Updates
Toronto Groups Urge Candidates to Follow Through on City’s Anti-Poverty Commitments
Commitment TO Community and Faith in the City mailed out letters today to over 200 Mayor and Council candidates asking them to support the implementation of City Council commitments on poverty reduction.
“Too many people in Toronto are struggling to make ends meet,” says Adina Lebo, Chair of Commitment TO Community. “Voters want to know which candidates will follow through on City plans to improve access to affordable housing, transit, child care and recreation programs.”
Job Opportunity: Executive Director
Social Planning Toronto (SPT) is a non-profit, charitable community organization that works to improve equity, social justice and quality of life in Toronto through community capacity building, community education and advocacy, policy research and analysis, and social reporting. Formally known as the Community Social Planning Council of Toronto, SPT has spent over 60 years providing critical social research and reporting, community capacity-building and engagement as well as evidence-based advocacy for Toronto and its communities.
Social Planning Toronto is committed to building a "Civic Society," one in which diversity, equity, social and economic justice, interdependence and active civic participation are central to all aspects of our lives — in our families, neighbourhoods, voluntary and recreational activities, and in our politics.
What Price Local Democracy? Premier Doug Ford Moves to Reduce Toronto City Council By Half
Social Planning Toronto issued the following response today to Premier Doug Ford's move to reduce Toronto City Council by half.
We urge you to contact your local Member of Provincial Parliament to express your disagreement with this hasty action against local decision-making, which will have a highly disruptive and confusing affect on this year's municipal election.
Ensuring the Right to Housing is Embedded in National Housing Strategy Legislation
Widespread homelessness and lack of access to adequate housing in a country as affluent as Canada is clearly one of the most critical human rights issues facing all levels of government.
Social Planning Toronto has joined other community organizations and advocates as a signatory to an open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Families, Children and Social Development, asking them to embed the right to housing in the National Housing Strategy legislation currently being drafted.
Life in Toronto Without English: 130,000 residents do not speak English and seek reduced barriers to language programs
Over 130,000 people — a population the size of a small city — do not speak English and face everyday challenges navigating life in the city, a new report from Social Planning Toronto finds. The report finds these residents have diverse and complex language learning needs.
“This population is big, and their needs are as diverse as their stories and backgrounds,” said Peter Clutterbuck, Interim Executive Director of Social Planning Toronto. “These residents are our neighbours, from the young mother at the local park caring for small children, to the grandmother next door — being able to speak English would make a big difference in their quality of life, from finding a good job to accessing services in their community.”
Remembering Karen Liberman
A message from Peter Clutterbuck:
It is with great sadness that I learned that Karen Liberman passed away on Thursday, May 24th, 2018. Karen was a long-time community activist, planner, workshop presenter and facilitator.
New Report Finds $36 Million Gap Between Council Commitments and City Budget.
Critics say budget process is badly broken— not equipped to tackle city’s ‘big issues’.
As Toronto City Council prepares to make its final decision on its 2018 budget, a new report by Social Planning Toronto reveals it will fall short by $36 million on funding council’s own pledges on housing, climate change, transit, and poverty reduction.
New affordable housing law all but scrapped by Province's proposed regulations: Over 60 community groups.
Wealthy developers will not likely end up helping to pay for affordable housing under new regulations proposed by Ontario’s Minister of Housing, say over 60 community organizations and housing experts. The regulations effectively reverse policy aimed at ensuring developers build affordable housing with each new development— a measure called ‘Inclusionary Zoning’.
New Report: Child poverty rate double for racialized children in Toronto area
Children in the Toronto region and their families’ incomes are deeply divided along race, a new report finds.
Based on 2016 Census data, the report shows that Toronto region children from racialized families— families of people of colour— are twice as likely to be living in poverty compared to children in non-racialized families (25.3 % compared to 11.4%). The report also found that Indigenous families with children are experiencing an extremely high poverty rate of 84%.
Social Planning Toronto Congratulates Fellow NOW Magazine Honourees Black Lives Matter – Toronto In Winning The Readers’ Choice "Best Social Justice Group".
We would like to extend our congratulations to Black Lives Matter – Toronto for their winning of the NOW Magazine’s Readers’ Choice "Best Social Justice Group". We couldn’t be prouder to place second to such a committed and effective group.