Accessible condos in Toronto don’t exist
Torontoist
By Tannara Yelland
15 June 2017

Doug Buck and Kate Chung outside their apartment. Photo by Tannara Yelland
Kate Chung and Doug Buck have been trying to find an accessible condo
to live in since Doug’s hip surgery briefly left him unable to get
around their apartment. They’ve grown increasingly frustrated with the
lack of accessible housing in the city, which they note affects not
just seniors, but anyone with mobility issues as well as their friends
and family.
Kate: Fifty per cent of all the units in new buildings that got their
building permit since January 2016 have to be “visitable.” Not
inhabitable. And to them [the building code], “visitable” means you can
get through the door in your wheelchair, you can get into the living
room, and you can use the washroom. So you couldn’t live there, because
you can’t get into the bedroom or use the kitchen. So that’s crazy.
There’s still no housing for people who are in a wheelchair or in a
walker, because it’s the same problem. So we’re trying to change that;
we have a campaign. We want everyone in the whole province to write to
their MPP, and tell them to change the bloody building code to require
that 100 per cent of all new apartments and condos have to be
barrier-free. Universal design—because that covers eyesight problems,
hearing—[is] standard now, thanks to [disability activist] Dave
Lepofsky, that your elevator tells you what floor you’re at. That kind
of thing.
Accessible condos in Toronto don’t exist. If you go to the sales office
of a new condo, and you speak to the salespeople, they don’t know what
you’re talking about. The crazy thing is that developers won’t build
[with accessibility in mind] because they say it costs too much. But in
fact, it costs less than one per cent more if you do it from the
planning stage. But if you try to renovate, it costs a fortune.
My mother is in assisted living in Nova Scotia, where her apartment is
wheelchair-accessible. She’s not in a wheelchair, but she has a walker.
And you know, if they can do it in Nova Scotia, they can do it here.
Seniors’ places here are not accessible.
Doug: I was on a walker for, I don’t know, a few weeks after having hip
surgery. The door to our apartment is fairly narrow and it can’t be
widened, because it’s sandwiched between the door to the next apartment
and the stairwell. So it can’t be expanded. And the doorways to the
bathrooms, they’re even narrower.
Kate: What using the walker made me realize is how vulnerable we are
here, and that this apartment is just not accessible. Doug’s 80-years
old now. So we’re worried we’ll never find anything.
Doug: Imagine if you broke your back or had a stroke or whatever.
Kate: Riding on your bike, you get hit by a truck.
Doug: You could lose your job, you could lose your home. So all of a
sudden, you have no income and you can’t go home. And those people are
either stuck filling up a hospital bed for thousands of dollars a day,
or being sent to a seniors’ home.
Kate: Well, no, not a home, long-term care, which the government’s
wailing about the cost of. But if everybody had an accessible home, a
lot of those people wouldn’t be in long-term care. And they wouldn’t be
locking up beds in a hospital. They’d be at home. With home care, if it
really existed.
Doug: Home care is a lot cheaper than the government subsidizing your living and feeding you in a hospital.
Kate: I keep saying, how can I have home care if I don’t have a home?
If politicians are complaining about the cost of home care, why don’t
you just pass a law to change the building code so that all
housing—new, just new, apartments and condos, we’re not talking
single-family homes—so all apartment buildings have to be universal
design? And then people could come home from the hospital. A relative
of a friend of mine went into hospital because of diabetes, and they
took off his leg. Totally unexpected. He couldn’t go home to his
seniors’ apartment because it wasn’t accessible, so he’s in long-term
care now. That is just ridiculous. Seniors’ apartments should all be
accessible. All apartments should be, but seniors, you’d think they’d
have caught on.
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