TORONTO – Ontario is putting $200 million to supportive housing over three years, with almost half of that money going to Toronto.
The investment is aimed at housing people who experience chronic homelessness and giving them supports such as counselling and addiction services to help them stay there.
Toronto is set to receive $90 million over three years and the province says it will announce funding for more municipalities this fall.
It’s the second announcement in recent weeks in which Ontario has doled out millions to Toronto on housing, which had become a contentious file between the two governments.
Get daily National news
Mayor John Tory has long advocated for the need for more social housing money from the province, saying there is an approximately $2-billion repair backlog, and slamming the Liberals for a lack of support in this year’s provincial budget.
Housing Minister Peter Milczyn announced last month that more than half of up to $657 million over five years in money for social housing repairs and retrofits would go to Toronto.
- ‘A foreign policy based on short memory’: Carney continues push to diversify from the U.S.
- Canada and Japan sign partnership deal on defence, energy, trade
- ‘Buy Canadian’ policy likely to cost taxpayers $12 billion yearly: study
- Ottawa, Alberta reach prospective agreement on major project assessments
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.