Important Reminder: The City of London 2026 final tax bill June installment is due this month.
The final tax bill was sent out to property owners by mail in early June 2026, with the first installment due on Tuesday, June 30, 2026.
The official website for the City of London, Ontario
As part of the Whole of Community System Response, Hubs will support individuals to move safely inside, become stabilized, access wrap-around supports, be connected to the right housing and receive support to stay housed. Every interaction in a Hub is an active and intentional effort to enable an individual’s next steps toward supportive housing.
Council has approved the building of a network of Hubs that will be located throughout the city, offer a common set of functions and direct connections to the right supports at the right time for our most marginalized residents. These Hubs will serve 25 to 30 people per location, depending on the acuity and needs of the population. These Hubs will be open every day, around the clock, staffed by frontline support workers and a management team. It is estimated that each Hub will require six employees during daytime hours and five during the evening. These Hubs will prioritize couples and families, Indigenous peoples, medically complex individuals, women and female-identifying individuals, and youth. These Hubs are purpose-built spaces that optimize access, facilitate privacy and dignity, and ensure positive neighbourhood relations.
View the Hubs Implementation Plan
Services and Programming
Staff will be able to provide patrons with an extensive list of services and programming at Hubs thanks to the collaboration with a number of community partners, giving users access to immediate basic needs and stabilization support, including:
Choosing the right location for a Hub is a critical part of the Hubs Implementation Plan. A wide variety of potential location criteria has been considered, based on input from the Hubs implementation table, business and development reference tables and meetings with Business Improvement Areas, and based on community engagements with community members.
Following Council endorsement of the Hubs Implementation Plan in July 2023, the City began a competitive procurement process to identify lead agencies and proposed locations for the first five Hubs.
Engagement opportunities on London’s Whole of Community System Response to the health and homelessness crisis continued at the end of August, giving Londoners more opportunities to ask questions and provide feedback on the Hubs Implementation Plan. Residents could attend one of five in-person sessions taking place between August 30 and September 7. Feedback was also collected through this webpage.
A report was then prepared by the City about health and homelessness and the procurement process to identify lead agencies to operate Hubs. The report can be reviewed online.
The report was discussed at a Special Meeting of the Strategic Priorities and Policy Committee on September 25 and then at a Council meeting on October 5, 2023. At this Council meeting, London City Council approved the first three Hubs, marking a significant leap forward in addressing the health and homelessness crisis. The approval of these first Hubs marks the next step in the implementation of the Health and Homelessness Whole of Community Response and a new, system-wide approach to ending homelessness in our city. A recording of this meeting can be viewed below on this webpage.
The Hubs are designed to provide wrap-around care and a host of services for unsheltered individuals with the most complex needs, focusing on three of the priority populations identified in the Hubs Implementation Plan: Indigenous individuals, youth, and women and female-identifying individuals. As comprehensive centres, the Hubs will offer around-the-clock services, encompassing supports such as food, shower, laundry facilities, rest areas, income support, integrated care planning, healthcare, and a suite of services designed to help individuals transition into stable housing.
The first Hubs are as follows:
The Hubs will be primarily funded by provincial dollars already allocated to the City under the Homelessness Prevention Program, in the amount of $10.4 million, spread over two years. A request will also be made to the Fund for Change in the amount of $4.9 million to open and $5.2 million to operate the Hubs over the two years. There will be no tax levy implications resulting from the implementation of these Hubs.
Community members in the vicinity of the new Hub locations will be engaged by the lead agencies to learn more about the hubs and how they can provide feedback for a smooth transition for Hubs into their respective neighbourhoods.
With the implementation of the first Hubs, the City will also continue to work with sector and community members to establish highly supportive housing which is also a critical element of the Whole of Community System Response.
The physical design considerations and space specifications for the Hubs include an estimated 8-10,000 square feet of multi-use space, recognizing that this will be impacted by building availability and specific population design and accessibility criteria.
Exterior:
Interior: This plan intentionally includes separate spaces in the Hubs for those in transitional beds and respite beds – to help ensure continued stability for those in-residence versus those staying temporarily, each of whom have different needs, including:
Transitional beds:
Respite Beds:
Overall Infrastructure:
Individuals with lived and living experience were asked to help inform the Hub implementation plan. These experiences and voices will continue to be collected and the Hubs move forward into operationalizing and through the Whole of Community System Response as other initiatives including highly supportive housing progress. Through a partnership with St. Joseph’s Health Care, the individuals that participate and share their input are offered the opportunity to disengage at any time and should the sharing of their experiences ever become triggering or difficult to handle, supports are offered to them ahead of time. Resources have been created for collecting feedback and to better understand the specific needs of those experiencing homelessness. The feedback gathered through interviews and focus groups centres primarily on probing questions in plain language to elicit a conversation style survey.
This is a critical function of the Hubs– a place where you can walk in the door 24/7 and receive immediate support. In addition to basic needs/in the moment stabilization support, each Hub offers approximately 35 beds: 25 to 30 are transitional; 5 to 10 are respite beds, ensuring fully accessible spaces
The vision for the Hubs includes a consistent set of services and standards across multiple locations.
The total projected cost for starting up the first five Hubs would be approximately $13.5 million in operating and $10 million in capital. While some existing Housing Stability Services base funding through the Homeless Prevention Program funding is available, advocacy efforts will see funding from other levels of government, and Civic Administration will also be launching the Funders Reference Table as part of this response framework.
The projected cost of each Hub is approximately $2.7 million per year in operating costs on average, which reflects approximately 25-35 beds and staff.
All Doors Lead Here
By working differently together and ensuring the mindset of a ‘no wrong door’ approach, we can offer a range of common functions in an integrated, multi-agency and interprofessional model that is population-specific to meet the unique demographics and care needs, supported by one central phone number for referral, and designed to ensure timely and direct pathways to housing.
Using the “No Wrong Door” approach will all anyone that comes through the front door of the Hubs, from any referral source, to receive help. For high acuity individuals, that may mean stating at a Hub, for others who are lower acuity or when Hub spaces are full, it may mean diversion into other parts of the system. For this reason, professionals staffing the front door of Hubs will be highly trained in stabilization, diversion and utilize a method of triage that allows for a rapid, high level analysis of an individual’s needs.