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Community Safety &
Well-Being Plan
Townships of Central Frontenac, North
Frontenac, South Frontenac
and Frontenac Islands
Jane Torrance
Stephanie Gray
June 2021
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
2
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
3
1.
Introduction to Community Safety and Well-being
6
1.2
Environmental Scan
7
1.3
Objectives
12
1.4
Approach and Methodology
13
2.
Risks to Community Safety and Well-Being
15
2.1
Rural Economic and Community Development
15
Poverty
16
Income
17
Employment
20
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
23
Housing and Homelessness
26
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
30
Transportation
32
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
34
First Nations Indigenous Culture
35
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
37
Rural Community Development
38
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
40
2.2
Health, Mental Health and Substance Use
40
Health
41
Youth
42
Seniors
45
Special Needs/Services
45
Primary Care
46
Substance Use and Mental Health
46
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
51
2.3
Violence Against Persons (physical, emotional, sexual, domestic)
56
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
60
3.
Outcomes and Actions and Implementation
63
References
66
Appendix 1 - Draft Implementation Plan
69
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
3
Executive Summary
The Townships of Central Frontenac, North Frontenac, South Frontenac and Frontenac
Islands have been working with their community partners since October of 2019 to
develop a Community Safety and Well-being Plan, as mandated by legislation under the
Police Services Act. More than 80 individuals, groups, organisations and agencies have
been consulted in this process.
The Ministry of Solicitor General has provided a framework to help municipalities
undertaking the community safety and well-being planning process. A critical element of
this framework is understanding the importance of planning in the following four areas "to
ensure local plans are as efficient and effective as possible in making communities safer
and healthier":
-
social development
-
prevention
-
risk intervention, and
-
incident response
Consequently, this Community Safety and Well-being Plan will work mostly within the
Social Development and Prevention rings of this diagram.
Social Development
Social development requires long-term, multi-disciplinary efforts and
investments to improve the social determinants of health (i.e., the conditions in
which people are born, grow, work, live, and age such as education, early
childhood development, food security, quality housing, etc.) and thereby
reduce the probability of harm and victimization. Specifically, social
development is where a wide range of sectors, agencies and organizations
bring different perspectives and expertise to the table to address complex
social issues, like poverty, from every angle. The key to successful social
(Community Safety and Well-being Planning Framework, 2019)
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development initiatives is working together in ways that challenge conventional
assumptions about institutional boundaries and organizational culture, with the
goal of ensuring that individuals, families and communities are safe, healthy,
educated, and have housing, employment and social networks that they can
rely on. Social development relies on planning and establishing multi-sectoral
partnerships. To work effectively in this area, all sectors need to share their
long-term planning and performance data so they have a common
understanding of local and systemic issues. Strategies need to be bolstered or
put into place that target the root causes of these issues. Social development
in action will be realized when all community members are aware of services
available to them and can access those resources with ease. Knowing who to
contact (community agency versus first responder) and when to contact them
(emerging risk versus crisis incident) allows communities to operate in an
environment where the response matches the need. Communities that invest
heavily in social development by establishing protective factors through
improvements in things like health, employment and graduation rates, will
experience the social benefits of addressing the root causes of crime and
social disorder. (Community Safety and Well-being Planning Framework,
2019)
Prevention: Proactively reducing identified risks
Planning in the area of prevention involves proactively implementing evidence-
based situational measures, policies or programs to reduce locally identified
priority risks to community safety and well-being before they result in crime,
victimization and/or harm. In this area, community members who are not
specialists in "safety and well-being" may have to be enlisted depending on
the priority risk, such as business owners, if the risk is retail theft, and property
managers, if the risk is occurring in their building. Service providers,
community agencies and organizations will need to share data and information
about things like community assets, crime and disorder trends, vulnerable
people and places, to identify priority risks within the community in order to
plan and respond most effectively. Successful planning in this area may
indicate whether people are participating more in risk-based programs, are
feeling safe and less fearful, and that greater engagement makes people more
confident in their own abilities to prevent harm. While planning in this area is
important, municipalities, First Nations and their partners should be focusing
their efforts on developing and/or enhancing strategies in the social
development area to ensure that risks are mitigated before they become a
priority that needs to be addressed through prevention (Community Safety and
Well-being Planning Framework, 2019).
Risk Intervention is where tools such as situation tables (an intervention table that
provides wraparound support for individuals at acutely elevated risk) are called into play,
and Incident Response is when the police and other emergency responders get involved.
Beyond the legislative requirement, this Community Safety and Well-being Plan is an
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
5
opportunity for the community to work together on a plan to enhance health and well-
being across all Townships in the County of Frontenac. Many residents, community
partners and organizations are already doing tremendous work to contribute to well-
being, safety and a sense of belonging in Frontenac. It is important to continue to build
and strengthen partnerships across sectors, and the Community Safety and Well-being
Plan is a great opportunity to accomplish shared goals.
Through the many months of consultation and development of this plan, nine priority risks
areas have been identified as impediments to Community Safety and Well-being.
Strategies have been developed to mitigate risks specific to these areas:
- Substance Use
- Mental Health
- Violence against persons (physical, emotional, sexual, domestic)
- Health and well-being (basic needs, neglect, parenting, specialized supports)
- Poverty (lack of employment
- Housing (emergency, affordable, supportive)
- Transportation
- Cultural (Indigenous)
- Geographic/social isolation (rural realities, service delivery, stigma/self-
awareness, staff retention, equity of opportunity)
We will group the risks into a themed approach for implementation:
- Rural Economic and Community Development: Poverty, Income, Employment, Staff
Retention; Housing and Homelessness, Affordable Housing, Transportation, Indigenous
Services, Rural Service Delivery, Equity of Opportunity
- Health, Mental Health and Substance Use: Health and Well-being (basic needs, neglect,
parenting, specialized supports); Mental Health and Substance Use
- Violence Against Persons: Against Persons (physical, emotional, sexual, domestic)
This planning framework and approach can be embedded into the work of all partnering
organisations across the county and can be used to guide future activities and inform
planning and prioritization. It is dynamic and will evolve and adapt over time as response
to emerging issues emerges, and innovative ways to improve systems are found.
Everyone has a role to play in community safety and well-being. The four Townships,
working collaboratively alongside the community, can accomplish these shared goals and
keep residents safe and thriving.
We sincerely thank the many community partners who serve the entire area and have
come together to develop this Community Safety and Well-Being Plan.
Stephanie Gray
Jane Torrance
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
6
1. Introduction to Community Safety and Well-being
1.1 Background
The Police Services Act requires that municipalities in Ontario prepare and adopt a
community safety and well-being plan by July 1, 2021. The Act outlines requirements for
an advisory committee, consultation and establishing priority risks. A CSWB plan must
show outcomes and measurables with strategies to meet them. The framework for
planning was provided by the Province.
Municipalities are required to engage with partners to develop the plan and are required
to consider data from multiple sources across the broad range of issues and factors.
The CSWB plan must include the following core information:
-
Local priority risk factors that have been identified based on community
consultations and multiple sources of data including data from Statistics
Canada as well as local sector-specific information.
-
Evidence-based programs and strategies to address those priority risk
factors.
-
Measurable outcomes with associated performance measures to ensure that
the strategies are effective, and the outcomes are being achieved.
A CSWB plan identifies risks and proactively develops evidence-based strategies and
programs to address local priorities related to crime and complex social issues. These
strategies can then be implemented.
The vision is to work together to support and promote sustainable communities where
everyone feels safe, has a sense of belonging, access to services, and where
individuals and families can meet their education, health care, food, housing, income,
social and cultural needs.
Developing a Community Safety and Well-Being Plan is about working together to
ensure the right services get to the right people at the right time. It involves an
integrated approach to service delivery by working with a wide range of agencies and
organizations, and to build on the many successful efforts that contribute to a strong
sense of safety and well-being in our community.
A Community Safety and Well-Being Plan is about preventive action and identifies
areas to promote and maintain community safety and well-being through social
development, and proactively reduces risk through prevention programs and activities.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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1.2 Environmental Scan
Frontenac County is located on unceded Algonquin Territory, and the Shabot Obaadjiwan
First Nation and Ardoch Algonquin First Nation call this area home. The four municipalities
of North Frontenac, Central Frontenac, South Frontenac and Frontenac Islands make up
the County of Frontenac, with a combined area of almost 4000 square kilometres.
Frontenac County is served by:
-
Kingston General Hospital, Hotel Dieu Hospital, Perth and Smiths Falls District
Hospital, Lennox and Addington Hospital (Napanee)
-
Two Family Health Teams (Sharbot Lake Family Health Team, Lakelands Family
Health Team with clinics in Northbrook and Denbeigh serving North Frontenac)
-
Three Medical Clinics (Verona Medical Clinic, Wolfe Island Community Health
Clinic, Sydenham Medical Centre)
-
Police services are supplied by the OPP: Frontenac OPP has detachments in
Sharbot Lake and Hartington; Lennox and Addington OPP has a detachment in
Napanee
-
Frontenac Paramedic Services has seven ambulance stations serving people in
Frontenac and Kingston with a mix of Advanced Care Paramedics and
Paramedics. There is one ambulance station in each of North, Central and South
Frontenac and Frontenac Islands. Community Paramedicine provides wellness
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check clinics in Arden, Glenburnie, Ompah, Plevna, Sydenham, and Wolfe Island.
-
Two publicly funded school boards serve Frontenac - the Limestone District
Schoolboard (LDSB) and the Algonquin Lakeshore Catholic District School Board
(ALCDSB)
-
Library services are provided by Kingston Frontenac Public Library (KFPL). There
are 11 library branches in Frontenac, located in Arden, Cloyne, Hartington, Howe
Island, Mountain Grove, Parham, Plevna, Sharbot Lake, Sunbury, Sydenham and
Wolfe Island.
-
Community (children, youth, family, and senior) support services are provided by
Rural Frontenac Community Services in Sharbot Lake, Southern Frontenac
Community Services in Sydenham and Land O' Lakes Community Services in
Northbrook
-
An abundance of social and human service agencies are generally located in
Kingston but also serve the rural townships
-
Various service collaboratives
-
Social Services offer services to the townships but are managed out of Kingston
The 2016 Census provides a profile of the four townships:
2016 Census Data
North
Central
South
Islands
Population
1898
4373
18646
1760
Median age
59.5
53.5
46.9
55.9
-
0-14
185
530
2990
205
-
15-24
95
435
2040
135
-
25-54
470
1345
6950
510
-
55-64
450
890
3345
375
-
65+
700
1155
3320
530
Total dwellings (includes seasonal)
2966
3726
9213
1273
Dwellings by usual residents (year-
round)
923
1885
7186
783
-
Single Family
910
1785
6880
770
-
Semi-detached
5
25
40
5
-
Other (row, apt, mobile)
10
80
240
5
- Owner
92.4%
88.1%
92.1%
88.1%
-
Renter
7%
11.9%
7.9%
11.9%
-
1 person/house
30.4%
25.5%
16.5%
22.9%
-
2 person/house
52.7%
45.6%
42.6%
51%
-
3+ person
16.9%
28.3%
40.9%
26.8%
-
Average household size
2.0
2.3
2.6
2.3
Shelter Costs Owner $
838
89
1271
1047
Shelter Costs Rental $
664
897
954
1116
More than 30% on mortgage
22.6%
19.2
13.6
10.3
More than 30% on rent
53.8%
47.8
45.9
53.8
Median income
48,064
56,550
89,457
80,512
Prevalence LIM after tax
19.9%
19.1%
7.7%
10%
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Employed
625
1695
9670
915
Unemployed
75
170
450
20
Not in labour force
1005
1875
5480
620
Employment Rate
36.8%
45.3%
62%
59%
Unemployment Rate
10.7%
9.1
4.4
2.1%
English as first language
97.6
98.5
97.8
98
Indigenous
3.8%
9.8%
3.6%
2.6%
Central Frontenac
The Township of Central Frontenac has an area of 1,025 square kilometres and has a
permanent population of 4,373 that more than doubles in the summer. Central Frontenac
was amalgamated in 1998 and is made up of four former townships, including Kennebec,
Olden, Oso and Hinchinbrooke. The municipal office is located in Sharbot Lake. Central
Frontenac straddles Highway 7 with easy access to Perth and Kingston.
The people of Central Frontenac enjoy a unique character and quality of life with homes
spread between the village of Sharbot Lake and the hamlets and crossroad communities
of Parham, Mountain Grove, Arden, Tichborne, Piccadilly, Godfrey, Henderson, Elm Tree
and Crow Lake.
There are 3,726 dwellings with 1,885 permanent residences and 1,841 seasonal homes.
The majority (1,785) are single-family homes with an average household size of 2.3
people. With a 9.1% unemployment rate, the median household income is $56,550 and
19.1% of the population live below the low-income measure. The majority (98.5%) of
residents speak English as a first language, and 9.8% identify as Aboriginal. Thirty percent
of the Central Frontenac population is aged 25 to 54 (the working years) and the median
age of resident is 53.5.
Central Frontenac has the largest number of Indigenous people of the four townships, and
the Shabot Obaadjiwan First Nation band office is located in Sharbot Lake.
North Frontenac
The Township of North Frontenac has an area of 1,165 square kilometres and is home to
more than 1,898 permanent and 7,000 seasonal residents. North Frontenac was
amalgamated in 1998 from the former Townships of Barrie, Clarendon and Miller,
Palmerston and North and South Canonto. The municipal office is located in Plevna.
The people of North Frontenac have a very rural lifestyle, with homes spread between the
villages of Cloyne, Plevna and Ompah, the crossroad communities of Ardoch, Harlowe,
Mississippi Station, Fernleigh, Coxvale, Myers Cave, Snow Road Station and Robertsville,
and lots of rural properties.
There are 2,966 dwellings, of which 923 are permanent and 2,074 are seasonal homes.
