Beach Metro Community News May 2, 2023

Page 2

Malvern Collegiate celebrates 120 years on May 13

A LARGE number of former students and staff are expected to attend events surrounding the 120th anniversary celebration of Malvern Collegiate Institute on Saturday, May 13.

Along with an Open House at the school (55 Malvern Ave.) that day from 1 to 4 p.m., there will also be Pub Nights for students who attended during different decades on the Saturday night.

Sandy Kaskens, principal of Malvern, said the celebrations are a chance for current students to learn more about the school’s past while also celebrating its long history in the community.

“Malvern has always very much been a community school,” she said. “The students really have a well developed sense of belonging in the school, and a strong sense of their community. This is where they grew up and so did their families…There’s such a long history at this school and that builds a school community that is closely connected.”

Kaskens said there are many of examples of students at the school whose parents and grandparents also attended Malvern.

Principal at Malvern for the past three years, Kaskens has also done her part to help celebrate the school’s history. She has made it a point to display collages from old school yearbooks going back to 1926 in the halls, and to also celebrate the successes of recent graduates.

There is a section of the school that for decades had wooden panels with the names of scholars

Continued on Page 9

Dance Off at Notre Dame Catholic High School

MPP questions lack of affordable housing mandate in sale of Metrolinx land near Danforth GO Station

THE ONTARIO government is under the microscope after allowing the sale of public land to a private buyer without assurances of affordable housing components.

On March 8, Metrolinx finalized the sale of their property on 8 Dawes Rd., south of Danforth Avenue, to development company Marlin Spring. With discussions dating back as far as October 2022 according to the City’s of Toronto’s Application Information Centre, many in the community are wondering why affordable units weren’t made a more significant part of the negotiation process in the sale of the land at the northeast end of the Danforth GO station, which had been owned by the provincial transit authority Metrolinx.

Local politicians are now asking Ontario’s government to revisit legislation which allows develop-

ers to acquire land without keeping Toronto’s affordability crisis at the forefront of the discussions.

Beaches-East York MPP MaryMargaret McMahon told Beach Metro Community News that the province has the power to mandate a certain amount of affordable housing in new developments but chooses not to do so.

On April 24 at Queen’s Park, McMahon highlighted this issue to her colleagues as she inquired about why the Progressive Conservative government of Premier Doug Ford did not require Metrolinx, a crown agency, to include minimum affordable housing requirements in their property sales to private housing developers.

The Beaches-East York Liberal MPP also asked why Ontario is seemingly ignoring the recommendations by the province’s Housing Affordability Task Force to require all future government land sales, “whether commercial or residen-

tial”, to reserve at least 20 per cent of their development for affordable housing.

According to its official website, the Housing Affordability Task Force is “comprised of industry leaders and experts” who “consulted with stakeholders including municipalities and advocacy groups to develop their report”. The Task Force report was put in place to help the government identify and implement measures to address the housing supply crisis by getting feedback through avenues such as municipal and public consultations.

“What is the point of creating this report if you do not take the sound advice of experts,” asked McMahon during the April 24 session of the provincial legislature at Queen’s Park.

Kinga Surma, Ontario’s Minister of Infrastructure, responded by saying Ontario’s Progressive Conservatives are doing a “very thorough analysis of all of our GO

Stations within the Greater Toronto-Hamilton Area to see where other opportunities (for affordable housing) exist”.

However, that wasn’t a sufficient response for those wondering why a piece of public land in an essential, high transit area was sold off without guarantees for members of the community who need affordable housing, said McMahon. She said she now intends to submit her inquiries as Order Paper questions which gives the government 24 days to respond in writing.

“We need to have these mandates for affordable housing otherwise people are going to keep moving out of the city,” said McMahon. “We have these major urban centres with entire generations of young people and essential workers who are unable to find rental housing that they can afford.”

McMahon isn’t the only East Toronto politician that has publicly

Volume 52 No. 5 May 2, 2023 BEACHMETRO.COM
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Notre Dame Catholic High School hosted its Dance Off! competition on Friday night with a number of different high school dance teams taking part. The winner of the event was the team from Dante Alighieri Academy Catholic Secondary School. Second place was Madonna Catholic Secondary School. Third was Senator O’Connor College School. Fourth place was Notre Dame. Shown in this photo above is the team from St. Joseph’s.
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Grace Pascoe Food Bank dealing with high demand during its evening opening hours on Thursdays

THERE LIES a common misconception among many that food banks are solely reserved for homeless people. Although it shouldn’t, this also creates a negative undertone when residents think about the idea of approaching food banks for help.

