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Homelessness and Panhandling in Toronto

Completely false. Church St. has actually seen a big improvement over the past 2 years.

Over the past couple of years I've noticed that area get much, much worse. I try to avoid having to walk in the Church/Wellesley area now, but when I do go through there, there's barely enough sidewalk space because of all of the punks hanging out.
 
Writer at Globe and Mail pretends to be panhandler in Yorkville.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/blogs/wtiff2007blog

$32 and change

Jen Gerson, 09/09/07 at 2:37 PM EDT

It's the first drizzly, cold day in fall and my task is to sit on a street corner and beg for change. I'll assume I'm paying back some karmic debt for missing my mother's birthday.

I went to Tim Horton's and asked for my usual -- a medium steeped tea double double with milk, double-cupped please. I pulled on my torn jeans, inkk-stained green hoodie, favourite hat and dark eye make up and hit the streets with a folded cardboard sign and a thin black felt pen. On the northeast corner of Bay and Bloor, the nexus of wealth and fame during fest, I met Gordon Lackey, 56. Armed with a Grade 10 education and a heart problem that had thrown him out of manual labour, Lackey now hits Yorkville on the weekend. His usual haunt near King and Bay is deserted on Sunday.

"And people have money up here," he said.

I hit him up for tips.

"You just have to be respectful," he advised. He knows some panhandlers who steal wheelchairs and canes from the hospital and he hates that. Just be polite.

"I know you're not going to do this forever," he said and offered to help me out if a nearby aggressive panhandler in a red hat gave me any trouble.

"I know him," he said.

So I took my piece of cardboard and sat under the eave of David's shoes, on the same side of the street as Holt Renfrew. On my sign I wrote: "Out of Job. Running Short. Will write for change. $.25 per word. (Cheap!)" Which isn't entirely untrue. I took Lackey's advice, was polite, smiled and didn't harass anyone. Within a few moments, people were dropping change into my cup: A man wearing a wooden cross with a heart punched out of the middle; a celebrity-stalking journalist in an orange shawl; a former colleague whose son gave me a loonie.

I expected to be ignored as a panhandler. I was wrong. People look, they just look away when you make eye contact. But the position offers a great vantage for people watching. It's hard not to notice the celebrity stalkers. Well-coiffed and usually women, they walk around the block, collecting a Starbucks cup, or a bag from Holts along the way.

Liv Tyler and Danny Glover walked past. They didn't give me any money.

A clean-cut man wearing glasses walked up to me. He had a blue collared sweater over a collared shirt. He was carrying a full-length umbrella, and a black leather clipboard holding a perfect, folded newspaper.

"You want a job?" he asked.
"Sure. I charge a quarter a word. I'm a burgeoning literary talent. What can I write for you?"
"You want to work?" he asked again.
"Absolutely."
"There's a Tim Horton's down the street. I'm sure if you approach them, they'll take you on the spot."

Before I could explain to him that I actually had a job, and could I please have the spelling of his first and last name, he spun around and strode away, his gait just an inch or two taller than it was before.
Apparently, all the money in the world can't buy you a pair.

A security guard who witnessed the incident offered me a cigarette and a loonie. I thanked him.

Another man in a dark suit approached me a few minutes afterward. He pulled out a silver clip with a thwack of folded American twenties.

"What are you short on?" he asked.
"Actually, I'm a writer. I charge $.25 a word. Cheap."
"I'm a writer too," he said and handed me a twenty.
"What's your name?" he asked.
"Jen."
"I'm Paul Haggis."
"Nice to meet you."

Which means that the Canadian and Oscar-winning director is either a genuinely kind person, or that he has a damn astute publicist.

After about two hours on the street, I took my twenty and my $12 in change and gave it to Lackey. He emptied the cup into his hand and said that I'd done not too bad. He paid for two coffees at the Timmy's under the Bloor cinema, where most of the films for the fest are playing. He said on a good day, he can make approximately $50, and told me about the time he ran into Ringo Starr.

"I know you, I said. He gave me a $50 bill and he looked like a street person. He had a shirt out to here. He stayed and talked with me for about ten minutes," Lackey said.

Sometimes you get lucky. Life is like that. One minute you're getting told off by a random person on the street, the next, Paul Haggis is paying for lunch.

Lackey's joints are swelling up again and he says he doesn't expect to make it to Christmas. He's okay with it. He offered two more pieces of advice to me. The first was to be kind to my mother: "The day she dies will be the saddest day of your life. She's your best friend."
The other: "Stay young."
 
i say around 80%, however when you see a person who needs real help, we all tend to forget about them.


Actually you see i could live with the polite hobo who just sits there... and does not make eye contact....He usually wins more sympathy really then an aggressive scary looking guy.