The majority (910) are single-family homes and have an average household size of two
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
10
people. With a 10.7% unemployment rate the median household income is $48,064 and
almost 20% of the population lives below the low-income measure. The majority of
residents speak English as a first language, and 3.8% identify as Aboriginal. North
Frontenac has an older population, with a median age of resident at 59.5.
North Frontenac is the largest (by area) of the townships and has the largest number of
seasonal residents, who are attracted by the pristine lakes and wilderness, the sparse
population and the beautiful four-season recreational activities. It is also the most remote
and has the highest unemployment rate, and the highest rate of single occupant
households.
South Frontenac
The Township of South Frontenac has an area of 941 square kilometres and is home to
18,646 permanent residents. South Frontenac was amalgamated in 1998 and is made up
of four former townships: Bedford, Loughborough, Portland and Storrington. The municipal
office is located in Sydenham. South Frontenac is 20 minutes from the 401 and the City of
Kingston.
South Frontenac is home to families, farmers, artisans, self-employed tradespeople,
entrepreneurs and professionals who contribute to this vibrant community spread between
numerous villages and hamlets, crossroad communities and rural properties nestled
around 75 lakes.
There are 9,213 dwellings, including 7,186 permanent and 2,027 seasonal homes, with a
majority (6,880) comprised of single-family homes and an average household size of 2.6
people. With a low 4.4% unemployment rate, the median household income is $89,457,
but still 7.7% of the population live below the low-income measure. The majority of
residents speak English as a first language, and 3.6% identify as Aboriginal. South
Frontenac has a fairly young population, and the median age of resident is 46.9.
South Frontenac has the closest proximity to Kingston, the highest employment, the
highest income in the county, as well as the highest mortgage costs.
Frontenac Islands
The Township of Frontenac Islands has an area of 175 square kilometres and is home to
1,760 permanent residents. Frontenac Islands was formed in 1998 by the amalgamation of
Wolfe Island, Howe Island and Simcoe Island, which are accessed by ferry, as well as
Arabella, Bayfield, Black Ant, Garden, Goose, Hickory, Horseshoe and Simcoe Islands,
which can only be accessed by private boat.
The people of Frontenac Islands have a mixture of agricultural and rural lifestyles. Only
Wolfe Island has a recognizable concentrated settlement, the village of Marysville, with
around 400 inhabitants.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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There are 1,273 dwellings (including 783 permanent and 490 seasonal homes, with a
majority (770) comprised of single-family homes and an average household size of 2.3
people. With a low unemployment rate of 2.1% (only 20 people), the median household
income is $80,512, although 10% of the population lives below the low-income measure.
The majority of residents speak English as a first language, and only 2.6% identify as
Aboriginal. Frontenac Islands has a middle-aged population, and the median age of
resident is 55.9.
Frontenac Islands is the smallest of the townships with the lowest population, the lowest
unemployment rate, the most stable population across the age groupings, as well as the
highest rents.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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1.3 Objectives
The overall purpose of the plan is to examine assets in the community, assess gaps
and develop strategies to enhance the community safety and well-being for residents of
the four townships in Frontenac.
There are many positive benefits of developing a CSWB plan, including:
-
Enhanced communication and collaboration across sectors, agencies and
organizations
-
Effective alignment of resources and responsibilities to better
address local priorities and needs
-
Better understanding of local risks and vulnerable groups
-
Increased awareness of and access to services for community
members, including vulnerable groups
-
An opportunity to keep the municipalities safe and ensure residents enjoy
a high quality of life
Multi-sectoral collaboration is a key factor to successful Community Safety and Well-
Being planning, as it ensures an integrated approach to identifying and addressing local
priorities. The Province of Ontario identifies seven critical success factors required for
CSWB planning. These include:
Seven critical success factors
o Strength-Based: Leverage existing resources, programs and services
in the community
o Risk-Focused: Risk-based planning rather than incident-driven
o Awareness and Understanding: Ensuring all understand the benefits of,
and their role in, CSWB planning
o Highest Level Commitment: Commitment from local government, senior
public officials, and leadership through multi-sectoral
agencies/organizations
o Effective Partnerships: Creating meaningful, integrated
partnerships across multiple sectors
o Evidence and Evaluation: Using research, data, and performance
measures throughout the planning process, and working
collaboratively across sectors to identify and address local priority risks
to safety and well-being
o Cultural Responsiveness: Effectively collaborating with, and responding
to, the needs of diverse groups of people in the community
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
13
1.4 Approach and Methodology
The professional services of Stephanie Gray and Jane Torrance were retained by the
Townships of Central Frontenac, North Frontenac, South Frontenac and Frontenac
Islands to facilitate, advise and guide the municipality in establishing a structure and
process to develop a community safety and well-being plan to be implemented locally.
The consultants were contracted to:
- identify a local champion who will gain commitment from local
government; to obtain multi-sectoral buy-in, to communicate effectively
with potential partners; and to engage the community
- conduct local research to support identification of risks and to prioritize
those risks
- establish a multi-sectoral advisory committee that will map community
assets and identify gaps in service for prioritized risks
- identify strategies that can be enhanced and implemented; to write a
community safety and well-being plan
- assess, evaluate the plan, and to help form an implementation team.
Mayor Fran Smith (Central Frontenac) was identified as the municipal government
liaison, willing and assigned to lead the advisory committee and champion the
community safety and well-being planning process along with Deputy Clerk Cindy
Deachman (Central Frontenac) providing administrative support.
The CSWB Advisory developed terms of reference with the stated purpose being "to
collaborate across sectors to build a sustainable and endorsed Community Plan for
(Community Safety and Well-being Planning Framework)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
14
Safety and Well-being for the Townships of Central Frontenac, North Frontenac, South
Frontenac and Frontenac Islands that is part of risk-driven, community safety model that
evolves as social needs change. The overall purpose of this plan will be to examine the
assets in the community, assess gaps and develop strategies to enhance the
community safety and well-being for residents of the Townships."
Members of the cross-sectoral CSWB Advisory include a political representative from
municipal government, Rural Frontenac Community Services, South Frontenac
Community Services, OPP, South Frontenac Police Service Board, Social Services,
Housing Services, KFLA Public Health, Limestone District School Board, Algonquin and
Lakeshore Catholic District School Board, Maltby Centre, FLA Family and Children's
Services, KFLA United Way, Addictions and Mental Health Services KFLA and the
Shabot Algonquin First Nation, as well as administrative support from Central
Frontenac.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
15
2. Risks to Community Safety and Well-Being
Local priority risk factors have been identified in consultation with the Advisory
Committee and through agency surveys, interviews and input through a Partner Day, as
well as through researching multiple sources of data, including Statistics Canada and
local sector-specific information. The individual risk areas have been grouped into theme
areas in order to support future implementation plans.
2.1 Rural Economic and Community Development: Poverty, Income, Employment,
Staff Retention; Housing and Homelessness, Affordable Housing, Transportation,
Indigenous Services, Rural Service Delivery, Equity of Opportunity
Objective: Economic Development - sustainable and continued economic
development; increased meaningful employment environment and opportunities
for all residents of Frontenac County.
Rationale: Prosperity, economic health and equity.
Objective: Community Development - sustainable and continued community
development; increased connection to service, support and social opportunities
for all residents of Frontenac County.
Rationale: Social connection, community health and equity.
The County of Frontenac has many assets to assist in economic and community
development. There are lots of jobs and training opportunities available, and unemployed
or underemployed people can get help through drop-in resource centres, job-search
assistance programs and job-skills workshops. Connections Adult Learning helps with
purchasing equipment and cellular data plans to loan to clients while they are taking
courses.
Food security is managed with food banks, local food production, Meals on Wheels, and
many social dinners. There is an abundance of active community and support programs
and dedicated services, and the two multi-service rural agencies, Rural Frontenac and
South Frontenac Community Services, provide hub models of incredible community
support. Lots of agencies offer mobile services in Frontenac - youth, mental health,
counselling, employment - many with a wrap-around approach to support people. A
gateway to human services for individuals and planners, 211 is the helpline and website
that provides information on and referrals to community, social, health-related and
government services - a free 24/7 confidential phone call away.
Income support (social assistance) is delivered by Social Services through administration
of Ontario Works benefits. Social Services also supports people in financial emergency
situations and provides referrals to help people get employment, addictions, mental health
services, etc. Social Services is located in Kingston. Once a week a caseworker has office
hours in Sydenham, and four days a week in Sharbot Lake, with extended hours to try to
meet need. Application for Ontario Works can be made online, and ongoing management
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
16
of social assistance through the "My Benefits" portal can help reduce the stigma of
unemployment.
A rural lifestyle often means that a sharing economy helps people get what they need, and
in the County of Frontenac the sharing or bartering of goods and services between people
is second nature. The people are proud and resilient, and often resistant to urban solutions
and standards.
The agency survey conducted for this plan in early 2021 identified the risk factors
encountered in client service:
Frontenac - CSWB Plan - Agency Survey (January 2021)
Risks Encountered
Answer Choices
Responses
Housing/homelessness - person does not have access to or is at risk
of losing appropriate housing
76.47%
Poverty - person living in less than adequate financial situation
76.47%
Basic needs - person unable or unwilling to have basic needs met
70.59%
Unsafe living conditions
64.71%
Lack of transportation affecting ability to connect to services,
employment, school
52.94%
Social isolation - person does not have access to family or social
supports
52.94%
Negative social environments/neighbourhoods
47.06%
Unemployment - person temporarily or chronically unemployed
41.18%
Fire safety - residence poses a fire hazard to itself and/or neighbours
29.41%
Geographic isolation leading to victimization or self-harm
23.53%
Unemployment - caregivers temporarily or chronically unemployed
17.65%
Poverty
Poverty is almost always seen as the number one, overarching social determinant of
health. All human-service partner organisations recognize that poverty is a risk to
community safety and well-being, and removal of this barrier would allow people to access
appropriate services and fully engage in the community.
Living in poverty means there is not enough money for the basics of
a healthy life. Poverty imposes hard economic choices -- between
shelter and medicine, nutritious food and transportation, childcare
and employment opportunities, moving towards a self-sufficient
future versus just getting through today. Collectively, we need to
change these circumstances, so all residents can live without
worrying about their next meal or a roof over their heads. (United
Way, Poverty Reduction Report, 2018)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
17
The County of Frontenac participates in the development and delivery social services from
the City of Kingston through a Local Service Realignment (LSR) agreement. This
agreement ensures fair access to social programs and services. Not all people who live in
poverty are on social services or are connected to service provision.
Income
The distribution of household income is where we start to see the disparity between the
North and South of the county.
With a provincial median household income of 74,287, both North and Central Frontenac
fall below the provincial average, while South Frontenac and Frontenac Islands, with a
close proximity to Kingston, are above provincial average.
How do we measure poverty? Maytree, a respected foundation committed to advancing
systemic solutions to poverty and work on research and public policy, advocates for using
the Low-Income Measure as the yardstick for measuring poverty.
Under the LIM, a household has low income if its income is substantially
below the average. The LIM is calculated at 50 per cent of the national
household median income. Using "equivilisation factors," incomes are
adjusted to account for the household size (because a couple would
need more income than a single person to reach the same living
standard, but not double) so the poverty threshold can be adjusted to fit
any household composition. The LIM is the most overtly relative measure
of poverty. In theory, it is a measure of inequality, not between the
bottom and the top but between the bottom and the middle. With LIM, the
concept of poverty is having substantially less than what is typical in
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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society (either typical today using the variable LIM or, with the fixed LIM,
what was typical in the recent past) (Maytree, 2017).
The LIM-AT, as defined by Statistics Canada, refers to a fixed percentage (50%) of
median adjusted after-tax income of private households. The household after-tax income
is adjusted by an equivalence scale to take economies of scale into account. This
adjustment for different household sizes reflects the fact that a household's needs
increase, but at a decreasing rate, as the number of members increases. The prevalence
of low income is the proportion or percentage of units that fall below the LIM-AT.
In the Community Profiles 2020, as prepared by the United Way KFLA, a picture of
poverty begins to emerge. With a provincial average of 14.4%, the prevalence of low
income-after tax is measured at 24.3% in North Frontenac, 17% in Central Frontenac,
9.1% in South Frontenac, and 10.3% in Frontenac Islands (United Way Kingston
Frontenac Lennox & Addington, Community Profiles, 2020).
(United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington, 2020)
(United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington, 2020)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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(United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington, 2020)
(United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington, 2020)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
20
Employment
The data tells us that Frontenac County as a whole does not have a high unemployment
risk; however, much of the employment is seasonal and at times near to minimum wage.
The anecdotal information gathered suggests that training does not match the jobs
available, transportation is a barrier to reach employment, and Internet connection is a
barrier to working from home.
(United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington, 2020)
(United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington, 2020)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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2016 Census Data
North
Central
South
Islands
Ontario
Unemployment Rate
10.7%
9.1
4.4
2.1%
7.4%
(Statistics Canada, 2016)
In a recent 2020 Frontenac County Population, Housing and Employment Projection Study
by economists Watson and Associates, historical employment growth trends across
Frontenac County were recorded by local municipality. Key observations include the
following:
-
Between 2001 and 2006, all Frontenac County townships experienced positive
employment growth, with South Frontenac growing by the largest increment.
-
South Frontenac continued to demonstrate strong employment growth over the
2006 to 2011 period, with only Frontenac Islands experiencing negative growth.
-
As previously discussed, Frontenac County and the Kingston CMA was hit relatively
hard by the 2008/2009 economic downturn. In particular, South Frontenac
experienced the greatest number of job losses, with North Frontenac also declining
in total employment. Across all three of the previous Census periods, Central
Frontenac has been the only township to continually experience positive
employment growth.
-
It is important to note that while Frontenac County's employment base during the
2011 to 2016 period declined, more recent employment data provided by
Employment Modelling Specialists International (EMSI) suggests that the county's
employment base has increased by approximately 50 jobs between 2016 and 2019.
During this most recent period, employment growth has been observed in South
Frontenac, Frontenac Islands and North Frontenac (Watson & Associates, 2020,
pp. 3-12).