But contrary to such belief, Toronto’s food banks are a source of financial relief for workers that, perhaps, just don’t earn enough to meet the growing demands of our inflated economy. As prices soar, many have simultaneously seen their working hours decline, putting them in desperate, unmanageable living situations.

“Many of our clients in fact work,” said Boafoa Kwamena, a volunteer at the Grace Pascoe Care Centre Food Bank on Main Street, between Kingston Road and Gerrard Street East.

“They’re just unable to stretch their budget. Some people come only once a month to get a few items while others are regulars who come every week.”

For more than 60 years, Grace Pascoe Care Centre, a ministry of Calvary Baptist

Church which serves residents from Victoria Park to Woodbine avenues and from Danforth Avenue to Lake Ontario, has made it their goal to meet the immediate needs of such East Toronto residents in an attempt to make their journey towards self-sufficiency easier.

“One of the things that we’re grateful for is that Calvary Baptist offered us this space rent free,” said Kwamena. “It was their idea to serve the working families of our community. They spearheaded [the idea of] opening at night and they were absolutely correct to do that.”

Taking into account that people who work during the day sometimes require just as much assistance, since reopening last May following COVID-19 pandemic closures, Grace Pascoe has operated between 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. every Thursday so as to ensure those who work during the day have equal opportunity to access their services.

“We’re one of the few food banks that actually open at night,” said Kwamena. “It’s grown since we reopened but we serve from 280 people a week on (low traffic) nights to 380 on (high traffic) nights.”

Kwamena told Beach Metro Community News that Grace Pascoe, like many other food banks in the city, is seeing an increasing number of families seeking assistance.

“About 25 per cent of people we serve are under the age of 18,” she said.

This coincides with reports that one in four food bank clients in Toronto are minors.

Keeping up with this rise in food bank demand has proven tough.

As a Daily Bread Food Bank agency, Grace Pascoe is required to give clients at least four days worth of food. However, food shipments, which they receive from Daily Bread, have not been sufficient to comfortably meet this requirement considering the increase in food bank traffic.

“There are a lot of times where we will run out of milk, or eggs, or tuna towards the end of the night which is really difficult because it has required us to [pull] back on what choices we offer clients just so that our food stretches to more people,” said Kwamena.

Although clients might not get their first choice of food, Grace Pascoe has been fortunate enough to always be able to give a client something.

“But what tends to happen now is people start lining up at 3 p.m. sometimes, even though we open at six, just so they can get [everything they need].”

Grace Pascoe has operated quite under the radar in the community. As one of the seemingly lesser known food banks, according to Kwamena, they “don’t have some of the strong community partnerships” that provide them with donations which limits their ability to assist as efficiently as the more established organizations.

Lately, they have been in

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need of bread, tomato sauce, and proteins such as canned fish as these seem to fly off the shelves quicker than other items.

As families visit the food bank more often, Grace Pascoe has also seen an increase in mothers looking for diapers for their babies – an item that they are not always able to provide.

Although Grace Pascoe can’t meet every client’s request, the organization’s volunteers have built a strong bond with the individuals they serve – some of them even joining the team, helping them grow to about 20 volunteers as of now.

Kwamena told a story of one grateful client, an 80-year-old man, teary eyed, who told her that he couldn’t believe the position he was in at this point in his life. Having worked his whole career, the man said he would never have predicted such a desperate future for himself.

However, he showed immense gratitude about the fact that Grace Pascoe was available to help him during this harsh period. With nine per cent of their clients being over the age of 65 due to circumstances such as insufficient pensions, it is safe to assume that this individual’s story is not unique to just him.

“When you speak to our clients they will say if it wasn’t for the food bank, they don’t know how they’d feed their family,” said Kwamena. “Because the cost of food, transit and everything is making it impossible for people to stretch their budget. Food banks are filling a really important void.”

In 2022, there was a 134 per cent spike in food bank dependency in Canada. That number is expected to increase another 60 per cent this year.

The need for food security within the City of Toronto is ever-growing, and support for food banks and other organizations is also desperately needed.

