december 10 east
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Serving MALVERN, ROUGE, WEST HILL and GUILDWOOD
www.scarboroughmirror.com thurs dec 10, 2015
e
www.opticallounge.ca
1725 Kingston Rd,Pickering
(905) 239-5500
70 Town Centre Court,Scarborough
(416) 296-9991
THE OPTICAL LOUNGE
Call: Kia Hotline 416-266-0066www.scarborokia.ca2592 Eglinton Avenue E. (East of Midland)Scarboro KIA
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HOME OF THE REAL DEALSKias new Customer Friendly Pricing includes admin fee$698 delivery and destination fees and all mandatorygovernment levies. Prices do not include fuel-fill charges upto $100, licensing or applicable taxes.
Offer(s) available on select new 2015/2016models through participating dealers to qualified retail customers who take delivery from December 1, 2015 to January 4, 2016. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. See dealer for complete details. Vehicles shownmay include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All offers are subject to change without notice. All pricing and payments include dealer administration fee $698, delivery and destination fees up to $1,715, $5 OMVIC fee, $29 tire fee, and $100 A/C charge (where applicable). Excludes other taxes, licensing, PPSA, registration, insurance, fuel-fill charges up to $100, and down payment (if applicable and unless otherwise specified). Other lease and financing options also available. 0% financing for up to 84months or upto $7,000 discount available on other select 2015models. Discount is deducted from the negotiated purchase/lease price before taxes. Maximum $7,000 discount ($6,000 cash discounts and $1,000 ECO-Credit) is offered on 2015 Optima Hybrid LX (OP74AF) only. $1,000 ECO-Credit is offered on all 2016 Optima Hybrid models. Certain conditions apply. See your dealer for complete details. Representative Financing Example: Financing offer available on approved credit (OAC), on a new 2016 Rio LXMT (RO541G) with a selling price of $16,562 is based onmonthly payments of $177 for 84months at 0%with a $0 down payment and first monthly payment due at finance inception. Offer also includes $1,000 discount (loan credit). Other taxes, registration, insurance and licensing fees are excluded. Dont Pay For 90Dayson all models (90-day payment deferral) applies to purchase financing offers on all new 2015/2016models on approved credit. No interest will accrue during the first 60 days of the finance contract. After this period, interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay the principal interest monthly over the term of the contract. Offer ends January 4, 2016. *Cash Purchase Price for the new 2015 Optima LX AT (OP742F)/2015 Optima Hybrid LX (OP74AF) is $21,662/$25,462 and includes a cash discount of $5,500/$7,000 including $6,000 cash discounts and $1,000 ECO-Credit. Dealer may sell for less. Other taxes, registration, insurance and licensing fees are excluded. Cash discounts vary by model and trim and are deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. Representative Leasing Example:Lease offer available on approved credit (OAC), on the 2016 Forte Sedan LX MT (FO541G)/2016 Soul LX MT (SO551G) with a selling price of $18,262/$19642 is based on monthly payments of $148/$194 for 60/36 months at 0%/0.9%, with $0 security deposit, $1,300/$0 discounts (lease credit), $750/$1,000 down payment and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation $8,853/$6,991 with the option to purchase at the end of the term for $6,661/$11,346. Lease has 16,000 km/yr allowance (other packages available and $0.12/km for excess kilometres). Open to Canadian residents who have reached the age of majority in their province or territory of residence who take a test drive at a Canadian Kia dealership between November 3, 2015 and January 4, 2016. 10 weekly prizes of a $3,000itravel2000 voucher available. Plus one $100 travel voucher per eligible test drive. Limit of one entry/test drive voucher per person. No purchase necessary. Skill testing question required. Some conditions apply. Go to kia.ca for complete details. ^Lease paymentsmust bemade on amonthly or bi-weekly basis but cannot bemade on aweekly basis.Weekly lease payments are for advertising purposes only. Model shownManufacturer Suggested Retail Price for 2016 Forte SX AT (FO748G)/2016 Soul SX Luxury (SO758G)/2015 Optima SX ATTurbo (OP748F) is $27,393/$28,193/$35,593. The 2015 Optimawas awarded the 2015Top Safety Pick by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) for model year 2015. U.S. models tested. Visit www.iihs.org for full details. The Kia Soul received the lowest number of problemsper 100 vehicles among compact multi-purpose vehicles in the proprietary J.D. Power 2015 U.S. Initial Quality StudySM. Study based on responses from 84,367 U.S. new-vehicle owners, measuring 244 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of U.S. owners surveyed from February to May 2015. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. Government 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA's) New Car Assessment Program (www.SaferCar.gov). Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of printing. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Kia is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.
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Staff photo/BENJAMIN PRIEBE
Ontario Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services Yasir Naqvi displays a proper smoke detector while greeting the crowd during the 12 Days of Holiday Fire Safety event inside Scarborough Town Centre on Tuesday.
Toronto Fire Services offi cially launched the 12 Days of Holiday Fire Safety campaign Tuesday in Scarborough.
