Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Toronto will add over 1,200 shelter spaces for winter months

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2025 11:43 AM
  • Toronto will add over 1,200 shelter spaces for winter months

The City of Toronto is adding more than 1,200 shelter spaces for people experiencing homelessness later this month as part of its winter services plan. 

A news release from the city says this figure includes 370 permanent supportive and subsidized housing units, 244 warm centre spaces that will open when temperatures hit -5 C or colder during winter weather warnings, as well as nearly 490 new shelter spaces and 175 surge capacity spaces to open during extreme temperatures. 

The city says it will also dispatch more street outreach teams during extreme cold, and will continue regular outreach programs to provide warm clothing, sleeping bags and other supplies throughout the winter.

The measures will be in place from Nov. 15 to April 15. 

The city says a select few new shelter spaces will open this weekend as temperatures are expected to plunge to -5 C on Sunday and the city is set to get its first snowfall of the season. 

Toronto continues to experience what the city calls a "homelessness emergency" driven by unaffordable housing, insufficient income supports and unmet health needs. 

There were more than 15,000 people in Toronto experiencing homelessness last year according to the city's 2024 Street Needs Assessment. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

MORE National ARTICLES

Never going to happen': Ministers push back as Trump revives talk of annexing Canada

Never going to happen': Ministers push back as Trump revives talk of annexing Canada
Canada's sovereignty was front and centre as federal ministers and Liberal MPs fielded questions about U.S. President Donald Trump's latest talk of annexation ahead of the first post-election question period in the House of Commons.

Never going to happen': Ministers push back as Trump revives talk of annexing Canada

Minister says CFIA following due process in B.C. ostrich cull case

Minister says CFIA following due process in B.C. ostrich cull case
The federal agriculture minister says the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is following "due process" as it prepares for a cull of about 400 ostriches at a farm in British Columbia.

Minister says CFIA following due process in B.C. ostrich cull case

Eby's 10-day Asian trade trip eyes growth potential in Malaysia

Eby's 10-day Asian trade trip eyes growth potential in Malaysia
British Columbia government staff say Malaysia is being included in an Asian trade tour by Premier David Eby and other ministers as part of a bid to diversify trade away from the United States.

Eby's 10-day Asian trade trip eyes growth potential in Malaysia

Defence minister says cost of Trump's proposed missile defence project still unknown

Defence minister says cost of Trump's proposed missile defence project still unknown
Canada does not know what it would cost to join U.S. President Donald Trump's proposed "Golden Dome" missile defence program, Defence Minister David McGuinty said Wednesday.

Defence minister says cost of Trump's proposed missile defence project still unknown

Government moves to purge consumer carbon pricing from law

Government moves to purge consumer carbon pricing from law
The federal government moved on Tuesday to purge consumer carbon pricing from law, effectively putting an end to what was once the keystone of the Liberals' climate policy.

Government moves to purge consumer carbon pricing from law

'Duck Dynasty' patriarch and conservative cultural icon Phil Robertson dies

'Duck Dynasty' patriarch and conservative cultural icon Phil Robertson dies
WEST MONROE, La. (AP) — Phil Robertson, who turned his small duck calling interest in the sportsman's paradise of northern Louisiana into a big business and conservative cultural phenomenon, died Sunday, according to his family. He was 79.

'Duck Dynasty' patriarch and conservative cultural icon Phil Robertson dies