The East York Mirror, June 30, 2016
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Transcript of The East York Mirror, June 30, 2016
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Rolling in the right direction With more than 500 kilometres of bike lanes mostly in downtown – cycling advocates hope Toronto politicians stay on track to connect the entire city
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Parade, fireworks, party set for Canada Day in East York
Serving LEASIDE-BENNINGTON, DANFORTH VILLAGE, NORTH RIVERDALE and BROADVIEW
www.insidetoronto.com thurs june 30, 2016
TARA HATHERLY [email protected]
East Yorkers will be out in full force celebrating Canada’s 149th birthday Friday, July 1.
The annual East York Canada
Day celebrations kick off with a parade, beginning at Dieppe Park, 455 Cosburn Ave.
T h e p a ra d e l e a ve s a t 10 a.m., travelling along Cosburn, Coxwell, Sammon and Woodbine avenues, before
finishing at Woodbine and Cosburn at 11:30 a.m. It features bands, floats, antique cars and marchers from various local organizations.
Parade watchers can park for free at the East York Civic
Centre, 850 Coxwell Ave. There will also be free street parking on Durant Avenue.
The hot spot for parade watching is the Mortimer and Coxwell avenues area, where
>>>RIBFEST, page 6
Police launch safety on Danforth campaignJOANNA LAVOIE [email protected]
Toronto police officers from 54 and 55 Divisions have recently launched a project aimed at maintaining safety along Danforth Avenue.
Dubbed Project Annapolis, the initiative is an extension of Project Borderline, which wrapped up in December 2015.
The project will include enforcement to the bars to ensure compliance with various legislations, mostly the Liquor License Act to address the crime and disorder that accompanies overserving, permitting drunk-enness, and serving minors among other things.
Issues have occurred both in and out of local bars.
T h e C i t y ’s Mu n i c i p a l Licensing and Standards Division is also involved in Project Annapolis, helping ensure each business has an actual license to operate safely for themselves, their staff and customers.
>>>polIcE, page 9
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3
DAVID NICKLE [email protected]
In 1991, 15-year-old Yvonne Bambrick rode the streets of Toronto with brash confi-dence – making the consid-erable daily commute from her family home at Victoria Park in East York to Jarvis Collegiate by bicycle, along busy downtown streets that made scant accom-modation for bikes.
“Back when I was a naive teenager, I didn’t think twice about it,” recalls Bambrick 25 years later, sitting on a sunny patio in Kensington Market, steps from one of the city’s massive on-street bike racks and just over a block from the busy College Street bike lanes.
“The concept of bike lanes wasn’t on my brain at all. I
did know it wasn’t safe – I got
doored on the Danforth and had a wipeout on bad road conditions. Otherwise I was just a teenager on her bicy-cle, happy to be free getting where she’s going. It meant I could have all the ice cream I wanted.”
In 2016, the Toronto that Bambrick bikes around is a much safer place. Toronto has a total of 558.4 kilome-tres of on-street bike lanes, including white bicycle lanes, contra-flow lanes that run against the flow of traffic, so-called “sharrows”, signed routes without pavement
markings, and even a few kilometres of cycle tracks
that are fully separated from traffic.
A lot of people use those lanes. According to the 2 0 0 6 C e n s u s , Torontonians bike to and from work like nobody else in the Greater To r o n t o a n d Hamilton Area, with 19,780 com-muting by bike
compared to 14,925 in 2001.
In 2015, Bambrick published a book for
those cyclists: The Urban Cycling Survival Guide: Need
To Know Skills and Strategies
for Biking in the City. It was a book culled from her work advocating for cyclists as the head of the Toronto Cyclist’s Union – now Cycle Toronto – and her years riding Toronto’s sometimes tricky streets.
There’s a lot to know: how to make a safe left turn (there’s more than one way); how to suit up for cycling in bad weather; dealing with potentially hostile interac-tions; and how to navigate all those different styles of bike road infrastructure.
Currently, most of those routes are in neighbourhoods surrounding the downtown core – including the rela-tively new cycle tracks on Sherbourne, Adelaide and Richmond streets.
“Richmond-Adelaide were a game changer,” says Bambrick. “I was having to ride there all the time (before), and I’m a confi-dent rider but even for me it was tough. This is amazing. Transformative.”