The launch of the fourth annual provincial campaign took place at Scarborough Town Centre and featured the largest-ever public assembly of Ontario
fi re inspectors.The 101 fi re inspectors joined
Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services Yasir Naqvi, Toronto Fire Chief Jim Sales, and Ontario Fire Marshal Ross Nichols to kick off the province-wide program by giving away 1,010 gift bags
containing Kidde smoke alarms and other holiday education and safety items.
The inspectors then fanned out in the shopping centre with 10 gift bags each to give away.
Nichols said such a large group of uniformed fi re services personnel sends a strong mes-
sage about the need for extra vigilance when it comes to fi re safety over the holidays. And having working smoke alarms and CO alarms is vital.
Fire safety campaign launches in Scarborough
Refugeeclothingcentre open on VictoriaPark Ave.ANDREW [email protected]
A few weeks ago, Laura-Jean Bernhardson put out a call on her Facebook page for clothing for a Syrian refugee family shes helping resettle to Canada.
That one post was shared 2,500 times and resulted in a mountain of apparel.
By day two, I could see that I was in trouble with that post, said Bernhardson, a Toronto entrepreneur. I honestly pic-tured that it would be 30 bags of stuff, Id sort them in my living room and be done with it.
Instead, thousands of pieces of clothing began pouring in.
Bernhardson then put out a call for volunteers, and 50 people stepped up within 24 hours.
It just snowballed, she said.
I think it tapped a nerve that people really wanted to do something...It was a miracle unfolding.
The outpouring of generosity led Bernhardson to establish The Clothing Drive, and this week it secured a three-month rent-free location at 1682 Victoria Park Ave. to store and distribute cloth-ing for Syrian refugees.
About 17,000 pieces of >>>CLOTHING, page 19
The 12 Days of Holiday Fire Safety tips are available for download online at www.
safeathome.ca/12days
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1 Mitsubishi Motor Sales of Canada, Inc. will reimburse 4 monthly, 8 bi-weekly or 16 weekly financing payments or 4 monthly or 8 bi-weekly lease payments (as applicable) up to a maximum of $1,600/$1,600/$1,800/$1,200/$1,600/$2,000 (including taxes) on a new 2015 or 2016 Lancer (excluding Lancer Evolution)/2015 or 2016 Lancer Sportback/2015 RVR/2015 Mirage (excluding Mirage ES 5MT)/2016 i-MiEV/2016 Outlander. Reimbursement provided by a dealer cheque at delivery. Offer available at participating retailers to qualified retail customers who, between December 1, 2015 and January 4, 2016, finance or lease through Scotiabank/ScotiaDealerAdvantage/MMSCAN Financial Servicessubvented financing or lease programs on approved credit and take vehicle delivery. See participating retailers for full details. Conditions apply. Offer may change at any time. vMitsubishi First Auto Program applies to Lancer, Sportback, RVR and Mirage vehicles (excluding Mirage ES 5MT), is applicable to all approved Scotiabank first-time automotive finance orlease purchasers and must be combined with Scotiabank Subvented Finance or Lease Rates. Rebate amount will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. Some conditions apply. Please see dealer for details. $9,998 starting price applies to 2015 Mirage ES (5MT), includes consumer cash of $2,500 and excludes freight and other fees. 2015 MirageES (5MT) MSRP is $12,498. Factory order may be required. $2,500 consumer cash offered on the retail purchase of new 2015 Mirage ES 5-Speed Manual Transmission models from participating retailers from December 1, 2015 to January 4, 2015. $2,500 will be deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Some conditions apply. Offers are subject tochange without notice. AWC standard on RVR SEAWC, Limited Edition and GT/Lancer SEAWC, Limited Edition SEAWC and GTAWC.S-AWC standard on Outlander GT. Estimated combined city and highway ratings for non-hybrid sub-compacts based on Natural Resources Canada new testingmethodology:Mirage highway 5.3 L/100 km (53mpg), combinedcity/highway 5.9 L/100 km (48 mpg) and 6.4 L/100 km (44 mpg) in the city for CVT-equipped models. Actual fuel efficiency will vary with options, driving and vehicle conditions. ** Whichever comes first. Regular maintenance not included. See dealer or mitsubishi-motors.ca for warranty terms, restrictions and details. Some conditions apply.
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Past inhabitants of Scarboroughs Rouge Valley were said to have buried weapons under a white pine to signal a conflict was over.
Around two weeks ago, politi-cians who supported the federal Conservative position on what the Rouge National Urban Park should be made a gesture of their own.
They wrote to Cather ine McKenna, the new Liberal govern-ments environment minister, and Brad Duguid, the Ontario cabinet minister who withheld 9,000 acres of provincial land from the park.
They politely asked McKenna and Duguid to meet them, and to trans-fer those lands to the new national park as soon as possible.
peace offering
The letters were a peace offering to the new federal government from people who have worked to protect the Rouge Valley for decades, said Scarborough Centre Councillor Glenn De Baeremaeker, adding he and other signers were also offering their services.
Signers of the letters include Conservative MP Peter Kent, who announced the Rouge NUP as Canadas environment minister in 2012, Conservative MP Michael Chong, former Scarborough Progressive Conservative MP Pauline Browes, and Scarborough East Councillor Ron Moeser.
