Close X
Saturday, December 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds Agree To Open Toronto Armoury To Homeless Amid Frigid Temperatures

The Canadian Press, 05 Jan, 2018 01:05 PM
    TORONTO — Canada's public safety minister says a downtown armoury in Toronto is being opened as a temporary homeless shelter for two weeks.
     
    The decision by Ralph Goodale comes as the city experiences an unusually frigid spell and a spike in demand on its homeless shelter system.
     
     
    In a tweet, Goodale says the federal government accepted a request from the city and Ontario to make the Moss Park Armoury available.
     
     
    Earlier this week, Toronto Mayor John Tory said the city was revisiting a shelved proposal to open the facility to the homeless.
     
     
    Goodale says the armoury will be open 24-7 for the duration.
     
     
    He says all levels of government are working together to keep people safe from the cold.
     
     
    Temperatures in Toronto have dropped to around -20 C for several nights, prompting thousands of residents to sign a petition in favour of opening the armoury.
     
     
    The facility, just on the eastern edge of the downtown core, is close to a supervised injection site and near other shelters where scores of people seek refuge every day.
     
     
    City data indicate Toronto's shelters were close to full last weekend with 5,460 people staying in the shelter system on Jan. 1. Another 445 people used winter-respite centres — temporary shelters opened up only during cold months.
     
     
    Tory has said the armoury would add about 100 beds to an already overtaxed system that has seen demand surge by 30 per cent over the same time last year. The city has six other winter respite centres.
     
     
    Toronto has promised to increase shelter capacity by 400 beds in the coming months and to build new facilities this year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Freezing Rain Warnings Issued For Sea To Sky Hwy., Other Parts Of B.C.

    Freezing Rain Warnings Issued For Sea To Sky Hwy., Other Parts Of B.C.
    Freezing rain warnings have been posted for several parts of the province and drivers are urged to use extreme caution today as they travel between Vancouver and Whistler or into the southern Interior from the Lower Mainland.

    Freezing Rain Warnings Issued For Sea To Sky Hwy., Other Parts Of B.C.

    Police Continue To Investigate Head-on Sea To Sky Collision That Killed Two

    Police Continue To Investigate Head-on Sea To Sky Collision That Killed Two
    Two people died and six others suffered injuries in a crash on the Sea to Sky Highway, and police say a pickup truck and a minivan with seven people inside were involved.

    Police Continue To Investigate Head-on Sea To Sky Collision That Killed Two

    Father Charged With Second-degree Murder In B.C. Sisters' Deaths

    Father Charged With Second-degree Murder In B.C. Sisters' Deaths
      OAK BAY, B.C. — The father of two girls who were found dead in a Victoria-area home on Christmas Day has been charged with two counts of second-degree murder.

    Father Charged With Second-degree Murder In B.C. Sisters' Deaths

    No Charges Against Vancouver Cop Whose Police Dog Injured Suspect During Arrest

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's prosecution service has announced no charges will be laid against a Vancouver police officer who deployed his police service dog during the arrest of a suspect.

    No Charges Against Vancouver Cop Whose Police Dog Injured Suspect During Arrest

    Niagara Falls A Winter Wonderland That Draws Tourists During Frigid Weather

    Niagara Falls A Winter Wonderland That Draws Tourists During Frigid Weather
    Diane Zhao has made the journey from China to Niagara Falls three times before, but she has never seen it like this — a veritable ice palace, straight out of a fairy tale.

    Niagara Falls A Winter Wonderland That Draws Tourists During Frigid Weather

    'Sounds More Like North Korea Than Canada,' Says Artist Behind Stalled Subway Art

    'Sounds More Like North Korea Than Canada,' Says Artist Behind Stalled Subway Art
    Two artists behind a controversial art installation commissioned for a newly opened subway station in Toronto say the city's refusal to greenlight the project has ironically achieved what the art was meant to do — spark a debate about free speech.

    'Sounds More Like North Korea Than Canada,' Says Artist Behind Stalled Subway Art

    PrevNext