Bambrick and other cycling advocates are hoping for more change like that, on roads that extend beyond the downtown. This summer, the city will be embarking on a pilot project to try a cycle track along Bloor Street through the Annex neighbourhood – a test, to see whether a city-spanning
track could be installed the length of Bloor Street and Danforth Avenue.
And the outcome of that could determine the implementation of parts of the city’s next big plan for cycling expansion: the Cycling Network 10 Year Plan. Under that plan, Toronto’s bikeway and bike trail network would be extended to the ends of the city: north along Yonge Street to Steeles Avenue; on Kingston Road in Scarborough from Eglinton Avenue to the Highland Creek Trail; Kipling Avenue from Bloor Street to the Waterfront Trail; and Midland Avenue, from Steeles to Lawrence avenues.
Toronto’s Chief Planner Jennifer Keesmaat said to provide an effective cycling alternative, the network needs to expand in the same way that transit networks expand – in a continuum. Do that, she says, and it becomes viable to commute, at least to down-town, from nearly anywhere in the city.
“With cycling, distance isn’t that much of a problem,” says Keesmaat.
“The city is really not that big, and 10 kilometres, 20 kilo-metres isn’t really a big deal. And from the centre of the city you can get pretty much anywhere on a 10 kilometre
bikeway. If you’re cycling from Scarborough to Etobicoke, that’s a big trip. But from the centre of the city you can get anywhere – all you need is safe infrastructure.”
The other thing that a cyclist needs, of course, is the will, and a bit of know-how. Bambrick is an evangelist for the former and a resource for the latter. When asked what it takes to get on a bike, after dutifully recommending a careful read of her book, she suggests a step-by-step approach. Borrow a bike-share bike; go riding with a friend on a quiet street. If it’s been awhile, take a BikeShare course.
And remember: roads were originally for bikes.
“We paved our roads because wheelmen’s clubs advocated to get the roads paved. The bicycling move-ment has been around for a long time,” says Bambrick. “It’s never gone away.”
Staff/MetrolandCyclists make their way in traffic along the Sherbourne Street bike lane at Carlton Street on a recent Thursday afternoon.
going the distance in to
ronto
Infrastructure
there are 558.4 total lane kilometres of on-street cycling infrastructure. here is the breakdown:
15.1 km – cycle tracks
209 km – white bicycle lanes
6.1 km – Yellow ‘contra-flow’ bicycle lanes
26.2 km – lanes with shared lane pavement markings
302 km – signed routes (no pavement markings)
– courtesy City of Toronto
65% of people
who ride a bicycle to work are male, and 35%
are female
58% of people who ride a bicycle to work are between the ages of
25 to 44
Downtown lanes a ‘game changer’ as
Toronto’s bicycle network expands
LIKE BIKE
weto
– courtesy City of Toronto
special feature
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column
WHO WE SERVEopinion
The East York Mirror is published every Thursday at 175 Gordon Baker Rd., Toronto, ON, M2H 0A2, by Metroland Media Toronto, a Division of Metroland Media Group Ltd.
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WRitE uSThe East York Mirror welcomes letters of 400 words or less. All submissions must include name, address and a daytime telephone number for verifi-cation purposes. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject letters. Copyright in letters remains with the author but the publisher and affiliates may freely reproduce them in print, electronic or other forms. Letters can be sent to [email protected], or mailed to The East York Mirror, 175 Gordon Baker Rd. Toronto, ON, M2H 0A2.
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On Friday, July 1, we Canadians pause to cel-ebrate another year as just that: Canadians.
We have been able to do that for 149 years now, and let’s be honest: it feels good.
We’re a good country, after all. We look after each other, and try to extend that
compassion abroad. We have bad days – who doesn’t? – but on balance
we’ve lived our 149 years well, and we look pretty good for our age.
The same can’t be said for the rest of our family of nations, and it’s tempting to feel smug about that.
The United Kingdom, to whose Queen we still swear allegiance, is not doing well at all.
In an ill-managed referen-dum, its people have voted to take it from the European Union (EU), in the process
throwing its economy, and the world’s economy, into turmoil.
The vote to leave was decisive but not universally so, and now the U.K. is on the verge of fragmenta-tion, with Scotland poised to hold another indepen-dence referendum, not two years after it narrowly voted to remain in the U.K.
This time, with EU membership in the balance, polls indicate the Scots might well succeed.
We in Canada have flirted with this sort of thing in the past, through two nail-biting referendums in Quebec, each of which might have put us in a similar place: a country split at the seam, where nativism and nationalist intransigence make dissolution seem inevitable.
