We promote the rights of people with mental
illness to live in the neighbourhood of their choice.

Every person has an equal right to accommodation, free from discrimination on the basis of mental illness, another disability, source of income or any other personal characteristic.


Media Room

HomeComing was founded by a coalition of supportive housing providers, human rights activists, urban planners, mental health agencies, consumers of mental health services, and other citizens who share our goals.

HomeComing’s mission is to promote the rights of people with mental illness to live in the communities of their choice.

Below you’ll find real stories of people that live in and near supportive housing.

 

Recent Items

Toronto Zoning By-law still discriminatory

Toronto City Council passed its amalgamated zoning by-law on August 27th –but the Ontario Human Rights Commission calls for changes.

A landmark Charter Challenge

Legal case seeks declaration that homelessness violates Charter.

Our best chance to abolish discriminatory zoning by-laws

Tell the City’s Planning and Growth Committee to uphold the human rights code and drop distancing requirements.

Last frontier of legal prejudice

The Dream Team challenges Toronto’s discriminatory zoning by-law.

Sarnia revokes anachronistic by-laws targeting disabled

The City of Sarnia throws out regulations that restrict the location of group homes.

By-laws must follow Human Rights Code – OHRC

“Using by-laws to keep some people out of neighbourhoods is wrong,” said Ontario Human Rights Commissioner Barbara Hall.

OMB says zoning must respect human rights

A landmark OMB decision says the City of Kitchener’s Cedar Hill By-law did not give due consideration to the human rights of vulnerable people.

A new NIMBY guide for municipal officials

ACT (Affordability and Choice Today) has just published Housing In My Backyard: A Municipal Guide for Responding to NIMBY. The guide offers practical advice and case studies from across Canada, including Ontario’s groundbreaking human rights work.

OHRC comments on Toronto zoning by-law

The City has committed itself to a Housing Charter. The City’s new amalgamated zoning by-law is one place to put that commitment into action. Read the Ontario Human Rights Commission’s comments.

Human Rights Commission launches rental housing policy

The OHRC affirms that “people or groups identified under the Code should not have to ask permission form prospective neighbours before moving into a neighbourhood.”

Council approves Toronto Housing Charter

Toronto Housing Charter says all residents should “be able to live in the neighbourhood of choice without discrimination.”

Two Calgary studies add to the evidence

Studies from the University of Calgary and the City of Calgary show affordable and non-market housing has “little or no” impact on surrounding property values.

Human rights trump property rights

Columnist Carol Goar reports “barriers are toppling. Attitudes are changing. NIMBYISM appears to have met its match.”

NIMBYism: a human rights concern

Ontario Human Rights Commission names discriminatory NIMBY as a human rights concern. Get the link to the full report.

Letter to the Editor: NIMBYism alive and well

Don Weitz writes: “Congratulations to urban planner-researcher Lilith Finkler for criticizing housing discrimination against psychiatric survivors and the homeless. Unfortunately, NIMBYism is still widespread in Toronto and other major cities in Canada.”

Human Rights? Not for everybody

Joey Slinger writes: “Neither liberals nor conservatives have the slightest hesitation about saying the most utterly despicable things imaginable.”

Mentally ill, homeless hurt by zoning by-laws

Ontario municipalities are discriminating against the mentally ill, the homeless, and other disadvantaged groups through their zoning by-laws, says a Toronto urban planner.

Toronto Star: Premier chides ‘overzealous’ Ruprecht

Get a link to the article and read letters to the editor.

Toronto Star: MPP’s ‘crazed’ crack riles mentally ill

“A group of mentally ill Torontonians has launched a human rights case against a Liberal MPP who opposed a supportive housing development because his community had enough “crazed individuals” already.” Link to the full article and letters to the editor from HomeComing supporters.

Alternative Living Solutions, 1908 Gerrard Street East

Council resoundingly approved funding to convert a vacant banquet hall into 29 supportive housing apartments.

Imagine affordable housing development without NIMBY

ONPHA releases research on new inclusionary zoning policy.

New Study: Supportive Housing in Toronto

The Dream Team and University of Toronto release a new study on the impacts of supportive housing in Toronto.

From the Globe and Mail, Gary Mason

Download an excerpt of Gary Mason’s October 10, 2006 column.

Crosscurrents: The Journal of Addiction and Mental Health, Summer, 2006

CAMH’s Crosscurrents produces a special edition on housing and homelessness.