“We need community support,” said Kwamena. “We are really struggling to serve our community and anything anyone can do to supplement what we already get from Daily Bread would be really, really appreciated.”

Anyone who would like to donate food items, or monetary contributions, is encouraged to bring their donations to Calvary Baptist Church (72 Main St.) on Wednesdays between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m., and Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Anyone who would like to volunteer with the Grace Pascoe Food Bank can reach out by email to volunteergpcc@gmail.com for further information.

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Amarachi Amadike is a Local Journalism Initiative Reporter for Beach Metro Community News. His reporting is funded by the Government of Canada through its Local Journalism Initiative.

Affordable housing requirements sought

voiced concerns about Ontario’s failure to fight for housing affordability.

Earlier this month, Toronto-Danforth Councillor

Paula Fletcher had similar complaints about a proposal at 425-471 Carlaw Ave. (just northeast of Gerrard Street East and north of the railway tracks) which includes a mixed-use podium building with three tower elements at 30, 35 and 40 storeys. The land is an area identified as a transit priority zone given its proximity to the GO Train tracks and the proposed future Ontario Line subway.

On April 12, Fletcher submitted motions at Toronto City Hall that proposed Toronto Council requests the province to require a minimum of 20 per cent affordable housing on the Provincial Transit Oriented Community (TOC) site at Gerrard/Carlaw for a minimum of 50 years.

Toronto Council had approved an Inclusionary Zoning framework which required up to 22 per cent of

units in new condominium developments in growing areas to meet affordability standards and remain affordable for 99 years. However, the provincial government’s Bill 23 (More Homes Built Faster Act, 2022) last year made changes that directly contradicted this by reducing affordable component requirements to five per cent.

Currently, Official Plan Amendments in Toronto needed to implement any new affordable housing framework are still awaiting provincial approval.

McMahon said the chance to put affordable housing requirements into the land sale for 8 Dawes Rd. is a missed opportunity given the ideal transit links in the area. “We definitely want density along subway corridors – in mobility hubs,” she said. “Main Street is a huge mobility hub.”

The area between Main Street and Dawes Road north of the GO Train tracks is already the subject of numerous high-density building proposals by developers,

none of which appear to have mandated affordable housing units included.

Marlin Spring’s proposal is still going through the city’s application process. Although showing no current signs of affordable units, representatives for the developer reminded residents during a March 8 public consultation that Marlin Spring is known to have affordable units in other projects.

The application for 8 Dawes Rd. proposes a 38-storey mixed-use building. This development will contain 399 dwelling units – 39 threebedroom, 109 two-bedroom, and 251 one-bedroom units.

Beach Metro Community News reached out to Metrolinx for comments regarding the sale of the land at 8 Dawes Rd., but has yet to receive a response.

Amarachi Amadike is a Local Journalism Initiative Reporter for Beach Metro Community News. His reporting is funded by the Government of Canada through its Local Journalism Initiative.

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‘MPP’ from Page 1

Please join us for the Celebration of the Life of PETER ROBINSON and the launch of his final book Standing in the Shadows

Celebration of Life for acclaimed author Peter Robinson planned

THE LIFE of Beach author

Peter Robinson will be celebrated, as will be the release of his final book, on the evening of Thursday, May 18.

Robinson, who is the author the Inspector Banks mystery novels, died last October at the age of 72.

His final book in the Inspector Banks series, and the 28th one he had written, is titled Standing In The Shadows and was officially released last month. His books have sold millions of copies around the world and were also made into a television series in England.

The celebration of life event set for the Balmy Beach Club from 6 to 9 p.m. on May 18 will also serve as the launch party for Standing In The Shadows

Robinson lived in the community for decades and was well known in the Beach area, and in particular at The Feathers on Kingston Road which he considered his “local” pub. He and his partner of more than 30 years, Sheila Halladay, actually met at The Feathers.

“At the time, I was a partner in a Bay Street law firm, who represented Penguin Canada, the publishers of Peter’s book,” Halladay told Beach Metro Community News in an email.

“When I mentioned that I had heard that one of their authors lived in the Beach area and went to The Feathers I was told that not only was he a talented writer but that he was a nice guy and, if I got a chance, I should introduce myself to him. One Friday afternoon when I went to The Feathers I was told that he was at the back with an English teacher from Malvern, because he had just given a talk on creative writing to the students there. So, reader, I married him.”

