Greetings, friends. My name is Jess McLean, and I'm here to provide you with some blueprints
Speaker:of disruption. This weekly podcast is dedicated to amplifying the work of activists, examining
Speaker:power structures, and sharing the success stories from the grassroots. Through these discussions,
Speaker:we hope to provide folks with the tools and the inspiration they need to start to dismantle
Speaker:capitalism, decolonize our spaces, and bring about the political revolution that we know
Speaker:we need. Welcome folks. Can you introduce yourself to our audience please? Starting with Dredz.
Speaker:Hi, good day. I'm Dredz. Dredz Green. My 20 years plus of living experience on the streets
Speaker:between housing, the sidewalk, just the various back and forths that privilege me to be here
Speaker:today to help advise towards the situations that we're facing. I work with Voices and I
Speaker:work with various other groups in anti-poverty activism in states and to try and bring awareness
Speaker:to the homeless condition, the poverty condition in various states. Today, hopefully we get
Speaker:to highlight the homeless addiction state in the best light that we can. We're absolutely
Speaker:gonna do that. Thank you, Dreds, for being here. Nahum. Hey, everybody, I'm Nahum. I'm also
Speaker:one of the organizers. at Voices, and also, yeah, my own lived experience of being on the
Speaker:streets and in shelters and living in poverty is what drives me in this work too. Thanks
Speaker:for having us. We're honored to have both of you because although we have spoken about encampment
Speaker:evictions, homeless evictions, it's... always been from a secondhand perspective. And that
Speaker:is not the way to do things. So I appreciate the way Dreds introduced himself and that he
Speaker:would be here to advise us because that is absolutely what we've invited you here to do. And when
Speaker:I asked what you folks wanted to focus on, the response was quick and concise, homeless evictions.
Speaker:What do you wanna tell people? There's a lot of things that lead to the... unhoused state
Speaker:and pretty much everyone that ends up in the unhoused state you'll end up tempted going
Speaker:to the shelter just a various cycle and when you do take a shot of going to the shelter
Speaker:um the problem is people don't feel that they're heard and that leads to the cycle people adapting
Speaker:to being outside so they no longer want to be in the shelter because they've had the help
Speaker:already and failed them. So they got to living on the streets. And then from there, they're
Speaker:now harassed to try and do minor things, go into the washroom, trying to function, shower,
Speaker:getting basic needs met, even mental health needs, things like that, even being heard,
Speaker:right, as to what needs they may have. So these, the entire state of being unhoused, is very
Speaker:deconstructive to the mental state of the person who is being victimized and not heard. The
Speaker:message is always, I believe the message is always brought across wrong by the staff as
Speaker:to what their duties may be versus engaging and problem solving. So there are a lot of
Speaker:variables that need there, but the bottom line for me is that I feel that people need to start
Speaker:being heard on that ground level to start affecting change. We often hear when there's evictions
Speaker:of the encampments that people go willingly, and it's voluntary. You know, there's, that
Speaker:is the narrative that the city of Toronto is, clearly that's not always the case. So what
Speaker:would you prefer the response from the city because you talk about being adapted, adapting
Speaker:to living inside. And I think, you know, from an outside perspective, we would like to advocate
Speaker:for housing. That seems like a long-term goal, I know it shouldn't be. So in the immediate,
Speaker:rather than evicting encampments and harassing, like we can talk about Clarence Square and
Speaker:the various levels of harassment that goes around tented communities, what could the city be
Speaker:doing? Other than housing, let's assume housing is always the primary goal. Well, we can still
Speaker:assume that housing is their bottom line goal for everyone. But now is it throwing everyone
Speaker:in the first available space that just says available or is it adapting to the needs because
Speaker:you visited the park three or four times, you've spoken to the worker at the shelter and you
Speaker:found out that they were familiar with the labor of being adapted to sensitivity, they're escaping
Speaker:a brand of abuse. All those variables are not taken into consideration. And me being in currently
Speaker:in Metro Toronto housing, for example, at the point in time where I took it, they were, I
Speaker:was told if you don't accept the first offer, you won't get another offer for a long time.
Speaker:So these are now part of the challenges with people getting out. You have to adapt to a
Speaker:neighborhood that you're completely unfamiliar with. You've got to find the resources that
Speaker:you can utilize in that area while pretty much being naked to any information. If you're not
Speaker:a social person, if you already have basic challenges in your life, like I can't read, these things
Speaker:all need to be considered when people are working with their worker. So even in the shelter,
Speaker:when people, before people end up in the unhoused, like, tented state, sleeping in the park. They
Speaker:post rules everywhere that no one relays it in a comfortable fashion. So as soon as someone
Speaker:disrespects the newly posted rules or outside, but there's no, I guess, humanity towards,
Speaker:okay, this is a fresh rule. We've got to give people time to adapt any of that stuff. It's
Speaker:always right to the worst level. And then now as we look at the shelter system as a mimic
Speaker:of the bigger system, like the justice system, we now say things like when a police officer
Speaker:shows up, even though they're there to be a peacekeeper, there are no negotiation tools
Speaker:on their belt. There are cuffs, there are guns, there are tasers, there's everything but something
Speaker:to negotiate with the people with, all that is force. And that's exactly what I find them
Speaker:doing in the shelter system. If you don't adapt to their rules, they force you back outside.
Speaker:And it's worse more so because they've spent. the small windows, the COVID window. They spent
Speaker:the years saying they're adapting these programs to help make transitional shelters to get people
Speaker:out from outside of the park. And now it's five years later, hotels are shutting down, but
Speaker:now the expenses of living day to day is so much. People don't have time to ask where their
Speaker:money's going. Right? What's happening with these programs? Why am I seeing tents back
Speaker:in the park? Right? Just to even ask questions, if you're a concerned citizen, I've seen people
Speaker:getting arrested in the park and citizens have come by and told the cops that they can't do
Speaker:that and they're recording and they threaten the citizen with arrest for being a witness.
Speaker:So it's almost like you're not allowed to stand up for it. If they can get away with it, they
Speaker:will. Right? This is, I feel this is a part of the reason there are no... I guess under
Speaker:house bodies within the decision making portions of where the money goes, when they're trying
Speaker:to figure out what to do with encampments, anything like that. Because if their interest wasn't
Speaker:played anywhere, you would have someone from the community trying to overhaul or pull up
Speaker:at the table to say what the needs are. One of our current examples would be Trinity. Right
Speaker:now they're in need of a porta potty, a stall. and all the restaurants in that downtown core
Speaker:area are closed before they say seven. Usually I've seen it nine, but they say it's seven.
Speaker:So from seven until a drop in opens again at seven or six in the morning, there is no access
Speaker:to a washroom for them. And when trying to negotiate with the city workers that are coming by, no
Speaker:one wants to listen to them. This is contributing to keeping it clean until they can be housed.
Speaker:Yeah, and I also just wanted to add too that like, I mean, this is us like, It's like a
Speaker:carceral system of housing, right? Like, I mean, it's essentially just like warehousing poor
Speaker:folks, whether that's in the encampments or the shelters, the hotel programs, and you know,
Speaker:as Dredz is mentioning, even Toronto County Housing, you're in these buildings, in these
Speaker:spaces that are like severely neglected. in terms of maintenance, just in terms of like
Speaker:healthy, dignified living, mold, bed bugs, mice, all of these things. And then under like a
Speaker:constant surveillance, with cameras around, with more security than there are actual workers
Speaker:to provide essential services, like a constant presence of police. And like just kind of living
Speaker:under this threat, like Dredd's mentioned of like, if you don't follow the rules, you know,
Speaker:like you're gonna be punished. And we're seeing this like, you know, I think it's probably
Speaker:at its most severe in the hotel shelters that were leased through the pandemic. We do outreach
Speaker:at the Delta Hotel. up at Kennedy in the 401. You have like 350 people in a building with
Speaker:two housing workers at best. Sometimes both of them aren't even there. With security and
Speaker:police in the lobby constantly and with this system of, and we'll get into more of what
Speaker:we mean by evictions in the shelter hotels, but this system of living under threat of eviction
Speaker:constantly for anything from speaking up for yourself or staff not liking the tone of your
Speaker:voice when you talk to them to one of our members got kicked out of a city run shelter for eating
Speaker:in the TV room. Just a... an arbitrary and abusive set of reasons to force people back out onto
Speaker:the street. So we're like against, you know, we're all for housing, all for public housing,
Speaker:like let's build more, but not the way it stands, you know, not neglected derelict buildings
Speaker:under constant surveillance. We want dignified housing, accessible housing, right? Immediately.
