TARP Presentation: Aboriginal Men, Homelessness and Housing

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A TASSC public engagement presentation about the TARP Report findings on Aboriginal men, Homelessness and House in the City of Toronto.

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TORONTO ABORIGINAL SUPPORT

SERVICES COUNCIL (TASSC)

Aboriginal Homelessness & Housing

& Aboriginal Men

1st Annual Decolonizing Indigenous Health Research Conference

Love

Respect

Courage

Honesty

Wisdom

Humility

Truth

www.tassc.ca

www.tassc.ca

Aboriginal Men

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less than high school

high school

some post secondary

college diploma/degree

university degree

university graduate degree

0 5 10 15 20 25

CHART 5A: Aboriginal Men Educational Attainment

(Quantitative n=313)

Percentage

www.tassc.ca

0 - 10,000 10 - 20,000 20 - 30,000 30 - 40,000 40 - 50,000 50 - 60,000 60 - 70,000 $70,001 +0

5

10

15

20

25

CHART 5B: Aboriginal Men's Household Income

(Quantitative n=253) Pe

rcen

tage

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0 - 10,000 10 - 20,000 20 - 30,000 30 - 40,000 40 - 50,000 50 - 60,000 $60,001 +0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

CHART 5F: Aboriginal Men's Educational Attainment vs. Total Household Income

(Quantitative n=294)

less than high schoolhigh schoolsome post secondarycollege diploma/degreeuniversity degreeuniversity graduate degree

Perc

enta

ge

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“Success is to be in touch with oneself. It is to know who you are and where you come from. It

is to have knowledge of the teachings and ceremonies and to find out what Creator has in mind for you…your place within society. I try to

instil this in my son and to help him not be ashamed of where he has come from.”

(Aboriginal Men’s Focus Group)

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“When you’re ready to stop drinking and drugging there’s no place to go. There is an inability of places

that have the capacity to properly assess us as Aboriginals, so they don’t know where to put you or

what you need. My needs and her needs can be quite different. There is also more need for

individual counseling. Most of the places focus on groups and group counseling and not enough on

me. I’m there for me, not for the group.

(Homelessness Focus Group)

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Police and court system25%

Workplace21%

Schools20%

Housing18%

Restaurent and malls17%

CHART 5I: Places Where Racism Most Often Occurs For Aboriginal Men (Quantitative n=326)

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“We forget who we are and where we come from when we are in Toronto and we are faced

with racism and labeling and are expected to be a drug addict….there is really blatant racism

here in the city.”

(Aboriginal Men’s Focus Group)

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Housing & Homelessness

in the Aboriginal

Community in Toronto

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“The day of the nuclear family is not here with Aboriginal people. When I lived in social

housing in Scarborough, there were three of us that had seven dependents, a niece and

nephew or an uncle. There isn’t social housing that embraces that style of housing.”

(Aboriginal Women’s Focus Group)

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21%

61%

4%

14%

CHART 11A: Major Housing Issues Concerning Aboriginal People Living in Toronto/GTA(Qualitative n=173)

Inadequate or overcrowdedAccessibility, Affordability, AvailabilityPeople with addictionsLack of Aboriginal housing

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“Native housing agencies are not geared for guys; they’re geared for either working people

or families. They should put some of their money they get to create a system that can

help guys, not just leaving it for us, because a lot of guys don’t have the skills to get out there

and do that for themselves.”

(Homelessness Focus Group)

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More than 1 housing situation

A house

An apartment or house/condo

Shelter

Stay with friends or family

Rent a room in a house

On the streets

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

CHART 5H: Housing Status For Aboriginal Men (Quantitative n=305)

Percentage

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Rented apartment, condominium or house55%

Stay with family and friends, shelter, or on the streets

14%

Live in a house31%

CHART 11B: Housing Situation of Respondents(Qualitative n=807)

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11%

55%

20%

6%

3% 1%

CHART 12C: Length Of Time Homeless(Homeless Interviews n=138)

Less than a Year1 - 5 years5-10 years10-15 years15-20 years20 + years

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“Without work or housing…which comes first, housing or work? And then, taking on both at

the same time is twice as challenging.”

(Homelessness Focus Group)

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0 - 10,000 CAD dollars $10,001 - 20,000 $20,001 - 40,000 $40,001 - 60,000 $60,001 and above0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

CHART 11E: Stable Housing by Total Family Income (Qualitative n=624)

yes no

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Overcrowded12%

Needs Maintenance15%

Rent is too High15%

Unsafe Building and Area19%

Far from Services8%

Negative Tenant Relations9%

Building Unclean or Unsanitary14%

Negative Landlord Relations8%

CHART 11C: Reason for Inadequate Housing(Qualitative n=642)

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• Wrapping up

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Toronto Aboriginal Support Services Council

16 Spadina Road

Toronto, ON  M5R 2S7

 Phone:   (647) 748-6100 

Fax:        (647) 748-0699 

Email:     jbull@tassc.ca

Website: www.tassc.ca

Contact us

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