Unveiling the Pathways: Mapping and Understanding Hidden Homelessness Among 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in Ontario
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“living independently of parents and/or caregivers, but do not have the means or ability to acquire a stable, safe or consistent residence. […] In addition to experiencing economic deprivation and a lack of secure housing, many young people who are homeless lack the personal experience of living independently and at the same time may be in the throes of significant developmental (social, physical, emotional, and cognitive) changes. Few young people choose to be homeless, nor wish to be defined by their homelessness, and the experience is generally negative and stressful.”[3]
- How can government and community services prevent hidden homelessness among 2SLGBTQ+ youth?
- How is Ontario’s homelessness response supporting and preventing chronic homelessness among 2SLGBTQ+ youth experiencing hidden homelessness?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sampling
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Analysis
2.4. Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.2. Hidden Homelessness
3.2.1. Conceptualizing Hidden Homelessness
“I would say that it would be those experiencing homelessness who aren’t utilizing maybe shelter or different community organizations that help those experiencing homelessness. So, this could be anybody who might be couch surfing or maybe staying with a friend. Even staying with like a relative, but on a short-term basis. Like where they’re staying isn’t permanent, however hidden in the sense that they’re not kind of marked in the system.”(Key Informant 12, London)
“Nobody really notices, realizes just how bad it is because you’re at the whims of everybody else. And if you don’t have anybody else, then you’re actually homeless. And that is frightening.”(Green, Age 18, Toronto)
3.2.2. Complexities in Identifying Hidden Homelessness
“A bunch of my friends kind of copied me and they all started popping away from home just because they didn’t want to follow simple rules. Simple mindless rules that would make a house function, like take out the trash, do the dishes, simple things a mother would ask their kid to do. And they just were like ‘I don’t want to do that’ and ran away.”(Blue, Age 18, London)
“Just specifically in York Region, I think hidden homelessness looks a little different than Toronto because we’re so spread out. And there isn’t the same level of awareness…nor is there the same level of acceptance, I think, in the community.”(Key Informant 6, York Region)
3.2.3. Social Isolation
“All of the situations where I’ve been staying with other people have been extremely traumatic for me…it probably won’t be for everybody. But the fact that you kind of have to become a burden on other people to be able to survive, it ruins a lot of things for you. Most of the people I was friends with last year are not friends with me anymore.”(Green, Age 18, Toronto)
“It’s just a looming dread that I need to stay alive, I need to maintain this...for the past year or so I’ve just been, I’ve been constantly afraid that I have been a burden to some of the people around me. A burden on the people around me because that’s how I was while I was couch surfing.”(Green, Age 18, Toronto)
3.3. Pathways into and out of Hidden Homelessness
3.3.1. Barriers
Family Conflict
“My parents kicked me out, because he found out I was, I guess, dating my ex. … But because she was a girl, they didn’t approve of it. So, I was kicked out.”(Red, Age 26, Toronto)
“It seemed like an endless cycle. Because my parents also have some mental health issues. That kind of influenced that decision of sometimes telling me to leave. But my culture is also very family-oriented. So, it was always a short period of time because they always said that you should come back, and we talked about it. It only lasted maybe, not more than a few weeks.”(Yellow, Age 21, Toronto)
“Not even rejection outright from their family, but fear of rejection, I think that’s really important to note…a lot of folks will be staying with friends, or they will be finding somewhere else to live, because they don’t want to have the conversation, because they are afraid that this is the result anyway.”(Key Informant 5, York Region)
High Cost of Living
“I have to go to the food bank in the middle of the month simply because I have a $100 food budget with a $40 leftover money budget. I’m sorry, no. $100 doesn’t even get somebody through two weeks, let alone a month.”(Blue, Age 18, London)
Lack of 2SLGBTQ+ Youth Services
“I find that most LGBTQ services, at least in London itself, kind of cater more towards an adult population. … you might find like 14- to 16- or like 12- to 16-year-olds and then you have like 25 up and there’s like this gap in this, the young adult, older teenage area that there’s not as much support … And I think also within those groups specifically, they’re not specific to LGBTQ folks who are experiencing homelessness.”(Key Informant 12, London)