Speaker:what comes to mind is when you talk about like the sheer number of security, it's like that,
Speaker:well, that money that they're using to pay for the security could be going to actually helping
Speaker:the people instead, right? It's, it's a very easy parallel to draw. Nahum, last time I saw
Speaker:you, we were at the St. Stephan and the Fields Encapment Eviction in Kensington Market. I'm
Speaker:heading over there this Monday because Maggie was just, Maggie the Reverend of the Church
Speaker:was just talking about some continued city harassment there and you know there's still very much
Speaker:people living on that property, a church that protects them, that wants them there, that
Speaker:helps them and yet the city decides that no it's not okay for them to be there. Can you
Speaker:tell me a bit about you know that continued hurt, from what you know of like... the tactics
Speaker:that the city uses to continue harassing people, even when it's not as far as an eviction, just
Speaker:like in the smaller things that we don't get a chance to hear about. Yeah, for sure. I mean,
Speaker:you know, one thing that I think's a common thread across all the encampments, like now
Speaker:and in the past, is this idea of fire safety. Fire gets constantly used as this reason for
Speaker:why we need to mass evict. these spaces, but there's no, I'm blanking on the name of the
Speaker:ruling, but there was like a ruling in the courts that set some precedent around how the city
Speaker:should and the fire department should actually be present, training people, providing fire
Speaker:safety equipment, providing safe alternatives. So you know, you think like people are starting
Speaker:fires, they have maybe little propane tanks to cook on, things like that. And the city
Speaker:just comes in, the fire department just comes in and confiscates things, harasses people.
Speaker:I mean, at the worst kind of examples, like clears the camp, but there's no alternatives,
Speaker:right? I mean, like, I think there would be... probably some positive reception to being like,
Speaker:okay, look, you can't have this propane tank. You know, it's deemed a fire safety hazard.
Speaker:And so instead, like we got these heaters that we've like, we've cleared as a fire department,
Speaker:like they're safe or, you know, plugins to city power, which is what folks at the Trinity Square
Speaker:encampment are dealing with. They're trying to plug in. to city power, which has been on
Speaker:all winter to plug in 10 million Christmas lights near the Eaton Center. But God forbid you plug
Speaker:in a little space heater to try and keep warm in the winter. And the city, the police, the
Speaker:fire department, they come in unplugging people's cables and actually at Trinity Square, like
Speaker:the city escalated to actually just like shutting. those outlets off, like the power is not even
Speaker:there anymore. But without alternatives, right? And so now you put people in a position where
Speaker:they're trying their best to keep warm in the safest way possible. What's the logical next
Speaker:step? I mean, people are gonna start fires, they're gonna light candles in their tents.
Speaker:They're gonna find any kind of way to keep warm and to keep fed. And it's just like a total
Speaker:neglect from the city to the point where folks actually, there is these really cool like fire
Speaker:safety manuals that got made from folks like Greg Cook at Sanctuary and some others who
Speaker:just put in that research and the work to publish things. And they're the ones actually doing
Speaker:the training. They did this down at Clarence Square last year. Oh, you got it right in your
Speaker:hand. I was making a note of it. There you go. Yeah, so it's just like that same old story
Speaker:of the city having these high bars for what an encampment can and can't have, but then
Speaker:providing zero resources, and it's down to folks like us. It's down to... poor folks, unhoused,
Speaker:underhoused folks that are like spending full time hours week in, week out in community just
Speaker:trying our best to pull resources together and keep people safe in a city that has like such
Speaker:an abundance of wealth and resources at its fingertips. So to kind of speak into that a
Speaker:little.
Speaker:When we're talking about alternatives, it literally means if you come and take the propane tank
Speaker:that is sold over the counter in Canadian Tire, various stores in Chinatown, serious convenience
Speaker:stores, and I can get that anywhere, but you can take that and not provide any alternatives,
Speaker:then it's going to be minus 10, minus 20 outside. And your alternative is to move me completely.
Speaker:even if I have a bunch of stuff, the city doesn't try to have any brand of negotiation plans.
Speaker:So there's not a secret plan with public storage. And the City of Toronto, so if you're unhoused
Speaker:and you have a certain amount of stuff, they'll deal with you with the storage if you go to
Speaker:a shelter, for example. That alone should be a fair enough, safest deal. That's encouraging
Speaker:to take a shelter in. and probably uphold the rules there, for example. And that's within
Speaker:their cost. If you wanna do something like heating, and it's outside, I don't know if you guys
Speaker:remember those old black barbecues that were always in parks, they were on the black pole,
Speaker:they could do a solid iron. But you have just blocks of those, no tent within like 20 feet
Speaker:of it, but people can come around and eat, now you have a reason to have a security guard
Speaker:there. So his job being paid by the city is to now watch that eater. So it's on 24-7. He
Speaker:needs fuel oil, radio for it, so it will come with sticks. These are the kind of alternatives
Speaker:they can offer so that people won't have a propane tank inside when they wanna get heat, or a
Speaker:bunch of people gathering around that barbecue outside to see the group, 20 people in the
Speaker:encampment. are going to be able to that many people that are very simple, cost effective
Speaker:measures that they have within their grasp. It's not something they would have to build.
Speaker:They already have those. They probably have to extract somewhere sitting on the part of
Speaker:the city. Or they can just put that cement block underneath it in each area. Maybe one of the
Speaker:north and south of our garden, for example, again, where people are tented. It's not in
Speaker:the means of. even within the city is going to be themselves. So we're going to say we're
Speaker:not trying to encourage people being outside. It's not encouraging until you find the right
Speaker:housing plan for them, help make outside somewhat functional. Help teach them about fire safety,
Speaker:have a regular garden circulation and cleanup, and then teaching them about being community-esque.
Speaker:And these are the things that. to help people not keep the NIMBY effect. I say, hey, those
Speaker:guys look intense, but they're functioning. Like my dog runs over and plays with them.
Speaker:They're all cool people. Just little simple things. So now the person's still gonna feel
Speaker:intimidated if they can't use the part. Becoming a visual appeal or how it may work on the video.
Speaker:That's amongst other things. And it was sheltered under a similar bias as well. So we watched
Speaker:that happen way out there at Delta. There were some people that do walk by and they ask what's
Speaker:happening, but now there's a lot of genetics happening. It was very hard to get people to
Speaker:just stop and intake the real things that were happening inside and to be people in the area.
Speaker:All right, to help work with them as a community. So... It's like, hey, some people work here
Speaker:and they do want a room and they want to get themselves together. These guys aren't helping
Speaker:them out. Their worker doesn't see them. So as Ney and Liz said earlier, there's 350, 400
Speaker:people and only two workers. Even at the 365 day a year thing, if you're working every day,
Speaker:you might see half of those people once. So just to speak more into it. It's getting plans
Speaker:together from the ground, the tentative level, to the shelter level, all allocated towards
Speaker:housing and improvement. And getting more actual counselors that can be reflective, responsive
Speaker:in their craft, immediate, on-site. And I know it's a challenge, but if it takes money to
Speaker:encourage that kind of pay, then they should do it, instead of spending it on security.
Speaker:and the security guard, and the police. And the evictions themselves, even denying folks
Speaker:all of the things that you're talking about likely cost the city money, and they cost the
Speaker:community. Like you're talking about parks, public washrooms, like barbecues, fire safety
Speaker:knowledge. things that you want everyone in your community to have, like regardless of
Speaker:what their shelter system is, like things that make a thriving community, like even the anti-homeless
Speaker:architecture, where there's no benches or the benches are awful, you can't lie down on them.
Speaker:All of those are detriments to the entire community. And so when you look at it from that perspective,
Speaker:it's so maddening because then it's so clearly an attack, specifically. on the unhoused community
Speaker:to deprive the entire community of these items simply because it might sustain their life
Speaker:outside. Because it's ridiculous that anyone is encouraging people to live at the tentative
Speaker:level, right? That no one would be encouraged to do that. That is, like you said from the
Speaker:very beginning, a circumstance people find themselves in because of the systems that we're living
Speaker:under, right? It's not a choice in that way, right? That's a ridiculous statement that they
Speaker:would say to deprive that and our whole community loses. It's funny that the podcast is actually
Speaker:called The Good, The Bad, and The Disruption because even as I look around Delta, I see
Speaker:the death by design. So we see about 10, 15 condos out there. There's no new mall, there's
Speaker:no new school, there's no new grocery store. Those condos are all like 20 stories plus.
