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Supportive Housing Growth Plan

view of the city of toronto

The number of people waiting for supportive housing in Toronto has long outpaced supply, with thousands of individuals and families unable to access the help they need. The Growth Plan advances new, more collaborative ways for the sector to work together to build capacity for expansion and development and help achieve the City of Toronto’s target of growing Toronto’s supportive housing supply by a minimum of 18,000 homes by 2030.

The Growth Plan is a comprehensive strategy, with year-by-year actions to grow the supply of housing with supports, improve access to supportive housing, and enhance care for supportive housing clients. This initiative is the result of a sector-wide, collaborative effort, developed through a multi-pronged approach to build evidence-informed consensus. Research components included an Asset Inventory, quantifying, for the first time, what assets currently exist in the supportive housing sector, including physical stock, land, and rent supplements, and how these could be leveraged towards new supply to minimize the need for additional investment.

Wellesley Institute led the work on the Needs Assessment and the Funding Analysis. The Needs Assessment aimed to develop a more detailed understanding of need, including both the range and typology of housing and supports required, to ensure the Growth Plan’s solutions match real needs. The Funding Analysis analyzes the range of existing government funding applicable to supportive housing to help advise government on how funding can be applied in more strategic ways, and where new funding can be targeted to fill the gap.

Needs Assessment ReportDownload
Funding Analysis ReportDownload
Sarah Sanford

Sarah Sanford

Dr. Sarah Sanford (she/her) is a qualitative researcher with a background in critical social sciences, global health governance and public health. She has worked across numerous applied health research and policy settings over the past 15 years, and most of this work has centred lived expertise in developing solutions to promote health and health equity. She has recently cultivated her thinking about the economic determinants of health and is currently researching wealth inequality and health equity in Toronto. Sarah holds a PhD from the University of Toronto and a Master’s degree from York University.

Brenda Roche

Brenda Roche

Dr. Brenda Roche is Director of Research at the Wellesley Institute. She was a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in Anthropology and Health at the Gender, Violence and Health Centre of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She comes with academic and community-based research experience exploring social and health issues in urban settings, including homelessness, sexual health, violence and psychological trauma and distress. Her doctorate, through the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, examined discourses on trauma that operate within the context of refugee resettlement, and how these influence health and social care practices for women (and their families) seeking political asylum in the United Kingdom.