The same report also projects a positive growth forecast:
-
It is expected that job growth within Frontenac County will be steady over the
next 30 years, with employment growth in retail and tourism services to serve
the growing permanent and seasonal population base. Local job growth within
the county is expected to be in response to permanent and seasonal population
growth within the county and surrounding area.
-
The number of residents within the county who work from home or have no
fixed place of work are expected to steadily increase. This increase is
anticipated to be primarily driven by the transition of the economy towards the
service sector and "knowledge-based" economy, combined with continued
improvements to telecommunications and communication technology.
-
The county is expected to experience modest employment growth in the
industrial sector. Potential industrial sectors include utilities and construction,
small scale manufacturing and energy.
-
Over the 2016-2046 period, the county's employment base is forecast to
increase from approximately 5,400 in 2016 to 7,000 by 2046. This represents an
increase of approximately 1,600 employees from 2016 to 2046, of which almost
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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56% of job growth is forecast in the "work at home" and "no fixed place of work"
employment categories. Remaining county job growth (approximately 700
employees) is forecast within the commercial sector and, to a lesser extent, the
industrial and institutional sectors.
Specific occupational needs are also forecasted in this report:
-
Over the long-term the county's employment activity rate is anticipated to slowly
increase from approximately 20% in 2016 to 22% by 2046 (refer to Figure 8-4). This
moderate increase is anticipated to be largely driven by local employment
opportunities within the County's export-based employment sectors (e.g.
transportation, wholesale trade, construction, small-scale manufacturing and agri-
business) as well as population-related employment sectors such as retail,
accommodation and food, professional, scientific and technical scientific services
and health care. A large percentage of forecasted job growth is anticipated to be
accommodated through home occupations, home-based businesses and off-site
employment (pp. 8-4).
The recent 2020 Blackline Service Delivery Review of Economic Development in
Frontenac County outlines a clear statement of economic development objectives for the
county, including to "set the objectives of sustaining residents and businesses, increasing
(Watson & Associates, 2020)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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the supply of living wage employment and completing your communities," and to "Create a
working group that allows the County, member municipalities and the Frontenac CFDC to
collaborate on ED" (Blackline, 2020).
In 2016, a Rural Summit community process was led by Northern Frontenac Community
Services (NFCS) to respond to issues of poverty and homelessness. One of the strategic
directives of the City of Kingston's 10-year plan to eliminate homelessness is to develop a
rural homelessness strategy (more on this later) and strategies were developed at this
summit, including the creation of a rural poverty coalition.
With these two studies in mind, the strategies to mitigate the risk of poverty and
unemployment come full circle and address the gaps noted through the consultation and
research for this community safety and well-being plan.
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
Action
Create a regional employment plan that includes a cross-
sectoral staff attraction, retention and development component
Evaluation
- Increase in employment rates and full-time employment.
- Increase in household income and decrease in LIM-AT.
- Reduced staff turn-over.
- Positive service outcomes.
Outcomes
- Employment opportunities are increased to meet future
employment need projections and participation raises
income.
- Full-time and fairly compensated employment increases
income and health.
- Qualified staff is hired and remains in the position allowing for
positive job placements for employee (job satisfaction).
- Employer is not in constant state of recruit/hire/train/separate
(staff retention).
- Stable service levels for community (service satisfaction).
- Trusted relationships can develop with clients for stronger
outcomes (client satisfaction and growth).
- Collaborative relationships possible between cross-
sectoral partners.
- Employment and service stability builds trust in rural
clientele.
- Relationships are nurtured, service delivery is sensitive to
rural realities.
- Hiring processes are competitive as rural service delivery
is seen in positive light.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Steps Needed
- Create a working group that allows the county, member
municipalities and the Frontenac CFDC to collaborate on
economic development.
- Set the objectives of sustaining residents and businesses,
increasing the supply of living wage employment and
completing your communities.
- Explore and expand training opportunities for rural youth -
ready to meet job opportunities as projected.
- Explore and advocate for rural transportation options so
people can travel for work.
- Advocate for digital access and equity through Eastern
Ontario Warden's Caucus to increase access and
affordability for training and projected increased work-
from-home (and no-fixed-place-of-work) employment
opportunities.
- Monitor COVID impact - successfully working virtually,
impact on families and schools, people relocating to rural
areas.
- Invite community service organizations, municipalities,
and others interested to work together and develop staff
attraction, retention and development component.
- Share best practices of staff recruitment and retention.
- Determine if any collaborative hiring, housing or
supervision is possible.
- Involve colleges - Kingston and Perth.
- Work with multiple partners, including municipalities, to
share hiring notices to local job candidates.
- Consider hub model of service delivery to create place-
based network of service providers who support each
other.
- Encourage cross-sector mentoring relationships to build
rural network.
Action
Create a rural poverty coalition to act collectively to break the
cycle of poverty and health inequity.
Evaluation
- Coalition members meet and develop annual work plan that
includes advocacy.
- Caseworkers in newly transformed OW system are able to
work with partners to quickly navigate a networked system.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Outcomes
- Increased understanding of service delivery in a rural model
that is not a simple duplication of an urban service; rural
people and lifestyle are acknowledged.
- Stigma is reduced.
- Coordinated food strategy across the four townships.
- System navigation is strengthened.
- Continued and enhanced coordination and referrals within
Social Services.
- Municipalities could be more involved in helping create
change.
Steps Needed
- Find a champion, a catalyst.
- Determine which partners are also interested in the work.
- Build on past successes - poverty summit, plus Ardoch
Algonquin First Nation project.
- Work in a collective impact model.
- Determine best time to approach this work - when there is
time and energy post-COVID.
- Food Security: Develop a comprehensive and coordinated
food strategy across the four townships to address food
insecurity.
- Stigma: Work within the newly transformed social services
model and reduce stigma where possible; consider
continuing digital meetings between client caseworkers
beyond pandemic.
- Rural Issues: More conversations between partners about
issues to improve understanding and to develop solutions;
education around eligibility; volunteers to help with system
navigation and financial management; social services
transformation for OW.
- Shared Economy: Acknowledgement and support of shared
economy with promotion of available tools (freecycle,
rideshare, carshare, buy nothing, etc.).
- Advocate for Universal Basic Income, including education
and resulting long- term impact on regional economy and
community development.
- Consider a managed volunteer bank for bartering/sharing of
services.
- Review current social services model, delivered out of Kingston,
provides a challenge in applying some recommendations in
existing plan to rural work; are programs in city right ones for
county; need to look at regional approach.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Housing and Homelessness
The City of Kingston manages the social housing for the County of Frontenac. Social
housing units located in the county include two seniors' apartment buildings in Sydenham,
built and managed by Loughborough Housing Corporation; non-profit housing in Sharbot
Lake managed by North Frontenac Non-Profit Housing; and the recently fire-damaged
McMullen Manor apartment building in Verona that will be rebuilt, managed by Kingston
and Frontenac Housing Corporation.
Frontenac County is rich in services in the area of housing and homelessness. Social
Services offer formal housing supports in terms of intensive ongoing case management,
as well as rent subsidies. The Portable Housing Benefit (PHB) is a portable rent subsidy;
the Homelessness Prevention Fund/Discretionary Residency Benefit provides financial
assistance to aid in maintaining/obtaining housing; Prevention Diversion and Housing First
programs support people at risk of or experiencing homelessness; Kingston Frontenac
Renovates Program is a financial assistance to make homes more accessible or for
emergency repairs; KFHC pilot program is a Tenant Support Services provided to assist
with managing tenancy; a Hoarding Coalition was recently re-established; and there is
also a homelessness prevention worker in rural Frontenac.
Social Services and Housing is managed out of Kingston. There are four main streams:
housing assistance and emergency shelters (Kingston only); prevention and diversion
(helping people at imminent risk of homelessness maintain housing or newly homeless to
get back on feet); rapid rehousing and Housing First (distinct programs for adult and
youth); Homelessness Prevention Fund (financial assistance to secure and maintain
housing - similar to discretionary housing through ODSP but meant for those who can't
access it).
City of Kingston is currently undergoing review of homeless services: a youth - family
mediation program (through Kingston Youth Shelter funded by United Way) helps youth in
KFLA and families mediate to prevent youth from becoming homeless; Kingston Youth
Shelter is available for youth in Frontenac for emergency homelessness situations;
Transitional Housing for youth is also available for youth in Frontenac; Kingston Pen Tours
are funding the youth homelessness initiative.
There is a 10-Year Housing and Homelessness Plan for the City of Kingston and County
of Frontenac that plans for and documents change in the social housing sector. The plan
builds on the Municipal Housing Strategy of 2011 and was developed in partnership with
community organisations and has been guiding change since 2013, with a midpoint
update in 2019 (City of Kingston, 10-Year Housing and Homelessness Plan, 2013).
This plan has identified twelve strategic directions. The first five are consistent with the
strategic directions identified in the Municipal Housing Strategy (2011) and relate to
housing. The plan further identifies seven additional strategic directions related to ending
homelessness to end homelessness in Kingston and Frontenac by 2023:
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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1.
Managing the Housing Agenda: This strategic direction relates to creating a clear,
visible direction for housing that aligns efforts.
2.
Creating a Complementary Regulatory Environment: These recommendations
involve establishing a conducive environment that creates opportunities and
minimizes barriers.
3.
Leveraging Resources and Tools: These recommendations encourage using and
maximizing available resources to help generate positive housing-related outcomes.
4.
Building Housing Capacity: This strategic direction seeks to increase knowledge,
resources and support to better respond to the needs of the community.
5.
Cultivating Partnerships: These recommendations involve building and harnessing
the strengths of stakeholders.
6.
Systems Reorientation: Leadership, Integration & Coordination: This strategic
direction focuses on aligning the efforts of homeless serving agencies, the Service
Manager, and other community partners.
7.
Strengthening Homelessness Prevention & Diversion: These recommendations
relate to improving the effectiveness of existing homelessness prevention efforts and
implementing shelter diversion policies where applicable.
8.
Redefining the Role of Emergency Shelters: This strategic direction includes
recommendations that reframe emergency shelters as "Housing Assistance and
Emergency Shelter Services," which assist clients to quickly obtain housing
assistance.
9.
Increasing Housing Options for Those with Highest Needs: This set of
recommendations focuses on increasing the quantity and range of housing units
available for individuals and households with higher needs.
10. Improving Housing Stability for the Most in Need: This strategic direction focuses on
implementing Housing First and Rapid Re-Housing programs within the Kingston and
Frontenac area.
11. Developing a Rural Homelessness Strategy: These recommendations revolve
around providing more affordable housing in rural areas and improving access to
services.
12. Measuring Outcomes & Report Successes of the Strategy to End Chronic
Homelessness: These recommendations encourage effective data collection and
analysis in order to provide more effective, targeted services and track progress
towards ending homelessness.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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In the five-year midpoint update, 10-Year Municipal Housing and Homelessness Plan for
the City of Kingston and County of Frontenac - Five-Year Review: Environmental Scan
and Needs Assessment, no progress was shown in this area. This update proposes that
"the next steps will involve another round of consultations to review and refine the
proposed new goals, targets and associated actions. Ideally the updated plan will be
focused around the three suggested overarching strategies, articulate clear outcomes and
targets (to monitor progress) and either consolidate, remove or replace some of the more
detailed actions" (City of Kingston, 10-Year Municipal Housing and Homelessness Plan for
the City of Kingston and County of Frontenac - Five-Year Review, 2019).
Affordable Housing
It is clear that the plan is being worked on by an active and committed housing
department, and that there are no quick solutions to a complex problem. What has
become obvious in the research and consultation for this community safety and well-being
plan is that affordable housing that is attainable for people not connected with social
It is in Strategic Direction #11 that the County of Frontenac might have
the most interest:
- Expand housing options for low-income and homeless individuals
in rural areas.
o Promote secondary suites within existing structures without
compromising safety or the character of the older buildings.
o Consider rent supplements as a vehicle for promoting
housing access in rural areas rather than extensive new
construction.
- Improve access to services in rural areas.
o Promote online resources that can be accessed to assist
with housing security.
o Increase outreach programs to better connect at risk
households with available services.
o Investigate options to address the transportation issue in
rural areas.
- Enhance targeted prevention in rural areas.
o Increase awareness of resources within and across the
broader region.
o Assess needs of presenting households and exercise
diversion as much as possible to connect people with
natural supports first, rather than system supports.
- Promote local leadership in ending homelessness.
o Identify a "glue person" to improve local service delivery
o Identify a "champion" to raise public awareness of rural
homelessness.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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services is also in short supply and presents perhaps a far greater risk to a wider
population.
In any community there is a wide range of household types and income levels, and
affordability is relative to those situations. The Province has defined, through the Provincial
Policy Statement, that "housing is deemed affordable when annual accommodation costs
which do not exceed 30 percent of gross annual household income for low- and moderate-
income households" (Provincial Policy Statement, 2020, p. 39).
The cost of housing has escalated across the country in past years and Frontenac is no
exception. Purchase and rental costs are skyrocketing. People are employed for the most
part, but in lower-paying occupations with little income to manage mortgages or rent, or to
repair or upgrade current housing.
The 2016 census showed that, on average, 16.5% of owner households spend more than
30% of income on housing, and 50.3% of tenant households spend more than 30% of
income on housing. These figures were captured before the current housing boom.
2016 Census Data
North
Central
South
Islands
Total dwellings (includes seasonal)
2966
3726
9213
1273
Dwellings by usual residents (year-
round)
923
1885
7186
783
Shelter costs owner households $
838
89
1271
1047
Shelter costs tenant households $
664
897
954
1116
Owner households spending more
than 30% of income on housing
22.6%
19.2
13.6
10.3
Tenant households spending more
than 30% of income on housing
53.8%
47.8
45.9
53.8
(Statistics Canada, 2016)
Most communities have a wide range of housing types that are appropriate for a wide
range of income levels. In Frontenac County, housing stock is almost exclusively single-
family, owner-occupied dwellings.
