newearthling
Senior Member
This thing with Doug reminded me of something I hadn't thought about for a long time. When my wife and I moved to Toronto in 2004, we bought a house just off Queen St. East, about a block away from an apartment/drop-in centre for street people in one direction, and block a away from a street clinic in the other direction. We figured that was a benefit, because the people in our neighbourhood who might not otherwise have somewhere to go actually had places to go. And that was the case. Relations between the street folks and the homeowners was quite neighbourly.
From reading the article, I got the sense that these people don't really know what it means to be neighbourly. They are probably scared of everyone and everything outside their doors, and that is why they don't want the centre in their 'hood.