE. It's right out there, outside our
doors. Covid has made it worse, by reducing the possibility of community
groups, like the Out of the Colds around the City being able to alleviate,
however modestly, the pain for a few hundreds. This can't stay ignored,
invisible to comfortable middle-class neighbourhoods, some kind of
taken-for-granted reality in Toronto. It isn't going away. If Easter
means anything, it has to include opening our collective eyes and minds to
the need for fresh energy and raising of collective shame. We must act.
Rosemary,
On Tue, Apr 19, 2022 at 9:40 PM Greg Gillis via Sundaycommunity <
sundaycommunity at lists.integralshift.ca> wrote:
> Thanks David, it is good some of the media are drawing attention to these
> issues. Last year's display of police brutality against Toronto's homeless
> was a disgrace to the city and the country. Hopefully, some change is in
> the air come election time.
>
> Greg
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2022 at 9:01 PM David Walsh via Sundaycommunity <
> sundaycommunity at lists.integralshift.ca> wrote:
>
>> It is difficult to believe this is happening in our city.
>>
>> NOW - Op-ed: 43 street nurses are gone due to Ford government funding cuts
>> Spadina-Fort York MPP Chris Glover says the firing of street nurses in
>> Toronto exacerbates the homelessness crisis
>> Apr 18, 2022
>> *Op-ed: 43 street nurses are gone due to Ford government funding cuts
>> (nowtoronto.com)*
>> <https://nowtoronto.com/news/op-ed-43-street-nurses-are-gone-due-to-ford-government-funding-cuts?utm_source=nowtoronto.com&utm_campaign=358c3a9704-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2022_04_19&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_bfaa0e1d4c-358c3a9704-81138686>
>> It’s incredible to think about how callous our society has become. We
>> have a *homelessness crisis* <https://nowtoronto.com/topics/homelessness> compounded
>> by an opioid epidemic and people dying on the streets every day. The City
>> of Toronto is often criticized for its handling of this crisis, but the
>> real blame lies with the provincial and federal governments.
>> The roots of today’s crisis date back decades. In the early 90s, the
>> federal and provincial governments were building 10,000-15,000 affordable
>> housing units per year – mixed income co-ops, public housing and supportive
>> housing for people with mental health and addiction issues. In the mid-90s,
>> the federal Liberals cancelled the federal housing program. The Ontario
>> government then downloaded it onto the city. Since then, almost no
>> affordable or supportive housing has been built.
>> The reason so many people with mental health challenges and intellectual
>> disabilities are homeless dates back to the early 80s, when federal and
>> provincial governments began closing large residential mental health
>> institutions like the Queen Street Mental Health Centre and transitioning
>> people into group homes in the community. Then the governments stopped
>> building group homes.
>> If failing to provide housing for the most vulnerable wasn’t enough,
>> Premier Mike Harris cut Ontario Works (welfare) rates by 21.6 per cent in
>> 1997, arguing that people could survive on a “welfare diet” of pasta
>> without sauce and dented cans of tuna. Successive Conservative and Liberal
>> governments since then have let inflation reduce it further. If you’re
>> wondering why we have a homelessness crisis, the Ontario Works rate of $733
>> per month is not even enough to rent a room.
>> Greed compounded the growing homelessness crisis. In the 90s,
>> pharmaceutical companies like Purdue began aggressively marketing opioids
>> for pain relief, downplaying the addictive nature of the drugs and creating
>> the opioid epidemic that killed more than 5,000 Canadians in 2021.
>> It’s incredible to think about how callous our society has become. We
>> have a *homelessness crisis* <https://nowtoronto.com/topics/homelessness> compounded
>> by an opioid epidemic and people dying on the streets every day. The City
>> of Toronto is often criticized for its handling of this crisis, but the
>> real blame lies with the provincial and federal governments.
>> The roots of today’s crisis date back decades. In the early 90s, the
>> federal and provincial governments were building 10,000-15,000 affordable
>> housing units per year – mixed income co-ops, public housing and supportive
>> housing for people with mental health and addiction issues. In the mid-90s,
>> the federal Liberals cancelled the federal housing program. The Ontario
>> government then downloaded it onto the city. Since then, almost no
>> affordable or supportive housing has been built.
>> The reason so many people with mental health challenges and intellectual
>> disabilities are homeless dates back to the early 80s, when federal and
>> provincial governments began closing large residential mental health
>> institutions like the Queen Street Mental Health Centre and transitioning
>> people into group homes in the community. Then the governments stopped
>> building group homes.
>> If failing to provide housing for the most vulnerable wasn’t enough,
>> Premier Mike Harris cut Ontario Works (welfare) rates by 21.6 per cent in
>> 1997, arguing that people could survive on a “welfare diet” of pasta
>> without sauce and dented cans of tuna. Successive Conservative and Liberal
>> governments since then have let inflation reduce it further. If you’re
>> wondering why we have a homelessness crisis, the Ontario Works rate of $733
>> per month is not even enough to rent a room.
>> Greed compounded the growing homelessness crisis. In the 90s,
>> pharmaceutical companies like Purdue began aggressively marketing opioids
>> for pain relief, downplaying the addictive nature of the drugs and creating
>> the opioid epidemic that killed more than 5,000 Canadians in 2021.
>> Since then, federal and provincial governments have consistently refused
>> to make the investments to bring an end to homelessness, to provide
>> supportive housing for people with intellectual disabilities and mental
>> health challenges and to provide the treatment necessary for people to
>> overcome addictions.
>> As an MPP, I often receive complaints from residents and business owners
>> about the homelessness crisis. And they are absolutely right. We have
>> people living in crisis and too often dying in our streets. Communities and
>> businesses are left to deal with the impacts.
>> But community members and businesses alone cannot fix the crisis created
>> by provincial and federal governments. Only the federal and provincial
>> governments can solve it. And right now, the Ford government is firing 43
>> street nurses.
>> *Chris Glover is an NDP MPP representing Spadina-Fort York in the Ontario
>> legistalture.*
>>
>> *John Tory’s failure of leadership on homelessness is a shame*
>> It's becoming harder to explain away the mayor's inaction when his allies
>> on council are being dispatched to provide cover and do his dirty work
>> *John Tory’s failure of leadership on homelessness is a shame - NOW
>> Magazine (nowtoronto.com)*
>> <https://nowtoronto.com/news/john-torys-failure-of-leadership-on-homelessness-is-a-shame>
>> *BY ENZO DIMATTEO*
>> *Oct 8, 2021*
>>
>>
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