2016 Census Data
North
Central
South
Islands
Total dwellings (includes seasonal)
2966
3726
9213
1273
Dwellings by usual residents (year-
round)
923
1885
7186
783
-
Single Family home
910
1785
6880
770
-
Semi-detached
5
25
40
5
-
Other (row, apt, mobile)
10
80
240
5
- Owner
92.4%
88.1%
92.1%
88.1%
-
Renter
7%
11.9%
7.9%
11.9%
(Statistics Canada, 2016)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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The population of Frontenac County is aging, and a significant amount of housing stock is
seasonal. As these seasonal residents retire, there has been a trend to convert the
cottage to a year-round dwelling, as noted in the Watson report, and much of the modest
population growth is realized through these additional permanent senior residents.
Opportunity and risk will co-exist in this likely scenario as an increase of more affluent
senior residents sell their primary residence, renovate and inhabit their season residence
in Frontenac. It frees up housing stock in another community, but puts more pressure on
the already stretched services here.
Household size is decreasing, with the burden of household bills falling more and more to
single people, and we know that this will continue as the population ages.
2016 Census Data
North
Central
South
Islands
Total dwellings (includes seasonal)
2966
3726
9213
1273
Dwellings by usual residents (year-
round)
923
1885
7186
783
-
1 person/house
30.4%
25.5%
16.5%
22.9%
-
2 person/house
52.7%
45.6%
42.6%
51%
-
3+ person
16.9%
28.3%
40.9%
26.8%
-
Average household size
2.0
2.3
2.6
2.3
(Statistics Canada, 2016)
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
Action
Develop a rural affordable housing and homelessness strategy
(as proposed in 10-Year Housing and Homelessness Strategy)
Evaluation
-
2016, 2021 and 2026 census data prove trends.
-
Continued/enhanced coordination and referrals to Social
Services where appropriate.
-
Affordable housing policies developed and embedded in
planning documents.
Outcomes
- Acknowledgement that rural housing issues are different than
urban, and solutions may be different as well.
- Expanded housing options for low-income and homeless
individuals in rural areas.
- Working in alliance with regional economic development
working group to determine best practice for affordable
(attainable) housing opportunities through policy direction.
- Improved access to services in rural areas.
- Enhanced targeted prevention in rural areas.
- Local leadership in ending homelessness.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Steps Needed -
Rural Affordable Housing Working Group Post-pandemic review of
housing and homelessness in Frontenac County with eye on
senior housing, service delivery and social service transformation
plans, wait lists, RGI subsidies, portable benefits, landlord/tenant
rights education, transportation, definitions of substandard/legal
housing, eligibility of working poor, cottage conversions, uptake of
renovate Kingston and Frontenac in rural areas to improve
substandard housing, increasing house evaluation and tax
implication, property standards, rigidity of rules, lack of housing
options that force people out of their communities.
-
Conduct a County and lower-tier municipal policy and planning
review with eye to affordable (attainable) housing; Review housing
types - encourage conversion of larger homes or secondary
homes on property as recommended in the 10-year Housing and
Homelessness Plan.
-
Look at vacant land inventory and determine if partnerships with
not-for-profit housing provider is possible to build affordable
housing units.
-
Devote more resources to planning and expediting processes,
communications and by-law enforcement.
-
Create Housing Hub with services for all ages and include service
navigation, shelter/transitional housing, second-stage options,
computers, health services, etc.
-
Address staffing retention and change. In rural communities,
relationship building is so important; if a caseworker changes it is
a step back in relationship building; Limited staff and
homelessness means less service for rural areas. In Kingston two
primary homelessness programs: prevention diversion (at
imminent risk of homelessness) and Housing First in county
funded for only two full-time staff to run everything.
-
Supportive Housing - demand for supportive housing is greater
than supply; existing supportive housing programs have very long
wait lists and there is no appropriate housing for clients in the
interim; end up living in environments where the needed supports
do not exist, or they remain homeless.
-
Opportunity for home-sharing/room rental in existing stock of
houses.
-
Senior Housing options to address the tsunami that is coming
-
Partner with not-for-profit housing providers where possible to
increase stock of rural senior housing, affordable housing,
supportive housing: Kingston, SFCS, Salvation Army, Central
Housing Corporation, North Frontenac Housing Corporation,
Aboriginal Housing.
-
Work with landlords to advocate regarding long wait times for
hearings and tribunals (Landlord and Tenant Board) to help
reduce barriers to landlords supporting housing programs.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Transportation
Transportation was identified as a risk to community safety and well-being for a variety of
reasons, both from an economic development (transportation to access work) standpoint
as well as a community development barrier (transportation to access service and reduce
isolation).
Transportation services do exist for seniors or for medical transportation, and Frontenac
Transportation Services and South Frontenac Community Services have Seniors
Volunteer drivers to give rides to people in the county with a cost attached. Many rides are
covered through ODSP or OW (there is a limited amount of money Social Services can
spend on client transportation), and Veterans Affairs, EarlyON and some agencies set
aside funds to pay for transportation. Subsidy is often available with fundraised dollars.
For the general population, these services are not available.
There is no taxi service or public transit available north of the 401.The result is that
transportation is a huge barrier for residents to get to appointments, school, employment,
any programming or training. Youth feel trapped and unable to get away, they can't
participate in after-school work or recreation or in co-op placements, and there is no free
bus pass for Kingston transit for county students, a service available to Kingston students.
The coordination of transportation is overwhelming.
A Ride Share service (https://www.communitycarpool.ca) was prepared to launch before
the pandemic and is currently on hold and untested.
The 2020 KFLA Rural Transportation Project Final Report prepared by the Child and
Youth Service Planning Committee (The Table) offers excellent insight into the details of
need in rural Frontenac. Beginning with the 15-year history of discussions and planning on
the topic:
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
33
This multi-year discussion has focused both on transportation as well as alternatives to
service delivery. The pandemic has hastened the rapid delivery of virtual services. The
need for transportation services for rural residents still exist to participate in their
(Child and Youth Service Planning Committee, 2020)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
34
communities and meet their basic needs. To address gaps and inefficiencies in the current
system, the following actions were suggested:
-
Explore option for extending funding for transportation programs from Frontenac
County.
-
Speak to Ministers and MPPs about rural transportation and lobby Ontario
government to redefine "Public Transit."
-
Lobby school boards to offer late bus option at every rural high school that allows
students to use for all purposes, with late bus stopping at local Youth Hubs after the
school pick-up.
-
Allow students to bring infant and pre-school siblings/children on the bus to attend
childcare at or near their school.
-
Lobby funders to relax age limitations for programs to allow economies-of-scale ride
shares and resource sharing between programs.
Reliable digital access and affordability was also determined to be a critical companion to
transportation to allow for full participation and access to services. Knowing that the
Eastern Ontario Regional Network (EORN) Cell Gap Project and Gig Project, as endorsed
by the Eastern Ontario Warden's Caucus, continue to advocate for project funding and
have a high likelihood of success, the Table will work on the affordability of digital service.
They have purchased wifi hubs for placement across the county to help those who
otherwise would not have access:
The Table agreed to purchase four extreme weather, outdoor wifi hubs.
A call went out to agencies through the CYSPC network to solicit
partners to host the hubs, offering free Internet to the public at these
four sites. This pilot project successfully partnered with North Frontenac
Council and Limestone District School Board to install free wifi hot spots
at the following locations:
✓ Clara Mills Hall in Plevna
✓ North Addington Education Centre in Cloyne
✓ Tamworth Public School in Tamworth
✓ Mountain Grove or Parham (still to be determined)
The Table further agreed that, based on the success of the pilot, a funding proposal would
be developed and submitted for more wifi hubs to be installed across the region.
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
Action
Continue the work started by the Child and Youth Planning
Committee to move transportation and digital strategies forward.
Evaluation
- Participation and access are expanded.
- Alternate system delivery systems is achieved and residents have
no barrier to receiving service - choice is made on personal
preference.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
35
Outcomes
- Participation in employment and training opportunities.
- Participation in community.
- Access to food and basic needs.
- Access to medical and other services.
Steps Needed
- Coordination of transportation services.
- Explore option for extending funding for transportation programs
from Frontenac County.
- Speak to Ministers and MPPs about rural transportation and lobby
Ontario Gov't to redefine "Public Transit."
- Lobby school boards to offer late bus option at every rural high
school that allows students to use for all purposes, with late bus
stopping at local Youth Hubs after the school pick-up.
- Allow students to bring infant and pre-school siblings/children on
the bus to attend childcare at or near their school.
- Lobby funders to relax age limitations for programs to allow
economies-of-scale ride shares and resource sharing between
programs.
- Use volunteer drivers to drive kids who can't get into town to job
placement or to a spot to hop on bus to get to placement.
- Advocate for digital access and equity through Eastern Ontario
Warden's Caucus to increase access to services/supports and
social connection.
First Nations Indigenous Culture
Long before European settlers arrived in Frontenac, First Nations people, mostly
Algonquin, lived on this land. The Ardoch Algonquin First Nation and the Shabot
Obaadijiwan First Nation continue work to be self-governed and self-sustaining to better
meet community needs in Frontenac and beyond.
2016 Census Data
North
Central
South
Islands
Population
1898
4373
18646
1760
Indigenous
3.8%
9.8%
3.6%
2.6%
(Statistics Canada, 2016)
The band office of the Shabot Obaadijiwan First Nation is in Sharbot Lake in Central
Frontenac and the Ardoch Algonquin head office is in Westport. With a provincial average
of 7.4% of Indigenous population, Central Frontenac boasts almost 10% of its population
as self-identified Indigenous. The vibrant culture and community is kept active through an
annual pow-wow, training on traditional culture (field dressing, birch bark canoes, harvest,
dream-catcher), fishing derbies, healing circles, sweat lodges, fish fries and numerous
community dinners and meetings. A Food Bank for the Algonquin people of Shabot
Obaadjiwan has been established.
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In recognition of the harm caused by colonial practices to Indigenous children and families,
historically and presently, the child welfare sector has been undergoing a transformative
truth and reconciliation process. Currently, 30% of kids in care in Ontario are Indigenous, a
vast over-representation that continues long past the days of residential schools.
Family and Children's Services of Frontenac, Lennox and Addington is working with
members of First Nations, Metis and Inuit (FNMI) communities in this area and has formed
an advisory group. The Kewaywin Circle initiates and fosters support, guidance and
connections to community and cultural knowledge for families, children and youth working
with the agency who self-identify as Indigenous, as well as caregivers who have self-
identifying Indigenous children/youth living in their homes. The Circle further assists and
guides agency staff to provide services to Indigenous families, children and youth, and to
the Board of Directors, who hold the agency accountable to commitments made, work
being done and policies/procedures in place. The Circle also offers input with an
Indigenous lens regarding services FCSFLA provides and makes recommendations for
change. The FNMI service team includes a cultural advisor as part of the team to help
build support into the culture of organisation, including equity training and examining white
privilege and systemic racism.
The Kewaywin Circle vision is to reignite and ground children, youth and families
Indigenous to Turtle Island in their culture and to make connections, with opportunities for
sharing knowledge, while ensuring that those children and youth grow up healthy and
integrated within their families, cultures, and communities.
The KLFA Children and Youth Planning Committee has collated an Indigenous e-resource
library, and has created a virtual learning circle that is helpful to all service providers:
https://kflachildrenandyouthservices.ca/indigenouslearningcircle/
To note, FNMI is the naming convention right now and seen to be most respectful. First
Nation, Metis and Inuit peoples see themselves as a separate cultural group, not a
racialized BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Colour) group.
To take care of the earth and the community of life we need to remember
the teachings of the First Elder, who has handed on the gifts of
knowledge that he received from the Seven Grandfathers when he was
just a boy. Each grandfather gave him a great gift. One gave him the gift
of Wisdom, and he learned to use that wisdom for his people. Another
gave the gift of Love so that he would love his brother and sister and
share with them. The third offered the gift of Respect, so that the First
Elder would respect everyone, all human persons and all the things that
are created. Bravery was the next gift, bravery to do things even in the
most difficult times. One grandfather gave the boy Honesty so that he
would be honest in every action and provide good feelings in his
heart. One grandfather gave the boy Humility, to teach the boy to know
that he was equal to everyone else, no better or no less, just the same
as anybody else. The last gift that he received was Truth. The
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
37
Grandfathers told him, "Be true in everything that you do. Be true to
yourself and true to your fellow man. Always speak the truth."
They told him, "Each of these teachings must be used with the rest; you
cannot have wisdom without love, respect, bravery, honesty, humility and
truth. You cannot be honest if you use only one or two of these, or if you
leave out one. And to leave out one is to embrace the opposite of what
that teaching is" (Shabot Obaadjiwan First Nation, The Seven
Grandfather Teachings, n.d.).
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
Action
Support First Nation people in Frontenac County in efforts to
be self-sustaining, to increase understanding of shared
history and to support well-being and truth and reconciliation
efforts.
Evaluation
- Indigenous children, youth, and families are connected to their
culture, with opportunities for sharing knowledge.
- Children and youth grow up healthy and integrated within their
families, cultures, and communities.
- Indigenous First Nation people in Frontenac are well connected
to appropriate services.
- Progress in meeting Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Actions.
- Reduced number of Indigenous children in care.
Outcomes
- Appropriate service is offered to a large population of Indigenous
youth.
- Trust in 211 system that includes First Nation support.
- Social and digital connection - pandemic has meant remote
assistance and people cannot be connected with Elders or hold
socials, healing circles, sweat lodges, etc., creating
communication issues.
- Increased financial supports to help families hit hardest by
pandemic.
- Capacity is built by Shabot Obaadijiwan First Nation, Ardoch
Algonquin First Nation and partners.
Steps Needed
- Follow the Seven Grandfather teachings in all relations with
Indigenous First Nation people in Frontenac County when
providing service.
- Increase education and appreciation in community of trauma and
harm of colonial history.
- Work with community and local government to implement Truth
and Reconciliation Calls to Action that includes statements on
appropriate protocols.