Speaker:And even as they all get filled, you're adding that many families to the community and stressing
Speaker:the resources that are there, driving that food prices everywhere. Because now they're gonna
Speaker:ram the lettuce every hour once those condos are filled. Right? Whoever can't afford it,
Speaker:they're gonna go and steal it, they're gonna start saying, hey, my kid's gotta eat. stuff
Speaker:like that. Right? So you see the destruction of being built. They're not building any of
Speaker:those at the shelters. All those are condos. So it's just going to raise competition. Oh,
Speaker:we don't want this here. Now there's going to be more people in Texas when it hits that unaffordable
Speaker:level. And none of the safeties are there that people think are there in a shelter, for example,
Speaker:that they're outside in a tent. Oh shit. as we still have these people. Like, this is the
Speaker:kind of thing that wakes them up. And I think too, Jess, to your point, like, it is very
Speaker:intentional. Like, capitalism and neoliberalism, like, needs poor and homeless people as a,
Speaker:like, as a threat that keeps everybody working three bullshit. jobs at minimum wage without
Speaker:health care, without benefits, grinding away to pay rent because there's this very like
Speaker:visual, you know, like uncomfortable threat of like living in a park and living in a shelter,
Speaker:being like seen as somebody who's like panhandling or wandering out every day in the streets because
Speaker:you know a lot of these shelters too. the congregate ones, you know, you eat your breakfast and
Speaker:then like you're out. You have to be out all day, right? And so our system, I like, requires
Speaker:this level of poverty and precarity to keep people like tied into this wage system. And
Speaker:so yeah, it is absolutely intentional. and very specific and targeted on our community to keep
Speaker:this visual problem alive and well, even if it is also causing the kind of rifts and deterioration
Speaker:in the broader community like you brought up. It's all by design. I know that. And I don't
Speaker:mean to say like, don't tell me that, but I mean, I didn't say it because I didn't think
Speaker:any of you knew it either. It almost then brings me... to the point of, okay, so then what?
Speaker:Now you know those fuckers are doing it on purpose, right? Like we could go talk to them, we could
Speaker:go talk to Toronto council, but they know they're doing it on purpose. Olivia knows all the small
Speaker:town, big town mayors, they absolutely know what the purpose behind all of these denials
Speaker:are of basic stuff. Like even the most basic stuff, like what kind of city, you want a shining
Speaker:city, but we are so bad, we have no public bathrooms. Everyone knows, anyone who's ever wandered
Speaker:around the city for any reason knows that we are an awful city for that. And so all of these
Speaker:things, all of these things, they know that they're just really purposely to do harm. And
Speaker:so I think of that poster you folks had for the Valentine's Day event outside City Hall.
Speaker:And I know you were outside City Hall, but I know you weren't really speaking to them. I
Speaker:mean, you are. You should yell at them. They deserve it. But you know where their mind is
Speaker:at. It was the Poor People Rise Up that was featured on the poster that really comes to
Speaker:mind because that's what we need. Right? Like, we do need to center— That isn't to dispute
Speaker:that we need to center the voices of unhoused folks when we're trying to talk about solutions,
Speaker:all of them. But not to, like—they shouldn't have to, like, tell their trauma. Right? Like,
Speaker:that shouldn't be necessary. Not to politicians, because they fucking know it. They like that
Speaker:seems like harmful almost. So it's just like absolute rebellion at this point. I'm sorry.
Speaker:That seems so rudimentary, but let's talk about the organizing then. Not because we don't want
Speaker:to hit on these lived experiences, but like, what do we do? Because in a city like this,
Speaker:where you should have some leverage on a mayor with like progressive issues, surely we can
Speaker:make progress here. That's part of the biggest challenge with the unhoused community, right?
Speaker:There is not even entering the shelter and you don't have really any leverage. There's somebody
Speaker:in their installation coming to ask for help. Like, when you're paying rent at an apartment,
Speaker:for example, you're not getting money. They're not doing that. That's right, you're paying
Speaker:a full rent. So same thing at work. You cross in the trees there, you can strike. Now he's
Speaker:not making as much. That kid's not going out. All right, we're in the shelter. They build
Speaker:few beds and keep like 10,000 people out there making it to 580,000 because the shelters will
Speaker:always be full. They'll always take things, they'll take XYZ years. If something, if a
Speaker:riot happens tonight, they'll have a new task force tomorrow, they'll come to the police,
Speaker:I guarantee you.
Speaker:Right? So, so why can't we use that money to produce the positivity production, preserving
Speaker:the people, right? Getting solutions done. We want more people working, for example, to be
Speaker:taxed. Let's help people get settled and then make sure that there's jobs out there for people.
Speaker:Right? Get some people with lived experience to start getting paid for, living in their
Speaker:community and contribute. And that could cut the travel expense and it could also positively
Speaker:impact the community.
Speaker:I'm just a volunteer at social assistance and do this in a small range of training programs.
Speaker:Those training programs get you into somewhere that's 100% employable. Yes, otherwise it's
Speaker:a game. Because it shows that there's a need for those programs, even if they don't employ
Speaker:you. You finish the program at 15 minutes, the social assistance says you can get employed
Speaker:now because you have that 5-D skill. Show me where to get employed with three months of
Speaker:training. I have my African utility to do it. Require two years worth of mastery shift or
Speaker:XYZ license with two years of professional. They have reference. Like, it's a game up there.
Speaker:It's a big game. And that's when you try to play it the honest way. You play it the dirty
Speaker:way, you get arrested. And then you... lose everything and you just don't got to start
Speaker:over anything and be outside.
Speaker:Right? You just don't want to insure. So it's not like you're tied down or you're doing so
Speaker:much work. You're doing the same thing I said. You're doing a free job. You barely get time
Speaker:to see your kids to give them any positive influence that you would like. You might be there answering
Speaker:the bases that you might want to be there to play catch. Right? As if some life things.
Speaker:You might want to contribute to your health, because that's the challenge you're dealing
Speaker:with. It's a lot, maybe play around with it. They have a bell, let's talk, for example.
Speaker:During the entire COVID, I've never seen a bell talk representative walk around the park and
Speaker:check on any of the depressed people that weren't in the park. That's a corporate response, I
Speaker:think. So that's part of what's advertised, that's not real. It's funny how, you know,
Speaker:capitalism has this myth of like voluntary, like we, that we get to choose this idea of
Speaker:freedom that you get the, well, if you want this, you can go on this path, this path, but
Speaker:then you hear, you hear that and it's, it's all coercion is what it is, right? That here
Speaker:are your options and either way we're going to exploit you. It's a horrible system. Nahum,
Speaker:one of the times I saw you before the Kensington one was at City Hall, John Tory budget meeting.
Speaker:And I remember you and a bunch of folks were there specifically to talk about the lack of
Speaker:any help in the budget front house, folks. Well. John Tory's gone, Olivia Chow's here. We've
Speaker:had another budget meeting and there's still not enough.
Speaker:What's it is it? What's the answer here? Because clearly we elected a person who's supposed
Speaker:to do something better, right? Yeah, I mean I think that and you know also to touch on
Speaker:this like talk about the organizing right like I think that There are a lot of complications
Speaker:like dreads sad just in terms of like what are our leverage points as poor and unhoused folks
Speaker:But I think Olivia Chow is a great example. Personally, I don't think that there's too
Speaker:much to benefit in getting into the weeds on criticizing any one person or another in positions
Speaker:of power, but more so just a very clear example that the system's not. going to save us, right?
Speaker:And like, when we kind of like lean on these advocacy approaches, which we also see it in
Speaker:like the labor movement, right? Over the last like, how many decades? Like moving away from
Speaker:direct action, flexing that muscle of power through like strikes and into this idea that
Speaker:like, oh, like we can just like meet with politicians in boardrooms and like they'll pass better
Speaker:policies. I think we're actually in this kind of time right now as well, right? Like people
Speaker:are realizing, um, especially at like the, I call them chapters cause we are kind of building
Speaker:towards thinking of like what a, a union or like a member based org of poor and unhoused
Speaker:folks. would look like the realities they're facing is like, we're gonna get kicked out
Speaker:regardless, right? You know, the Delta for instance, is being transitioned into a refugee shelter
Speaker:and we're already seeing this uptick in service restrictions like discharges from the hotel
Speaker:program, which we call evictions, cause they're evictions, right? And put all the flowery non-profit
Speaker:language around it as much as you want. You're evicting people from their homes, right? And
Speaker:so there is that fear of like getting kicked out of the retribution, the coercion, but also
Speaker:just the reality, this growing reality that like you're gonna get kicked out, right? And
Speaker:so, you know, like kind of, Going back into those traditions of organizing in thinking
Speaker:about the fact that, while 400 residents to two housing workers is shitty for so many reasons,
Speaker:it also is empowering in the sense that we are the majority in this space, right? And as we
Speaker:individualize people at Voices, we do a lot of casework and kind of advocating for folks
Speaker:who face evictions and, you know, really try to pressure the service providers to like appeal
Speaker:those decisions and let people back in. Like it's also about like collectivizing, right?
