City to open warming centres ahead of blast of cold weather Monday night
CBC.ca
Jan. 31, 2023
The city is opening its warming centres ahead of a blast of cold weather expected to hit Toronto on Monday evening.
In a news release on Monday, the city said it is also announcing a fourth location at Cecil Community Centre. The new location brings the total number of spaces for those seeking respite from winter weather to more than 140, with 75 of those located downtown.
The centres will open Monday night at 7 p.m. and will stay open until further notice:
The city said if a warming centre is at capacity, it will assist transporting someone in need to another location.
Warming centres are activated when an extreme cold weather alert is issued by Toronto's Medical Officer of Health, usually when the weather is expected to be --15° C. This latest alert was issued in anticipation of colder weather for the next 24 hours or longer, the release said.
Monday evening will see a low of --11° C. Overnight, with wind chill, it will feel like --18° overnight.
The announcement comes after public scrutiny on the city's handling of its warming centres in recent weeks, when winter storms have landed in Toronto and the GTA.
The city's own data shows nearly 9,000 people are using its shelter system, and that the system turned more than 100 people away nightly over the month of December.