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- Capture the recommendations of the TRC in all actions of this
report, woven throughout.
Rural Community Development: Geographic/social isolation, rural realities, service delivery,
stigma/self-awareness, staff retention, equity of opportunity
Frontenac County is a large geographic area with thousands of square kilometers and a
relatively small number of people. The challenges to service the community are many and
the geography becomes both an asset and a risk to community safety and well-being.
2016 Census Data
North
Central
South
Islands
Population permanent residents
1898
4373
18646
1760
Square Kilometres
1,164.77
1,025.20
971.56
175.04
(Statistics Canada, 2016)
As with most rural areas, the larger Frontenac County is the political and census division,
but the township (and often the villages or crossroad communities) is the insular, self-
supporting and resilient community. These small rural communities are often resistant to
the imposition of urban wisdom, program and service. There is no "one size fits all"
approach to planning in a rural area. Solutions are place-based, and what works in South
Frontenac may not work in Frontenac Islands and what works in Kingston will probably not
work in Central or North Frontenac in the same way that policy developed in Toronto may
be blind to the needs of Kingston or Frontenac County. The saying in rural community
development is that "once you have seen one rural community, you have seen one rural
community."
With this in mind, it is not hard to see why the abundance of programs and services
coming from Kingston are so difficult to deliver in rural Frontenac. It is not just the
geography that is the challenge, but also the acceptance of service and trust in the
relationship with the service provider. There is also a reluctance to accept service,
perhaps rooted in pride, fear of stigma, fear of judgment, or a simple forbearance of
difficult situations.
Without this relationship, people fall through the cracks because they don't access the
service available when needed, and community safety, health and well-being are put at
risk. The four Townships of Frontenac are all beautiful green spaces where you can live
without neighbours nearby, but people can be incredibly isolated both physically and
socially, especially if they live with other vulnerabilities.
Rural people are friendly, and neighbours may take care of each other. Municipal services
are strong with cost-effective delivery of asset management, infrastructure, environmental
services, good governance and effective administration, health, recreation, culture and
lifestyle, protection and health of natural environment, infrastructure, bylaw enforcement,
fire and emergency services.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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The community hub models of service that are evident in both South Frontenac and Rural
Frontenac Community Health Services have been building on trusted relationships with
people over many years. Alternate service delivery (virtual or by telephone) is often easier,
both in terms of the burden of service delivery on provider, and acceptance of service by
the user.
Traditional service delivery often means that a staff member from a service agency based
in Kingston drives to an office in Frontenac once or twice a week to deliver program. Staff
retention is difficult, the staff person is isolated from their colleagues, and much of the time
is spent in travel. With regular changeover in staffing, trusting and supportive relationships
aren't possible with clients or between service providers.
The seasonal population of Frontenac spikes to 67,000 from 26,000 permanent residents,
along with a risk and how to protect safety and well-being. Seasonal people don't have the
personal connections or knowledge of the community when they need help, and don't
know who to call on in Kingston.
Fire services are often first point of contact in emergency situations because the
ambulance cannot always get there in time to meet the standards, or police can't respond
immediately to a motor vehicle incident. At the same time, the Frontenac Townships
struggle with finding and rigorously training volunteer firefighters and retaining these
volunteers.
The Limestone District School Board sees equity of opportunity as the biggest challenge
with Frontenac, with lots of students moving into the secondary system who can't access
extracurricular programming or services because of busing. They try to connect families to
services through partners, but without transportation this is often not possible, so the
school and staff is being asked to support families who have greater need with less money
and staff.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
Action
Serve the rural areas with a variety of program delivery
methods to achieve health and service equity.
Evaluation
- Increase in service uptake and greater participation in
community development opportunities.
Outcomes
- Service is available no matter where you live in Frontenac and
delivered in an appropriate place-based program.
Steps needed
- Make high schools into community hubs so all members of
community can reach service.
- Encourage networked approach to service provision so that
services are not duplicated.
- Improve digital access for alternate service delivery.
- Recognize and embrace sharing economy.
- Free up space on municipal service delivery; need more support
when government downloads services for training and facilitation;
streamline reporting requirements so can focus more on service
delivery and make it more efficient; address provincial response
to aging infrastructure that creates financial pressures for road
repairs and maintenance, leaving little for bare essentials or to
develop recreation programs or community grant opportunities;
embed program at township level if possible.
- Encourage congregate living; lower-income people are hard to
serve when they are residents who choose to live alone and are
not connected.
- Include transportation costs for staff and participants in all
funding applications serving rural.
- Approach rural service provision with an equity mindset.
2.2 Health, Mental Health and Substance Use
Objective: Enhance availability and access to health, mental health and substance use
supports across the townships.
Rationale: Access to needed supports helps residents to live a healthy life and prevents
risk.
Elements of physical health, mental health and substance use are integrally tied together
to affect a person's overall well-being. This section covers identified risk areas, including
general health and well-being (health services, youth, seniors, specialized supports), and
mental health and substance use (addictions). Many services are provided throughout the
four townships; however, the bulk are centred in Kingston.
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41
211 is available to access help 24/7. Service providers have suggested it is better if a
client calls 211 instead of a worker, and that accessing by phone is better than doing so
online.
Many agencies have responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by adding virtual services to
their complement. While in-person continues to be an important approach for many
circumstances, a large number of surveyed agencies have indicated some form of virtual
service will continue post pandemic. The success of virtual service has been an increase
in accessibility.
Health
The agency survey conducted for this plan in early 2021 shows the range of health-
related, parenting and demographic risk factors encountered in clients the responding
agencies serve. A chart outlining mental health and substance use issues is located later
in this section.
Frontenac - CSWB Plan - Agency Survey (January 2021)
Risks Encountered
Answer Choices
Responses
Health - difficulty meeting nutrition or basic needs
70.59%
Developmental disability - affected by
52.94%
Social isolation - person does not have access to family or social
supports
52.94%
Person not providing proper parenting
47.06%
Learning disability - affected by
47.06%
Health - not following prescribed treatment
41.18%
Acquired brain injury - affected by
41.18%
Lack of supports for elderly person(s)
41.18%
Parenting - person not receiving proper parenting; parent/child
conflict
35.29%
Cognitive disability - affected by
35.29%
Language/communication barriers affecting ability to access services
35.29%
Gender issues
35.29%
Truancy or chronic absenteeism from school
29.41%
Perpetrator of elder abuse
23.53%
Missing/runaway - with or without parents' knowledge; history of
23.53%
Custody issues/child welfare
23.53%
Rural Frontenac Community Services (RFCS) offers a wide variety of programs and
services for all demographics. They have permanent space in Sydenham and Sharbot
Lake, and rent space in Arden, Parham, Plevna and Storrington. They provide
transportation services for childcare, youth/school and medical appointment, and they offer
counselling services with no wait list and no diagnosis required. RFCS rents and shares
office space to agencies to work in Frontenac County at Sharbot Lake and Sydenham.
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Partners at Sharbot Lake include Community Living, Adult Protective Service Worker,
Connections, pre-school speech and language, food bank, income tax clinics, Maltby,
Ontario Works, Ontario Disability Support Program, Child and Family Services, Providence
Care Occupational Therapy, Addictions and Mental Health, Land of Lakes Community
Services, violence against women services, St. Lawrence Employment Services, Family
Health Team health and mental health rounds, legal services, libraries and Salvation
Army. Services specific to youth and seniors are listed below.
South Frontenac Community Services Centre (SFCSC) also offers specific demographic
services (see below), as well as a food bank serving between 50 and 60 households each
month, housing listings, telephone reassurance, social and exercise programs, a tablet-
lending library and referrals. SFCSC networks and coordinates with other agencies in
order to meet community needs. Their Rural Services Worker knows where resources are
for various services and aims to connect people to them.
Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington Public Health (KFLAPH) also provides numerous
programs across all demographics. Based in Kingston, it has offices in Sharbot Lake and
Cloyne and concentrates on upstream prevention and health promotion, as well as
resiliency. It is willing to work with family health teams.
For adult learners, clients of Connections Adult Learning have been able to access
sufficient, affordable Internet service thanks to funders who have stepped up to provide
assistance for equipment and data cost coverage for cell-based internet. Online
programming has also been developed and is ongoing.
Development of Ontario Health Teams are underway and are designed to streamline
services and operate in a patient-centred mobile with access to one team of health-service
providers in a variety of disciplines.
Youth
A United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington Community Profiles report in 2020
measured contains Early Development Indicators (EDI) for various communities
throughout the region. EDI measures early childhood development to assess children's
readiness to learn before entering Grade 1. Five core areas scored include physical health
and well-being, social knowledge and competence, emotional health/maturity, language
and cognitive development, and communications skills and general knowledge. "One of
the key measures of the EDI is the percentage of children who are vulnerable or at risk for
problems in later childhood, by capturing those that are struggling, but may have not been
formally identified" (United Way KFLA, 2020). The chart below shows the most vulnerable
in KFLA tracking slightly above the provincial average in the five core areas.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
43
There are several assets to support child and youth development and care throughout the
townships:
RFCS has EarlyON programs available for families with children ages 0 to 6. For daycare,
there are special needs supports and subsidized spaces for families needing social
support. For ages 6 to 12, social recreation program is available, and there is a Youth Hub
for ages 13 to 25. They also offer a Home Alone/babysitting course and Northern Rural
Youth Leadership program, funded by the United Way.
For families and children, KFLAPH has Child & Baby Talk programming, prenatal classes,
breastfeeding support, Healthy Babies Healthy Children, nutritional advice for school food
programming, parenting campaigns and vaccinations. There is a visiting nurse in all high
schools, and a nurse practitioner with the family health team.
Youth Diversion offers a mentoring program for ages 12 to 17 that matches at-risk youth
with positive role models, as well as the Rebound program for the same age group, which
is a 10-week Cognitive Skills program.
The Youth Outreach program is a prevention and intervention program that supports at-
risk youth to make healthy life choices and is designed to connect youth, 12 to 21 years of
age, and their families to services in the community.
The ACES Working Group is doing community training on resilience.
(United Way Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington, 2020)
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The Limestone District School Board accepts everyone and is 100% inclusive. Its strategic
plan emphasizes and actions wellness, collaboration and innovation. These three
mandates mesh together, and activities fall within each with a report back to senior
leadership. Limestone seeks ways to support students through co-op and Prior Learning
Assessment to help them graduate.
The Maltby Centre is based in Kingston and offers mental health and autism supports for
children and youth and their families. They are co-located with Family and Children's
Services in Sydenham and have a total of seven locations in KFLA.
A coordinated approach to service and system planning is taken by the KFLA Child and
Youth Services Planning Committee. This children's planning table is a group of service
providers working together to plan and promote a seamless network of responsive
services and supports for children, youth and their families in the region. With a networked
approach, the CYSPC can engage in collaborative planning, implement initiatives, monitor
services and influence policy to ensure that community needs and priorities guide the
planning and delivery of children and youth services in the City of Kingston and the
Counties of Frontenac and Lennox & Addington. Municipalities can be involved in this
collaborative. As well, established inter-agency groups meet monthly (Sydenham and
Sharbot Lake) to do some of the collaborative work.
(Kingston Frontenac Lennox& Addington Child and Youth Services Planning Committee, 2020)
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The United Way Report on Youth Homelessness 2021 contains recommendations that are specific
to Frontenac and offers programs. While the report is about youth homelessness, the focus is
prevention, which means programs such as Intersections start with young participants - as young
as six years old. A steering committee has been working on implementing the plan, and the United
Way reports great progress in the last five years. The plan is based on consultation with youth,
including 170 this year and a separate consultation with Frontenac youth that received input from
more than 100 youth a couple of years ago.
Seniors
Social and geographic isolation tend to be significant factors for the aging population,
which has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Many agencies have worked
creatively to maintain some form of contact with isolated seniors.
RFCS provides Meals on Wheels and a Diners club, which is a social program for 60+.
Home help for seniors to maintain their homes is available at an hourly rate, and there is a
senior services transportation subsidy to assist with going shopping, visiting and for
medical appointments. Community rounds connects service providers with each other, and
there is a geriatric rounds in Sharbot Lake as well. SFCSC provides adult day programs,
Meals on Wheels, transportation, home making/maintenance, foot care, volunteer visiting
hospice and Diners Clubs.
Special Needs/Services
There is a range of assets available to address specific special needs:
A partnership with ABI Canada/MedicAlert Connect Protect is available through MedicAlert
and connected to Frontenac OPP. The Connect Protect program gives emergency
responders and healthcare providers quick and secure, 24/7 access to a MedicAlert
subscriber's electronic medical profile, helping to ensure successful responses.
The Maltby Centre provides free psychoeducation groups for parents, and a single-
session walk-in clinic (which can be used by parents). There are phone, in-person and
virtual options.
There are supports for individuals who have suffered an acquired brain injury (ABI) and
their families. For qualifying individuals there is an ABI System Navigator and Community
ABI Programs (CBIS) with one-on-one outreach supports. This involves travel to Kingston
for group services and has been impacted by COVID-19 protocols. Education, system
navigation and referrals are available.
Other assets include a Stroke Services Program for stroke survivors through VON Greater
Kingston; an online services and support group for caregivers/survivors through Ontario
Brain Injury Services, which is not regional but connects people.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
46
Various services providers have identified a need for enhanced developmental disabilities
locally. Family and Children's Services indicates youth are being placed in other parts of
Ontario far from family supports in order to meet this need. As well, wait lists for
specialized mental health services such as eating disorders are long.
Primary Care
Multidisciplinary family health services are offered in Sharbot Lake, but the bulk of primary
care is located in Kingston. KFLA has been approved for an Ontario Health Team and
more information about pathways of care and client-centred approaches, including primary
care, is anticipated. Community rounds are run by the Family Health Team.
In the rural areas, emergency services and volunteer firefighters are covering for medical
emergencies until paramedics arrive, creating additional stress on these emergency
services. There are mutual aid medical calls when ambulances are unable to meet time
requirements for response. This results in increased training cross-over. Municipalities
also face recruitment issues in terms of finding volunteers who are employed close
enough to service areas to be able to respond to call.
