Saturday, October 11, 2025
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

St. Catharines divided on homelessness crisis 

|
|

There is a growing divide among St. Catharines residents as homelessness reaches all new highs across North America. 

As the cold weather intensifies, most Canadians’ biggest concern is scraping off their windshield in the morning, or the frigid walk from their car into work. For the rapidly growing unhoused population in the Niagara region, the start of winter is much more consequential, signifying many more uncomfortable and restless nights outside in the freezing cold. 

On Jan. 1, Mat Sisco, the mayor of St. Catharines, acknowledged that housing issues and homelessness have reached crisis-level highs and that something must change. In an interview with the St. Catharines Standard, Siscoe said that helping those who are suffering is on his list of priorities in 2025. 

In November 2024, Siscoe was included as one of Niagara’s Big Three mayors to support the use of the Notwithstanding Clause (NWC) to remove homeless encampments. At a council meeting on Nov. 4, Mat Siscoe co-signed a letter along with 11 other Ontario mayors that explained their rationale for demanding the Premier override the Charter rights of vulnerable residents and invoke a rarely used legal measure. Welland Mayor Frank Campion indicated in a letter to the Premier that he was requesting the use of the NWC to assist Welland “in finding reasonable and compassionate solutions in addressing the complex legal, social, and public safety concerns and roadblocks.” PelhamToday stated that the clause is essentially “a way for governments to override the rights of their citizens.” 

One unhoused individual told CHCH News that “it’d be basically impossible to move right now, in this weather. There’s nowhere to go. Out here, everyone’s basically ripping each other off — it’s very hard, very hard living. The rent is insane, triple the price it was. Even if you have the money, you can’t get a place because you need good credit.” 

Homelessness in Canada is up 20 per cent since 2018 with the housing crisis pushing many people onto the streets. 

In the letter to the Premier asking for the use of the NWC, Mayor Siscoe said that the large population of unhoused individuals are resulting in “encampments on public land, up against people’s property or adjacent to schools. Whether anyone likes this fact or not, the reality is that encampments tend to have a much higher incidence rate of drug use, of human trafficking, possession of weapons and other illegal activity. We need to be able to prohibit encampments in areas of sensitive use.” 

Executive Director of the St. Catharines Salvation Army Juan Burry pointed out the reason why people desire to remove the homeless encampments: “If there is an encampment, it comes with a whole host of issues (such as) debris, behavioral problems.”  

St. Catharines resident Rob McConnell said to CHCH News, “We’ve found syringes, crack pipes, knives, human feces, used condoms throughout the neighbourhood. There’s prostitution, drug deals going on day and night. The use of drugs in plain view is an everyday occurrence.” 

In an interview with CHCH News, Mat Siscoe insisted that he’s still “pushing Niagara Region because that’s where those dollars are and they’re the ones that make the decisions.” As a lower tier municipality, St. Catharines is not responsible for social services such as housing, shelter and homelessness. 

Reporter Alicia Marshall has spent countless hours offering immediate help such as tents, blankets and food. She states in an article by The Pointer, “I can assure you, our unhoused think the government does not care. Our unhoused have no hope they will be able to access assistance and supportive living conditions. 

There’s no doubt any longer that winter has arrived, and with January’s biting winds comes concern for those without shelter and while supposed sympathy is there, a plan is not.  

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Mapping MAMM #4: What the f*** is Canadian Literature anyway? 

Mapping MAMM is an ongoing series which gets into the research questions surrounding the Mapping Ann-Marie MacDonald Research Project. My previous articles have introduced the project as well as examined its cross-disciplinarity and ethics of care. In this fourth installment, I’ll get into the “fraught construct” that is CanLit. 

Late Night comedy in the face of censorship  

Jimmy Kimmel is a late-night comedy staple. Having been on the air since 2003, the comedian is perhaps best known for his viral videos, including “Mean Tweets” — where celebrities read hateful posts on X and his long running YouTube series “I Told My Kids I Ate All Their Halloween Candy.” Kimmel has always been a relatively tame figure in late night media. Though not as politically neutral as Jimmy Fallon, he is certainly not as outspoken as fellow late-night hosts Seth Meyers, Stephen Colbert, John Stewart or John Oliver. 

USA: Not fascist, just anti-anti-fascism 

The United States is not a fascist state. Elections still occur, courts still sometimes check executive power and journalists and comedians still speak out against the government. Within the remains of a democratic framework, on Sept. 22, President Donald J. Trump signed an executive order designating “Antifa” — a composition of autonomous groups affiliated with political movements against fascism and other far-right extremist ideologies — as a domestic terrorist organization. Despite the lack of legal framework for this designation, the executive order purports that dissent against the Trump administration is a threat to national security rather than a legitimate democratic right

The war within: Pete Hegseth and the weaponization of U.S. military identity 

When Pete Hegseth — formally the U.S. Secretary of Defense, but ceremonially the Secretary of War — took the stage at Marine Corps Base Quantico on Sept. 30, his first words carried the weight of an era. “Welcome to the War Department,” he said to a packed auditorium of generals, admirals and senior officers. “The era of the Department of Defense is over.”

Five activities to add to your fall bucket list 

If you’re looking for something fun to add to your bucket list this fall, this list of autumn activities is perfect for you. 

Brock’s Wellness Fair spotlights countless student services and opportunities  

The 2025 Brock Wellness Fair gave students the chance to explore a wide range of services, supports and community spaces available both on and off campus. From volunteer initiatives and interfaith opportunities to a variety of mental health supports and athletics, the fair displayed a growing list of opportunities for students to take care of themselves, connect with others and make Brock feel like home. 

10 years after TRC’s Calls to Action and Canada’s promises of reconciliation are still pending 

Ten years have passed since the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) released their landmark Final Report in June 2015. The Commission, established under the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement, spent seven years gathering testimony from over 6,000 Survivors to document the devastating legacy of residential schools. This led them to issuing 94 Calls to Action — a roadmap for governments, institutions and Canadians to repair harm and build a more just future. These Calls were never meant as symbolic gestures; they were concrete, actionable steps. A decade later, one question remains: has Canada lived up to them?

Buyback or backfire? Ottawa’s gun compensation program faces mounting pushback  

In late September, Ottawa announced an official gun buyback pilot program in Nova Scotia — the first step toward removing more than 2,500 models of legally purchased, now-prohibited firearms from licensed Canadian gun owners.