Together they lived on Isleworth Avenue (near Queen Street East and Wineva Avenue) for more than 30 years.

“We continued to live in the Beach, although a few years ago we bought a cottage in England, in the Yorkshire Dales, where his books are set, and we would go over there two or three times a year for a couple of months,”

Thursday, May 18, 2023

said Halladay.

6:00 – 9:00 pm

The Inspector Banks books follow the career of police detective Alan Banks in a fictional town in the northern England area of Yorkshire. Robinson himself grew up in Yorkshire, and studied English at the University of Leeds before he moved to Canada.

Balmy Beach Club 360 Lake Front Toronto

Halladay said Robinson often joked the students used the scholarship funds for “beer, books and CD money”.

However, she said the scholarship at the University of Leeds (which also houses Robinson’s manuscripts) has been greatly appreciated by the students it is awarded to.

about the human beings involved,” said Penny. “That’s why people are drawn to them and drawn to Alan Banks. He has made them deeply human and recognizable, and I think that has helped to bring crime novels and crime writing to the fore.”

A Beacher who grew up on Crown Park Road and attended local schools including Malvern Collegiate, Halladay said Robinson had a great love for the Beach community, and credits Canada with giving him the perspective to be able to write his novels.

“I think that Beach Metro readers should know what a strong connection Peter had to the area. He lived over half of his life in Canada and over 30 years in the Beach,” she said.

“Canada has a history of welcoming authors from other parts of the world to write about where they came from. Peter always said that writing from Canada gave him a perspective that he wouldn’t have had if he had stayed in the UK (United Kingdom).

“Peter came to Canada in the mid-seventies to study for a Masters in Creative Writing at the University of Windsor (with Joyce Carol Oates) and then moved to Toronto to study for his PhD at York University in the 1980s,” said Halladay.

“After he completed his PhD he moved to various places in the east end of the city and ended up living on Lawlor Avenue. He would joke that one of the reasons that he moved there was that it was close to The Feathers.”

Robinson never forget his early days growing up in post-war working class Yorkshire and of being accepted at the University of Leeds. He and Halladay set up the Peter Robinson Scholarship at the university “for an English student with a less privileged background, with an interest in creative writing”.

“Students have written to us that it meant more than that. Peter also gave his papers, notes, manuscripts to the University, where they are housed in special collections, and can be studied by future scholars, including aspiring crime writers,” said Halladay.

Along with supporting young writers in university, Robinson was also a mentor and friend to other mystery writers.

Louise Penny, author of the Armand Gamache novels set in Quebec and a friend of Robinson’s, said in his obituary in The Globe and Mail that Robinson was part of a “renaissance of crime writing not only in Canada but worldwide”.

“His books aren’t necessarily like mine; they are proudly mysteries and crime novels, but they’re not really about the crime, they’re

It is also interesting to note that while his DCI Banks series of books are mainly set in a fictional town in England, in The Hanging Valley, Banks’ investigation takes him to Toronto and a pub crawl in the east end of the city, ending - at The Feathers! Also many of his short stories such as The Wrong Hands are set here.”

Halladay said that when Robinson died in October of cancer, it was always the intention to have a larger celebration of his life that would coincide with the launch of Standing In The Shadows. She said local residents and his many fans are welcome to attend the Balmy Beach Club event on May 18.

“So all of Peter’s friends and readers are welcome to join us at the Balmy Beach Club on Thursday, May 18, from 6 to 9 p.m.to celebrate not only his life and work but also launch his final book Standing In The Shadows The event is open to everyone who is a fan or friend and there is no need to register in advance,” she said.

For more on Peter Robinson’s books, please go to www.inspectorbanks.com

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PHOTO: SUBMITTED Beach author Peter Robinson, writer of the Inspector Banks series, will be remembered at a Celebration of Life event on May 18 at the Balmy Beach Club. The event will also serve as the official launch of his final book Standing In The Shadows.

Eid-al-Fitr celebrated by thousands in Dentonia Park

A crowd of thousands gathered at Dentonia Park in East Toronto on the morning of Friday, April 21, to celebrate Eid-al-Fitr. The celebration featured speeches followed by prayers to mark the end of the holy month of Ramadan which is observed by Muslims around the world. Eid-al-Fitr signifies the end of the month of fasting, reflection and helping others. The Dentonia Park event was organized by the Danforth Islamic Centre.