Substance Use and Mental Health
Through interviews, Advisory Committee discussions and surveys it became clear that
risks in the area of substance use and mental health overlap in numerous ways,
particularly when it comes to servicing rural areas, supporting the staff and agencies in
order to do so, and helping individuals and families to recognize when they are actually at
risk of harm and encouraging them to reach out for or to accept help - a difficult thing in a
proud, self-sufficient community where anonymity is difficult due to its small population and
close-knit nature.
The agency survey conducted for this plan in early 2021 showed that mental health
problems (diagnosed or suspected), made up the vast majority of contacts made with
clients - at 88%. The chart below shows the percentage of risk factors this group of
agency respondents identified that are related to mental health and substance use issues.
Frontenac - CSWB Plan - Agency Survey (January 2021)
Risks Encountered
Answer Choices
Responses
Mental health problem - diagnosed or suspected
88.24%
Alcohol or drug use/abuse by an individual
70.59%
Grief/trauma
70.59%
Mental health problem affecting others
64.71%
Mental health - not following prescribed treatment
64.71%
Harm caused by someone's use/abuse of alcohol or
drugs
52.94%
Hoarding
47.06%
Self-harm - engaged in or threatening to do so
41.18%
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Fortunately, the Kingston and Frontenac area has a wide range of assets to help
individuals and families dealing with mental health and addictions issues. The tendency for
residents in the more rural areas has, anecdotally, trended towards self-sufficiency and
leaning on family, which can result in chronic states of risk. In many cases,
families/individuals may not understand the level of risk they are in due to this sustained,
often intergenerational, tendency. Agencies report the data shows where demand for
service is, but anecdotal evidence may indicate otherwise, making it difficult to find the
people who need the services most.
For Frontenac, Lennox and Addington, the Ontario Health Team is pursuing an integrated
mental health and addictions process with approximately 20 members taking part and
using a rural focus.
Substance Use
Addictions and Mental Health Services KFLA indicates it has three case managers and
one addictions worker covering this large service area and vast geography, meaning
transportation is a significant barrier to getting people to the services they need.
Encouraging staff to take on the more isolated jobs in this geography has been deemed
challenging. The cost to the agency to offer services in this way (with significant travel
time) is also high; one worker may end up doing only one visit in a day, which is a benefit
to the client but expensive. Staffing is crucial and there can be a lot of turnover before
someone is found who is willing to work in the more rural areas.
Kairos has a youth diversion program for ages 9 to 24 that includes having counsellors in
the high schools and elementary schools. It can offer psychoeducational workshops on
substance-use topics for children and youth ages 9 to 18. Youth Diversion deals with
addictions.
KFLAPH has programs to support individuals and families around substance use. Its
Healthy Babies Healthy Children program is mandated across the province and will
support parents with substance use issues. KFLAPH plays a key education and advocacy
role, offering various health promotional campaigns, supporting curriculum implementation
around substance use for all schools and advocating at the provincial level for change. It
notes the glamourization of alcohol in society is creating risk and harm in society and
currently has programming on this topic now, along with a targeted media campaign for
high school about harm reduction. They advocate to the province about accessibility of
alcohol. "This is not just a public health issue, it is a community issue" (Susan Stewart,
KFLAPH, Partner Day, 2021).
Acquired brain injury - affected by
41.18%
Suicide - current or previous risk
35.29%
Individual affected by a suicide
35.29%
Methamphetamine use
35.29%
Problematic opioid use
35.29%
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The opioid crisis continues to accelerate across Canada. KFLAPH issues warnings when
toxic drugs are found in the community and has played a key role in the distribution and
training on naloxone, which can save lives in the event of an overdose. It is also actively
involved with the Municipal Drug Strategy. The KFL&A Community Drug Strategy Advisory
Committee has released its Opioid Action Plan to the public. Key commitments include
preserving the health and safety of those who use drugs, reducing opioid overdose
mortality in the at-risk population and reducing harms associated with licit and illicit use of
opioids. The foundation for the strategy is active surveillance. (Kingston Frontenac Lennox
& Addington Public Health, Community Drug Strategy, 2020).
Data from The Ontario Drug Policy Research Network shows the increase in opioid-related
deaths in KFLA during the pandemic.
KFLAPH has a service agreement with Street Health for needle exchange (Kingston
Community Health Services). Feedback from Street Health has been there is less
anonymity than in larger centres, creating a barrier for residents who might be seen going
into the van. Rural Frontenac Health Services is working on a drop-off system, but has
found reluctance by agencies to welcome people who are active users, as well as service
providers not being able to find capacity.
(The Ontario Drug Policy Research Network, et. al., 2020)
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49
KFLAPH's annual report for 2019 shows "the proportion of the KFL&A population
exceeding either of the two low-risk drinking guidelines continues to be higher than the
province, 49% in KFL&A versus 44% in Ontario (2017); however, the rate in KFL&A has
decreased from 52% (2015 and 2016)" (Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington Public
Health, Annual Report, 2019).
Rural Frontenac Community Services is available for substance use support and
consultation.
Intersections KFLA is an evidence-informed early intervention program for children and
youth who are at-risk of becoming justice-involved. It provides supports to their families as
needed. The program covers the KFLA area and helps to identify substance use issues
early.
Youth Diversion reports providing addiction services to children and youth is more
challenging if they are not in school and the geography is taken into account. Workers
identify the complexities are even greater in rural areas; youth in urban areas tend to use
substance sometimes for social reasons, but in the north it is "primarily because of family
circumstances or other trauma presence in life" and youth in the north may be less likely to
engage in social use of substance (Shawn Quigley, Youth Diversion, Partner Day, 2021).
For the Granite Ridge Education Centre, an addictions counsellor attends the high schools
one day per week and has a float day for emergencies. Regular programs are offered at
high schools as needed, and there are usually grade assemblies held at the beginning of
the year. Counsellors can attend elementary schools on a sign-up basis and have therapy
visits. Youth Diversion will also conduct home visits or go to wherever is most convenient.
With ample real estate in the townships to facilitate the growth or making of drugs, it has
anecdotally become a more prevalent coping solution during COVID-19, and access to the
CERB made it more affordable. OPP report an "apparent" increase in prevalence of
acquiring drugs; not necessarily an increase in people but more regular users have had
police contact than before (Sharron Brown, Frontenac OPP, Partner Day, 2021).
Emergency service providers indicate a lack of awareness of overdose incidents when
various responders are involved.
Mental Health
Addictions and Mental Health Services KFLA offers case management and diversion. It
has locations in Verona, Sharbot Lake and Northbrook. There is a Mobile Crisis Team in
Kingston, and the agency is considering a similar service for Frontenac, Lennox and
Addington.
The Maltby Centre provides single session and on-going counselling for children, youth
and families. In addition, there is support for students at Granite Ridge Education Centre
and Sydenham High School through supportive programs. Maltby provides professional
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
50
clinical services to children with mental health and autism diagnosis. It strives to engage
youth in a number of ways. Maltby makes an effort to ensure services are not just in
Kingston; they have seven sites across KFLA and work to bring youth in from the whole
region to participate in things that happen in Kingston. Schools are a significant access
point for Maltby to see clients.
The Youth Diversion Intersections Program offers temporary clinical supports for children
and youth who are coming into contact with police and Family and Children's Services.
The Hotel Dieu Hospital has a neuropsychiatry focus on Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) as
well as system navigation tools, such as "Managing Powerful Emotions specific to ABI:
Distress Tolerance group," which was created by Community Brain Injury Services (CBIS)
and accessible for CBIS clients. The wait list for neuropsychiatry, however, is long
(reported as a year long in 2021). The KFLA ABI and Addictions/Mental Health
Collaborative, which is similar to a risk watch table, provides system navigation when there
is confirmed or suspected ABI and addictions/mental health concerns. This is provided for
service providers by service providers to address situations of high risk with the client's
consent.
KFLAPH promotes mental health and well-being through school curricula, as well as in the
provincially mandated Healthy Babies Healthy Children program. They also provide a
mental health way-finding pathway for health-care providers looking for mental health
services for a patient. It comes from the "Moving Towards Wellness" table and includes an
up-to-date online tool for searching for services and regions.
RFCS has a family counsellor who is often a triage to connect to other mental health
services in rural Frontenac. This is funded through United Way and provides the flexibility
of not requiring a diagnosis. It can be a one-time meeting. Youth over the age of 16 cannot
be served, but RFCS will bridge to the Maltby Centre when possible. Various kinds of
counselling, including financial, can be offered. The counsellor attends rounds in Sharbot
Lake and can refer and be a warm hand-off if not already counselling the client.
A part-time counsellor is also housed with Sharbot Lake Health Team. The United Way
has a family mediation worker serving Frontenac who helps with homelessness
prevention, which is often related to addictions and mental health.
Hoarding is a complex issue that involves collaborative support. Housing and Social
Services (City of Kingston) can provide financial support to help clean out hoarding
situations, but this has strict criteria, which is barrier to housing and mental health support.
OPP have highlighted a number of crisis service gaps, including long wait times when
officers bring a mental health patient to hospital. They indicate there is a good working
relationship with Kingston General Hospital emergency, which is creating improvements.
OPP have established efficiencies in terms of hospitals when they have a mental health
apprehension, travelling to Kingston instead of Perth and then Brockville if an individual is
formed. There are six safe beds available, but they are in Kingston and this can also
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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lengthen call times when trying to find a local safe bed for someone. In 2019, an
agreement was reached between Frontenac OPP and AMHS-KFLA for a collaborative
model to see a member of the AMHS team working in the detachment to provide real-time
support for people in crisis, with immediate follow up after police involvement available.
Service agencies from Frontenac take part in the Community Risk Watch Table based in
Kingston, which is an intervention table designed to provide wraparound support for
individuals they refer who meet a threshold of acutely elevated risk. Discussion has taken
place about ways to make better use of this tool to support rural residents.
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
Action
Collaborate with partners to explore ways to increase
presence throughout the region and to maximize existing
resources and awareness of programs.
Evaluation
- Increased number of outreach services available in under-
served areas.
- Increased number of shared spaces available for meeting with
clients/conducting outreach and/or group sessions.
- Increased participation by agencies in 211.
- Increased use of 211 by residents.
- Increased number of residents accessing services.
Outcomes
- Residents/clients have increased number of services available to
them closer to home.
- Increased availability of harm-reduction services/supplies.
- Increased awareness of services provided by other agencies and
procedures to facilitate referrals for clients.
- Warming centre established for day use.
- Increased awareness and improved communication across
Frontenac regarding services and how to get information.
- Increased uptake with 211 system by both agencies and clients.
- Increased volunteer base to support program aspects where
appropriate.
Steps Needed
- Increase communication about and availability of economical
spaces for group/outreach activities (shared spaces).
- Increase awareness/education for staff serving rural areas of
spaces available for meeting clients.
- In addition to 211, have information cards available in various
service locations and take advantage of radio outlets to
disseminate information.
- Explore possibility of shared mobile services and/or home visits.
- Support efforts identified in Economic Development strategies for
staff retention, particularly in isolated areas.
- Advocate for increased human resources and incentives for
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sustainability/consistency of personnel for mental health and
substance use programs in under-served rural areas.
Action
Enhance or create training, education and communication
plan for rural residents to increase awareness of dangers of
substance use, tools to help with addictions and mental
health, and methods to reduce stigma about accessing help
in a small, rural area.
Evaluation
- Strategy developed to support youth adversely affected by
family substance use or mental health issues.
- Increased number of rural residents accessing addictions/
substance use services.
- Decrease in number of individuals exceeding low-risk drinking
guidelines.
- Decrease in opioid-related deaths.
- Increase in number of individuals accessing local services.
- Number of presentations provided in schools and to
businesses/employers.
Outcomes
- More residents feel comfortable accessing needed substance
use and mental health services in a way that is not stigmatizing
(factoring in rural nature of community).
- More children and youth are supported in family addictions and
mental health situations.
- Increased opportunities created for individuals/families to
access services, including virtual, sharing resources to reach,
e.g. technology.
- Communication plan developed with partners to provide
education through social media and local traditional media
resources.
Steps Needed
- Consider possible tools for access, e.g. virtual or home visits
(explore opportunities to create mobile services).
- Continue to advocate on the issue of glamourization of alcohol.
- Coordinate with Ontario Health Team to ensure involvement
with integrated mental health and addictions process.
- Recognize in education planning the definitions of masculinity
and its role in stigmatization around mental health, as well as
barriers faced in small communities. (Key partners: Addictions
and Mental Health, KFLAPH, school boards, Maltby Centre,
family counsellors, AA group).
- Develop a calendar of articles and topics for publication through
local media and social media as part of communication plan.
- Communication plan should include presentations to local
businesses and employers.
- Include people with lived experience in education around
reducing stigma.
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53
- Determine need for additional study to identify most at-risk peer
groups, particularly for rural Frontenac.
Action
Increase and raise awareness of after-hours crisis services
for addictions and mental health.
Evaluation
- Increased use of rural Mobile Crisis Team and
subsequent referrals.
- Increased resources for rural Mobile Crisis Team.
- Increased referrals to service providers.
- Increased use of 211 by agencies and clients.
Outcomes
- Enhanced Mobile Crisis Team for rural Frontenac to work with
OPP.
- Establish safe beds in Central and North Frontenac.
- Availability of existing after-hours crisis services is well-
documented and communicated to agencies and public.
- Improved access to local after-hours medical care, mental health
and addictions services, social services (e.g. housing supports).
- More robust use of 211 by agencies (via updates) to ensure up-
to-date crisis information available.
Steps Needed
- Advocate for program enhancements where needed.
- Inventory and share up-to-date crisis services information
amongst all relevant service providers, including schools.
- Increase promotion of agency services through their own
websites and social media.
Action
Enhance programs, services and opportunities to reduce
social isolation.
