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Khaleel Seivwright, 28, marks off a measurement along a 2 x 6 board which is part of a tiny structure he is building for a homeless person.Nick Kozak/The Globe and Mail

A carpenter who builds small shelters for Toronto’s homeless has asked the city to drop its court fight against him.

The city filed an application for an injunction on Feb. 12 seeking an order to stop Khaleel Seivwright from making, fixing and relocating small wooden shelters on city-owned land.

Mr. Seivwright says the city should focus its resources on getting people housed rather than fight him in court.

He began making the structures last fall and has raised more than $200,000 to pay for building materials.

The city says the structures are a fire hazard.

A man died last week after a small wooden structure caught fire in a downtown Toronto homeless encampment.

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