Its those ones that chase people down or yell at people that should be fined and charged and such. Those people really bring the quality of life down.
 
What I'd like to see is proper Police enforcement of the Safe Streets Act. The SSA clearly prohibits solicitation (including begging) on roadways, however every day I drive down the Jarvis Street exit from the Gardiner I see a pair or more of beggars walking between the lines of cars asking for change.
 
I agree, but our proposals need not be exclusive of each other. I say we start with enforcement of the laws we've got, such as the Safe Streets Act which clearly prohibits solicitation at the road side, and the relevant white colour laws as well.
 
.
Homeless man film fest's hottest celebrity


Colin Farrell spares some change, turns 'Stress' into sensation

by Tim Lai
Entertainment Reporter
September 14, 2007

http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/FilmFest/article/256457


The media circus swirling through Yorkville yesterday wasn't chasing an elusive movie star, but an enigmatic homeless man whom many of his brethren describe as having "a bar of gold up his ass." Still, they wonder how long his luck will hold.

The talk of the avenues of luxury – Dave, who goes by the street name "Stress" – was nowhere to be seen at his regular spot in Yorkville, planted outside Remys. On Wednesday, Cassandra's Dream star Colin Farrell took Stress on a shopping spree at a camping store and supposedly fronted his rent for up to a year.

It's not the first time Stress has benefited from the movie heartthrob. A few years back, Farrell picked Stress as the winner of a $2,000 radio contest, but he apparently blew it quickly on drugs. Stress has another strike-it-rich story, but fellow Outreach newspaper seller, Steven, said that tale is one kept to themselves.

"He draws good luck," said Steven, who enjoyed a successful day selling papers, since media and celebrity hounds pestered him with questions about the now-notorious Stress. "I don't want him back on the streets. He got a lottery ticket and it's the best thing. He needed it."

His story was apparently the most-read online at the Toronto Sun. Stress's street celebrity grew throughout the day as rumours about his whereabouts churned out faster than some celebrity blogs.

Some people on the street said they had heard he was trying to double up at Casino Rama or in Niagara Falls. Others said he flew the coop for the U.S. Many figure this loner will be back on the street soon enough, though – but ducking low for his own safety.

"Thank God (for) Colin Farrell. And more people should do that," Steven said.

"For someone to take you off the streets and give you something like that, that's a gift."

Steven said Stress's story made it hip yesterday to give homeless people money, a much better perception than being labelled a murderer, referring to the recent case in which Ross Hammond of St. Catharines died of stab wounds inflicted by alleged panhandlers.

He added he has had his own financial windfalls from celebrities. During previous festivals, he said, Robin Williams and Bruce Willis each dropped him a few hundred.

But, compared to others, Steven was tight-lipped about Stress.

"We call him `Stress' because he stresses people out. He's not all there. He has his, you know, problems. He's a recovering alcoholic and (crack) addict," claimed Shorty, who's usually planted across the street from Sassafraz.

"I'm pissed off he got all this money and all this good stuff, but I have to be happy for him."

Despite hopes he's wrong, Shorty expects to see Stress back on the street because of his addictions. Shorty said if there were more resources put into detox and rehab centres, then perhaps this fresh start could be sustained.

"He's got a disease like the rest of us," said Shorty, who saw Stress's high-end sleeping bag, one of his gifts from Farrell, a few hours after it was purchased.
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“squeegee guy†attacks man in Toronto

Okay, so this guy was charged with assault, but how about also charging him for breaking the Safe Streets Act, which clearly prohibits squeegee tactics.

http://www.eontarionow.com/provincial/2007/09/14/squeegee-guy-attacks-man-in-toronto/

Toronto (EON) - A driver, stopped at the intersection of Spadina Ave. and Dundas St. on Thursday afternoon, says a “squeegee guy†attacked him after he told him not to clean his windshield.

The driver, only identified as David, says when he saw the panhandler coming towards his vintage MG Midget convertible, he told the man not to touch his car. The panhandler is then said to have become angry and pounded the side of the car with his squeegee.

David told the Toronto Star that he then told the man to “Get the f— away from the car.†That apparently angered the panhandler even more, because David says that’s when the man jumped into the open convertible and began beating him with his squeegee and his spare hand.

Shortly after, the panhandler ran away, followed closely by David. He eventually caught up with him and held him until police arrived.

David was not injured. The panhandler, 27-year-old Derek Leonard, has been charged with assault.
 
Adm. Beez:

Actually, the Safe Street Act only allows for relatively minor fines ($1000) and jail-terms (6 months). Charging and convicting someone under assault is a far more severe punative measure.

AoD
 
I could vomit at Colin Farrell's grandstanding. Completely unproductive except for his career. It totally direspectful to people who give anonomously.
 

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