PHOTOS: ALAN SHACKLETON

Ramadan Food Drive in East York

PHOTO: SUBMITTED

Members of the Ismaili Civic East York stand with some of the many items collected during the group’s Ramadan Food Drive last month. On April 23, the collected items were sorted and distributed to the Bluffs Food Bank in southwest Scarborough and to the Flemingdon Park Food Bank. Ismaili Civic is a legacy initiative to mark His Highness the Aga Khan’s Diamond Jubilee and Canada’s 150th anniversary since Confederation. It was a commitment by Canadian Ismaili Muslims of one million volunteer service hours to improve the quality of life of fellow citizens in Canada. It began on July 1, 2017, and by March of 2018, the million-hour commitment had been met and the volunteer service continues.

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Residents need to examine priorities when choosing next mayor

What do Toronto residents care the most about today? Is it their safety, or food and housing affordability?

As we inch closer to the mayoral byelection as a result of — well we’re not going to delve into that — it appears quite a few candidates would argue that community safety is at the forefront of most people’s minds.

But, I believe the answer to that question highly depends on where you lie within the tax bracket. Residents who are living comfortable lives, sheltered from the food insecurities and affordability issues faced by many in the city, will probably say security is their main concern. I don’t blame them. Voters tend to lean towards candidates whose mission aligns closest to their own interests.

However, just because a resident

isn’t plagued by thoughts of food security, or how they will afford the upcoming rent, doesn’t mean they are not directly affected by it.

Earlier this year, Toronto Council approved a $48-million increase in the police budget bringing it to a total of about $1.1 billion.

There has been a noticeably fearful aura amongst Torontonians as of late. Our streets are coated with conversations of crime and mayoral candidates have happily hopped aboard the fear-mongering express, reiterating talking points about TTC safety — the lowest hanging fruit.

It’s an easy way to galvanize voters, but almost insulting. Are they actually trying to scare residents into voting for their next “saviour” who will clean up the streets of Toronto?

Candidates in this mayoral race speak so often about TTC security — barely touching on other pressing issues — that one could almost forget that the unsafe climate being experienced by Torontonians today is a direct byproduct of the city’s growing affordability crisis.

In its 2022 Who’s Hungry Report,

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Letters to the Editor

Daily Bread Food Bank, in partnership with North York Harvest Food Bank, recorded that 1.68 million food bank visits were tracked in the City of Toronto — 16 per cent higher than the previous record of 1.45 million the year prior.

I find it poetic that Daily Bread Food Bank is now hosting a mayoral debate on May 15, because the city has come to rely on such organizations for support rather than effective government policy. But with donations now reportedly running low, perhaps it’s time for Toronto Council to pull their own weight. But here lies the problem.

As one official recently told me, “Toronto is just a creature of the province”. And I couldn’t agree more. What they meant by this is that Toronto Council’s powers have grown increasingly limited. With the provincial government lurking with its own agenda, many of which contradict that of the city, it’s easy to see why much hasn’t been accomplished in Toronto’s recent history.

The Strong Mayor legislation has muddied these waters even more, further extending the pro-

vincial government’s reach into municipal affairs.

The most obvious example of this is the Doug Ford government’s reversal of Toronto Council’s Inclusionary Zoning framework that mandated new developments to reserve 22 per cent of its units for affordable housing. This decision was due to the Ontario Progressive Conservative’s aim to seduce developers into building more housing in the province.

The provincial strategy to entice developers also included scrapping the Rental Fairness Act in 2018, instead allowing newly built units, or units being occupied by new tenants, to be exempt from rental increase restrictions.

Ever so often at Queen’s Park, we’re reminded by Progressive Conservative MPPs that they have “created the climate for developers to invest in the province”.

Unfortunately, they have simultaneously created a climate that breeds criminal activity and increased mental health demands.

The policies of the provincial government, albeit mixed with hardships of the COVID-19 pandemic,

has led Toronto down a path of uncertainty.

Food banks are now accustomed to empty shelves as even people with full-time employment are finding themselves needing assistance to offset the shortcomings of their income. Landlords are bolder with their rental increases, evicting people in order to capitalize on the loosened rental legislation.

The skeptic in me wants to say that it doesn’t matter who becomes Toronto’s next mayor. If we’re discussing bike lanes or a street sign you don’t like, then sure, they can help. But if we’re discussing security, then we must discuss affordability. And conversations on affordability will always lead us to the steps of Queen’s Park.