They, and the Friends of the Rouge National Urban Park (NUP) organization that sent the letter, had vigorously defended plans the Conservatives had for the park much of it to be declared a pro-tected agricultural area where tenant farmers would not be dis-placed by trees from Duguids
refusal to allow the transfer until the October election.
Friends of the Rouge NUP kept urging people to question Duguid and the provinces stance against the land transfer, calling it politi-cally motivated. The group also said the $170 million the Conservatives promised the park was much more than the province ever invested.
political catfight
But all this was a relatively small disagreement that turned into a political catfight about who thought they knew best for the park, said De Baeremaeker, a former full-time campaigner for Rouge Valley preservation who now hopes some of that partisan fric-tion will disappear.
The letter-signers also asked Duguid to submit comments on behalf of Ontario on the Rouge Park management plan drafted by Parks Canada under the Conservative regime.
In an interview last week, Duguid said he wants the land transferred as expeditiously as possible, but the park legislation, and therefore the plan, must first be rewritten to make environmental protections for the Rouge Valley as strong as they are today, if not enhanced.
That was the challenge the (Stephen) Harper government let us down on, said Duguid, arguing the letter-signers, perhaps feeling a little sheepish now, are the same people who urged me to sell out our commitment to protection in order to build the park faster.
Though Duguid said he welcomes their support, he said hell work more closely with environmental groups such as Friends of the Rouge Watershed (FRW), which stood by our efforts and made submissions to the previous government that were ignored.
Duguid, who was able to stop the provincial land transfer because he was Ontarios infrastructure minis-ter, said hell connect with McKenna when she returns from the Paris climate change conference.
Both governments now share the same perspective on the Rouge, but still have work to do amending the park legislation and management plan, he said.
Supporters of the Conservative position have said their plan which introduced armed park wardens provided stronger protections.
Those on the other side said existing protections must include policies that put the watersheds ecology first and construct a wide corridor of forests through the park in Markham.
De Baeremaeker said he still believes the Conservative govern-ments legislation was better for the park, and the provinces refusal of it was a bit of a jaw-dropper to me.
Still, he said he hopes the bicker-ing is over, and the 9,000 provin-cial acres can be handed soon to a park getting a federal investment at least as big as the Conservatives promised.
add more land to park
The councillor said he will also press the federal Liberals to dedi-cate 10,000 more acres of land in Durham Region to the park. Now is an amazing opportunity, he said.
Jim Robb, general manager of FRW, said hes looking forward to the two governments fulfilling their agreement the park would meet or exceed current protections.
Im very optimistic now, Robb added after he and a few other mem-bers of non-government groups met Duguid late last month.
Though she wasnt re-elected in Scarborough North, former New Democrat MP Rathika Sitsabaiesans private members bill for amending the park legislation is a good starting point for the federal Liberals, Robb suggested.
The legislation, if they want to, should be able to go through in a year, but investigations Parks Canada must do before the land transfers, judging from the past, will take longer, he said.
peace in the valley closer after federal liberals elected
community
Province wants strong protections for Rouge Park before land transferred
communIty bREAKfAst
From top: Children get a photo session with St. Nick during Breakfast with Santa at Coucelette Public School Saturday; Michael Fortier, left, serves up some pancakes and syrup for Lisa Mitchell; Courcelette Public School students perform at the event, which was a benefit for Birchmount Bluffs Neighbourhood Centre. In addition to the pancake breakfast, the event featured two bands, raffles, crafts and a visit from Santa Claus himself.
Photo/BRANDON STEWART
Last year, the Courcelette
Public School community donated more than $4,400 in cash and $6,000 worth of new clothing and household goods to Birchmount Bluffs Neighbourhood Centre.
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The Scarborough Mirror welcomes letters of 400 words or less. All sub-missions must include name, address and a daytime telephone number for verification 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 Scarborough Mirror, 175 Gordon Baker Rd. Toronto, ON, M2H 0A2.
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PublisherGeneral ManagerManaging EditorRegional Dir. of Distribution SalesRegional Dir. of AdvertisingRetail Sales ManagerDirector of Circulation
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Toronto has been in fiscal denial, off and on, since it was amalgamated in 1998. That was when Mel Lastman was elected mayor, promis-ing to freeze property taxes for the first three years of the new mega-city. He pulled it off, but not in a fiscally responsible way. Rather than finding internal efficiencies and cutting services, most of the citys financial problems were deferred down the line in the service of a tax freeze.
When David Miller took over two terms later, the city and council did better, but it was a tooth-and-nail fight to implement the land transfer tax and vehicle registration tax, which let council get away with more minor efficiencies and modest property tax increases thanks to a booming real estate market.
Those taxes and a municipal workers strike sent Rob Ford into the mayors office and while that regime made some mostly unpalatable cuts, once again ambitious spending and timid revenue-seeking put Toronto back in the hole.
The early months of John Torys time in the mayors
office seemed to continue this unrealistic mash-up of promises of frugality with big-ticket commitments. For a time, it looked as though the reconstruc-tion of the Gardiner Expressway, SmartTrack, the Scarborough subway and countless other enhance-ments were going to bankrupt us all.