Speaker:Collectivizing that struggle, taking up space, taking ownership of the spaces that people
Speaker:are living in. And so, you know, at the Delta, we're having organizing meetings. We're really
Speaker:taking a lot of lessons and kind of models from more historical union organizing to identify
Speaker:leaders, like finding those people who have trust in the community, finding those activists
Speaker:in the shelters, and starting to think about like... What are the tactics at hand, right?
Speaker:I think often when we're in conversations, folks have these really intense emotional responses.
Speaker:I'm just gonna push my bed in front of the door and not let staff in. And when they come to
Speaker:us with that idea, like they're, it's kind of like. wrapped around this sense that they have
Speaker:that like, oh, that's like, I'm just angry, you know, like that's like, that's not actually
Speaker:doable. And I think it's really important to change that narrative, like something that
Speaker:we do in our conversations is like, is it not doable? Or like, or are we like not at the
Speaker:place in which that's like a tactic, right? And I'm not necessarily saying that that's
Speaker:here or there, like anything that's being planned explicitly, but I think it is really about
Speaker:like reframing those conversations to say like, yeah, you know what? At the end of the day,
Speaker:we've tried all the other things, right? Like we've tried to ask nicely, we've sent letters,
Speaker:we've had a petition to city council. and the mayor to stop service restrictions, to stop
Speaker:camp clearings. And like we're met with the same thing. We're actually met with, like in
Speaker:the midst of us launching that campaign, No Homeless Evictions campaign, shortly after
Speaker:the St. Stephen's eviction, the city put trespass notices on all the tents at the Trinity Square
Speaker:encampment, right? And so... It's not only that they're not listening to our maybe more diplomatic
Speaker:approaches to find solutions, but they like they double down on the very harms, right,
Speaker:that are causing us to take these steps. You know, the delta is being transitioned. There's
Speaker:rumors going around that the Bond Hotel is going to mass evict everybody. from their beds there,
Speaker:you know, Clarence Square, the hotels like across the city facing this sorts of things. So, you
Speaker:know, I think as scary and as unknown as it is, because like this kind of organizing and
Speaker:like mass mobilization hasn't really happened so much. There aren't very many like super
Speaker:clear examples of people taking action in this way. Like we are as voices, like, in this space
Speaker:of entertaining, like, oh, wait, well, what does that look like? And as impossible as it
Speaker:might feel to take mass action, to mass mobilize in a space, let's instead ask ourselves a question
Speaker:of, like, what do we need to be able to do that? Right? And what are the steps that we take
Speaker:people on that go from where we are today to some kind of mass action? at a hotel. And so,
Speaker:you know, petitions are like a great entry point. You know, at the Delta, there's some very,
Speaker:what we feel are kind of like low hanging fruit things that most folks in the program agree
Speaker:on and can get behind. And like taking people up this ladder of engagement and some might
Speaker:say like ladder of risk in terms of organizing. that like get us these small wins, but less
Speaker:so the wins and more these like feelings that people have that when we work together, when
Speaker:we organize together, that we can make victories, right? And so something as small as one of
Speaker:our first victories at the Delta was getting every shelter in Toronto is supposed to have
Speaker:a monthly resident meeting. Right? And the Delta operated for two fucking years without a single
Speaker:meeting. And so we were able to collect, shout out to a fantastic organizer at the Delta who
Speaker:was able to collect like 150 signatures on a petition, deliver that petition, and now we
Speaker:have these monthly meetings, right? I mean, those meetings are shit. They're... poorly
Speaker:managed. All meetings are shit, don't worry. There's no minutes, there's no notes, there's
Speaker:no follow up. But we got that, right? And people have this taste of like, oh, we did something
Speaker:together and got it. So now come back to the table to say, what's next? Okay, we're gonna
Speaker:make those meetings a little bit better, right? Then we're gonna start to think about what
Speaker:are our real tangible demands, putting those demands forward. And one other thing I wanted
Speaker:to talk about in terms of the organizing we're doing too is like building these bridges between
Speaker:labor, right? Between the workers' struggle and poor people's struggle, not only for the
Speaker:just reason of like solidarity and like labor should be supporting like these social justice
Speaker:issues. but also for the fact that workers are sleeping in their fucking cars, right? Workers
Speaker:are accessing food banks. And when we look at the Delta, for instance, run by Homes First,
Speaker:is a charity that runs lots of spaces across the city. In 2015, they locked out all their
Speaker:fucking workers because they were trying to unionize. And what are they doing now? They're...
Speaker:creating like very tailored exploitative contracts to hire folks who are incredibly precarious
Speaker:lots of newcomers Lots of poor folks putting them in these contracts that don't give them
Speaker:benefits that don't give them job security and I mean as much as like we fight against the
Speaker:abuses that unhoused folks face from shelter staff like We also have to be able to take
Speaker:a step back and say, well, if shelter staff are not trained, not resourced, living in super
Speaker:precarious situations with no job security and no benefits, like what do we expect other than
Speaker:these like high tension points where staff default to kicking people out when things get tense?
Speaker:when they're faced with situations that they're just like completely untrained and unresourced
Speaker:and unprepared to deal with. And so it's OPSU workers at the, at Homes First, at the Delta.
Speaker:And we learned that they actually are like in bargaining, had to bring in the Ministry of
Speaker:Labor because 90% of their workers rejected the deal from Homes First. So these are places
Speaker:of of solidarity that we're trying to build. They just had a really awesome meeting yesterday
Speaker:with quite a lot of unions and labor organizations to start to build those things because we wanna
Speaker:join you on the picket, right? And we want you to join us on our pickets because at the end
Speaker:of the day, it's these, just like in the corporate wage world, it's these fucking corporations,
Speaker:these charities. that are dead set on their bottom dollar on building a level of like management
Speaker:and executive positions that are well comfortable and stable and secure at the complete exploitation
Speaker:and disregard of poor folks, whether they're living in the shelter or working in the shelter.
Speaker:And so those are some of the things that we're talking about as well. at Trinity Square, you
Speaker:know, it's about moving the needle, right? We've seen encampment defense, and I think that was
Speaker:very powerful and galvanizing for folks. But like, let's move the needle into like, not
Speaker:just being reactionary, not being on the defense, but being on the offense. Let's take spaces.
Speaker:Let's own them. Let's build the kind of like... you know, infrastructure that people want and
Speaker:need to live dignified lives until that the housing that Dreds was talking about gets delivered
Speaker:to them. So I think we're in a place of seeing like so much precarity in the city and that
Speaker:precarity creeping so much more into like what we might've called like middle class people
Speaker:in the past that The time is now, right? I think we need to just be kind of rooted in the reality
Speaker:that like, shit's bad, shit's getting worse. And so the risks and the fears we might feel
Speaker:in taking action, you know, are wrapped in the context that like, things aren't gonna get
Speaker:any better, right? And whether it's today or in six months or in a year, you might actually
Speaker:be forced into some kind of like, risk taking, action taking, because the boot is just like
Speaker:pressing on our necks harder and harder day in and day out. Jess, I feel like you got it.
Speaker:You're burning with a question over there. I wanted to, okay, Santiago came into the studio
Speaker:one day and he was frustrated. He's looking at me going through. That happens constantly,
Speaker:so I just give you anything. Okay, he's like, which time? There was an Acampment eviction
Speaker:that... people, some people had responded to in body, right, in person. And I think there
Speaker:was an itching by those that had responded to physically resist the eviction. But that's
Speaker:not their call, right? They are coming because they were called, but not for that. And when
Speaker:you asked earlier, you know, and talked about the lack of leverage and you said, what would
Speaker:be our leverage? Like my notes, I go numbers, right? And you hit on that, I'm not telling
Speaker:you anything new at all. Labor and other, like the rest of the community needs to come together
Speaker:in a way that you can breach that threshold where you can safely physically resist. Cause
Speaker:I get it, if it's just a handful of people and you've got to defend a space, open wide park,
Speaker:I mean, just the logistics, if you're thinking of like battle plants, that's probably not
Speaker:going to end well. It's that... that critical threshold of numbers. And I'm really happy
Speaker:to hear that, you know, there's movement being made in terms of labor because there's really
Speaker:two ways, because you talk about spending your days and nights really doing a mutual aid as
Speaker:well, like scrounging together resources for whoever needs what. So not only can they play
Speaker:a role in terms of boosting numbers, but there's... there's some resources that folks, that I imagine
Speaker:would make your job a lot easier because part of organizing when poor and unhoused is like
Speaker:energy time. If that's all spent trying to survive and to get the basic stuff that should already
Speaker:be there. like meetings, you know, if you're having to spend all of your energy just to
Speaker:get what you've already been told you're supposed to have and other basic necessities, that's
Speaker:less time you could be spent doing more resistive, more proactive organizing, right, to put you
Speaker:on the offense. Because it's actually, it's so doable to take a building. It's so doable.