All we can hope for is that Toronto’s next Strong Mayor isn’t just strong by title, but by character. An individual that isn’t simply an extended arm of the provincial government, but rather an advocate for the people.

-- Amarachi Amadike’s reporting for Beach Metro News is funded by the Government of Canada through its Local Journalism Initiative.

Re-opening Little Ice Age discussion is neither interesting nor useful

Re: ‘Hunting down carbon dioxide is of benefit to no one: geologist,’ Letters, Beach Metro Community News, April 18.

I am, unfortunately, motivated to respond to the letter. Re-opening a debunked discussion of climate change by publishing a letter about the Little Ice Age (LIA) is neither interesting nor useful - and a promotion of misinformation.

Instead of the sleight of hand of asking the question “what are we to do if government is misinformed” as if it is a valid premise, I would posit “what are we to do if the public is

constantly misinformed?”

To summarize this call for a rebuttal, the warming forces at play following the LIA are not the same forces causing global warming now. Also, heat on this planet is stored in water (liquid and frozen) as well as the air and rock. And this year the oceans are the hottest on record. Your letter writer has no comment on that.

Melting ice takes 80 calories to melt one gram, and only one calorie to heat one gram of water by one degree…so as ice melts the planet is warming even when the tempera-

ture is still at zero degrees. (Cheng, L., Abraham, J., Trenberth, K.E. et al. Another Year of Record Heat for the Oceans. Adv. Atmos. Sci. (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-0232385-2)

It might have been much more interesting to do some actual reporting and find a scientific source to provide the public with good information.

IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) documents contain the official public agency recording of the latest available published science, and when the political re-

ality is that they are the negotiated outcome of 195 governments – they often are reduced from the actual magnitude of the science to meet some political objective (i.e. don’t offend the fossil fuel wealth that the current cycle of the economy is fuelled by) it is hard to say they are overstating the critical nature of the greenhouse-gases-are-causing-globalheating issue.

You could cite experts, instead of providing a platform to those claiming that they are the only ones who know more than the experts:

Continued on Page 7

In My Opinion 6 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 BEACHMETRO.COM

Letters to the Editor

Carbon dioxide letter prompts many responses

Re: ‘Hunting down carbon dioxide is of benefit to no one: geologist,’ Letters, Beach Metro Community News, April 18.

The letter writer expresses the opinion that climate modelers have not taken sufficient account of the effects of volcanic eruptions on global warming. He concludes that “The consensus attribute that warming to carbon dioxide which cannot be teased out of the temperature data and is not science except as a tentative assumption”.

In support of his position, he used “graphs of temperature sequences through time created by the National Oceanograhic and Atmospheric Administration better known as NOAA”.

The NOAA, however, appears to interpret its data very differently. The NOAA website, citing scientific studies, states that “Human activities emit 60 or more times the amount of carbon dioxide released by volcanoes each year. Large, violent eruptions may match the rate of human emissions for the few hours that they last, but they are too rare and fleeting to rival humanity’s annual emissions.” (https://www.climate. gov/news-features/climate-qa/which-emits-more-carbon-dioxide-volcanoes-or-human-activities/)

The NOAA’s views are supported by other trusted scientific sources. For example, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration states on its website that “Essentially, CO2 emissions from human activities dwarf those of volcanoes”. (https://climate.nasa.gov/faq/42/what-do-volcanoes-have-todo-with-climate-change/)

We must recognize that global warming is a serious threat to humanity and is caused by the rapid increase, since preindustrial times, of GHG emissions from human activities. For the sake of our children and grandchildren, we must take all steps possible to reduce GHG emissions.

A waste of ink and paper

Wow! For decades now, thousands of global scientists from multiple disciplines have built an increasingly strong consensus backed by increasingly robust evidence that human activity leading to increased carbon dioxide (and other) emissions is causing the climate to warm (“Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability,” IPCC Sixth Assessment Report).

But wait! Beach Metro Community News publishes the lengthy opinion of a single artesian geologist who claims, that we should ignore CO2 and focus on beach clean-ups!

Just an opinion in a letter to the editor, you say? Sure! I look forward to an equally weighted piece on the evidence that the earth is flat. What a waste of ink and paper (another source of climate change, by the way)!

