Youth Development

Who’s Accountable for Black Youth Housing?

“We heard and felt the anger, and answered it with structure, care, and receipts.”

Let’s start with a hard question: If we all believe young people deserve safety, why do Black youth in Peel and Toronto keep falling through the cracks? When REST Centre’s and the REST Youth Council released a Joint Statement on July 10th, 2025, the line that rang in my chest was this: “Black youth are not experiencing homelessness by chance, it is the result of structural inequity.” We heard and felt the anger through the emails that followed. Some asked for proof. Some asked for solutions. Some asked if we were “politicizing” poverty.

Here’s what we learned by listening first and then doing the math of care. A housing-first, culturally responsive, wraparound model is a system. REST’s Bridge of Hope connects youth to: vetted community landlords, secures rental subsidies, and mediates relationships so a room key doesn’t come with a fresh set of risks. Eviction Prevention and Applicant Assistance turn complicated paperwork into practical protection. When a young person says, “I’ve never signed a lease before,” REST says, “Let’s learn it together.”

Basic needs are not “extras.” Bare Necessities stabilizes life: groceries, starter kits, temporary rent support, so youth can breathe before they’re asked to become budget experts. Then the skill-building begins: Financial Literacy workshops on budgeting, debt management, tax basics, meal planning, and the boring-beautiful rituals of adulthood that keep the lights on.

Healing has to be culturally safe to be real. HERO (Healing Emotional Recovery and Opportunity) offers individual and group counselling that treats trauma, addiction, and grief as public health concerns, not private shame. Life doesn’t restart without community. LIFE Skills Development braids tenant rights, job readiness, home economics, digital literacy, and apprenticeships. RISE Above uses mentorship and basketball to turn physical movement into social connection and conflict management, and because homelessness often begins at home, FIRM (Family Intervention and Reunification Management) helps Black, African, and Caribbean families work through conflict with mediators who understand the culture, the history, and the stakes.

Now, about power and policy. The Joint Statement was a boundary. It said to institutions, funders, and governments: if you value equity, then legislate it, resource it, and let those most affected drive it.  Our role as community media is to make the emotional labour of decision-making visible. We acknowledge valid criticism: numbers without narrative can be cold; narrative without numbers can be soft. So we bring both. We present the over-representation of Black youth in homelessness and pair it with lived-experience design.

In Canada, do we expand mental health access? Do we measure outcomes in ways that show who’s still excluded? When REST calls for housing equity for Black youth, that’s accountability. If a framework helps our city track who is being left out and fix it faster, we’ll use it. If it doesn’t, we’ll say so.

Common Ground: Most people (left, right, centre, and fed-up) agree that a 17-year-old shouldn’t have to choose between a couch and a street corner. The disagreement is usually about how we fix it and who decides. So here’s a shared starting point: outcomes matter. Stable housing, improved mental health, family reunification where safe, and pathways to work or school. If a program delivers those, scale it. If not, change it.

Forward Movement; Your part, our promise:

Institutions: Tie funding to measurable equity outcomes and community governance.

Landlords: Join Bridge of Hope; gain support, mediation, and stable tenants.

Residents: Volunteer as mentors with RISE Above or contribute to Bare Necessities.

Youth: Your experience is policy data. Join the REST Youth Council—shape the decisions that shape you.

We’ll keep reporting with receipts and heart. You keep holding us, and every system, accountable. That’s how communities move from outrage to outcomes.

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