Speaker:You don't even actually need that many people. You just, you need allies that perhaps the
Speaker:police aren't willing to remove as easily. You know, Fred Hawn, perhaps chained to the front
Speaker:door would have a different impact, I'm sure. And actually, like, I just, just to build on
Speaker:that too, because I'm from Colombia originally. And one thing you see in Colombia is,
Speaker:You have neighborhoods, barrios, typically on hillsides, that don't technically exist. Like
Speaker:they're not, these are not planned areas, there were no approval processes. But people who
Speaker:were displaced, because we're an incredibly displaced country, and who had nowhere to go,
Speaker:came together with brick and plaster. And they built thousands. of tiny houses and they live
Speaker:in these communities. Something like that is unheard of here in Canada, right? When we tried
Speaker:to build tiny houses out of, I forget the word. Some municipalities won't even let you build
Speaker:a tiny house. Yeah, the tiny houses that they tried to use in Alexandra Park and whatnot,
Speaker:those got removed, right? But the idea is if you hit. with like the right resources, with
Speaker:the right planning, we don't have to wait for the country, the city, the province, whatever
Speaker:it is to come in and give us solutions, we can just do it ourselves.
Speaker:Anyways, it's just one, because like that idea is so foreign, right? And like even like in
Speaker:my home city of Bogota, we have a... in our largest park in the middle of the city with
Speaker:an encampment that's been there for years full of indigenous folks that they wouldn't dare
Speaker:touch because they know that it's untouchable, right? Because people there are organized different.
Speaker:It is a matter of numbers, a matter of resources. These things are doable. But anyways, just
Speaker:to add on to Jess's point. take up any more space there. But like just that idea of integrating
Speaker:into the community though, like when Dreads was talking about the person walking the dog,
Speaker:it was such an anecdote but it spoke to a larger problem, right? That these parks are surrounded
Speaker:by people in homes. People who should give a fuck. Right? When their community members are
Speaker:being harassed by the police, take their propane heaters taken away, like, that resistance doesn't
Speaker:have to only come from inside, from the tent level. It shouldn't. And, like, if you knew,
Speaker:right, if you walked your dog every day and said, good morning to Dredz, and then you saw
Speaker:the police harassing him, like, because you know he is part of your community, right? It's
Speaker:the separation that, that's why I kind of made a face to it, and I was talking about the barrios.
Speaker:I get it, like, you know, housing is, but then that's still like an ostracization. It's still
Speaker:like, that's its own community. And like, maybe that's the necessary, right? But. Finding ways
Speaker:to get people to understand that those are, that's their community too. Not just, and I
Speaker:use that language too, the unhoused community, fucking language. It's really a struggle, but
Speaker:it matters because it's how you think about it. Like as though it's a separate community.
Speaker:It's not, right? And that separation is denying them the leverage they need to get like the
Speaker:most basic stuff, like forget housing. the most basic stuff is being denied because they know
Speaker:that the fuss isn't that much when it's denied. We don't make a big enough deal about some
Speaker:of these things. And I think because they're not looked at as a whole. You know, like public
Speaker:bathrooms. If you talk about public bathrooms, people just roll your eyes. Like, there's so
Speaker:many bigger problems out there. Why are you talking about public bathrooms? That's not
Speaker:a big deal. Why are you talking about benches? Why are you talking about fire retardant tents?
Speaker:It's like each individual just seems like not—but it's— as this whole, right? It's like this,
Speaker:I don't know. I'm really struggling, I think, to formulate my thoughts. Yeah, but I think
Speaker:that, I know Dreads, I wanna let Dreads jump in just one second, but I think you're absolutely
Speaker:right, and this is also maybe a place for people that are listening that wanna think about how
Speaker:to support this kind of work too, right? It's like, somebody does need to be, Dreads was
Speaker:talking about all the condos up around the Delta Hotel, right? Like, Um, it's the sea counselor
Speaker:in that ward, Nick Mantis, um, he's pretty dead set on like closing, right? Like the whole,
Speaker:the whole reason the Delta is being transitioned to a refugee center is because, is because
Speaker:of him, right? Like, um, moved a motion to kind of tweak the, the vote to renew all the hotels.
Speaker:He said, well, we'll renew the Delta as long as It gets transitioned to a refugee center
Speaker:and everyone gets kicked out basically. And, you know, I've worked in politics enough to
Speaker:know that he probably feels informed by like a bunch of condo owners, right, that are calling
Speaker:and complaining. And those condo owners are the people that are voting for him, right?
Speaker:And so I think like, yeah, we actually do need some crews of canvassers that are gonna...
Speaker:going and have like probably pretty shitty conversations, but like to talk and listen to folks and like
Speaker:find that space to build connection, to build some empathy. I mean, if you're not facing
Speaker:housing precarity yourself, like I bet you your kid is, right? I bet you there's someone you
Speaker:know who like is realizing that they can't live in this city anymore. Right, and so like that
Speaker:is also kind of unsexy work that needs to happen because if the city councilor starts getting
Speaker:a bunch of phone calls from people on his voting list saying, I just had some a really awesome
Speaker:conversation and you need to keep the Delta open, this is crucial. Like that is definitely
Speaker:gonna change his mind more than like me and Dreads who are. kind of typecast as like shit-disturber,
Speaker:lefty activists. Like he doesn't care about us. So that's like another kind of really foundational
Speaker:piece that, you know, we talk about this, we talk about defunding the police. Like, yeah,
Speaker:we can get all the progressive folks in the city together to sign a petition to defund
Speaker:the police. Like we need like white middle-aged homeowners central Etobicoke to be calling
Speaker:their councillor and saying, yeah, actually we need to defund the police. Because those
Speaker:people don't care about anything except their re-election bid in the next cycle. And the
Speaker:only damn thing that's going to move them is if they're looking and going like, oh, this
Speaker:is Jessa, they're on my voting list, they vote for me every four years, and they're telling
Speaker:me... that this thing needs to happen, like that is now actually like a risk to me and
Speaker:my job and the power that I hold, right? And we've seen that like historically in Georgia,
Speaker:like flipping from Republican to Democrat, we've seen like the overthrowing of like anti-trans
Speaker:legislation in Florida, all from the same thing. Like I said, it's not sexy work, right? That's
Speaker:like a 20 minute conversation at the door with somebody who probably doesn't have the same
Speaker:political views as you. And you have to make some space and listen and put your reactionary
Speaker:self aside and put the stats aside and connect with people. Get into that feeling and that
Speaker:emotion because I believe that that's what. moves people on a deeper level than me just
Speaker:saying like, well, the stats here show that like you're wrong. Like that's not gonna move
Speaker:anybody, right? So anyways, just wanted to throw that in and Dredd say, you haven't chatted
Speaker:in a while, so I wanna toss it over to you. I just feel one of the biggest challenge is
Speaker:the consistency of quality resource, even though it doesn't work so. Even when we're there doing
Speaker:outreach, one of the main questions we had for a minute was, everyone wanted to know the lawyer
Speaker:thing, right? So they wanted to know who they could talk to if they had a human rights situation.
Speaker:So even council just regularly appearing for that, a volunteer, a student, something to
Speaker:kind of encourage along the way. Like, if you're going to have people coming in there, the security
Speaker:guards or whatever. Baby's close my baby sort of thing. So you might as well have some people
Speaker:there that are trying to follow themselves and other career paths I think kind of inspiring
Speaker:to go towards their Their mastery their community It's just saying whatever Right different brands
Speaker:of agency government Earlier they were talking about some of the games that the city plays.
Speaker:So just to show it's on the multi-level. Oh, well, I was in the park. There was an ex-police
Speaker:officer that ended up working for the city and helping to clear encampments. And they ended
Speaker:up walking around and spying on us for like two weeks. So we ended up taking pictures of
Speaker:them before they came and cleared people one by one out of the park. So that was one example
Speaker:of the one that Mayam was talking about that was for Tridy Square. And so the eviction notices
Speaker:the week after the Spadina and the college encampment, when we investigated that one as a follow-up,
Speaker:I forgot what Mayam was doing, but the city said that they... didn't mean it, they did
Speaker:it to try and teach, show an example or a lesson as to what they could do if they really wanted
Speaker:to, like something to that effect. And it was really, to me that's really ignorant. With
Speaker:all the education and power and what you're paid to do and the amount of problems that
Speaker:people have in the city, if you have time to grasp what people are on paper with an example.
