24-hour shelter opening at former Htel-Dieu hospital as contract ends with downtown Montreal hotel - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 03:56 AM | Calgary | -14.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

24-hour shelter opening at former Htel-Dieu hospital as contract ends with downtown Montreal hotel

As Montreal's contract with a downtown hotel that offered homeless people rooms throughout the pandemic ends, the city's oldest (and now former) hospital will become a 24-hour shelter.

One of the pavillions at Montreal's oldest hospital will now house at least 100 people living in homelessness

beds in a shelter
One hundred beds will be available at the former Htel-Dieu hospital on Saint-Urbain Street as of Thursday, July 1. (Josie Desmarais/POOL/Journal Mtro)

As Montreal's contract with a downtown hotel that offered homeless people rooms throughout the pandemic ends, the city's oldest (and now former) hospital will become a 24-hour shelter.

The Htel-Dieu de Montral was the first hospital established in Montreal. Located on St-Urbainstreet, it is no longer a hospital, but it is still home to outpatient clinics and administrative offices for Montreal's French-language superhospital (CHUM).

During the pandemic, it became one of several specialized clinics in Quebec treating COVID-19 patients.

The former hospital will have at least 100 beds, with a capacity of 200 if needed, according to health officials who led reporters on a tourWednesday.

"This is going to be a place of dignity and a place of humanity," James Hughes, the president of the Old Brewery Mission, told reporters.

The Old Brewery Mission and Welcome Hall Mission partnered with one of the Montreal health boards, theCIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'le-de-Montral, and theCHUM superhospitalto set up the shelter.

The shelter will open Thursday, about three weeks after dozens of homeless people were told tofind a new shelterbecauseemergency accommodations in Place Dupuis another temporary shelter in a downtown hotel would close at the end of June.

James Hughes, the president of the Old Brewery Mission, showed media the rooms that will serve as a shelter to homeless people in the former Htel-Dieu hospital as of Thursday. (CBC)

The contract between Montreal and the hotel led to the creation of250 emergency places to shelter homeless people through the winter.

The shelter in Htel-Dieuwill span four floors in the building's Le Royer pavillon. There are 25 rooms on each floor and each has two beds with a private bathroom.

Objective is to find housing for residents

Residents will be able to leave their belongings in the room they are staying in, and meals and snacks will be provided.

The goal is to help residents find long-term housing by connecting them to rent subsidies and other programs to find housing, as rents in the city rise.

"To really get to work with such complex people with such complex journeysand challenges, we need to work with them during the day and make sure they have stability in the night. It's only in this kind of environment we can do it," Hughes said.

The city has estimated that the homeless population in Montreal has more than doubled during the pandemic.

"More people are coming in than getting out at the present time," Hughes said. "We want to help people get out. It's not our journey out, it's their journey out."

Staff from the Old Brewery Mission will be providing services during the day and workers from the Welcome Hall Mission will be there overnight.

The contract between the health board, which will provide funding for the project, and the other organizations is set to last until at least March 2022.

Caroline Dusablon oversees urban partnerships for the CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'le-de-Montral, which is helping fund the 100-bed shelter at Htel-Dieu. (CBC)

"The people that come here, they have a place to sleep during the night and after that, they are accompanied by the organizations," said Caroline Dusablon, who oversees urban partnerships at the CIUSSS.

"The aim is really that these people have their own apartment one day."

Those who have been staying at Place Dupuis and would like to move to the Htel-Dieu shelter can take a shuttle bus between the two locations Thursday.

With files from Sarah Leavitt