Evaluation
- Increased number of participants in programs to connect
residents.
- Increased number of seniors access home support
services.
Outcomes
- Increased opportunities for residents to connect in order to
reduce social isolation, increase safety and improve mental
health.
- Increased information and opportunities for seasonal residents to
get acquainted with opportunities for social connection and build
a connected community.
- Advocacy for more personal support workers and home support
to enhance services for seniors.
Steps Needed
- Welcome Wagon or similar program created where needed to
connect newcomers to programs and services.
- Inventory available services and consider alternate delivery
methods.
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54
- Engage faith community to support outreach.
- Encourage care providers to consider a "social prescription" that
takes such things as social interaction/involvement, physical
activity and outdoor time into account.
Action
Reduce wait times and improve access to specialized
supports.
Evaluation
- Reduced wait times for neuropsychiatry appointments
- Increased number of individuals accessing ABI/mental health
support programs.
- Increased access by community ABI programs in long-term
care for one-on-one support.
- Increased access to Assertive Community Treatment Team for
mental health supports.
- Increased access to psychoeducational assessments.
- Increased number of individuals receiving hoarding supports.
- Reduced wait lists for eating disorder clinics.
- Increased access to local developmental services.
- Increased availability of autism supports.
Outcomes
- Advocacy for additional resources for neuropsychiatry and
child/adolescent psychiatry, as well as specialized services
such as eating disorders.
- Improved diagnosis supports for ABI and mental health to
improve access to support programs.
- Increase ability for programs to work with memory and cognitive
impairments of ABI.
- Facilitate access by community ABI programs into long-term
care to provide one-on-one supports.
- Increase service and reduce wait times for child/adolescent
psychiatry.
- Improve access to Assertive Community Treatment Team for
mental health supports.
- Improve access to psychoeducational assessments.
- Increase opportunities for early identification and support for
hoarding situations.
- Greater number of clients experiencing hoarding are supported
and connected to appropriate services, including mental health
services.
- More first responders (e.g. by-law, fire services) are confident in
hoarding responses and the connections to make to support
individuals/families.
- Advocacy for increased resources/support for local
developmental services.
- Advocacy for increased autism supports available locally.
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55
Steps Needed
- Monitor mental health wait lists post-COVID - action may be
needed.
Action
Increased collaboration in privacy-protective formats to
facilitate wraparound supports for individuals and families.
Evaluation
- Number of partners involved in collaborative tables.
- Number of trainings held for VTRA.
- Increased referral numbers to Risk Watch Table from
rural Frontenac.
- Increased number of referrals with acutely elevated risk
lowered from rural Frontenac.
Outcomes
- A large group of partners is routinely collaborating to provide
supports to clients before they are at risk of harm.
- Increased education and training for community partners to
participate or understand referral process for Risk Watch Table.
- VTRA training is provided to partners to provide confidence in use
of protocol and collaboration opportunities.
- Increased number of community rounds opportunities.
Steps Needed
- Provide education or create protocols to clarify how community
rounds and community partners can collaborate at various levels
of risk.
- Explore virtual platforms as venue for sharing threat risk
assessments.
- Ensure collaboration with Ontario Health Team for FLA regarding
integrated mental health and addictions process and wraparound
support planning.
Action
Increase opportunities for a "social prescription" to support
mental and physical wellness.
Evaluation
- Increased number of recreation opportunities and clubs for
residents throughout rural communities.
- Increased participation in recreation opportunities.
- Increased communication about available opportunities.
Outcomes
- More opportunities are created to share common spaces at low or
no cost - partnerships with community agencies.
- Volunteer base is increased to facilitate recreation and clubs
resulting in increased socialization and decreased social isolation
for both volunteers and participants.
- Increased sense of community connection created for both long-
time and new residents.
- Reduced social isolation.
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Steps Needed
- Work with schools/school boards to find ways to collaborate and
partner on sharing school spaces with community partners at low
or no cost.
- Work with other community partners on sharing space.
- Inventory volunteer base and find ways to increase involvement.
- Advocacy for funding support to expand/enhance recreation
services and seek collaborative funding or shared resources.
- Work with family doctors to encourage support for "social
prescription."
- Promote as part of public health wellness campaign.
2.3 Violence Against Persons (physical, emotional, sexual, domestic)
Objective: To prevent violence against persons across all demographics.
Rationale: Preventing violence reduces victimization and its consequences and
increases health and well-being.
Violence takes many forms and affects a person's physical and mental well-being. In the
agency survey conducted in early 2021, respondents identified risk factors they
encounter with clients, and half are involved with various forms of violence. Victimization
from physical, emotional or sexual violence is a frequent risk, followed closely by social
isolation, perpetrating violence, domestic violence and elder abuse.
Frontenac - CSWB Plan - Agency Survey (January 2021)
Risks Encountered
Answer Choices
Responses
Victim of physical, emotional or sexual violence
58.82%
Social isolation - person does not have access to family or social
supports
52.94%
Perpetrator of physical, emotional or sexual violence
47.06%
Domestic violence
47.06%
Victim of crime
41.18%
Victim of elder abuse
41.18%
Human trafficking
35.29%
Bullying; victim of or perpetrator of
35.29%
Perpetrator of elder abuse
23.53%
Geographic isolation leading to victimization or self-harm
23.53%
Gang association or membership
17.65%
Threatened or victimized by gang
17.65%
Homicidal ideation - person has expressed thoughts/ideas about
homicide
17.65%
Sex trade
17.65%
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57
The 2019 Progress Report from Frontenac OPP highlights major categories they track for
violent crime.
The OPP have specialized investigative training to support specific violent crimes, such
as sexual assault, and including training on child interviewing and domestic violence.
They also have the benefit of cross-detachment area support, and a wide range of
partnerships, including:
- Victim Services for referrals
- Family and Children's Services
- Harm Reduction Team (HaRT)
- Sexual Assault Centre
- AMHS - KFLA (Mobile Crisis Intervention Team)
- Seniors and Law Enforcement Together (SALT)
- Community Risk Watch Table (Frontenac OPP made four referrals in 2019)
The SALT program provides fraud prevention information specifically for seniors, safety
tips and encourages reporting incidents to police. The South Frontenac SALT
presentations continued in 2019, and the Central North SALT committee was re-
established and organized four presentations in the fall of 2019. Three presentations
addressed frauds and scams and more than 200 seniors attended the sessions. Fraud is
one of the factors involved with elder abuse (Brown, 2019).
Family and Children's Services notes it has a strong relationship with police. Courts have
started to embrace technology more, which is facilitating more virtual service. The agency
highlights domestic violence (particularly in rural areas), housing and addictions as big
issues in child welfare. They have been able to maintain in-person service through the
pandemic. A continued emphasis on community partnerships has led to successful
outcomes; they strive to avoid contributing to the trauma of a child being in the care of the
state if there is any way for the child/youth to remain safe at home or with someone they
know. KFLAPH can partner in this work in light of Healthy Babies, Healthy Children
(Brown, 2019)
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58
program, Food for You, Food for Two program and Child and Baby Talk program (early
interventions). As well, EarlyON is delivering programs at nine sites in a prevention model
for families with children ages 0 to 6. The ACES group is active in Kingston and
Frontenac.
KFLAPH has begun a literature review on the role of public health in violence prevention.
This work has been delayed due to the pandemic, but could provide good guidance upon
completion.
Isolation - both social and geographic - has repeatedly been highlighted as a risk for
various vulnerable populations and demographics, and this has been exacerbated by the
COVID-19 pandemic. Participation in virtual EarlyON services was reduced, and there has
been limited observation of children and spontaneous family connections. Sharbot Lake
Retirement reports isolation has been debilitating for seniors, with more in-person contact
between seniors and various therapists needed. School boards, Family and Children's
Services and violence against women agencies have repeatedly flagged the "lack of
having eyes on people" due to pandemic isolation has increased risk of harm in many
areas. Seniors are particularly vulnerable to this risk, as social interactions through
employment or school are not a given for this demographic. Strategies to mitigate social
and geographic isolation are included in previous sections.
In Frontenac, almost half of the those responding to the agency survey noted "domestic
violence" as a risk they encounter.
OPP statistics for all of East Region, which includes Frontenac, for the last five years up to
2020, show a slight decline in sexual assault occurrences, but an increase in domestic
disturbances. Violent crime declined slightly.
(Ross, 2021)
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59
The closest shelters for women and children fleeing violence are located in Kingston and
Napanee. The Land O' Lakes Violence Against Women Program will accompany women
fleeing violence to Napanee or Kingston and will help with court visits (North Rural
Women's Program).
In its 2019 Progress Report, Frontenac OPP indicated it worked with service partners to
create a standardized Domestic Violence report for use by all community agencies
engaged with victims to provide consistency with support services. It was launched in
2019. As well, a High-Risk Assessment Team meets on an ad hoc basis and is attended
by the Community Services Officer to identify and resolve safety issues of victims when an
offender is released from custody.
(Ross, 2021)
(Ross, 2021)
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
60
Limestone District School Board strives to offer a climate of support in its schools. Some
students, however, are not safe and they are attending school, which creates a conflict
between the human right to education and that of keeping staff safe. It is difficult for
schools to access alternative services for those students, and they are missing out on
good opportunities and supports. The Violent Threat Risk Assessment protocol is a way
for schools to respond quickly to threatening incidents and to bring community partners
together to initiate supports for students. School is not a healthy place for everyone -
bullying, segregation, kids who transfer in are not included.
Youth Diversion offers youth justice programs for young people ages 12 to 17. This
includes pre- and post-charge diversion. The Intersections programs for youth ages 9 to
17 who come into contact with police or Family and Children's Services.
Frontenac OPP outlined various education sessions held in partnership with the Sexual
Assault Centre in high schools in its 2019 Progress Report, including violent crime
(assault, sexual assault, cyber related offences, sexting, etc.). The OPP KIDS program
for elementary schools includes lessons on cyber bullying and Internet safety. The
Community Services Officer worked with platoon members to deliver the program and,
on an ad hoc basis, brought frontline officers into schools to introduce them to students
and to deliver short presentations on safety, including cyber safety.
Police have highlighted the limited availability of agency resources in the northern parts of
Frontenac. Increasing the supports and access as highlighted in previous sections will also
help to provide supports for victims of violence.
Strategies to Mitigate the Risk
Action
Enhance system navigation and community collaboration.
Evaluation
- Increased referrals to Community Risk Watch Table from
across the Frontenac Townships.
- Increased number of discussions at Risk Watch Table
that demonstrate acutely elevated risk lowered.
- Decreased involvement by police with individuals
referred to Risk Watch Table.
- Increased number of court diversions for individuals with
acquired brain injury.
- Increased satisfaction for victims of violence in system
navigation and referrals.
- Increased number of shelter beds available in rural
Frontenac (Central, North) for women and children
fleeing violence.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
61
Outcomes
- Develop system navigation for acquired brain injury that includes
court diversion focused specifically on ABI partnered with mental
health.
- Victims of violence are supported in court process through
system navigation and referral processes.
- More individuals and families receive early intervention and
wraparound supports through community rounds or Risk Watch
Table processes.
- Women and children at immediate risk of violence are supported
for short stays in Central and North Frontenac (safe house) until a
shelter can be accessed.
Steps Needed
- Explore creation of a victim advocate/liaison program through
police in partnership with other service providers to support
victims of violence in navigating processes, referrals to other
services, and the justice system that takes privacy legislation and
procedures into account to support wraparound service.
- Confirm and promote referral processes to community rounds
and Risk Watch Table to encourage more connections.
- Enhance inter-agency connections where needed (Land O' Lakes
Violence Against Women Program, Interval House, Sexual
Assault Centre Kingston, Family Health Team mental health
rounds).
- Establish and increase number of informal shelter beds available
in rural Frontenac (Central, North) for women and children fleeing
violence.
- Consider establishment of formal shelter beds.
Action
Children and youth are supported to grow up in their
families, communities and cultures.
Evaluation
- Increased number of after-school programs and youth centres in
rural areas to support staying in community for activities.
- Increased privacy-protective collaboration amongst community
partners to provide wraparound supports for families and children
in crisis.
- Reduced instances of stress leave for teachers/school
staff.
- Increased numbers of youth encountering law accessing
diversion/Intersections.
Outcomes
- Greater understanding amongst community partners of long-term
impact of children being in the care of the state.
- Early community partnerships cultivated to help prevent family
crisis.
- More students who have had encounters with the law supported
through education and rehabilitation.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
62
- Wraparound supports between schools and community partners
for children and families also improves support/safety for school
staff.
Steps Needed
- Have skill trades program and ways to get students educated and
rehabilitated (if they have had encounters with law). Create
database of Frontenac employers who would be willing to work
with students. The employers would also get supports. This could
be for co-ops, jobs or volunteer hours - all pieces of what
students need to graduate.
- Advocacy for increased special education supports/funding.
- Enhance community partnerships to continue to support and
promote access to and available of existing early intervention
programs.
Action
Address root causes of violence against persons through
education, training and trauma-informed approaches.
Evaluation
- Increased trauma-informed care training opportunities
offered to all sectors in region (partnership approach).
- Increased workplace training for diversity, inclusion and
cultural sensitivity.
- Number of education programs delivered to address
myths about sexual assault.
- Decline in intimate partner violence statistics.
Outcomes
- Trauma-informed training and approaches incorporated into
human services providing care to victims of violence.
- Trauma-informed training and approaches incorporated into
human services connected with perpetrators of violence in order
to address root causes.
- Education programs developed and delivered to address myths
about sexual assault and generational stereotypes about violence
in women/family relationships.
- Increased diversity, inclusion and sensitivity protocols
incorporated into workplaces across sectors (public, agencies/
organizations, schools, community groups, etc.).
Steps Needed
- Seek partnerships to assist with provision of identified trainings
and education sharing.
- Shelter beds available in rural Frontenac (Central, North) for
women and children fleeing violence (e.g. safe house for short
stays for women/children at immediate risk until shelter can be
accessed).
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63
3.