Speaker:There's just too many different little... pads around the labor, just getting bad at it, despite
Speaker:that they want to try and show. Right, there's anywhere from the Olympic bid, for example,
Speaker:when they made Pan Am the labor. There's as old as Penn City, if people remember, there
Speaker:was the Occupy protest, no matter how big it gets. They'll literally tell you to pack up,
Speaker:go somewhere, but we'll do something. They don't want to make positive change in the fact that
Speaker:child balance has to scale. It's almost like they need to upkeep their payouts to make people
Speaker:who are working and see like they're paying the taxes and their taxes are going to go.
Speaker:And it really sucks that they just won't stop in the few years they always put things in
Speaker:their mouth without expecting a seizure. save the people. They're not expecting, at some
Speaker:point, though, the scales to be balanced. They'll show things, for example, like Vespa, no matter
Speaker:how blind she is, that scales are going to be balanced. I look in front of City Hall, for
Speaker:example, and I have a new courthouse right beside it, and it has a balance being with a lamb
Speaker:and a lion on it.
Speaker:But now the scale just looks else. It is hard to try and get them to be fair at their own
Speaker:game. And they have the advantage in their role. They can't see the game towards helping people.
Speaker:I believe. I was in a better, better state. I lied about it just long enough to make sure
Speaker:that when the new mayor came in, now a whole bunch of other cases. But it's very easy if
Speaker:you've made marijuana legal, for example. But you didn't make overall people's lives easier,
Speaker:so there's a lot of jobs that still consider you a drug dealer. There's some you can get
Speaker:without cover. There's a lot of jobs that still consider you a drug dealer. So you can't get
Speaker:past certain statuses, so.
Speaker:Right? Well, each job you do, you need a coping mechanism, as a natural path medicine to help
Speaker:people steer away from other things, these treatments. Right? Some people in the shelter could use
Speaker:that support. So they've been giving needles for years, bowls for years. I mean, they've
Speaker:been giving needles for like 20 years. They've been giving needles since Pearson, for free
Speaker:outside. Okay? And they will not give you... $5.00 bag of weed that's really cheap. You
Speaker:can go to a native store, get a pack of $50. Have a finger cap to that box of units. You
Speaker:can't leave your own gatekeeper or natural path and it'll be your option, anything like that.
Speaker:Right, there's people on the DOLADA program, for example. And if you do anything involved,
Speaker:you can get caught selling it, whatever, get arrested. They put you on methadone and jail
Speaker:and you'll be on the program. People are on the program. They get 28 pills per day, despite
Speaker:any other medication you're doing. You're expected to do those 28 pills. That's keeping you on
Speaker:the system. They're willing to keep you on that system. Can't see your medication, any sharpness
Speaker:drug mark, you end up throwing air, your shelter changes. Why can that not be part of your medical
Speaker:and housing plan? You're in a wellness plan. So we know the housing and the pharmacy is
Speaker:familiar with something that's not the ASAP. None of that becomes an option. Okay, you're
Speaker:working, let's hope you have a say in your value. But what if you get a reference? So what if
Speaker:you get a case and you just go there? That's it. There will only be a reference to say,
Speaker:yeah, she went there, you were a good tenant. And that's it. Not to be extra, like, Oak Ridge
Speaker:out there or any of that stuff. Nope, they were good tenants. But we heard challenges where
Speaker:people had gotten their houses and workers and messed it up for 10, 15 years on a maintenance.
Speaker:And a new worker is supposed to help them get out. We were hearing that as recently as yesterday's
Speaker:episode. So. There's a lot of points where they rather abuse the power that help you get in
Speaker:what they should be having in every shelter. Regular needles, if not manual, are kind of
Speaker:bored in that area. The Metro Toronto housing in each area, finding a way to bypass the red
Speaker:page since most people that are unhoused have problems with their ID. You use their police
Speaker:documents, their medical documents, their medical records. with the bypass that they take to
Speaker:look at the house, right? Help people who are mentally and well-housing their hospitals.
Speaker:So now you can have medical programs that include the buildings that are around it. It's very
Speaker:easy, right? A few little shuffles, they'll say everything's a test. Nothing's a test.
Speaker:It's a little shuffle that already exists, right? That includes property and everything. Anything
Speaker:you don't wanna build on, you wanna build a mall on it later, sorry, but it's a modular
Speaker:housing, I tell you, build a mall on it. to all those people in modular housing that were
Speaker:building across the street that's gonna house them permanently. Very easy. I still remember,
Speaker:it's a story I tell a few people actually. There was a gentleman that was building some steps.
Speaker:He built some steps, I think, over in Hyde Park. And it ended up costing him $1,000 in cement.
Speaker:He wrote the government about it. They told him it cost $100,000. They told them to take
Speaker:it down and they spent like seven thousand or eight thousand on it. They don't go the same
Speaker:steps. But the old man built himself, he didn't know what to speak, he didn't see when they
Speaker:needed a solution. So this is equally in favor of things like Kaleo. Right? Use his resources,
Speaker:don't make extra time, there's nothing to do. That's allowed to resolve problems, made a
Speaker:cross-effective solution, it won't be costing anybody anything. And then there's time and
Speaker:trends. resources and skills and many as part ordered and not build anymore. Please help
Speaker:me keep that. and they ordered him to not do that. The city is helping people, does this
Speaker:make sense? Would you not have this person transition as going to teach each person how to do it?
Speaker:And say, listen, if you find a safe piece of land, you can build this as a module as it.
Speaker:You can get a ticket number. Now there's security on the lot.
Speaker:like there's so many things that you don't say about the police is million dollars like you
Speaker:build a rocket, send some money overseas and there's nothing wrong with being nice along
Speaker:with others but you're not going to carry home well either. That's why I hate the like cost
Speaker:benefit analysis argument even because at this point everyone probably knows that it's actually
Speaker:cheaper to house people than to deal with all of the things that we're talking about, like
Speaker:all of these layers of bureaucracy and shelter systems and enforcement and surveillance and
Speaker:permits and I mean it's endless the work that goes into being awful to poor folks and it
Speaker:would be cheaper to not but there's just such purpose. behind it, right? It's not driven
Speaker:even by a cost benefit analysis and it's not driven by any kind of ethical code because
Speaker:it's completely unethical. So that's what makes it so frustrating. And when, Naeem, you talked
Speaker:about organizing and having those difficult conversations. It needs to get done. My only
Speaker:thing that I wanted to like yell at you is like, okay, but I would rather the counselor just
Speaker:fear that we would take it and like I don't even care what they think about their jobs
Speaker:anymore I want the elites and the upper class to just know they can't fuck around because
Speaker:the poor people will rise up and just take something or they will cause some shit like they at this
Speaker:point it's their political careers aren't even important enough because they get jobs after
Speaker:like that is true in politics some career politicians are so useless they may not be employable afterwards.
Speaker:But they've made so many friends that they'll just get some bored, paid job anyway, gigs,
Speaker:books, whatever. So that's not enough fear. They need to really be scared, right? Like,
Speaker:they need to know that society will not function when you try to oppress such a large portion
Speaker:of it. And that still requires having those awkward conversations. Just, I would like to—and
Speaker:they still should make those— fucking phone calls to their counselors. I'm not telling
Speaker:people to not, because you need victories, like even small ones. But it's that larger goal
Speaker:of really finding our power and being willing to use our bodies in ways, not just our voices.
Speaker:I agree with that. And let me just be really clear, like we're not doing the door knocking.
Speaker:in the political lobbying, like, we're a direct action-oriented group, and I think, like, you
Speaker:should very much anticipate that, like, shit's gonna get real this year. You know, the things
Speaker:that we've done so far have been fairly defensive, like I mentioned, like, you know, being there
Speaker:and trying to use our bodies to stop— horrible shit from happening. But we very much are looking
Speaker:forward in 2024 to what it means to be, yeah, putting our bodies out there proactively taking
Speaker:spaces. And even like the disruption we helped organize at City Hall for the budget vote,
Speaker:like that's gonna continue, right? and city hall, committee meetings, catching politicians
Speaker:in public, like absolutely that is what folks should anticipate this year is that like business
Speaker:as usual is done and we're moving away from the fear and the kind of reactionary state
Speaker:that I think we've been growing out of that over the few years and I don't wanna try to
Speaker:suggest that like, it's all voices, like there's been a big kind of meh-loo and mix of things
Speaker:that have gotten us to this point, but look man, like if there's nowhere to go, if our
Speaker:quote unquote new progressive council is just carrying on the legacy of the last. hundred
Speaker:years of conservative fucking politics in this city and we're just gonna continue to Fund
Speaker:I mean the on the 14th. I just have to say it boggled my mind to think that like in Olivia
Speaker:Chow's office is like Michael Hay who founded Progress Toronto and folks from the Toronto
Speaker:York Region Labour Council Who well this city? Those folks are inside City Council, inside
Speaker:City Hall, about to pass motions to give the cops more money. The organizations they founded
Speaker:are outside protesting against a police budget increase. Like, I can't even imagine what being
Speaker:in Olivia Chow's office is like these days, but like that's the state of things, right?
