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‘We are going to see more people this winter’: COVID-19 challenges Guesthouse Shelter in Midland

Nathan Sykes currently has more questions than answers.

The newly-minted CEO of Midland’s Guesthouse Shelter is in the midst of trying to figure out how the organization will help the community’s most vulnerable residents this winter. But the constantly changing regulations stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic have made planning very difficult.

As it stands, Sykes doesn’t quite know how The Guesthouse Shelter will operate this winter. What he does know is that there will be an extreme need for the services it provides.

“We are going to see more people this winter,” said Sykes. “There are a lot of people who have been laid off or have seen their hours reduced and CERB just ended. So, we expect a whole lot more people to be coming here who are not necessarily homeless, but in a state of being precariously housed.”

As of Oct. 1, the shelter building located at 522 Elizabeth St. remained closed. The facility shut down in late March and guests were relocated to local motels. 

Sykes and his staff have been working toward reopening the shelter, but constantly-changing COVID-19 regulations haven’t made it easy. 

Under current regulations, the shelter is allowed to have only 10 people in the building at one time. That means the Guesthouse would have room for only eight guests and two staff members.

“We normally have room for 18 and we are always full,” said Sykes. “So how do we decide which eight people will stay at the shelter? And what do we do with the wait list and overflow of people looking to be housed?”

Over the course of the past seven months, the Guesthouse has continuously supported an average of 20 people at local motels. At one point, there were 44 guests staying in motels. 

Shelter staff have been preparing meals and delivering them to the motels twice a day.

According to Jan Janssen, director of children and community services with the County of Simcoe, more funding would be needed in order for the motel program to continue through the winter. 

The motel model, which is being run by five shelters and two out-of-the-cold programs, costs the county $450,000 per month. 

“In addition to the costs of funding the rooms, the county is funding 24-7 staffing, security, deep-cleaning measures, personal protective equipment and all locations have been provided with a defibrillator,” said Janssen. 

With extra funding not guaranteed, local shelter executives have been continuing to explore options. They all meet over Zoom twice a week to collectively plan for the future. 

“We continue to plan what the winter could look like and what transition back to community could look like,” said Janssen. “The plan evolves all the time. We are building it as we go and it takes all of our heads around the table to sort this out.”

Sykes plans on reaching out to the north Simcoe community for assistance.


STORY BEHIND THE STORY: Reporter Andrew Mendler was curious about how the Guesthouse Shelter would be operating this winter in the midst of a pandemic. So, he reached out to shelter officials for details.

Small businesses say they’re ‘unfairly targeted’ by lockdown as Ontario reports 1,589 new COVID-19 cases

Premier Doug Ford says he agrees “it’s not fair” that Walmart, Costco and The Bay on Yonge St. can stay open while small retailers of non-essential goods must keep their doors closed to customers.

But, under pressure to ease lockdown measures in Toronto and Peel as Ontario reported a record 1,589 new COVID-19 cases and another 19 deaths Monday, Ford said doing so risks the virus spreading faster.

“We would be in terrible, terrible shape.”

The comments came as the Canadian Federation of Independent Business pleaded for help with non-essential businesses limited to curbside pickup and deliveries with the busy holiday shopping season on the way.

Only retailers selling essential items such as food, pharmacy and hardware can keep their doors open to customers, although at 50 per cent of customer capacity under the lockdown that began Monday.

“Too many business owners feel they are being unfairly targeted so the government can send a signal to the public that they need to take the pandemic seriously,” CFIB president Dan Kelly said, echoing concerns raised in the first lockdown last spring.

The lobby group called existing government supports a “drop in the bucket” and pushed for reopenings with strict capacity limits on customers, such as no more than three at one time or shopping by appointment to keep main streets alive.

“Many businesses in these regions have already lost three to five months of their year from government shutdowns,” Kelly said, dubbing the advantage granted to bigger retailers “outrageous.”

Asked about levelling the playing field by forcing Walmart and Costco to block off areas of the store not selling essentials, Ford said his discussions with executives convinced him that would be a “logistical nightmare.”

That’s no consolation to small retailers left to pay the price of the pandemic without adequate provincial supports, said Green Leader Mike Schreiner.

“It’s simply unfair that Costco and Walmart can continue selling jewelry, PlayStations and other non-essential goods while mom and pop retailers must shut down entirely.”

Small Business Minister Prabmeet Sarkaria said provincial aid includes a $600 million assistance fund available for applications online, and acknowledged business owners are facing “significant challenges.”

The decisions on which businesses to close were made “with the best advice of public health officials” amid the surge in COVID-19, he added.

“We’ll continue to work with our public health officials to get this right.”

With the CFIB demanding to see data supporting the closure of non-essential business, associate chief medical officer Dr. Barbara Yaffe said specifics are hard to come by because public health units can’t keep up with contact tracing.

But she told reporters there is “widespread community transmission” of COVID-19 and that it can happen in small spaces that are crowded or with poor ventilation.

“Those are the kinds of circumstances that may occur in smaller businesses,” Yaffe said.

The 1,589 new cases reported Monday lift the province’s seven-day rolling average of new infections to 1,429, near its record of 1,443 last week.

Ministry of Health figures showed Peel Region had 535 new cases and Toronto had 336. There were 205 in York Region, which remains in the red or “control” zone of precautions, which is one category short of lockdown.

Ford said tough restrictions were necessary with hospitalizations from COVID-19 climbing rapidly since September and threatening to crowd out non-emergency surgeries once admissions to intensive care units topped 150.

That number rose to 156 in Monday’s reports, the highest since mid-May.

Rob Ferguson is a Toronto-based reporter covering Ontario politics for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: