{"id":11117,"date":"2019-04-27T08:00:30","date_gmt":"2019-04-27T12:00:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wordpress-537697-2997182.cloudwaysapps.com\/?p=11117"},"modified":"2022-10-09T07:38:10","modified_gmt":"2022-10-09T11:38:10","slug":"canadas-youth-homelessness-crisis-tied-to-inequality-child-welfare","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wordpress-537697-2997182.cloudwaysapps.com\/canadas-youth-homelessness-crisis-tied-to-inequality-child-welfare\/","title":{"rendered":"Canada\u2019s Youth Homelessness Crisis Tied to Inequality in Child Welfare"},"content":{"rendered":"
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When Systems Fail: Bay Street, Toronto, 2012<\/h2>\n

It is a blustery winter night on the streets of Toronto. Heat rises up from the grate on Bay Street where 16-year-old Robert McLeod<\/a> tries to catch a few winks of sleep without freezing to death. He doesn\u2019t care for the shelter. He\u2019s tired of being robbed of his possessions when he tries to sleep there. So he sees this grate as an alternative to the harsh conditions inside, despite the biting cold, the constant police harassment, and the unending sense of being ignored \u2026 by the entire world.<\/p>\n

At some point in 2012, Robert adopts his first pet rat \u2013 a companion to cut the edge off the loneliness. He\u2019s had so many pet rats over the years that by 2015, he\u2019s figured out they live an average of two years.<\/p>\n

You\u2019re probably wondering how this could happen. How could a young teen transition into adulthood while residing over a sewer grate with only rats to keep him company in modern day Canada?<\/p>\n

Robert McLeod, an Asperger\u2019s syndrome sufferer, is one of many youths failed by Canada\u2019s child welfare services. The primary shortcomings of the welfare system are both structural and systematic. They include components such as:<\/em><\/h4>\n