Good for us that we didn’t take the plunge. We’re still here, in one piece, with the capacity to engage ourselves and the world as proud Canadians.
Let’s be proud, then: proud, but not smug. It is unlikely-to-impossible that separatists in
Quebec could marshal support for another referen-dum any time soon – the Parti Quebecois has yet to find a leader, and in any case will not be in a position to govern until the fall of 2018, when the next provin-cial election is scheduled.
But it is a point for sober reflection this Canada Day, just how precious is our unity and civility, and how easy it is for a nation – any nation, even our own – to allow that to slip away.
Unity and civility to be celebrated this Canada Day
OuR ViEW
Be proud, not smug, about togetherness You can get into a lot of
trouble, writing a column for a newspaper.
Even if you’re a profes-sional, it can be hazardous: sticky fingers for other peo-ple’s ideas and phrases will (or should) sink you; you can get facts wrong, or get caught making it up, which should and does sink you.
Or, like this columnist, you can realize a couple of days after you tried to link Brexit with spurious transit plans and bad public finance, that you may have just overreached – in which case you’ll get called on it, often on Twitter. And that stuff never goes away.
It’s worse when you’re not a professional. Worse still, when you’re not a pro-fessional who has skin in the game.
And so we come to Mayor John Tory, who tried his hand writing a column for a newspaper, The Toronto Star, on Tuesday: a column about his besieged $3 billion Scarborough subway plan, on the eve
of its debut on the floor of Tuesday’s Executive Committee.
It was a substantial piece in the Toronto Star, just a hair over 800 words long, and for most of those words it chugs along well, noting that he ran in 2014 promis-ing to build a subway in Scarborough, that we are behind on transit construc-tion, that there’s political consensus between the three levels of government that the subway’s the way to go, and that city staff have said the Scarborough subway could help boost ridership in a part of the city where it’s currently low.
So far, Tory has penned a good and boring op-ed. It gets troublesome when he goes for what some of us professionals might call “the dig”: that part where you try and nail down just what’s wrong with the thing
we’re critiquing.Writes Tory (at about
the 600 word mark): “But many of the subway’s loudest critics do not live or work in Scarborough, where more than half the population is born outside of Canada. When they say this is too much to spend on a subway, the inference seems to be that it’s too much to spend on this part of the city.”
Oh dear. It’s hard, indeed impossible, to not parse that down to a particularly ugly accusation – that those who fancy a light rail network in Scarborough and not a subway are anti-Scarborough nativists. Indeed, at least one of Tory’s colleagues on council, the subway-opposing, light-rail-loving Josh Matlow, parsed things exactly that way.
“Sad, desperate and shameful. I had hoped for much more from a mayor who preached civility,” tweeted Matlow.
This is the kind of trouble
that isn’t really very much trouble at all for profession-als. We’re used to people crossing the street to avoid us after a particularly vigor-ous application of fair com-ment on their dealings. It goes with the territory.
For a mayor, who’s built his brand on civility and team-work as Tory has?
Both Tory and his office tried to make it clear that the column wasn’t intended to be divisive, but to point out that Scarborough’s poorly served by transit. They weren’t out of line: Josh Matlow was out of line.
It was too late by then. It is one thing that those of us writing columns for the newspapers learn early: there are no take-backs when you write something, however unintentionally it may have been, that makes you look a bit of a jerk.
Mayor Tory’s op-ed column stirs controversy
David Nickle is Metroland Media Toronto’s city hall reporter. His column runs
every Thursday. Reach him on Twitter: @DavidNickle
i
david nicklethe city
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5 community calendarha
ppen
ing in
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RK featuredw Wednesday, July 6The Danny Loves Music Series: Canada Day SpecialWHEN: 6 to 9 p.m. WHERE: East Lynn Park, 1949 Danforth Ave. CONTACT: [email protected] COST: FreeEach day features a different artist. July 1st: Julian Taylor Band with open-ing act Simone Denny; July 6: Paul Reddick;July 13: Stephen Stanley;July 20: Byrds! Byrds! Byrds!July 27: Ted Peters & Gumbo Ya-Ya with opening act Dirty Dishes.This is a family friendly event which has many vendors and a beer and wine tent. Brought to you by the Danforth Mosaic BIA.