Thats why were happy to see that Tory has effectively abandoned his promise to keep property tax increases at or below the rate of inflation. Its not that we think higher taxes are a good idea. But the alternative planning to build a city the size of Toronto on an unsustainable fiscal plan is folly. Torys plan to charge a 0.5 per cent a year levy to build transit and housing is at least a step toward erasing that folly. The tax increase is relatively small: $13 a year for the average homeowner, for five years, on top of whatever inflationary increase they see on their tax bill. By itself, it is neither a great burden, nor the complete solution to Torontos needs. There will have to be more revenue grabs. But thats for another day. For now, we can at least applaud that the days of denial seem to be done.
Mayor John Torys property levy tax shows good financial planning
OuR ViEW
Proposal is good first step in responsiblity
Mayor John Tory has defied early expectations when it comes to governing a complex TorontoJohn Tory can be a tough mayor to interview.
Thats not to say that our mayor is evasive, or dishon-est, or, like the last one to hold the job, openly hostile to journalistic prying.
Tory is none of those things. The problem, rather, is the opposite: Tory thinks aloud, considering all points of view and in the end, states nearly all of them in addition to agree-ing with the premise of the question in case that hadnt come up in one of the other answers.
It can be frustrating work, trying to parse the mayors views from all that. A lead becomes a multiple choice question.
From that, one might conclude that the mayor is simply unprincipled and by a narrowly political definition of the word, that might be so.
Tory does not hold fast with the principles of one
faction or another of our political spectrum. He might have done so in the past. But now, Tory seems content to take his pick.
This he has demon-strated ably over his first year in office. For a time, it seemed as though Tory might be of a piece with councils right-wing intel-ligentsia: he championed a costly rebuild of the Gardiner Expressway favoured by Conservative members of council, and held fast on the costly Scarborough subway for which former mayor Rob Ford took credit.
He has sung the praises of the private sector and made jokes about the folly of big government as well as any right-wing pol might be expected to.
But as the year has gone on, hes defied those expec-tations.
After talking with busi-ness leaders and sport boosters, he backed the city away from another Olympic bid.
He used another meet-ing with the blue-blooded business crowd at the Economic Club of Canada to unveil plans for an annual tax hike to pay for a major round of construc-tion and repair of public affordable housing and transit infrastructure.
He flew to Paris right after that, to huddle with world leaders trying to find ways to battle, halt and possibly reverse climate change and when he came back, he announced plans to help Toronto recycle more garbage, consume less energy and get around on foot and on bicycles.
This is not the sort of thing youd have expected
from a guy named Tory.Now some of this might
be written off as evidence of a shifting of the politi-cal winds. Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus Liberals came to power on a wave of progressive policies and right-wing repudiation.
I would buy that more easily if I hadnt been exposed so early and often to the push-me-pull-you dynamic of Torys psyche.
And while its a frus-trating psyche to try and codify, it might actually turn out to be a healthy one when it comes to govern-ing a big, complex place like Toronto, where public mood and social reality can shift in a heartbeat.
Vision, clear and consis-tent and predictable, might well have had its day.
David Nickle is Metroland Media Torontos city hall reporter. His column runs
every Thursday. Reach him on Twitter: @DavidNickle
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Scarborough native The Weeknd continues to domi-nate the international music scene, scoring seven Grammy Awards nominations for his album Beauty Behind the Madness.
The nominations were announced early Monday, Dec. 7. The Weeknd, whose real name is Abel Tesfaye, is up for some of The Grammys biggest honours, including album of the year and record of the year.
The former West Hill Collegiate Institute student will face off against Alabama Shakes, Chris Stapleton, Kendrick Lamar and Taylor Swift for album of the year.
Cant Feel My Face, the third single from Beauty Behind the Madness, will take on tracks from DAngelo, Ed Sheeran, Mark Ronson and Taylor Swift for record of the year. The single is also up for
best pop solo performance. Earned It, also on the Fifty Shades of Grey soundtrack, was nominated for best R&B song, best R&B performance and best song written for visual media. Beauty Behind the Madness was nominated for best urban contemporary album of the year as well.
The Grammy nods cap a whirlwind couple years for Tesfaye, who has quickly gained international popular-ity and acclaim since releas-ing his first studio album, Kiss Land, in September of 2013.
debuted
Kiss Land debuted at number two on Billboards top 200 chart, while the follow up, 2015s Beauty Behind the Madness, debuted at number one, spending three consecu-tive weeks in the top spot.
Cu r re n t l y s i t t i n g a t number five, Beauty Behind the Madness has spent 13
weeks on the chart since its Aug. 28 release. Twelve of the albums 14 tracks have hit the Billboard hot 100 chart, with Cant Feel My Face and The Hills reaching number one and Earned It climbing to number three. During the week of July 25, 2015, the singles occupied the top three spots on Billboards hot R&B songs chart, making Tesfaye the first artist to hold all three of its top spots at once.
He hit the Billboard hot 100 charts as a guest on sev-eral other artists songs too, including his duet with Ariana Grande, Love Me Harder, which reached number seven. He also appeared on The Hunger Games: Catching Fire soundtrack.
