Activists in Toronto unite to stop clearing of homeless encampments under Gardiner
Activists from all walks of life gathered in Toronto this morning to try and stop the city and Toronto Police from clearing several homeless encampments under the Gardiner Expressway.
The city had previously placed a moratorium on dismantling encampments throughout the pandemic, but that decision has since been reversed and those experiencing homelessness continue to have their tents and belongings cleared as they try to self-isolate in makeshift structures.
"What's happening right now is just so unnecessary. It's against common sense to be doing this right now," said Jennifer Evans, an acitivist and CEO of software company SqueezeCMM who was on-site to help those under the Gardiner this morning.
"They are robbing these people of their dignity and it's just offensive."
City vehicles at Spadina to evict the one tent on the West side. At 850 am in the middle of a pandemic. #toronto #topoli pic.twitter.com/upP9v2mJcK
— jennifer evans (@nejsnave) May 15, 2020
Evans started her day at Bay and Lakeshore around 7:30 a.m. this morning, where a bulldozer was set to clear a tent that still had a person inside.
The situation was resolved only after an elementary school teacher named Ana stood directly in front of the bulldozer, putting herself in danger in order to help someone less fortunate.
In the middle of a pandemic at 730 am, everyone. #toronto #topoli https://t.co/CskqLHMW5W
— jennifer evans (@nejsnave) May 15, 2020
Evans said city officials on-site told them that nothing further would happen today, so she and fellow activists made their way down to Spadina, where police were threatening to clear the belongings and tents of several other individuals experiencing homelessness.
But it wasn't until they eventually convinced city officials and police to stop the dismantling there too that Evans was informed that — contrary to what they had been promised — everything at Lakeshore had been bulldozed after they left.
Bulldozed at Bay. Lovely#. #Toronto #topoli pic.twitter.com/6kNB8QnFKb
— jennifer evans (@nejsnave) May 15, 2020
"The problem is we can't get a straight answer out of anybody, and these are peoples' lives at stake," Evans told me when explaining that Toronto Police, Streets to Homes (a city-funded program to help people with a history of homelessness transition to permanent housing) and other city agencies with actual authority simply do not know what the other is doing most of the time.
The cops are extremely empathetic. Great dialogue. They don’t want to pull people out of tents either. There’s a game of telephone between the city and the police. Waiting for a sergeant to arrive. #toronto #topoli pic.twitter.com/ONm2OL1UBI
— jennifer evans (@nejsnave) May 15, 2020
She said some of the people whose tents have been cleared have been offered hotel rooms to self-isolate, but others are being sent to shelters which are even worse than tents due to ongoing COVID-19 outbreaks.
Not everyone here at Bay and Lakeshore is getting hotel, just the main guy from the big tent. pic.twitter.com/xsT26R1NyM
— Doug Johnson Hatlem (@djjohnso) May 15, 2020
As of May 14 at 4 p.m., there have been a total of 346 positive COVID-19 cases linked to all shelter outbreaks in the city. There are currently at least 301 active outbreaks reported among the city's shelters, and two people experiencing homelessness have died from the virus in Toronto to date.
"We either need to get people into hotels, and the city has loads of empty hotel rooms, or we have to let people self-isolate in tents," Evans said, adding that Seeds of Hope — an organization for which she serves as a board member — has been working for months to provide tents to let people isolate so they don't infect others if they do get sick.
That is a coffee table. With magazines. And candles. And a shoes outside. And a sign. Please do not take down my home, this tiny island of order I have created in the middle of a nightmare. Please do not take away my dignity. #toronto #topoli pic.twitter.com/7x7AXExLCx
— jennifer evans (@nejsnave) May 15, 2020
If it were up to her, Evans says she would allow those experiencing homelessness to set up tents in several parks across the city and ensure that each location is equipped with food and sanitation tents for the duration of the pandemic. Then, she says, permanent options such as modular housing must be provided as quickly as possible.
She also said she and other advocates will continue to show up under the Gardiner each day to prevent encampments from being cleared.
From this morning: A man panhandles on a rainy offramp while city vehicles assemble to clean out/evict under the Gardiner. Today, it was stopped. 👊 We’ll be back on Tues, Weds, later today, next week - as often as it takes until ppl are safely housed. #toronto #TOpoli #covid19 pic.twitter.com/HlbP3Xf9Pf
— jennifer evans (@nejsnave) May 15, 2020
"There's humanity here. These are people that just want to have lives and we treat them like trash," Evans told me through tears.
"All they're trying to do is show us that they fell on hard times... They're not bad people, they just need a little help."
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