ChECk ouT ouR complete online community calendar by visiting www.insidetoronto.com where you can read listings from your East York neighbourhoods as well as events from across Toronto.
get listed!The East York Mirror wants your community listings. Sign up online at eastyorkmirror.com to submit your events (click the Sign up link in the top right corner of the page).
it’s happeningw Friday, July 1Canada Day in East YorkWHEN: 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion Branch # 22, 1240 Woodbine Ave. CONTACT: Jim Farrell, 416-425-1714 COST: FreeWatch the parade, enjoy a barbecue and Bill Craig from 1 to 5 p.m. and harvest from 7 to 11 p.m. This is an all ages event until 6 p.m.
Canada DayWHEN: 11 a.m. WHERE: RCL 345, 81 Peard Rd. CONTACT: 416-759-5291 COST: FreeRaffles, games, prizes, yard sale, live music, barbecue, and beverage tent.
Neighbours Together On Canada DayWHEN: Noon to 4 p.m. WHERE: Riverdale Park East, 550 Broad-view Ave. CONTACT: Susy Glass, [email protected] COST: FreeCommunity event with performances, bouncy castle and cake.
Canada Day CelebrationWHEN: 1 to 6 p.m. WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion Branch 10, 1083
Pape Ave. CONTACT: M. P. har-vey, 416-425-3070, www.rcl10.ca, [email protected] COST: FreeDJ Rob Martine. Live performance by Black Watch Pipes & Drums. Free
lunch to all. Wheelchair accessible.
Entertainment at the LegionWHEN: Fridays 8 p.m. to midnight WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion, Branch
10, 1083 Pape Ave. CONTACT: 416-425-3070 COST: Free
w Saturday, July 2Family Storytime
WHEN: 10 to 11 a.m. WHERE: Riverdale Library, 370 Broadview Ave. CONTACT: 416-393-7720 COST: FreeStories, songs and rhymes for children from newborn to age 6.
w Sunday, July 3Sunday Afternoon EuchreWHEN: 12:30 to 3 p.m. WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion Branch 22, 1240 Woodbine Ave. CONTACT: Jim Farrell, 416-425-1714 COST: $6Come out and have a fun afternoon playing. Everyone welcome.
w Monday, July 4Catalyst 2016 ExhibitionWHEN: 6 to 11 p.m. WHERE: The
Dylan Ellis Gallery, 1840 Danforth Ave. CONTACT: Foxtail and Fawn, 647-209-2370, www.foxtailand-fawn.com, [email protected] COST: $10 Performances from a variety of different artists, dancers, poets and more. Cash bar, complimentary hors-d’oeuvres and raffle prizes to ticket holders.
w Tuesday, July 5East York Farmers’ MarketWHEN: 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. WHERE: East York Civic Centre, 850 Coxwell Ave. CONTACT: Ruth Abbott, 416-429-9684, [email protected] COST: FreeA wide range of fresh ontario products from fruits and vegetabels to honey and preserves, smoked meats and cheeses, fresh baking, home made soaps and lotions and freshly made smoothies as well as a barbecue and more.
Art Bar Poetry SeriesWHEN: 8 p.m. WHERE: Black Swan Tavern, 154 Danforth Ave. CON-TACT: [email protected], artbar.org COST: PWYCFeatured readers plus an open mic. Check site for schedule.
w Wednesday, July 6Holodeck Follies FundraiserWHEN: 8 p.m. WHERE: Social
Capital Theatre, 154 Danforth Ave. CONTACT: The Dandies, http://im-provdandies.wordpress.com, [email protected] COST: $15 The Dandies are raising funds to get to Winnipeg to perform their improvised Star Trek show for Wil-liam Shatner.
w Thursday, July 7Pole Walking Club (Toronto)WHEN: Thursdays 9:30 a.m. WHERE: Mosaic home Care Services and Community Resource Centre, CNIB, 1929 Bayview Ave., Suite 215h CON-TACT: 416-322-7002 COST: FreeSummer Walking Club starts today.
w Saturday, July 9Garage SaleWHEN: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion, 9 Dawes Rd. CONTACT: Nancy Mcknight, 647-223-9646, [email protected] COST: FreeBarbecue, hamburgers, hot dogs, cold drinks, coffee, tea and muffins available.
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lots of people will line the route.After the parade, the rest of the
event gets underway at Stan Wadlow Park, 888 Cosburn Ave. Admission is free. The official opening ceremony takes place at noon, with the singing of O Canada.
