innsertnamehere
Superstar
Homeless sleeping in suburban GO stations has also become very prevalent in the last 2 years - something which absolutely was not pre-covid.
I've had the police show up a lot of times the last 2 years while riding the go, even have a photo of the police escorting out a lady who threatened to shoot me and the other passengersHomeless sleeping in suburban GO stations has also become very prevalent in the last 2 years - something which absolutely was not pre-covid.
That’s truly upsetting. It only takes a few stories like this to accelerate a doom loop, where people think that the TTC is uncomfortable - if not flat-out unsafe - to ride.On my last ride on the 501, a homeless person had pretty much barricaded themselves into the back end of the car, shopping cart and all. In full view of riders, they proceeded to urinate on the floor. Riders just moved away, clearly no one wanted to directly intervene, and alerting the operator would only have delayed service and possibly been pointless.
What’s cold is telling people to go to a homeless shelter in a city where its shelters are beyond capacity, some of those that do exist have safety/security issues. Until there is enough capacity, and pathways to supported housing for as many as can be housed, the alternative is what? The sidewalk ventilation grates?I’m all for supporting the homeless, and I know I come off as cold here: but transit vehicles are not homeless shelters.
What’s cold is telling people to go to a homeless shelter in a city where its shelters are beyond capacity, some of those that do exist have safety/security issues. Until there is enough capacity, and pathways to supported housing for as many as can be housed, the alternative is what? The sidewalk ventilation grates?
I don't know... it's not pleasant to run into someone who has requisitioned the transit system for their own residence, and I never sit on the TTC for fear of what I might pick up on the back of my pants, but if the choice comes down to that, or finding them frozen to death in a back alley...
I don't know... it's not pleasant to run into someone who has requisitioned the transit system for their own residence, and I never sit on the TTC for fear of what I might pick up on the back of my pants, but if the choice comes down to that, or finding them frozen to death in a back alley...
What’s cold is telling people to go to a homeless shelter in a city where its shelters are beyond capacity, some of those that do exist have safety/security issues. Until there is enough capacity, and pathways to supported housing for as many as can be housed, the alternative is what? The sidewalk ventilation grates?
What’s cold is telling people to go to a homeless shelter in a city where its shelters are beyond capacity, some of those that do exist have safety/security issues. Until there is enough capacity, and pathways to supported housing for as many as can be housed, the alternative is what? The sidewalk ventilation grates?
Moving vehicles with drivers are an extremely inefficient way of sheltering people looking for some warmth.
This already happens at Spadina Station and Union Station from 20:00 to about 05:00. The City has converted a few decommissioned buses exactly for this purpose. Though sometimes they’ll use the BYD electric buses when residents complain about the noise.If we need to use transit vehicles as homeless shelters then retrofit some less reliable vehicles with restive heating and park them in convenient Green P lots with signs saying "Shelter". Plug them in for heat.
This already happens at Spadina Station and Union Station from 20:00 to about 05:00. The City has converted a few decommissioned buses exactly for this purpose. Though sometimes they’ll use the BYD electric buses when residents complain about the noise.
Could the police not just use their LRAD's and blast Nancy Sinatra's "These boots are made for walking" alongside some Alice Cooper?
If it worked for the ATF and FBI at Waco, it should work here.