
No ‘magic solution’ to Montreal homeless cohabitation issues, consultation hears
MONTREAL — There is no magic solution to homelessness, Montreal’s public consultation office heard Monday as it began a series of hearings on how the city can more successfully integrate services for vulnerable people into neighbourhoods.
Montreal announced the public consultations last year, as city officials grappled with the complex realities of rising numbers of people experiencing homelessness, and public opposition toward services such as shelters and supervised injection sites.
On Monday, the consultation committee heard from the first group of more than 50 people and organizations registered to speak, including from those who have experienced homelessness and had poignant stories to tell. However, it also heard testimony from witnesses to crime, drug use, disruptive behaviours and even death in areas that became gathering places for homeless people.
“These is no magic or universal solution to issues of homelessness or social cohabitation,” said Jeanne Archambault, who spoke on behalf of Action Autonomie, a group that defends the rights of people who use mental health services. “Just as medication isn’t the only response to mental health, housing isn’t the only solution to homelessness.”