Hamilton

Hamilton wants resident input on mental health, addiction, housing and hate crimes

Residents will have the chance to review the progress on Hamilton's community safety and well-being plan, which is aimed at reducing key issues like hate incidents, violence, mental illness, drug use, homelessness and access to income.

Mayor Fred Eisenberger said city's approach to police funding reductions based on talks about this plan

A bus drives on a road.
Locals can offer feedback on a plan the city says will tackle Hamilton's biggest issues. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

The city wants Hamilton residents to weigh in about mental health, housing and homelessness, hate crimes, violence, substance use, and access to income as part of the community safety and well-being plan. 

The city will hold meetings in February, and has an online portal where people can give their thoughts until March 1. 

The project will look at how local services are delivered. Several agencies, including Hamilton Police Service, are part of the committee. The city's police services board has also said the plan a way to reexamine which services are offered and funded through the police budget. 

The plan is even more important now, the city says, because COVID-19 has exposed inequities in terms of health and the economy.

The provincially mandated project "is an opportunity to examine the root causes of complex challenges facing Hamilton and find new ways to integrate and balance services and supports in the community," the city said in a release.

"A collective shift in focus from a reactive crisis response-based approach to incidents in the community to an upstream, holistic approach to community development will be a critical to Hamilton's health, social, and economic recovery.

Residents can register to participate in online meetings scheduled for Feb. 24 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., or Feb. 25 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

"There will be additional opportunities and channels for community members and service providers to provide feedback throughout the development and implementation of Hamilton's community safety and well-being plan," the city said.