Local musicians take the stage following the ceremony, providing live entertainment until 10 p.m.
The night ends with a bang, with fireworks at approximately 10:15 p.m.
Midway at Stan wadlow park
As well as live entertainment, there will be a midway, along with community displays, vendor booths and lots more. Revellers can even play a game of bingo.
The park’s pool and splash pad will be open from noon to 8 p.m. There will also be face-painting, crafts and other activities for kids.
At least 2,000 people are expected to attend the event.
“Come out and be part of our national holiday and enjoy the parade,” invited Shamsh Kara, East York Canada Day ambassador. “Be part of that joyous occasion.”
Visit www.eycdc.ca for more information about the East York Canada Day celebrations, organized by the East York Toronto Canada Day Corporation volunteer group.
rotary ribfeSt
West of the celebrations at Stan Wadlow Park, the Toronto East Rotary Club Annual Canada Day
Ribfest will be grilling for a good cause. Admission is free.
The event runs from noon to 8 p.m. at Whistler’s Grille, 995 Broadview Ave. Along with grilled goodies, there will be live jazz and blues, and a silent auction.
Proceeds from the ribfest will benefit community projects that are supported by the Toronto East Rotary Club.
community
>>>from page 1
Ribfest among East York Canada Day celebrations
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opinion
This year’s Canada day marks the country’s 149th year as a sovereign country. While it is definitely a time for celebration, we should also take a moment to reflect on where we are today as a nation and where we are going.
I have to admit that in my lifetime I have seen the country go through many changes, some of which I’ve approved and some which I have not. After all, it’s only human nature to want to have things remain the same when events and institutions appear to be supporting your own vested interests.
The fact is, however, that Canada is a dynamic and growing country where we have to accommodate many different people with a wide variety of interests that might be different than our own.
I can remember a time not that long ago when the law, social customs and the major institutions of this country favoured one particular gender, race and cultural background over others.
The truth is that while it
was very comfortable for that group to have the status quo treat them so favourably, it was far too limiting for the country to be able to truly achieve its potential.
During my lifetime I’ve seen all of our major institu-tions of business, professions, politics, and even religion, go from being “old boy clubs” to re-vitalized, active and dynamic organizations.
The reason for this change is simple; the more people you let in with diverse back-grounds and experiences, the greater the number of ideas and skills that you can bring to problem solving and planning.
Still, is the country perfect as a result of all of this change and diversity? Of course not, and it probably never will be, thanks to our many human limitations and imperfec-tions.
We still have a way to go before the full potential of
Canada, as a nation, can be achieved, and most of the change that is required is more one of attitude rather than institutional.
The reality of living in the 21st Century is that we as Canadians can no longer simply rely on natu-ral resources or manufac-turing to build our wealth. Every single day we are now competing with the entire world in a knowledge-based economy.
The question then, at the community level, is; are we building a society where our next generation of Canadians can be properly prepared to live and earn a living.
Frankly, is our future one of non-sustainability because we are still trying to build a city based upon 1950’s values because that’s all we’ve known, or are we really using all of our potential within our communities to fulfil our col-lective future.
joe cooperwatchdog
Joe Cooper is a long-time East York resident and community activist. His column appears
every Thursday. Contact him at [email protected]
Are we using Canada’s full potential?
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TARA HATHERLY [email protected]
It was a packed agenda for the Toronto District School Board’s last regular meeting of the school year, with several decisions made to close, sell or keep schools.
The most discussed items on the agenda were whether to declare three schools surplus — Thistletown Middle School, and Buttonwood Hill and Silver Creek public schools.
The TDSB has been pressed by the Province to sell properties to help fill the board’s $3.3-billion maintenance backlog.
“We are taking action to reduce excess space in a thoughtful way, while ensuring dollars are invested where they are most needed — our operating schools,” said TDSB chair Robin Pilkey.
Silver Creek in Etobicoke hasn’t been used by the TDSB since 1982, but is currently leased by two orga-
nizations providing services to chil-dren with special needs. McNicoll PS in North York hasn’t been used as a TDSB school since 2000, but is leased by a daycare centre for kids with special needs.
The rules for how the TDSB can lease buildings changed recently, removing the board’s ability to automatically renew leases. So if trustees voted to keep the schools, there was no guarantee the current tenants would be able to stay. When
School board to close Eastern Commerce, Greenwood
a lease expires, the board now has to offer it for bidding.