Earlier this month, Spotify announced Beauty Behind the Madness was its most-streamed album of 2015, with 60 million listeners. Rolling Stone magazine ranked it number five in its Best Albums of 2015 list.
Scarborough native The Weeknd scores seven Grammy nominations
community
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When Aamina was diagnosedwith neuroblastoma,her entire life was put on pause.Sleeping in the comfort of her own room. Paused.Celebrating her seventh birthday. Paused.Playing with her brother Ayub. Paused.Starting grade two. Paused.Painting at her kitchen table. Paused.
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Kwanzaa celebrationsset for ScarboroughThe Afr ican Canadian Heritage Association hosts its annual Kwanzza celebration this Saturday at Alexander Sterling Public School in Scarborough.
The free community event goes from 1;30 to 5:30 p.m. and features cultural enter-tainment and an African market place.
The ACHA will also provide a free communal feast.
Everyone is welcome to attend, and the doors open at 1 p.m.
Donations of canned or dried food items for local food banks, and donations of gently used shoes for the Kenya Project will be accepted.
Alexander Stirling P.S. is located at 70 Fawcett Trail.
Kwanzaa is a week long cel-ebration honouring African
heritage and culture.For more information,
email [email protected] or call 416-208-3149.
w Desserts by LampLight sLateDThe Scarborough Museum h o s t s i t s D e s s e r t s by Lamplight this Saturday from 6:30 to 9 p.m.
Participants can take part in an evening of lamp-lit rooms, decadent desserts and carollers.
Space is limited for this museum fundraising event.
Tickets cost $25, which includes tax. Pre-registration only. Early bookings are rec-ommended.
Scarborough Museum is at 1007 Brimley Rd., just north of Lawrence Avenue in Thomson Memorial Park.
For tickets, call 416-338-
8807 or online at https://scarboroughmuseum.stream-intickets.com/purchaseProd-uctSP.
w me/CFs/Fm support meeting tonightA community meeting for the ME/CFS FM Support Group in Scarborough is set for tonight.
The meeting goes from 1 to 3 p.m., and takes place at the McGregor Park Community Centre, 2231 Lawrence Ave. E.
The support group is intended for those dealing with ME (myalgic encepha-lomyelitis), CFS (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) and FM (fibromyalgia).
There is no charge to attend.
New members are welcome to attend.
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MIKE ADLER [email protected]
Strip malls. Back yard fences along wide streets. Apartment towers ringed by parking lots and lawns.
Its not so bad, right? And we can work with it, says New Suburbanism, a Scarborough-born movement to study the history of our suburbs and plan their future.
New Suburbanists must do this in front of experts who blame suburban plans and lifestyles for contributing to obesity, climate change and certain Arcade Fire songs, but that doesnt bother Morgen Peers.
These are really satisfying places to live, said Peers, a planner and founder of the Institute for New Suburbanism. They need to be engaged on their own terms.
The institute is organiz-ing a 2017 conference at the University of Toronto Scarborough, and will host a lecture Jan. 19 on what New Suburbanism is about.
Peers said a popular design
movement, New Urbanism, says our suburbs are problem-atic, improper forms of com-munity.
Hes trying to steer that con-versation using positive lan-guage, so we look at a suburb such as Scarborough as not something that needs to be corrected, but something that needs to be worked with and matured.
Suburban planning is about things being more spread out, and suburbs are a necessary broker between urban and rural landscapes, Peers said.
These arent easy times for defenders of the suburban dream in Scarborough and other spread-out parts of greater Toronto.
After its city council voted to refuse a $1.6-billion light rail line last month, one Toronto newspapers architecture critic wrote Brampton had been turned into little more than an arrangement of highways and parking lots interrupted by malls and subdivisions.
The writer, Christopher Hume, said rejecting the transit line was in character. The sub-
urban ethos, after all, is one of disconnection and separation. It rejects the urban ideal for something that, though it adds up to less, demands less.
Another critic, John Bentley Mays, earlier this month declared Scarborough a target for downtown urban-affairs writers these days because of the perceived wasteful nature of its proposed Bloor-Danforth subway extension to be lit-tered with bad building art of recent vintage: bleak concrete apartment slabs, and senti-mental, pseudo-historical new homes and townhouses.
Still, Peers maintains he sees the public shifting from talking about the suburbs as a problem to them being a naturally occur-ring part of an urban region.
His conference organizing group met for the fi rst time in October, and Peers said it will be open to opinions from resi-dents and professionals alike as the three-day event comes together.
The third day of the confer-ence will be tours or moving workshops using the buildings and vistas of Scarborough as a laboratory for problem-solving or ideas, he said.
Peers wrote research papers for the Scarborough Community Renewal Campaign, which was sponsored by local Rotary clubs.
The campaigns fi nal report last January called, among other things, for a Scarborough Business Association, formed since, a re-branding campaign to shift external perceptions of Scarborough, a tourism board to spotlight the areas hidden gems, and a new hub in Scarborough for music, arts and culture.
