Aurora Banner, June 9, 2016

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HOUSING — AN IN-DEPTH SERIES

PREPPING FOR STREET FEST

Millennials dig deep One couple takes plunge into Toronto’s condo market as first step

N

JOANNA LAVOIE

jlavoie@insidetoronto.com

ewlyweds Tripti Ninan and Ryan Perera are millennials. They wanted to get into the red-hot housing market and purchased their first home in Toronto just under one year ago. Based on their combined income and down payment they were able to come up with, the couple bought a 700square-foot, one-bedroom-plus-den condo unit in Toronto’s west end near a subway station.

‘And for us, location was key because we wanted to be close to transit. I did not want ridiculous commutes anymore.’ “We knew our first step would be a condo. We wanted to start small and we wanted something low maintenance,” said Ninan. “And for us, location was key because we wanted to be close to transit. I did not want ridiculous commutes anymore.” Ninan, a 30-year-old marketing

professional who works downtown, and 27-year-old Perera, an aerospace engineer whose office is near Pearson Airport, understood sacrifices were required to make their dream a reality. About five years ago, they both started setting aside money for their wedding and future home purchase. “We were actually planning for quite a few years and saving up,” said Perera. “We saved for both our wedding and our property even before we knew what kind of place we wanted and how big the wedding would be.” Ninan, who also paid her own way through college and university, said she was lucky to have taken a few financial courses and had a good understanding of what was involved in getting into the real estate market.

WHAT’S ONLINE

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ered to your email every morning: bit. ly/1WMDTfv ❐ 4 OD ON DRUGS IN GEORGINA: Users thought they were getting heroin, cocaine bit.ly/1TYGenl ❐ PHOTO GALLERIES: A picture worth 1,000 words. Check out our galleries: bit.ly/1Igqpjw ❐ DINE SAFE YORK: Find our which restaurants and pubs aren’t meeting health standards. bit.ly/1KpTRrt

See page A3.

Staff photo/Mike Barrett

Vendors stock their stands in preparation for the annual Aurora Chamber Street Festival. The fun-filled family event took place along Yonge Street Sunday and featured more than 500 vendors, talented street performers, music, food galore and more.

CATHOLIC BOARD — EDUCATION

Board eyes cuts amid $12M shortfall Special education funding on chopping block BY LISA QUEEN

C

lqueen@yrmg.com

arly Bryden has thrived through special education programs, including the close relationship she has with her “best buddy” Zephania Gangl, and she wants York Region’s Catholic school trustees to know it. Carly, a Grade 11 student with special needs at Aurora’s St. Maximilian Kolbe Catholic High School, was part of a group pleading with the York Catholic

District School Board not to cut special education funding as trustees look to chop about $12 million from their $568.8-million budget this month to avoid an illegal deficit. See page A7.

IN PHOTO: Best Buddies: Carly Bryden, Gr. 11 student at St. Maximilian Kolbe Catholic High School, gets a big hug from her friend, Zephania Gangl, Gr. 9. They spoke at the Catholic board’s open budget forum May 31.

ANIMAL ISSUES

Concerns raised about petting zoo BY TERESA LATCHFORD

A

tlatchford@yrmg.com

n Aurora man’s report of poorly treated animals at a petting zoo has caused a social media frenzy. Aurora resident Jonathon Cole has attended the Aurora Street Festival for 15 years and has never had a poor experience until yesterday when he, his girlfriend and younger sister discovered a kangaroo at the petting zoo run by Tiger Paw Exotics laying on its side and foaming from the mouth. Supplied photo/Jonathon Cole “We were in shorts and T-shirts and were very warm,” he Residents raised concerns about the welfare of animals, such as this said. “Here was this kangaroo in kangaroo, at a petting zoo operated by Tiger Paw Exotics during the direct sunlight with a bone dry Aurora Street Festival Sunday. water dish. It was very upsetting and my little sister was crying from the concrete they were shade from the sun including rabbecause it looked like he was standing on. bits huddled in one corner of a dying.” Cole then confronted the He immediately pulled out his cage and two porcupines fighting owner of Tiger Paw Exotics, Tim phone and took a photo because for the small patch of shade in Height, about the animals not their pen, according to Cole. There he felt it was something he had was also minimal bedding in the to bring attention to. There were pens to help protect the animals other animals with minimal See page A13.

Staff photo/Steve Somerville

HEALTH & WELLNESS

Canada on ‘messy road’ toward assisted suicide law As of Monday, Canada without law on issue BY LISA QUEEN

U

lqueen@yrmg.com

nlike almost 20 years ago when Canada was left without an abortion law after the Supreme Court of Canada struck down legislation on an issue that gripped the country, the federal government will find a way to adopt a law on the extremely sensitive question of doctor-assisted suicide, the dean of York University’s Osgoode Hall law school says. But that doesn’t mean it won’t be a “messy road” getting there, professor Lorne Sossin said. As of Monday, Canada is without a law on doctor-assisted suicide. In a historic move about 16 months ago, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled the ban on physician-assisted right to die leg-

LORNE SOSSIN: Dean of York University’s Osgoode Hall law school says law will have doctors ‘walking on eggshells.’ islation for consenting and severely ill adults was unconstitutional. It gave the federal government a year to enact new legislation. See page A4.

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