Speaker:And I think like- I love that you're laughing, because- The veil. I'm not there yet. What
Speaker:else can you do, right? I mean. I know, I know. But like that veil is dropped, right? And like
Speaker:people, even if you're housed, like people can't afford fucking groceries, they can't afford
Speaker:rent, their kids are moving out of this city. Like things are gonna escalate. The RCMP report,
Speaker:I don't know if you guys read about the RCMP report about how they say one of the biggest
Speaker:threats to national security. is going to be people in their 30s realizing that like, shit's
Speaker:never going to get better and they can't afford to live in this country. Like, I don't know
Speaker:why I left that part. That's the reality. And I think that like, folks listening to this
Speaker:podcast should definitely expect to see like more action, more bodies, like the parallels
Speaker:even to what's happening in Gaza, right? This is like a worldwide effort to militarize the
Speaker:streets, militarize the state and trample on poor folks. And we were really like, we're
Speaker:really blessed to have, you know, folks from Juicy No to genocide support our efforts around
Speaker:the budget. And we show up as well in solidarity to their actions like. This is what we should
Speaker:expect to see this year in encampments, in the shelter hotels, but also at City Hall and the
Speaker:places where politicians and decision makers congregate. Well, for all of that, shoot me
Speaker:a text and I'll be there with a camera and a microphone. I'll make the drive. And writing
Speaker:an article about it and. talking about it here on Blueprints. And actually I wanna say also,
Speaker:even if there's an eviction from, like even one person from a shelter, let me know and
Speaker:I'll go and cover that as well. That's really great to hear. I would just be quick to say
Speaker:that when we talk to folks, I think that that's something that they don't see or are aware
Speaker:of, right? Is that like, I'm here. I maybe have a couple of friends that might help me out,
Speaker:but it's like scary as hell. And when we've asked people at the Delta, like, oh, well,
Speaker:what do you need to take more action? It's allies. We need allies, we need support. We need to
Speaker:know the media is gonna be there. We need to know that folks that are housed are gonna show
Speaker:up for us. And so thank you for that. And I hope that message can come out in this podcast.
Speaker:more people will DM us and share similar pledges of support because that's gonna go a long way
Speaker:for people to take that feeling of empowerment and start to build out tactics and strategies
Speaker:in the places that they live. So much love, appreciate that. Nahum, when you were talking
Speaker:about. getting to a point, you know, and I'm not gonna take it anymore kind of point, you
Speaker:know? You're like, it's not just us. I wanted to yell over you. No, we all feel it, brother.
Speaker:Like we can all feel it, even when we're not personally feeling it, it's in the air. And
Speaker:a lot of people are just done and frustrated with the stagnation of our movements. Definitely,
Speaker:definitely. I think that's what makes, yeah, I think that that's what, what I love about
Speaker:Voices is that like, we're not, I mean, we can, our faces can present lots of different ideas
Speaker:of who we are, but like, we're poor. Like all our members, we're poor, we're homeless. If
Speaker:we're not homeless, we're severely underhoused and going to bed every night wondering when.
Speaker:We're gonna be homeless. And so this is a struggle. It's not us doing work on behalf of other people.
Speaker:Like this is us. So yeah, thank you for that acknowledgement too. Dreads, before we go,
Speaker:is there anything else you wanna share with folks? It's also to say that a lot of death
Speaker:occurs out there as well. Not just like the threat of people ending up out there. Like
Speaker:while they're out there, there's people who don't submit themselves to the wrong kind of
Speaker:drugs. You can't tell people what to do for their own solution, but some things are not
Speaker:for everyone, so... Some people submit themselves to the wrong kind of drugs, they're like, company.
Speaker:Right? So it's trying to avoid you getting into those toxic relationships. That's also the
Speaker:thing about getting people out of these, through these kind of threatening... grants and supports.
Speaker:So hopefully, everyone starts getting more solution based. We need more decision makers that have
Speaker:economic control or who always get high end decisions. We need more people from the sidewalk
Speaker:and certain committees.
Speaker:two shelters and a condo in a hospital, or it's gonna be five condos. All right, it's gonna
Speaker:be people from the community involved in these contracts. Right, because now money's just
Speaker:being taxed and spent and you're seeing it's big open and empty lots. All right, doesn't
Speaker:sound like community plans are involving the community anymore. It's just that the community,
Speaker:we're gonna make and we're gonna live in it. We don't care if it's gonna cost 10 times what
Speaker:it costs now. Like, realistically, a house should not cost a million dollars. For one coin a
Speaker:million dollars should be comfortable. Now, you'd be lucky in Toronto to get a house for
Speaker:a million dollars. That's crazy. And that's the entire living expenses. They can't even
Speaker:provide as many jobs in Toronto to support as many houses. But they have more houses in condos
Speaker:than people. Like, it's... It's crazy. First, there's people on Lensdowne for example. The
Speaker:other thing that Lensdowne and Broke are gonna do, that they stated that some of their condo
Speaker:buildings are only 30, 50% full, right? So to me, those things don't make sense. It doesn't.
Speaker:Not one bit. People don't start making that. It's gonna be a hole in their pockets, their
Speaker:lifestyle, their time. And as I said, more off community. do not know that they'll potentially
Speaker:end up here. I think the oldest person I met that came out here for the very first time,
Speaker:completely naive to the streets, was 64 years old. And I took that gentleman out of Canada,
Speaker:no, they didn't stay with me until we got into Delta. And when we started doing outreach at
Speaker:Delta, we still did. But this is just to speak to where it appeared to you. And Todd, that's
Speaker:just sudden. It's just the potential where you can bump into somebody kind of like myself.
Speaker:You know, to have you in the in-camp, to keep things clear. Right? Other people out there,
Speaker:if you're using things like that, taking their money out of the prime, and when you're young,
Speaker:someone's looking out for you. All right? You're going to grow old, you're a kid, something
Speaker:like that. And you're an elder when you're an adult. And you're in a mentally under-estated
Speaker:state. It's about to make you look out for you. So. It's pretty crazy out there. Crazy out
Speaker:there. So you gotta put the supports back where the supports are for you so everyone gets mentally
Speaker:well secure and safe when you're listed here. Putting challenges out there to these multi-billion
Speaker:dollar corporations and million dollar corporations. Like let's buy a house and have a six person
Speaker:program in it. Let's start having a bell-ringing house. If you can open. get there, hey, you
Speaker:get a chance to work for us. You want that realistically, Rogers, whatever it is, right? Not just shelters,
Speaker:solution programs, right? Because not everybody wants to sit there and just deal with nothing.
Speaker:Some people want to engage in stuff. Right, some people don't know what to do with themselves.
Speaker:You show them certain opportunities. Some of them need to straighten up right off of the
Speaker:substance they're dealing with. So hey, this is a realistic opportunity. And then we got
Speaker:the chance to go to Soil. I was just coming in my dad's backyard. Right, I've got a couple
Speaker:of new friends, saw down some parks. They did, now I got the chance to work for Roger's here.
Speaker:I might want to straighten up. I let that forward a little bit. Right, for some people, yeah,
Speaker:so did we. Now we're at a new big glass space, we can go out there and figure through the
Speaker:program. Now it's a transitional space. We're getting to make a successful plan. I remember
Speaker:new shelters, for example, within the first two days, you needed to meet with a worker.
Speaker:Within two weeks, if you did not meet with a worker, they would pick you up. You don't need
Speaker:shelters. I feel the adult shelters should have the same thing as the shelter hotels. You have
Speaker:to meet with your worker every week. So now there's no programs like that. And you don't
Speaker:jump in. That's why it's prone to all the other excessive dangers. You jump right up to the
Speaker:other abuses. Alright, so. Change has to be all levels. You want to drop at a time and
Speaker:overnight, but steps kind of respect. Any direction is going. forward to the third, but the government
Speaker:likes to step backwards. The promises, the lies, the foolishness. I can't spend any money. Right.