Trustees decided to declare the schools surplus, but not transfer them to the TDSB’s real estate branch — Toronto Lands Corporation (TLC). The decision was made in the hopes the Province will take over the sites and allow the current tenants to stay. The outcome of the negotiations with the Province will be presented this fall by TDSB Director of Education John Malloy.
Trustees also voted to declare Thistletown Middle School surplus, but not transfer it to TLC, in the hopes the City of Toronto will buy the site in Etobicoke and preserve its current services. The City has operated Thistletown Multi Service Centre there for three decades, after Thistletown Middle School closed in 1985. Thistletown Multi Service Centre offers recreational programs and houses a daycare, as well as the Rexdale Women’s Centre, Thistletown Seniors’ Centre and other organizations. The City is inter-ested in buying the site, and the TDSB has offered a flexible arrange-ment to let it buy it gradually. The outcome of those negotiations will also be presented this fall.
There was lots of debate about what to do with Buttonwood Hill Public School in Etobicoke, which closed as a TDSB school in 1983. The site is currently leased by a day-care and Italian immersion school. Many trustees expressed concern the school could be needed in the future, eventually voting to hold on to it.
Trustees declared two other schools surplus as well, opting to sell those sites. The schools, Sir Robert L. Borden Business and Technical Institute in Scarborough and Nelson A. Boylen Collegiate Institute in North York, will officially close June 30. Nelson A. Boylen has no cur-
rent students, and non-graduating students from Sir Robert L. Borden are being relocated.
Decisions were also made to close Greenwood Secondary School and Eastern Commerce Collegiate Institute, the result of a pupil accommodation review of 10 schools in the Toronto-Danforth area. The Greenwood program, which prepares new Canadians for high school, will relocate to nearby Danforth Collegiate and Technical Institute. Students from the School of Life Experience, which shared the Greenwood site, will move to Monarch Park Collegiate Institute. No students were enrolled at Eastern Commerce, which will be home to the new JK-Grade 12 First Nations school in 2017. Subway Academy One, an alternative school operating at the Eastern Commerce site, will continue to do so.
Several trustees expressed frus-tration with the provincially man-dated sell-offs, noting Toronto’s population shifts and schools that sit unused for years, even decades, are often needed again.
“We can’t predict where people will move,” said Willowdale Trustee Alexander Brown. “One of the con-cerns I have is that this is more about dollars and deficits than the kids and their communities.”
Beaches-East York Trustee Sheila Cary-Meagher voiced concern as well.
“We use our land as banks for the future,” she said. “Now our bank accounts are being closed.”
Trustees also approved a three-year capital budget that will reopen four closed TDSB properties for future use — Bannockburn Public School, Castlebar Public School, Sir Sandford Fleming Academy and Boyne River Outdoor Education Centre.
Metroland file photo
Students of Greenwood Collegiate School protest the recommended closure of their current building, and the merging of the ESL program with Danforth Collegiate School back in April. The Toronto District School Board has since decided to close the school.
Eglinton Crosstown Update:Station Open House
The Eglinton Crosstown Project is building the future Eglinton line, a 19-kilometre lightrail transit (LRT) line that will run along Eglinton Avenue through the heart of Toronto,with a 10-kilometre underground tunnel in its central section. When complete, the linewill connect Mount Dennis in the west to Kennedy Road in the east, and will movepassengers up to 60 per cent faster than bus service along Eglinton Avenue today.
Join us at our upcoming open house and learn about the future station on thefuture Eglinton line in your neighbourhood.
Starting in summer 2016, the next phase of construction begins at Science Centre Station,and many other Crosstown stations will be under construction before the end of 2016.
Join Metrolinx and its constructor, Crosslinx Transit Solutions (CTS), at the open house tofind out:
• what construction is happening in your neighbourhood• why it needs to happen• how it may impact you• who to contact if you have questions/concerns• when construction is happening
Science Centre Station Open House
Monday, July 11, 20166:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.Ontario Science Centre770 Don Mills Road
Visit the Crosstown Community Office at 660 Eglinton Avenue East (at Bayview).
email: [email protected]: www.thecrosstown.caTel: 416-482-7411
facebook.com/thecrosstown
twitter.com/crosstownTO
Ontario ScienceCentre
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9
The enforcement will be mostly by uniformed officers and is overt not covert.
Shift hours have been altered to have more offi-cers available when the bars close.