Mark

Time is short to deal with climate change

Your letter writer is a geologist, not a climate scientist. The Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change is made up of hundreds of climate scientists. In their scientific reports they have raised increasing concern about the impact of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.

Their latest 8,000 page report published last month details the devastating consequences of these emissions and the Increasingly dangerous and irreversible risks if we do not change course. This is the most comprehensive, best available scientific assessment of climate change. It’s real. It’s serious. It’s us. We can fix it but time is short.

Doug Pritchard Impacts of volcanic activity called negligible

The letter writer claims that climate modellers have been mistaken by “global time series seriously affected by volcanic activity from 1875 to 1932.”

Seriously? The claim is contradicted by the following statent: In the industrial era, volcanic activity had had negligible impacts on global temperature trends. (USGCRP (2017). Wuebbles, D. J.; Fahey, D. W.; Hibbard, K. A.; Dokken, D. J.; et al. (eds.). Climate Science Special Report: Fourth National Climate Assessment, Volume I. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Global Change Research Program..Link at https://science2017.globalchange.gov/ See Chapter 2: Physical Drivers of Climate Change.)

Boyd Reimer

Science should be free from doctrinaire nonsense

Climate change is real; no debate about that. Ice Age anyone?

But what role do industrialized humans play? It has become a polarized and emotive issue. And political. So much populist pseudo-science out there; so it’s refreshing to read the letter-writer’s informative opinion on this complex topic. Right or wrong, the field should remain open to informed discussion free from doctrinaire nonsense. That’s called science.

Reader disappointed by publication of letter

‘Re-opening’ from Page 6

i.e. FEATURE | March 25, 2021 - Direct Observations Confirm That Humans Are Throwing Earth’s Energy Budget off Balance. (https://climate.nasa.gov/news/3072/direct-observations-confirm-that-humans-are-throwing-earths-energybudget-off-balance);

or Is the Sun causing global warming (https://climate.nasa. gov/faq/14/is-the-sun-causing-global-warming);

or, there are balanced sources of scientific rebuttal of denialist claims that were interesting to expend energy on early in the discussion, but tiresome to have to keep calling up to rebut old debunked memes (https://skepticalscience.com/ coming-out-of-little-ice-age.htm).

Also, to rebut the claims that glacial melts won’t impact coastal property you could look at the following source: https://coastal.climatecentral.org/map/11/73.8779/40.7262/?theme=water_level&map_type=water_level_above_mhhw&basemap=roadmap&contiguous=true &elevation_model=best_available&refresh=true&water_ level=3.0&water_unit=ft

Or simply talk to the insurance industry on their take on the massive changes in fluvial and pluvial flooding risk. Why is this rapid onset and escalation occurring?

Or you could have looked up and published your take on one of the thousands of actual science papers by experts who are peer reviewed (rather than post a non-peer reviewed

Why Wait?

opinion letter as if it has merit).

For example, Mann, M.E., Zhang, Z., Hughes, M.K., Bradley, R.S., Miller, S.K., Rutherford, S., Proxy-Based Reconstructions of Hemispheric and Global Surface Temperature Variations over the Past Two Millennia, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 105, 13252-13257, 2008.

Also, blaming other countries for not being willing to reduce emissions assumes that all countries have had an equal hand in adding carbon to the atmosphere and that all have benefitted from the exploitation of that resource.

And the sleight of hand saying that “Big Oil” means OPEC and Russia, when it almost always actually refers to American and European oil companies amongst the majors is a rhetorical trick of the trade - misstate the issue so that you can create your own red herring argument.

I am disappointed to say the least that Beach Metro Community News would let that letter infect your much loved local publication….unless that is the point (and I really hope that that is not true).

I am not an atmospheric scientist. I am responding in my personal capacity as a Beach resident and not in my professional capacity. I think that the rebuttal should be your newspaper’s responsibility given your creation of the situation. I would highly recommend getting an expert who would have more than opinion to share.

With strong buyer demand and low inventory, it’s a great time to make a move. We are always happy to talk real estate. Connect with us to get started.

