Halfway home? Transitional housing to help start a new life

Winnie Czulinski –

From Gen Z to senior, how should a community deal with people coping with addic­tion, mental illness, abuse and past-incarceration – and being unhoused? Downtown East has diverse resources, including paths to permanent homes.

“Transitional housing pro­grams are critically important,” says Mark Aston, executive di­rector of Covenant House To­ronto. “They provide that step­ping stone for a young person to move out of shelter, get back into the community. They give people time to stabilize, to start pursuing whatever their plans and interests are. It could be go­ing back to school, to college, working a career pathway, sav­ing some money.”

Covenant House operates about a third of the shelter beds for young people in Toronto and opened a respite program this winter. It has transitional op­tions that include several youth sharing a house, often with a live-in mentor and on-site staff, and affordable scattered site units. Overall, Covenant House Toronto has about 300 units, with the largest off-site facility housing about 65 residents.

The agency’s Rights of Pas­sage program gives young peo­ple an opportunity to learn and practise life skills before they move out on their own. They live on a shared floor with pri­vate rooms at the main Cove­nant House site. In addition to learning from chores and re­sponsibilities, the youth can ac­cess extensive support for em­ployment, school, job training and mental health.

When Mickey arrived at 17 years old, she was shy but de­termined and focused. “I was in school and also working, and very stressed,” she said. “But knowing I had a safe place to sleep at night, and meals to eat – that really meant a lot.”

Overnight youth worker Mar­va Townsend-Joao helped Mick­ey learn how to cook, budget, and feel safe. “I’m getting shiv­ers just thinking about the con­fidence that she developed from trying things and being resil­ient,” said Townsend-Joao.

Other Downtown East hous­ing initiatives include those of Elizabeth Fry Toronto, with programs such as the Phyllis Haslam Community Residential Program for women on parole; the Home for Good program, offering safe, stable housing for women with a history of home­lessness who are transitioning out of institutions; and the EF Housing Success program that supports continued housing sta­bility.

St. Michael’s Homes on Carl­ton Street and Gerrard Street has 75 beds in four residential settings, out-patient counselling and psychotherapy, and a drop-in serving clients experiencing mental health problems. Transi­tional programs offer stays of up to 12 months or even four years. Still, it’s a struggle.

Yonge Street Mission, which assisted 208 adults and youth in 2025, is in its 130th year. Its manager of housing, Kristin Booy, says, “The biggest chal­lenges are linked to an over­burdened shelter system and an overburdened subsidized hous­ing system. The private market is inaccessible, shelters are full and there is over a decade-long waiting list for a subsidized housing unit.”

The mission’s Genesis Place has 26 rent-geared-to-income units, some of them permanent. New vacancies are filled via a referral process and agreement from the tenant to work on goals for three years.

“Since [the facility] was built in 1990, it has sought to provide housing for the hard-to-house,” says Booy. Vacancies are filled with people from the shelter system or short-term transition­al housing.

“We strive to create a place where individuals and house­holds can stabilize while expe­riencing a safe and affordable place to live.” Supports and goal-setting help people transi­tion to a permanent option.

One man with history of trau­ma and physical disability, who came from the mission’s Ever­green Centre for Street-Involved Youth, began to open up at Gen­esis Place. Social assistance problems were corrected and he applied to, and was accepted at, a college to work on a social ser­vices diploma. He then received subsidized permanent housing from the Toronto Community Housing Corporation.

Yonge Street Mission is de­veloping a section of Gerrard Street East with ELEV8 by YSM, a housing rental model of 194 units, with employment and entrepreneurship hubs. The Progress in Place project aims to create a pathway out of so­cial housing into affordable and workforce housing, and ulti­mately market housing.

Mickey, who was helped by Covenant House Toronto’s Rights of Passage transitional housing program, graduated from nursing school and got community housing from Cov­enant House. “I still use their counseling services and health­care. It’s really nice to know that there’s backup and that there’s a safety net.

“I honestly don’t know where I’d be right now if it hadn’t been for Covenant House.”