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A place called home? "Aging out" of care in the housing crisis in Toronto

Faculty Advisor

Date

2024

Keywords

‘aging out’ of care, child welfare, Eurocentric, housing crisis, neoliberalism, settler-colonialism

Abstract (summary)

In the midst of the worst housing crisis that our nation has ever experienced, the moratorium on ‘aging out’ of care of the state in Ontario, Canada ended on April 1, 2023. Stemming from the Youth in Care Hearings, the provincial government has instituted the Ready, Set, Go Program. It is designed to provide youth in care with a phased plan for ‘aging out’ of the system and access to much needed services. While we acknowledge the benefits of this program, we believe that it does not go far enough to alleviate the prevalence of mental health challenges experienced by youth ‘aging out’ of care. In an effort to disrupt the settler-colonial neoliberal policies and ideology that fosters the production and reproduction of the oppression of one of the most vulnerable groups in society, that of children in care of the state, this commentary contests the very notion of ‘aging out’ of care. Through a social justice and health equity lens, we examine the concept and argue that the Eurocentric neoliberal notion of ‘aging out’ of the system is an inappropriate measure for determining when a youth is ready to leave care. We argue further that the concept of ‘aging out’ in general, and within the context of the current housing crisis in Toronto, Ontario in particular, will cause significant harm to the mental health and well-being of youth leaving care. Rather, we advocate for a more nuanced approach that centres on a series of indicators that assess individual readiness and mechanisms that can take exogenous factors, such as the housing crisis, into consideration.

Publication Information

Barlow, A., & Edwards, F. (2024). A Place Called Home? "Aging out" of Care in the Housing Crisis in Toronto. INYI Journal. https://doi.org/10.25071/1929-8471.140

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

Rights

Attribution (CC BY)