“There is not a center, no place where the [2SLGBTQ+] youth can come together. There is a huge lack of services. Even in terms of specific services like health care or mental health, for the community. There is a huge gap in the industry, basically nothing.”(Key Informant 8, York Region)
2SLGBTQ+ Stigma
“Some of the challenges is that they don’t always feel safe to be out. Sometimes even in the shelter system, youth from the community, they report, they don’t feel safe. Not just with other clients, but also with the staff. And that’s one of the reasons why lots of times they don’t access the shelter system. But they rather stay in a hidden homelessness situation.”(Key Informant 8, York Region)
“Even though the services are saying that they are 2SLGBTQI+-friendly and supportive, they’re still experiencing a lot of harm within those situations, especially our students who are identifying as trans.”(Key Informant 5, York Region)
Intersectional Exclusion
“I experienced a lot of discrimination… you’re dealing with transphobia, you’re dealing with racism.”(Purple, Age 21, Toronto)
“A lot of LGBTQ-specific organizations might be sensitive about being queer, but they’re very lacking of being culturally sensitive. So, they built up a cultural environment, which is very, I’m sorry to say this, but very Canadian, Whitewashed. And everyone has to follow that or, if not, they kind of exclude you or make you leave the organization.”(Yellow, Age 21, Toronto)
“There’s a huge gap for BIPOC youth services specifically who are queer. And a lot of those programs are predominantly White spaces.”(Key Informant 14, Toronto)
Other Barriers to Service Area
- Geographic Disparities
- Lack of Transitional Services
“So, if the age out is 26, if the age out is 20, if the age out is 29th birthday, there’s no follow up afterward. Basically, messaging is often, we can only help you to try and transition your care after, a few months after, and then you’re on your own. There’s nothing to follow up to support those youth after.”(Key Informant 4, Toronto)
3.3.2. Facilitators
- Strengthening Social Supports
“I started couch surfing then I was told [by a friend], ‘If you pay rent you can stay here for as long as you want.’ So, I started living with my best friend, and paying rent.”(Pink, Age 23, York Region)
- Accessing Wrap-Around Support Services
“Just within the past three to five years have developed an intake specific to asking questions to suss out whether or not somebody is experiencing hidden homelessness. So, then we could do referrals to our housing programs through diversion or our housing programs through our transitional housing. So, really, it’s the intake that matters because if you check off housed, that’s great, you’re never going to talk to them about housing ever again, right?”(Key Informant 11, London)
“I received food help, food supplies. And that was an agency who also provided gift cards on a monthly basis. So, that was a big help.”(Yellow, Age 21, Toronto)
“My worker is the one who helped me fill out all my forms, get all my information straight [...] because I had a lot of the important stuff already, she was able to work very quickly and get me a place to stay.”(Blue, Age 18, London)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Location | n | % |
Toronto | 4 | 66.66 |
York Region | 1 | 16.66 |
London | 1 | 16.66 |
Age | ||
16–19 | 2 | 33.33 |
20–23 | 3 | 50.00 |
24–27 | 1 | 16.66 |
Gender Identity | ||
2 Spirit | 1 | 16.66 |
Gender Diverse (Bigender, Genderfluid, Non-Binary, Demiboy) | 2 | 33.33 |
Transgender (Trans, Transfemme) | 3 | 50.00 |
Sexual Orientation | ||
Demisexual | 1 | 16.66 |
Lesbian | 1 | 16.66 |
Pansexual | 1 | 16.66 |
Queer | 3 | 50.00 |
Race | ||
Aboriginal/Indigenous | 3 | 50.00 |
African/Black | 1 | 16.66 |
European | 2 | 33.33 |
Mixed | 3 | 50.00 |
White | 2 | 33.33 |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
MacEntee, K.; Elkington, N.; Segui, J.; Abramovich, A. Unveiling the Pathways: Mapping and Understanding Hidden Homelessness Among 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in Ontario. Youth 2024, 4, 1224-1237. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030077
MacEntee K, Elkington N, Segui J, Abramovich A. Unveiling the Pathways: Mapping and Understanding Hidden Homelessness Among 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in Ontario. Youth. 2024; 4(3):1224-1237. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030077
Chicago/Turabian StyleMacEntee, Katie, Nicole Elkington, John Segui, and Alex Abramovich. 2024. "Unveiling the Pathways: Mapping and Understanding Hidden Homelessness Among 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in Ontario" Youth 4, no. 3: 1224-1237. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030077
APA StyleMacEntee, K., Elkington, N., Segui, J., & Abramovich, A. (2024). Unveiling the Pathways: Mapping and Understanding Hidden Homelessness Among 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in Ontario. Youth, 4(3), 1224-1237. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030077