Outcomes and Actions and Implementation
The legislation for Community Safety and Well-being plans indicates that once a
municipal council has adopted its plan, it must be published according to regulations,
and that the council "shall, in accordance with the regulations, if any, monitor, evaluate
and report on the effect the plan is having, if any, on reducing the prioritized risk factors"
(Police Services Act, 2018, c. 3, Sched. 1, s. 211 (6). It must also, according to the Act,
provide the Solicitor General with information regarding the adoption and
implementation of the plan and its outcomes.
As of April 2021, the only regulations in place pertaining to CSWB plans were the
completion deadline and the publication requirement. Public consultation has reflected
that community partners would like to work together to follow through on the actions in
the plan, and a coordinated approach is most appropriate.
Implementation should include evidence-based programs and strategies to address
those priority risk factors.
An Implementation Team will take over once the Community Safety and Well-being
Plan is complete and has been presented to the Township Councils. It is this team that
will finalize and prioritize the actions in the plan. The composition of the Implementation
Team, reporting frequency, mechanism, and structure has not yet been determined.
Risks will be grouped into a themed approach for ease of implementation:
- Rural Economic and Community Development: Poverty, Income, Employment; Housing
and Homelessness, Affordable Housing, Transportation, Indigenous Services, Geographic
and Social Isolation, rural realities, service delivery, stigma/self-awareness, staff retention,
equity of opportunity
- Health, Mental Health and Addictions: Health and well-being (basic needs, neglect,
parenting, specialized supports); Mental Health and Addictions
- Violence Against Persons: against persons (physical, emotional, sexual, domestic)
In order to achieve the actions within the plan, it will be critical for all partners to ensure
good communication between working groups and sectors in relation to the plan's
activities, particularly to ensure goals are met in terms of regional objectives across a
range of demographics and sectors.
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64
The following is a summary of the themes, objectives, rationale and strategies upon
which the implementation plan will be based:
Rural Economic and Community Development
Objective: Economic Development - sustainable and continued economic
development; increased meaningful employment environment and opportunities
for all residents of Frontenac County.
Rationale: Prosperity, economic health and equity.
Objective: Community Development - sustainable and continued community
development; increased connection to service, support and social opportunities
for all residents of Frontenac County.
Rationale: Social connection, community health and equity.
Action
Create a regional employment plan that includes a cross-
sectoral staff attraction, retention and development
component.
Action
Create a rural poverty coalition to act collectively to break the
cycle of poverty and health inequity.
Action
Develop a rural affordable housing and homelessness strategy
(as proposed in 10-Year Housing and Homelessness Strategy).
Action
Continue the work started by the Child and Youth Planning
Committee to move transportation and digital strategies
forward.
Action
Support First Nation people in Frontenac County in efforts to
be self-sustaining, to increase understanding of shared history
and to support well-being and truth and reconciliation efforts.
Action
Serve the rural areas with a variety of program delivery methods
to achieve health and service equity.
Health, Mental Health and Substance Use
Objective: Enhance availability and access to health, mental health and substance
use supports across the townships.
Rationale: Access to needed supports helps residents to live a healthy life and
prevents risk.
Action
Collaborate with partners to explore ways to increase
presence throughout the region and to maximize existing
resources and awareness of programs.
Action
Enhance or create training, education and communication
plan for rural residents to increase awareness of dangers of
substance use, tools to help with addictions and mental
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
65
health, and methods to reduce stigma about accessing help
in a small, rural area.
Action
Enhance programs, services and opportunities to reduce
social isolation.
Action
Reduce wait times and improve access to specialized
supports.
Action
Increased collaboration in privacy-protective formats to
facilitate wraparound supports for individuals and families.
Action
Increase opportunities for a "social prescription" to support
mental and physical wellness.
Violence Against Persons (physical, emotional, sexual, domestic)
Objective: To prevent violence against persons across all demographics.
Rationale: Preventing violence reduces victimization and its consequences and
increases health and well-being.
Action
Enhance system navigation and community collaboration.
Action
Children and youth are supported to grow up in their
families, communities and cultures.
Action
Address root causes of violence against persons through
education, training and trauma-informed approaches.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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References
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Blackline Consulting. (November 2020). Service Delivery Review of Economic
Development in Frontenac County. Retrieved from
https://www.frontenaccounty.ca/en/government/resources/Documents/Blackline-
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City of Kingston Housing Department. (2011). 10-Year Housing and Homelessness Plan
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e%20of%20%20opioids
Maytree. (2017). How do we measure poverty? Retrieved from https://maytree.com/wp-
content/uploads/How_do_we_measure_poverty_May2017.pdf
Ontario. (2020). Provincial policy statement: Affordable housing. Retrieved from
https://files.ontario.ca/mmah-provincial-policy-statement-2020-accessible-final-en-
2020-02-14.pdf
Primal Glow. (May 2016). Rural summit on poverty and housing security: A community
response to poverty and housing security issues in the rural areas of the County of
Frontenac.
Ross, P. (March 2021). Victimology related to domestic and sexual offenses Hawkesbury and
Russell County. Ontario Provincial Police.
Shabot Obaadjiwan First Nation. (n.d.) The Seven Grandfather Teachings. Retrieved from
https://www.sofn.band
SHS Consulting & refact consulting. (n.d.). Municipal housing strategy for City of Kingston and
Frontenac County final report. Retrieved from
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0-ab4b-4a28-9eec-639e91a69ad1
SHS Consulting & refact consulting. (February 2017). Township of South Frontenac Business Plan
for Seniors Housing (Sydenham). Retrieved from https://www.southfrontenac.net/en/town-
hall/resources/South-Frontenac-Business-Plan-FINAL-March-2017.pdf
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Ontario [Province]. Retrieved from Census Profile, 2016 Census - Frontenac, Municipalité
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Forensic Pathology Service, Public Health Ontario, Centre on Drug Policy Evaluation. (2020,
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Ontario during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Retrieved from https://www.publichealthontario.ca/-
/media/documents/o/2020/opioid-mortality-covid-surveillance-report.pdf?la=en
United Way KFLA. (2020). Community profiles 2020. Retrieved from
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Population-Housing-and-Employment-Projections-2016-to-2046-Final-Report-2020.pdf )
Interviews:
Sharron Brown and Jamie Davis, 2019, Frontenac OPP.
Cindy Deachman, 2019, Central Frontenac.
Scot Gillam, 2019, Limestone District School Board.
Heather Mitchell, 2019, City of Kingston.
Louise Moody, 2019, Rural Frontenac Community Services.
David Townsend, 2019, South Frontenac Community Services.
Bhavana Varma, 2019, United Way.
David Herrington, 2019, South Frontenac Police Services Board
Kieran Moore, 2019, Kingston Frontenac Lennox and Addington Public Health Unit
Fran Smith, 2019, Central Frontenac
Kat Riley, 2019, City of Kingston
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Appendix 1
Draft Implementation Plan
Community Safety and Well-being Plan
North, South, Central Frontenac and Frontenac Islands
This plan will best be implemented across all of Frontenac unless noted. North and Central
do have some different needs than South and the Islands, and "north of the 401" and
"north of 7" are common descriptors of the transition points.
This Implementation Plan will be finalized by the Implementation Committee after the
adoption of the CSWB Plan by the Townships. It is meant to be dynamic, and the actions
listed can change/grow/be modified as the implementation progresses. This is a starting
point to Community Safety and Well-being.
With three Strategic Areas - Rural and Economic Development; Health, Mental Health
and Substance Use; and Violence Against Persons - this implementation plan includes
19 strategic actions that will mitigate the risk to community safety and well-being. These
actions are intended to be spread over five years and are prioritized by year for
implementation. Where possible, a lead organization has been identified, along with
partners willing to help in the work.
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Rural and Economic Development
Poverty, Income, Employment, Housing and Homelessness, Affordable Housing,
Transportation, Indigenous Services, Geographic and Social Isolation, Rural Realities,
Service Delivery, Stigma/Self-awareness, Staff Retention, Equity of Opportunity
Economic Development
Objective: Economic Development - sustainable and continued economic
development; increased meaningful employment environment and opportunities
for all residents of Frontenac County.
Rationale: Prosperity, economic health and equity.
Strategic Actions
Priority in
Year 1,3,5
Lead and Partners/Funding
1. Action: Create a regional
employment plan.
1
Lead: County Economic
Development
Partners: Frontenac Business Services,
employment agencies (St. Lawrence
College), Connections, Townships.
Consult Community Living, Pillar
Financial Services, Sharbot Lake
Business Group, Seed to Sausage and
Deans Grocery Store, Lanark/
Leeds/Grenville employers or
employment groups (CFDCs, eastern
Ontario)
2. Action: Develop cross-
sectoral rural staff retention
plan.
1
Lead: Maltby
Partners: municipalities, other service
agencies, FCS, Resolve, Colleges -
Kingston and Perth
3. Action: Advocate for
increased human resources
and incentives for
sustainability/ consistency of
personnel for mental health
and substance use programs
in under-served, rural areas.
Lead: Implementation Committee
4. Action: Create a rural
poverty coalition to act
collectively to break the cycle
of poverty and health inequity.
Launch in
year 1
work in
years 3-5
Lead: United Way, RFCS, SFCS
Partners: County, Family and
Children's Services, First
Nations, RFCS, Salvation Army
Frontenac
Created for all; implemented North
and South
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Community (and Social) Development
Objective: Community Development - sustainable and continued community
development; increased connection to service, support and social
opportunities for all residents of Frontenac County.
Rationale: Social connection, community health and equity.
Strategic Actions
Priority in
Year 1,3,5
Lead and Partners/Funding
5. Action: Develop a rural
affordable housing and
homelessness strategy (as
proposed in 10-Year Housing
and Homelessness
Strategy).
1
Lead: Kingston and County
Partners: SFCS, Salvation Army
Frontenac, current housing stock
owners (Central Housing Corporation,
North Frontenac Housing Corporation,
Aboriginal Housing)
Municipalities to ask for prioritization of
the rural strategy
6. Action: Review Municipal
policy and planning
documents regionally, with
eye to affordable (attainable)
housing.
May be
underway
Lead: All Townships
North, Central, South Frontenac and
Frontenac Islands
7. Action: Continue work
started by the KFLA Children
and Youth Services Planning
Committee to move
transportation and digital
strategies forward.
ongoing
Lead:
Partners: EORN, RFCCS, KF Public
Library - digital strategies
8. Action: Support First
Nation people in Frontenac
County in efforts to be self-
sustaining, to increase
understanding of shared
history and to support well-
being and truth and
reconciliation efforts.
ongoing
Ardoch Algonquin First Nation and the
Shabot Obaadijiwan First Nation,
municipalities, FCS (Keewayin); KCHS
9. Action: Serve the rural
areas with a variety of
program delivery methods to
achieve health and service
equity.
Current Network tables
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
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Health, Mental Health and Substance Use
Health and well-being, Basic needs, Neglect, Parenting, Specialized supports, Mental
Health, Substance Use
Objective: Enhance availability and access to health, mental health and
substance use supports across the townships.
Rationale: Access to needed supports helps residents to live a healthy life
and prevents risk.
Strategic Actions
Priority in
Year 1,3,5
Lead and Partners/Funding
10. Action: Collaborate with
partners to explore ways to
increase presence
throughout the region and to
maximize existing resources
and awareness of programs.
ongoing
Lead: Implementation Committee
Partners: Current collaboratives -
CYSPC, inter-agency groups, rounds;
OHT
11. Action: Enhance or
create training, education
and communication plan for
rural residents to increase
awareness of dangers of
substance use, tools to help
with addictions and mental
health, and methods to
reduce stigma about
accessing help in a small,
rural area.
Lead: Implementation Committee
Partners: Current collaboratives -
CYSPC, inter-agency groups, rounds,
OHT; Family Health Team; public health
12. Action: Increase and
raise awareness of after-
hours crisis services for
addictions and mental
health.
Lead: Implementation Committee
Partners:
13. Action: Enhance
programs, services and
opportunities to reduce social
isolation.
Lead: Implementation Committee
Partners: Current collaboratives -
CYSPC, inter-agency groups, rounds;
OHT; Family Health Team; public health
14. Action: Reduce wait
times and improve access to
specialized supports (Since
covid there are now wait lists
for many mental health
services - this could be a
crisis)
Year 1
Lead:
Partners:
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73
15. Action: Increased
collaboration in privacy-
protective formats to facilitate
wraparound supports for
individuals and families.
Lead: Implementation Committee
Partners: OHT; Risk Watch Table
16. Action: Increase
opportunities for a "social
prescription" to support
mental and physical
wellness.
Lead: Implementation Committee
Partners: Family docs; rounds
CSWB - Frontenac North, Central, South, Islands
74
Violence Against Persons
Physical, Emotional, Sexual, Domestic
Objective: To prevent violence against persons across all demographics.
Rationale: Preventing violence reduces victimization and its consequences and
increases health and well-being.
Strategic Actions
Priority in
Year 1,3,5
Lead and Partners/Funding
17. Action: Enhance system
navigation and community
collaboration; promotion of
existing services.
Lead:
Partners: Land O' Lakes VAW program
- Ally staff in Frontenac, Interval
House, SAC Kingston, link with Family
Health Team mental health rounds,
Interagency
18. Action: Support children
and youth to grow up in their
healthy families, communities
and cultures.
Lead: Family and Children Services
Partners: all
19. Action: Address root
causes of violence against
persons through education,
training and trauma-informed
approaches.
Lead:
Partners: KFLA Public Health
Leadership of the Implementation Committee
Although a great deal of commitment has been shown at the strategic action level, work remains to
be completed by the Advisory Committee members to determine some of the Implementation Team
roles, including:
- Co-Chairs of the Implementation Team and team membership (e.g. Advisory Committee
members)
- Central coordination for the whole plan
- Administration support for the plan
- Data coordination for the measurement and evaluation pieces
- Possible technical support (e.g. website to host information)
- Funding: E.g. for paid coordination if necessary, particular actions