Sudbury

North Bay, Ont. transitional housing complex expanding with 24 more units

The Northern Pines transitional housing complex in North Bay houses 52 people and is about to expand with 24 more apartments.

'My goal is to change the way people think about homelessness,' says program supervisor Trevor Lablond

This is what a transitional housing apartment in North Bay looks like

7 months ago
Duration 1:18
59-year-old James McDonald gives the CBC’s Markus Schwabe a tour of his apartment at the Northern Pines transitional housing complex in North Bay, Ont.

James McDonald is proud of almost everything in his home. The TV. The futon. The area rug. The kitchen where he loves to bake.

After years of couch surfing, the 59-year-old moved into the Northern Pines transitional housing complex in North Bay back in 2021.

He's received help with his lifelong struggles with mental illness, while furnishing his apartment with money he's saved from his social assistance cheques, from which he's also squirrelled away $1,000 to visit his brother in B.C.

"Super. The staff is good. The program is really good. Like we have chores to do. We have to do our chores and keep clean. Cut the lawn. I enjoy cutting the lawn," said McDonald.

"My dad always told me to always enjoy life."

A man stands next to the door of a bedroom with his hand on the knob
Trever Lablond is the program supervisor at Northern Pines in North Bay. (Markus Schwabe/CBC)

McDonald is one of 52 people who have found a roof over their head thanks to the transitional housing complex built out of an old OPP station.

"There's lots of success stories," said program supervisor Trevor Lablond. 

Northern Pines is also home to a 21-bed "low-barrier" homeless shelter, which Lablond says is full almost every night.

Many of those clients end up being moved into transitional housing, where there is a range of support programs to help people get out of the cycle of homelessness.

a simple bedroom with a bed, dresser and window
There are currently 36 transitional apartment units at Northern Pines in North Bay, with 24 more expected to open this fall. (Markus Schwabe/CBC)

"We do have folks who are living rough and living on the streets and I think this program partially addresses that problem and it gives people an opportunity to actually have a place to live," said Sue Rinneard, the executive director of Crisis Centre North Bay, which operates the shelter.

"Each time I come over and I speak to the clients and I see how much better they're doing, the pride they have in the property, it warms my heart. Because a lot of the folks living here could still be living on the streets."

The third phase, with 24 apartment units expected to open this fall, will bring the total at Northern Pines up to 60.

A 40-unit transitional housing complex is currently under construction in Sudbury and is expected to open before the end of the year. 

A woman stands in front of a large grey building.
Sue Rinneard, executive director of Crisis Centre North Bay, stands in front of the Northern Pines complex. (Markus Schwabe/CBC)

"My goal is to change the way people think about homelessness," said Lablond. 

"They're people's kids, they're people's sons and daughters, parents and grandparents, they're people just like you and I who have had some struggles and they need some assistance and some help to get out of those struggles."

A large room with rows of cubicle-type bedrooms
Many people first come to Northern Pines to stay in the 'low-barrier' homeless shelter and many are eventually moved into a transitional housing unit. (Markus Schwabe/CBC)