Speaker:You'll knock on your door for your vote. I say knock on your door to see if you're okay. So
Speaker:I, I don't get it. Right. And this will tell you your whole counts. So what about my Wallace?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:because the police have no tools on their note. It's a negotiation. Yeah, the way that you
Speaker:describe the shelters, it's almost like they're trying to drive people out of them from the
Speaker:beginning to a set of discomfort, harassment, or living conditions. It's, I think it goes
Speaker:back to the beginning of that cycle, right, like it's supposed to be a cycle. for those
Speaker:that are designing it, right? Because there's no logic. They're struggling to find logic
Speaker:in any of this is I think what just slows you down. Like why, why would they do this? It
Speaker:doesn't make sense. Why would they pass this policy? Why would a caseworker treat me this
Speaker:way? Like it makes no sense. Don't they understand? And it's just, yeah, there's sometimes just
Speaker:no finding any sense of it, but that doesn't mean you can't like. What sensible people become
Speaker:mentally unwell. from being in the shelter system just too long. They ended up leaving and going
Speaker:right to a tent and leaving Toronto.
Speaker:There's been a few things and they were getting the supports from two people that were sexually
Speaker:abused and the staff wouldn't do anything for them without them going to the police. So they
Speaker:wouldn't even look into it, check the cameras, anything. So for the three days until this
Speaker:person went to the police, this person was still there, the person was well named, doing whatever.
Speaker:So there were steps to those kinds of actions. even the attentive support that need to be
Speaker:there. Okay, we don't know what happened, so for your safety, you can't be on the same floor
Speaker:as the person. In this case, the person needed to pass the elevator every time to pass that,
Speaker:they have to pass their room to get to the elevator. So every time they needed to go downstairs
Speaker:and on the hotel, they have to pass the address or two. So it's like what steps were taken
Speaker:by staff at all. So like you spoke earlier, the training, as I said, the training goes
Speaker:to know the difference from a seizure and an overdose, for example.
Speaker:All right. Now we have a handle, a cut, wrap a wound. All right. Simple stuff. Head wound,
Speaker:a leg wound. All right. Make a quick split. You know, something until the ambulance gets
Speaker:there. For the house, the case workers and the housing workers, something like the Delta?
Speaker:Yeah. All the workers, yeah. Yeah.
Speaker:should be mandatory. What do they, what purpose do those folks serve just essentially like
Speaker:property managers that evict or are they supposed to be like social workers? Some of them are
Speaker:supposed to be housing. Some people said they haven't seen their housing worker in the entire
Speaker:time they've been there. I know it's two years, six months, a couple of weeks.
Speaker:They say there's a special diet. That's one of the incidents that led to somebody getting
Speaker:discharged. There's rumors leading to abuse and discharging. There's quite a few. They
Speaker:don't monitor. They just seem to let things happen. And once they build, they let the problem
Speaker:against the out-hands or whatever staff may be seeing it. Then they just say, oh, you're
Speaker:not reacting right. And if you don't listen to whatever demands they may have at the moment,
Speaker:like stop that or whatever it be. So you might say, hey, you didn't give me my food. Stop
Speaker:that. You're yelling at me. I'm not yelling. I'm mad because it's dinner time and I haven't
Speaker:gotten my diet all day. And I've been here for free. Like then the next thing you're getting
Speaker:it, you're discharged. You have an half an hour to pack your stuff. So now you're, now you're
Speaker:furious. Now you're throwing your food and all kinds of stuff. By now when the paper comes
Speaker:out, your kickbacks are throwing your food. Wait a minute. You were discharged before you
Speaker:threw your food, but the cameras don't work. Or they work but they don't have sound. Or
Speaker:10 staff saw you throw your food. All this retribution. Like that, those are the abuses. Those are
Speaker:the abuses of power. Dreads and Nahum, do you worry that organizing will have you evicted
Speaker:from any... shelter that you might be in or other police extra police scrutiny is that
Speaker:a reality for you? I can speak to this quickly I don't know what name I'm gonna say to it
Speaker:but I was already consequenced for organizing an overtel. I was charged for inciting a riot,
Speaker:creating an unsafe environment for the staff but they did this like hours, hours after the
Speaker:incident happened. And then they called police afterwards and said they called the police
Speaker:and that was the reason because I was assaulting staff. So one, they had two sheets of paper,
Speaker:one said three reasons, and the other discharge paper had another three reasons. So none of
Speaker:it was matching up, made sense. So that was like one element of it. so people can get discharged.
Speaker:And there needs a threat of discharge. One of the people that actually aided us in getting,
Speaker:one of the main people that aided us in getting the signatures towards the resident meeting,
Speaker:their tenancy at the hotel for participating with us was threatened, and it was for introducing
Speaker:something that was external to the program. But. what we did was get them to assist in
Speaker:petitioning for the resident meeting that was their right. So this is it's like it's their
Speaker:right to do it so now the resident meeting is happening but now they're the propaganda is
Speaker:speaking to speaking to us is trying to get the staff in trouble with losing jobs so that's
Speaker:now making the negative impact on the residents that don't know that are unaware. the residents
Speaker:that are aware try to tell people, no, this is what we're about. Right. So those are some
Speaker:of the challenges that we were dealing with in the means of support site and the challenges
Speaker:to their tenancy and like they really do. Right. So there's a threat of incidents that have
Speaker:happened to like myself. There's other members, but I don't know if they want to be named.
Speaker:So that's why I just
Speaker:But also, I mean, I'll just say that at the Delta, they already treat us like we're rioters
Speaker:or something for handing out coffee and trying to stop people from, or trying to help people
Speaker:get back in after eviction. So my take is, look, if you're gonna treat me this way for handing
Speaker:out cookies on a Thursday, then. Like we might as well take some action, right? Though, obviously
Speaker:I know like people's level of risk and precarity is different. I'm not, definitely not speaking
Speaker:on Dread's behalf because what went down at the Novotel was pretty bad. But you know, I
Speaker:also just wanna say too, like we, for those who aren't familiar, like we started. organizing
Speaker:at the Novotel down at the Esplanade a couple of years ago. And when they announced that
Speaker:it was closing, we did a series of escalating actions that led up to an occupation of the
Speaker:lobby. And they came down pretty hard. The cops, security, everyone came down pretty hard on
Speaker:us. And a couple weeks ago, we noticed that there were cops positioned at the Delta lobby.
Speaker:Every time we showed up there, cops kind of permanently there. And then very curious, not
Speaker:sure why all that's going on. And then a week, 10 days later, all the residents got these
Speaker:letters saying that the shelter's getting transitioned into a refugee space. So to me, that's a signal
Speaker:of fear, right? And I actually had a... the fortunate opportunity of a friend who sat in
Speaker:on a meeting after we occupied the Novotel with Holmes first staff. And it scared the shit
Speaker:out of them, right? That people took action, that disruption happened. And so no doubt they're
Speaker:gonna put cops in the lobby, right? Like they're worried about. that kind of level of response
Speaker:and reaction. They're using union busting tactics on you, right? They know how to do that. And
Speaker:they're applying it preemptively to the community there. Absolutely. Fuckers. Yep. Well, they're
Speaker:clever, but are they determined enough to stop? We're clever, too.
Speaker:Yeah, no doubt. And a lot more determined, I think.
Speaker:I want to thank you both so much for advising us and taking the time to come on here. And
Speaker:like I say to all my guests, even more so for the work that you're doing. Like thank you
Speaker:for persevering through all that shit and continuing to fight and try to pull people along with
Speaker:you that should already be coming along. And you're actually being quite gracious with the
Speaker:fact of how...
Speaker:with allies that should be doing more.
Speaker:Thank you again for coming on and sharing your stories too. Your perspective is important
Speaker:and we'll be sure to... Our show notes, if people are listening, are gonna point you right to
Speaker:Voices for the unhoused. So their social media accounts, various things that they've mentioned
Speaker:here on the show. And please, please show your support for us folks. All the more things.
Speaker:And then once the, then what's the, we have our podcast piece as well. This week's good.
Speaker:The, um. Yeah, we do.
Speaker:We do have a podcast called. Trial by Shelter. Folks can... We only have our first episode
Speaker:out. Our next episode's in editing right now. And also just... that like we would love, we're
Speaker:really looking for folks who can support us as like a monthly supporter and just like having
Speaker:that kind of consistency allows us to do the outreach, the mutual aid work that we do and
Speaker:just kind of gives us that consistency to know that next month will be okay, right? that do
Speaker:rely on that regularity of us showing up. So I'll share the link with you, Jess, so that
Speaker:you can share in the notes as well. And yeah, thanks for having us. Thank you very much.
Speaker:That is a wrap on another episode of Blueprints of Disruption. Thank you for joining us. Also,
Speaker:a very big thank you to the producer of our show, Santiago Halu-Quintero. Blueprints of
Speaker:Disruption is an independent production operated cooperatively. You can follow us on Twitter
Speaker:at BPofDisruption. If you'd like to help us continue disrupting the status quo. Please
Speaker:share our content and if you have the means consider becoming a patron. Not only does our
Speaker:support come from the progressive community, so does our content. So reach out to us and
Speaker:let us know what or who we should be amplifying. So until next time, keep disrupting.