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Charity donates 3,500 winter survival kits to unhoused people in GTA

The kits contain a sleeping bag, toque, scarf, winter gloves, socks and personal and health care items that advocates say 'often make a difference between life and death'
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Two tents and some personal belongings in an encampment in the yard outside St. Stephen-in-the-Fields Church in Toronto.

On Friday afternoon, local charities, advocates and the Toronto Police Service's 13 Division will distribute 3,500 "winter survival kits" to over 145 social service agencies and homeless shelters in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). 

The kits, assembled by the Toronto-based charity Engage and Change, contain a sleeping bag, toque, scarf, winter gloves, socks and personal and health
care items that the organization said "often make a difference between life and death." 

Volunteers are packing and assembling the kits today at a warehouse in Vaughan, Ont. 

In a press release, Engage and Change said homelessness in Ontario has reached a "critical" level, with an estimated 80,000 people unhoused in 2024.

Data in recent years has shown approximately three people experiencing homelessness die per week in Toronto, with various causes cited. 

"It is no longer simply the disheveled on the corner that account for this forgotten community: it is our neighbours, family, friends, former associates, and children," wrote an Engage and Change spokesperson. "They are forgotten." 

The winter gear is distributed as part of an initiative called Project Winter Survival, which was first created in 1999. Since its establishment, the project has provided unhoused people in Toronto and the GTA with over 50,000 winter survival kits. 

Though the charity and its allies plan to distribute 3,500 winter survival kits on Saturday, Engage and Change said over 15,000 kits have been requested to provide relief to those in need. 

“The appeal for kits is staggering,” said Jody Steinhauer, president of The Bargains Group and the Project Winter Survival founder. “The growing plight of our city’s homeless goes from critical to deadly during the volatile winter season. Ongoing challenges facing this high-risk group mean that increased numbers in need of warmth and shelter are left to fend off the elements as best they can.”

The charity said a $75 donation is required to produce a Project Winter Survival kit. 

Below freezing temperatures during winter months in and around Toronto can be dangerous, and even fatal, for people experiencing homelessness. Oftentimes, shelters and respite sites operate at maximum capacity during the winter and are unable to serve everyone in need of assistance and resources. 

This week, TorontoToday reported the city's warming centres have been operating at or near maximum capacity since the start of the year.

So far in 2025, Toronto’s five warming centres have been 94 per cent full, on average, with over half of warming centres operating at 100 per cent capacity during the first two weeks of the year. 

Combined, Toronto’s warming centres have space for a maximum of 242 people per night, though the city estimates 11,144 people were actively homeless in Toronto in the last three months. 

The winter survival kits distributed by Engage and Change are created in partnership with Auric Worldwide Cargo, Fortigo Freight Service, Scotiabank, RBC Foundation, CIBC, Perimeter Development Corporation, Optimus SBR and The Bargains Group.

With files from TorontoToday's Kathryn Mannie





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