Cambridge council supports Ontario's Big City Mayors resolution addressing homelessness
A plea from Ontario Big City Mayors (OBCM) to the province to address homelessness now has the backing of most of Cambridge City Council.
By a vote of six to three, Cambridge council approved a motion from Mayor Jan Liggett to support the OBCM resolution on Tuesday night. The resolution calls for, among other things, more treatment and diversion services to help deal with encampments by the expanding diversion courts for provincial and municipal offences while focusing on rehabilitation rather than punitive measures.
“I have addicts in my family, I have taken homeless [people] into my home. So before anybody says, ‘walk a mile in their shoes,’ I have done that. I have lived experience,” Liggett said during the meeting.
The three holdouts were councillors Scott Hamilton, Sheryl Roberts and Ross Earnshaw. Each said they support the majority of the resolution, but worried about it leading to mandatory treatment. The councillors thought efforts should be focused on offer better funding to existing services.
“Create more beds, create more treatment centers. Don't take away things like [Consumption Treatment Services] sites that are saving lives,” Scott Hamilton said during the meeting.
"Anything being asked in here does not preclude voluntary treatment,” Liggett said.
Julie Kalbfleisch, Director of Communications and Fundraising at Sanguen Health Centre, said putting people into diversion forces them into a choice of going to jail or seeking treatment. Kalbfleisch worries that this would only further burden the court system or force people into treatment without appropriate housing for them to go to.
“Putting someone into a forced treatment situation without having appropriate housing at the other side of it is a really big factor to consider,” Kalbfleisch said.
The resolution also calls for an update to the trespass to property act to include options to help address aggressive or repetitive trespassing. Kalbfleisch said without proper housing available in the community, changing the act will just burden courts further.
“Once encampments are cleared, people will inevitably pop up in other public locations because there is not enough housing and shelter for folks. They'll be found to be repeat offenders at that point and could be incarcerated,” Kalbfleisch said.
“The OBCM resolution leaves room for dangerous interpretation where elected officials would have the power to act in ways that could be harmful to folks based on their housing or mental health and addictions status,” Kalbfleisch added in an email to CTV News.
Ultimately, this is just the city’s way to support Ontario’s Big City Mayors resolution. But the decision to support it comes on the back of Liggett signing a letter that was given to the Premier asking him to use the notwithstanding clause, if needed, to ensure these measures are implemented in a timely and effective way.
“This would allow municipalities to bypass court rulings that prevent encampment clearings and would allow them to essentially remove encampments without having to provide people with a suitable or appropriate housing or shelter,” Kalbfleisch said. “This essentially goes against the Charter of Human Rights.”
The province has not formally responded to the request from the mayors.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Ottawa has sold its stake in Air Canada: sources
Two senior federal government sources have confirmed to CTV News that the federal government has sold its stake in Air Canada.
Premiers disagree on whether Canada should cut off energy supply to U.S. if Trump moves ahead with tariffs
Some of Canada's premiers appeared to disagree with Ontario Premier Doug Ford on his approach to retaliatory measures, less than a day after he threatened to cut off the province's energy supply to the U.S. if president-elect Donald Trump follows through on his threat of punishing tariffs.
'I recognize these footsteps': How Trump and 'coyote' smuggling changed life at the border
Bent signs bolted to the rail threaten fines and imprisonment should violators cross the boundary into the United States, a warning many people are choosing to ignore simply by walking around the barrier.
She took a DNA test for fun. Police used it to charge her grandmother with murder in a cold case
According to court documents, detectives reopened the cold case in 2017 and then worked with a forensics company to extract DNA from Baby Garnet's partial femur, before sending the results to Identifinders International.
McDonald's employee who called 911 in CEO's shooting is eligible for reward, but it will take time
More than 400 tips were called into the New York Police Department's Crime Stoppers tip line during the five-day search for a masked gunman who ambushed and fatally shot UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson last week.
Man who set fires inside Calgary's municipal building lost testicle during arrest: ASIRT
Two Calgary police officers have been cleared of any wrongdoing in an incident that saw a suspect lose a testicle after being shot with an anti-riot weapon.
Country star Morgan Wallen sentenced in chair-throwing case
Country music star Morgan Wallen on Thursday pleaded guilty to two misdemeanour counts of reckless endangerment for throwing a chair from the rooftop of a six-storey bar in Nashville and nearly hitting two police officers with it.
Danielle Smith announces new team to patrol Alberta-U.S. border
Premier Danielle Smith says her government will create a team of specially-trained sheriffs tasked with patrolling the Alberta-U.S. border.
Ho ho, oh no: Man sought by police goes down chimney and gets stuck
A Massachusetts man trying to escape from police shimmied down the chimney. And got stuck.