RIDE checks are also included in this project.
Recent compliance checks in bars east and west of Greenwood Avenue have resulted in the arrest of three people who are facing a slew of charges including posses-sion of property obtained by crime, possession of burglary tools, drug offences, and fail to comply with probation.
One bar in the area was also found to be operating with an expired license and one staff member did not have a Smart Serve certificate.
For more information on the safety campaign, please call 54 Division or 55 Division at 416-808-5400 or 416-808-5500 respectively.
>>>from page 1
community
Police change shifts to increaseuniformed presence on Danforth
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Benajim Priebe/Metroland
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11 transit
Bike Share Toronto has begun a promised expansion of its operations, adding 120 new stations and 1,000 more bikes.
The agency first announced in April it was purchas-ing the new infrastructure from Montreal-based PBSC Solutions, which ran the bike share originally called Bixi. This boost to its offer-ings effectively doubles the amount of bikes available for short-term rentals.
The purchase comes from a near $5-million funding arrangement with Metrolinx announced in 2015.
The new rides are expected to be available by July 11.
wPRESTO DISCOUNTS aRE NOT SO haRD afTER all
A couple of weeks ago, we wrote about the lack of TTC outlets for adding a conces-sion onto your Presto card in order to be eligible for a student or senior discount.
We’ve since received con-firmation from the TTC it’s possible to get the concession applied at any Presto outlet
regardless of transit agency. While that’s the case, spokes-person Chris Upfold said the TTC is hesitant to make this information widely known lest a large mass of transit riders “overwhelms” partner agencies like GO and YRT with demands for concessions. So there you have it: you don’t have to go to Davisville to get the discount added- but you didn’t hear it from me.
wSMaRTTRaCK fRIENDS SaY TIf WIll WORK
A group cheerleading for the SmartTrack transit project has now released a report claim-ing the city can raise billions towards its cost.
Friends and Allies of SmartTrack or FAST hasn’t done much since it came together in the New Year. But now it claims Tax Increment Financing (TIF), a funding plan pushed by John Tory
during the 2014 mayoral cam-paign, can raise $2.3 billion over 30 years for the project. In a nutshell, TIF would allow the city to leverage antici-pated property tax revenues from new development and put it towards financing SmartTrack.
wElECTRIfICaTION Ea COUlD bE DElaYED
Metrolinx may have to post-pone commencement of an Environmental Assessment (EA) for electrifying much of GO Transit’s rail operations.
The 120-day Transit Project Assessment Process (TPAP) was supposed to begin in July. But prior to that, a draft of the project report was to be completed by the end of June, which is now delayed to later in the summer.
It’s doubtful this delay will much impact the timeline since electrification won’t likely be done until 2024.
Bike Share adds 120 new stations
Rahul Gupta is Metroland Media Toronto’s transportation and infrastructure reporter. His
column runs every Thursday. Reach him on Twitter: @TOinTRANSIT
i
rahul guptaTO in TRANSIT
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Inspection and Pipe Locating • Lead & Galvanized Piping • Plugged Drains & Backed-Up SewersQuality and Service at Our Best
Call for a FREE estimate (416) 738-0274
Auburn Plumbing Inc.Metro Lic# P1538
For all your plumbing needs• New Work • Replacement, Repairs and Renovations
- Faucets, Sinks & Toilets • High Pressure Flushing • Camera Inspection and Pipe Locating • Lead & Galvanized Piping
• Plugged Drains & Backed-Up SewersQuality and Service at Our Best
Call for a FREE estimate (416) 738-0274
Auburn Plumbing Inc.Metro Lic# P1538
For all your plumbing needs• New Work • Replacement, Repairs and Renovations
- Faucets, Sinks & Toilets • High Pressure Flushing • Camera Inspection and Pipe Locating • Lead & Galvanized Piping
• Plugged Drains & Backed-Up SewersQuality and Service at Our Best
Call for a FREE estimate (416) 738-0274Check us out on www.homestars.ca
10% SENIORS DISCOUNT
416-427-0955Metro Lic. #P24654 - Fully Insured
24/7 No Extra Charges for Evenings, Weekends or Holidays
$35OFFWITH THIS ADEXPIRES JUNE 30, 2016
BaySprings Plumbing Small Job Specialists
FREE ESTIMATES
Servicing All Your Plumbing Needs
R&Z PLUMBING SERVICESBEST RATES AND SERVICE IN TOWN
Replacement & RepairsFaucets, Sinks, Pipes, Drains Etc. Furnace, A/C, Water Heater, Gas
28 Years Experience • 24/7
416.661.9393Metro License #PH23521
TOM DAY PLUMBING & DRAINSDiamond #1 Readers Choice Award Winner!•All plumbing work• Faucets, toilets, sinks, etc. installedBacked up drains, blocked toilets, basementbackups, external/internal drain excavating.• Video Camera Drain InspectionDamp Basement, Complete Waterproofing Service
416-480-0622Metro License #PH15982 •MASTER PLUMBER
roofingLow Cost Repairs $ Low Cost Repairs $ Low Cost Repairs
$
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SENIORSDISCOUNT
SAME DAY SERVICE647-235-8123
Low Cost Repairs $ Low Cost Repairs $ Low Cost Repairs
26years ofService
ROOFING REPAIRSCo.