Also on the list was a plan-ning conference on neo-subur-ban ideas, including some that could improve future develop-ment in Scarborough.
New Suburbanism doesnt really have anything to do with New Urbanism, said Andre Sorensen, chair of the depart-ment of Human Geography at UTSC, arguing Peers wants to change the image of the suburbs, trying to get people to think of them and Scarborough in particular as attractive places that arent in decline.
Many people in Canada have stereotypical ideas about the suburbs, but they are much different places now then when fi rst built, with more workplaces and complexities, Sorensen added.
Before you make changes to a place or policies, you have to understand it; that will be a focus of the conference on suburbs, he predicted.
Just understanding how theyre changing is a good fi rst step.
FINDING SATISFACTION IN SCARBOROUGH NEW SUBURBANISM
Defenders of suburban dream see
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Staff photo/DAN PEARCE
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Mayor John Tory returned from Paris with plans to put Toronto back into its old leadership role on climate change plans that include speeding up the
installation of LED lighting, getting rid of the biggest bin for non-recyclable garbage and planting more trees.
Tory says he will also imple-ment a smart commute plan to help Torontonians find alter-native ways to the car by which
to travel to and from work.I think its fair to say that
the City of Toronto was once recognized as being at the front ranks of cities when it came to environmental issues but we stepped out of those leader-ship ranks and our progress
has been slowed, said Tory. I think it is now time to get back to work.
Tory made the comments December 7, after arriving home from attending the international climate change summit in Paris, France. There,
Tory said he met with mayors from major cities from around the world, including New York Citys Michael Bloomberg, and came back with a suite of ideas to push Toronto forward.
Among them: the phasing out of the extra-large garbage bin that according to city solid waste staff is mostly used by lazy homeowners to throw waste that could either be recycled or composted.
We have to spend more energy rewarding good behaviour and weve got to discourage bad behaviour, said Tory. Right now residents using the extra-large bins, people are putting items in those bins they shouldnt be. Seventy five per cent of things in large bins should be in the blue bin or the green bin. I will be asking my colleagues for looking at the potential for phasing out the extra large bins.
Tory said hell also push to increase the citys budget for tree planting, and also for showcasing green con-struction practises.
I will be looking for an early opportunity to showcase the construction of a truly carbon neutral building, he said.
The city will also look for ways to partner with the federal government on making Toronto Community Housing buildings more energy efficient.
And in 2016, Tory said he will work to launch a smart commute congestion plan. He made the announce-ment in Liberty Village, because the local business improvement area organization has been launching initiatives there to encourage people to commute more intelligently.
Currently, a quarter of the people in the west-end Toronto neighbourhood walk to work or cycle, aided by bike lockers and bike paths strategically placed.
The challenge now is to expand these programs across the city, said Tory.
Tory vows Toronto will be leader in fighting climate change
PortsToronto officially scrapsplans for jets at island airportPortsToronto will stop work on expanding the Billy Bishop Airport, officially killing the prospects of jet aircraft taking off and landing from the airport on Torontos waterfront.
The announcement comes nearly a month after new Federal Transportation Minister Marc Garneau made it clear Ottawa has no interest in opening the tripartite agreement that would allow the airport to be expanded.
Porter Airlines, which flies turboprop aircraft from the island, has since 2013 been asking that the ban on jet aircraft be lifted so it could extend the range of its services.
In a statement, PortsToronto CEO Geoffrey Wilson said that is no longer a possibility.
PortsToronto will complete the technical work currently underway, but will not proceed with further public engagement-related activities pertaining to the Porter Proposal to introduce jets, he said. As such, the studies will not be finished. PortsToronto will make data and information gathered to date available to the City of Toronto and stakeholders that may be helpful in the Bathurst Quay Neighbourhood Plan currently being led by the City of Toronto.
Until Tuesday, PortsToronto had been silent on how it would respond to the statements from Garneau, which were initially released via his Twitter account.
PortsToronto (formerly the Toronto Port Authority) had been working on three studies at the request of Toronto: an Environmental Assessment, a Preliminary Runway Design, and a Master Planning Exercise. The agency had also asked Waterfront Toronto to conduct a peer review of the Environmental Assessment.
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The Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities Steve Chaves, left, lights a candle during the YWCA Turning Point programs Celebration of Light event on Friday. Right, MPP Mitzie Hunter (Scarborough-Guildwood) makes her address during the event which celebrated the graduation of participants in the Scarborough program.
