By Jennifer Stone (Executive Director) & Brendan Jowett (Staff Housing Lawyer)
On May 15, 2020, we joined community members along Lakeshore Blvd. W., between Spadina and Bay St., where the City of Toronto had given residents notice that they intended to clear tents and belongings of homeless people camped under the Gardiner Expressway. It was rainy and cold. The eviction notice originally said that the clearance would take place before 8am at Spadina and Lakeshore. A bit of cat-and-mouse took place instead. A community organizer at Lakeshore & Bay Street alerted us that in fact the frontloader/garbage trucks were there at 8am and set to clear another encampment. Those who had gathered at Spadina ran to Bay. You’ve perhaps seen the dramatic image of an elementary school teacher named Ana standing between a tent and bulldozer.
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Our Executive Director spoke with other community agency representatives from @StreetHealthTO, @TODropinNetwork, @SanctuaryTO at a press conference hosted by the Regent Park Community Health Centre on May 4th, to speak about the impact of #Covid19 on longstanding homeless, opioid and poverty crises. This was her statement:
Statement Originally Published July 2, 2019
Low income residents of Toronto’s downtown east side (NLS's client community) are facing hard times. Living here is increasingly unaffordable and once again supportive services are being cut back. Whether at the municipal, provincial or the national level, it is no longer possible to get all the help needed to push through the bureaucratic grind. Subsidized housing especially seems beyond reach for those on the waiting list. Getting decent income, whether through disability benefits or secure employment, is another dream, just or well beyond one’s grasp. And seeking permanent residence in Canada, whether through the refugee process or on humanitarian & compassionate grounds, is to wait and endure loss: of self-worth and confidence, of connections with children, spouses and other family members, and to live and be treated as a displaced person. The following post is reproduced from Justice for Children and Youth, to read the post on their site click HERE
COURT: FEDERAL COURT, 2019 JFCY WAS A PUBLIC INTEREST LITIGANT IN A PROCEEDING BEFORE THE FEDERAL COURT SEEKING THE RIGHT OF APPLICANTS FOR CITIZENSHIP TO SEEK AN EXEMPTION (OR REDUCTION OF FEES) IN CASES OF SPECIAL AND UNUSUAL HARDSHIP. BELOW IS THE NOTICE ISSUED FOLLOWING THE SETTLEMENT OF THE CASE, LINKS TO THE SETTLEMENT ORDER, AND THE MATERIALS FILED WITH THE COURT. |
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