$
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Rep
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$
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since 1990
• AnimAl DAmAge • AnimAl Proofing • gUTTer gUArD • TUCK PoinTing • CHimneYS • SKYligHTS • flAT roofS
• VAlleY rePAirS • All VenTing WorK• eAVeSTroUgH rePAirS • SHingleS• SoffiT & fACiA • WinDoW CAUlKing
• DoWnSPoUT DiSConneCTion • mAjor & minor rePAirS• liCenSeD AnD inSUreD
emergenCY AnimAl rePAir/leAKSEAVESTROUGH CLEANING FROM $20
All TYPeS of roof rePAirS
24/7SERVICE
roofing
ROOF REPAIRS• Roof repairs from $49• Leaks & replacement
• Eaves trough cleaning, repair & replacement • Chimney cleaning,
tuck pointing & rebuild • Animal removal,
repair & prevention SPRING SPECIAL
Eaves or chimney cleaning from $19.95*
416.802.9909Free estimates ~ Seniors discount
Licensed & insured
Best Pr ices $ Best Pr i ces
$ B
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Price
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s $Best Prices $ Best Prices
$ B
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DUN-RITEROOFING REPAIRS
647-857-5656
• SIDING/FASCIA• EAVESTROUGH• TUCKPOINTING• VENTING• GUTTER GUARDS• ANIMAL REMOVAL
• SHINGLES• FLAT ROOFS• SKY LIGHTS• CHIMNEY’S• VALLEY’S• ANIMAL PROOFING
24 HOURSEMERGENCY
REPAIRS
ALL TYPES OF ROOF REPAIRS15%
Senior’sDiscount
roofing
NA ROOFINGNorth AmericAN Best roofiNg iNc
• Shingles• Flat• Eaves• Soffit & Fascia• Skylight• Repair
NA roofing
647-222-7722www.tbsroo� ng.ca | info@tbsroo� ng
Shingles | Flat / Eaves | Sof� t & FasciaSkylight | Chimney |Siding | Repairs
24/7 Emergency • 25 Year Guarantee
facebook.com/tbsroofi ng
waste removalStudent Junk Removal
(647) 631-6904 www.studentjunk.ca | [email protected]
We are local students offering low rates and same day service.
Call now for a free quote
Lower Prices, Fast & Friendly Service
Classifieds Gottarent.comMonday to Friday 8:30am to 5pm • 905-853-2527 • Toll Free 1-800-743-3353 • Fax 905-853-1765
Home Improvement DirectoryMonday to Friday 8:30am to 5pm • 905-853-2527 • Toll Free 1-800-743-3353 • Fax 905-853-1765 • For delivery questions, please contact 416-493-2284
Home Improvement Directory
decks & fencesDECKS & FENCES
Interlock, custom concrete work & customized
specialization. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE
Licensed & insured professional tradesmen.
Harold 416-574-7720Chris 416-903-6315
chimneys
Bricks & [email protected]
Callus at: www.insidetoronto.com
Delivery questions? 416-493-4400
www.insidetoronto.com
| EAST YO
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| EAST YO
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MIR
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15YOUR WeeklY CROssWORd sUdOkU (Challenging)
last
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How to do it: Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3 by 3 box contains the digits 1 through 9.
w See answers to this week’s puzzles in next Thursday’s edition
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if the puzzles don’t fit,
please do not just run the
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for the guardian: for the mirror: for the villager:
EAST
YO
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Thur
sday
, Jun
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, 201
6 |
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