Staff Photos by Irvin Mintz
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/The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2016 Elantra L Manual/2016Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD/2016 Accent 4-Door L Manual with an annual finance rate of 0% for 84 months. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,695/$1,895/$1,595, levies and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Finance offers excluderegistration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. Financing example: 2016 Elantra L Manual at 0% per annum equals $85 biweekly for 84 months for a total obligation of $15,627. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0. Finance example includesDelivery and Destination charge of $1,695, levies and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Finance example excludes registration, insurance, PPSA and license fees. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E. and a full tank of gas. Holiday bonus of up to $2,000/$1,500/$2,000 available on all new2016 Elantra L Manual/2016 Accent 4-Door L Manual/2016 Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD models. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. Leasing offersavailable O.A.C. from Hyundai Motor Finance based on a new 2016 Tucson 2.0L FWD with an annual lease rate of 1.49%. Biweekly lease payments of $138 for a 60-month walk-away lease. Down payment of $0 and first monthly payment required. Total lease obligation is $17,940. Lease offer includes Deliveryand Destination charge of $1,795, levies, and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Lease offer excludes registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. $0 security deposit on all models. 20,000 km allowance per year applies. Additional charge of $0.12/km. Prices of models shown: 2016 Elantra Limited/2016 Tucson 1.6T Ultimate AWD/2016 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited/2016 Accent 4-Door GL are $27,677/$41,527/$42,577/$19,577. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,695/$1,795/$1,895/$1,595, fees, levies and all applicable charges (excludingHST). Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. Fuel consumption for new 2016 Elantra Limited (HWY 6.7L/100KM; City 9.7L/100KM); 2016 Tucson 1.6T Ultimate AWD (HWY 9.3L/100KM; City 11.6L/100KM); 2016 Santa Fe Sport 2.0TLimited (HWY 9.7L/100KM; City 12.9L/100KM); 2016 Accent 4-Door GL (HWY 6.3L/100KM; City 8.9L/100KM) are based on Manufacturer Testing. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposesonly. Government 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations (NHTSAs) New Car Assessment Program (www.SaferCar.gov). *Based on the 2009-2015 Global Automakers of Canada (GAC) Sales report. Offers available for a limited time and subject to changeor cancellation without notice. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited. Visit www.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details. Hyundais Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.
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MIKE ADLER [email protected]
A report on the future of hos-pitals in Scarborough and west Durham hospitals will be released soon, provincial officials are saying.
Ontario Health Minister Dr. Eric Hoskins received the report on Nov. 3.
Hoskins appointed eight experts in April, giving them six months to tell him how to deliver hospital services in both Scarborough and Durham.
Panelists were also told they could advise the minister on whether new hospital facili-ties may be needed in either area.
The Rouge Valley Health System and The Scarborough Hospital, which abandoned a proposed merger last spring, have asked the province to
launch a full study on their infrastructure needs.
In August, during the only meeting with panelists open
to the public in Scarborough, residents were told to expect the report will be released publicly.
When that will be is up to Hoskins, said John Ronson, a panel member who said pre-vious reports to the minister were made public within a few weeks.
None of us are interested in having a report on a shelf, gathering dust, Ronson added at the meeting. If there isnt action, Im going to be very, very angry.
Calls to Hoskins office and to the Central East Local Health Integration Network, which is the provinces health authority for the region, havent yielded a release date.
Health minister yet to release panel report on hospitals in Scarborough/west Durham
None of us are interested in having a report on a shelf
gathering dust. If there isnt action, Im going to be very, very angry
John Ronson, expert panel member
Acoustic Harvest presents a pre-Winterfolk Showcase Sat. Jan. 16, at 8 p.m.
Performing will be Brian Gladstone, Tony Quarrington, Hotcha! and David Storey.
Tickets are $25 at the door or $22 in advance at www.acousticharvest.ca
T h e p r e - W i n t e r f o l k Showcase takes place at Robinson Hall, St. Nicholas
Anglican Church, 1512 Kingston Rd.
The Winterfolk Festival is coming up Feb. 12 to 14. For more information, visit www.winterfolk.com
Acoustic Harvest presents pre-Winterfolk Showcase
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Kingston Road crash takes life of 32-year-old manA 32-year-old man is dead after the SUV he was driving slammed into a parked truck in Scarborough last Thursday, evening.
The crash happened on Kingston Road east of McCowan Road at 8:38 p.m.
Police reports said a westbound Saturn Vue hit the back of a parked Hino delivery truck for reasons not yet determined.
The driver of the Saturn was pronounced dead at the scene. This is the citys 61st fatal collision of the year.
Anyone with information is asked to call police at 416-808-1900.
w IndustrIal accIdent Injures manA 48-year-old man suffered serious injuries in an indus-trial accident at a Scarborough lumberyard Monday.
Police said the incident happened at Home Lumber
Inc. on Birchmount Road south of Comstock Road, at 7:17 a.m.
There was a forklift that was moving some of the lumber around and the lumber fell off and fell onto the victim, Const. Craig Brister said.
Hes suffered from several broken bones. We turned the scene over to the Ministry of Labour and they are currently conducting their investiga-tion.
The victim was taken to a trauma centre for treat-ment. His injuries are not life-threatening.
w arrest made In dIstractIon theftToronto police have arrested a 34-year-old woman in con-nection with a distraction theft earlier this year in the Victoria Park and Lawrence avenues area that targetted a 96-year-old victim.
According to police, the victim was walking in the area on Sept. 9 when she was approached by a woman driving a car who offered her some gold jewelry for sale.
The victim was then driven to a bank to get money to buy the jewelry. The accused put the jewelry on the victims neck and then removed her gold necklace, police alleged.
The woman after taking the victims necklace and selling her costume jewelry, police said.
On Sunday, police arrested a Toronto woman and charged her with theft under $5,000.
Police believe there may be other victims of similar distraction thefts targetting seniors and their jewelry.
Anyone with information should call police at 416-808-4100 or Crime Stoppers at 416-222-8477.
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column
The international year in review stories have already started coming out in full force, so I thought Id focus on just the promi-nent local goings-on in 2015.
It seems as if everything is now being recorded on somebodys cellphone. For what its worth, the person next to me filming this is nodding in agreement.
It is mandatory for every newspaper article to include some mention of social media. (Glad I got that out of the way. Nice to have the pressure off.)
It is also officially impossible to buy anything without being asked if you have a points card.
Whenever you round a bend youre greeted by a condo you swear you dont remember seeing the day before.
If youre about to take the subway to work and youre in a hurry because youre late, its closed and you have to take a shuttle.
If youre driving to work
and take the highway and youre in a hurry, your entrance and exits are both closed.
The guy sitting next to you at work comes in every day whining that his favourite major league baseball team refused to pay only $15 million or only $20 million or only $30 million for free agent so-and-so and says only at the top of his lungs over and over and over. Then after moaning and groaning he asks if you can lend him a buck a buck hell never pay back so he can get a chocolate bar at Dollarpalooza.
Prices went up for every-thing this year. Some went up more than once. For everything, that is, except your paycheque, of course.
When at least two people meet for whatever reason, a selfie is now
required to mark the occa-sion.
Anybody walking around singing Drakes Hotline Bling must do the moves along with it.
Finally, when you forgot a password, which we all did regularly in 2015 because were saddled with way too many to pos-sibly keep track of, you had to email the company in question to request a new one.
The user friendly one they sent you this year so you can get back into your account lickety-split? Read it and weep: XLRab258_gy_y976-GfSd_ yourmothersmaidenname_ ivHN_335/BVZzvb- 2468whodeappreci-ate/wsTA@159Mdu_ bobsyourcuncle/! JXsnf_32Ki...etc., etc., etc., adnauseam
What a year: condos, lottos, selfies ...
Jamie Wayne is a lifelong columnist who takes writing very seriously. The topics?
Not so much. His column appears every Thursday. Contact him at [email protected]
i
jamie wayneBUT SERIOUSLY
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13th AnnualBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry ChristmasBeary Merry Christmas
Metroland Media Toronto is very proud to be the founder of the Beary Merry Christmas Campaign. For the 13th consecutive year, Scarborough Mirror employees will deliver teddy bears to children spending the holidays in our local hospitals. We are so proud to have Samko & Miko as the o cial sponsor of this years teddy bears. As you can see, there are many other community minded businesses in the area that have generously purchased a bear for a needy
child this season. We thank all of our partners for helping us put smiles on the faces of so many children this Holiday Season.SCA
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2730 Markham Road(One traffic light North of Finch)
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clothing have been collected so far.
Its just incredible the amount of commitment and generosity that people are stepping up with, Bernhardson said. Some people ran a small drive themselves in their neighbourhood or collected at work.
The Clothing Drive is working with sponsor groups to help refugee families, who could either visit the storefront location to shop for free or order by phone and have the clothes delivered.
Were focused on getting the winter clothing out on the floor, Bernhardson said. Our goal is to equip a family whos coming here with probably nothing to be able to make it through a winter, but we do have spring and summer donations,
too, so were sorting those out and keeping them aside, and that will be the next phase.
Four families have so far made use of the donated clothing.
We have enough clothes for the time being, Bernhardson said. We need volunteers to help us operate and get in touch with the sponsor groups, so if people want to get involved, thats the best way to help out right now.
Dozens of volunteers inspected, sorted and sprayed the donated clothing on Tuesday.
Jonathan Janisse was one of them.
It makes me feel like part of the community, like Im doing something to make a difference, he said.
>>>from page 1
Clothing drive will help outfit Syrian refugees for winter
Staff photo/Andrew PAlAmArchuk
The Clothing Drive founder Laura-Jean Bernhardson examines some gar-ments that are being collected in support of Syrian refugees, on Tuesday at the campaigns Victoria Park Avenue facility.
Residents can help support Torontos Syrian refugees by donat-ing new and gently used clothing to New Circles Community Services, which runs a free clothing service in Flemingdon Park and Thorncliffe Park called GLOW (Gently Loved Outfits to Wear).
New Circles is working with Lifeline Syria and other agencies to provide Syrian refugees with clothes for up to two years, and is asking community members to join in and assist its effort.
Donations can be dropped off at 161 Bartley Dr. between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday to Wednesday and Friday, or between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. Thursday. The centre will be closed from Dec. 23 to Jan. 4.
New Circles collects clothing for refugees
For more information, email [email protected]
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Winter WheelChange for
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& Baguettes.
caring for all yourfamilys dental needs...family s dental needs... needs... needs...
Drop in, call (416) 281-GRIN (4746) or visit www.centenarydental.comConveniently located at the entrance of Centenary Hospital (Rouge Valley)
Welcoming neW patients all aspects of dental care
Evening and weekend appointments available Emergency walk-ins FREE PARKING with