7 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 GRIEVE SIGNATURE LABEL
KEN GRIEVE & KELSEY GRIEVE Real Estate Homeward REALTOR ® 416 587-7522 grievesignature.com *Not intended to solicit anyone under agency contract. Royal LePage Estate Realty, 2301 Queen St. E. Direct 416.571.2181 | Office 416.690.5100 Kerryjackson@gmail.com Kerry Jackson Did you know... you can find and register the location of a Li�le Free Library near you or anywhere in the world? li�lefreelibrary.org/map 2550 Danforth Ave. (Main & Danforth) fully accessible HopeUnited.ca 416-691-9682 Hope United.ca Sunday Services in person Sundays 11 am New Horizon Luncheon for Seniors May 27 4:30 pm Jazz Vespers Olivia Esther Ensemble Thursdays 12:30 pm Music on a Sunday Afternoon Louis Lawlor, classical guitar May 14 1:30 pm
/BeachMetroNews @beachmetro www.beachmetro.com @beachmetronews Story idea? News tip? Let us know!

Community Calendar

MAY 5-7: Jane’s Walks, honouring urbanist, activist and longtime Toronto resident Jane Jacobs. Info: www.janeswalkfestivalto.com

MAY 6: EcoFair at Beach United Church, 140 Wineva Ave., 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 35+ exhibitors/vendors: solar panel co-ops, vegetarian food vendor and cooking demo, info on green grants and how to access them, recycling experts, bike repair tent, a beekeeper, butterfly and pollinator gardeners, energy advisors and more. Free. All welcome! Info: beachunitedchurch.com

MAY 6: Jazz & Reflection (Theme: Time) at Beach United Church, 140 Wineva Ave., 4:30 p.m. We are excited to welcome young jazz singer John Amato (vocals), Jesse Whiteley (piano) and Matt Savard (bass) to our Main Hall. Donations are welcome and proceeds support the Beach United food programs. Info: beachunitedchurch.com

MAY 6: Garage Sale for Shelter at several East End locations, 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Sponsored by Royal LePage Estate Realty and Royal LePage Shelter Foundation. To donate gently used items, or for location info, call 416-690-5100.

MAY 10: Scarborough Garden & Horticultural Society presents Size Small – Fits All – small sized cultivars for all gardens by well known Heinke Thiessen, at Scarborough Village Recreation Centre, 3600 Kingston Rd. (corner Markham Rd.), 7:30 p.m. Refreshments included. Guests welcome.

MAY 13: Annual Outdoor Plant Sale at Cornell Campbell House Property, 3620 Kingston Rd. (next door to at Scarborough Village Recreation Centre with large parking lot), 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

MAY 13: Historical Walk with Beach Metro News history columnist, Gene Domagala, 1 p.m. Starting at Corpus Christi Catholic Church at Queen St. E. and Lockwood Rd., this walk travels along Queen Street to finish at Beach United Church at Wineva Ave.

MAY 13: Malvern collegiate Institute 120th Anniversary Celebration, 55 Malvern Ave. An Open House will be held from 1-4 p.m. at the school, and a pub night will be held at several different locations. Info and tickets: malverncollegiate.com/events/reunions/mci-120/

MAY 13: Nisbet Lodge McClintock Manor Foundation Mothers Day Walkathon, 10 a.m. (registration starts at 9 a.m.) This in-person 5K and 1Km walk starts at 740 Pape and wends through the neighbourhood, and includes a post walk BBQ and prizes. Our fundraising goal is to raise $40,000 to upgrade our resident’s activity room. Registration is required. Contact Gwen at foundation@nisberlodge.com

MAY 13: Dorothy Cotton Jubilee Singers at Grant AME Church, 2029 Gerrard St. E., 7 p.m. Enjoy a free music-filled evening with the Dorothy Cotton Jubilee Singers from Ithaca, New York on their Spring Tour Concert. Info: grantamechurch@yahoo.ca, 416-690-5169

MAY 13: 55 Division Community Police Day at Jimmie Simpson Park, Queen St. E., 11 a.m.-2 p.m. rain or shine. Police vehicles on display, police horses, specialty units, bike safety, and more. Info: www.55cplc.ca/events

MAY 16: East York Farmers Market opening day at the East York Civic Centre, 850 Coxwell Ave., 8 a.m.-2 p.m.

MAY 20: Organ Recital (rescheduled!) with Stefani Bedin at Beach United Church, 140 Wineva Ave., 4:30 p.m. ORGAN STOPS - pianist and organist Bedin will perform a beautiful, varied program from Bach & more. Donations are welcome and proceeds support the Beach United food programs. Info: beachunitedchurch.com

MAY 20: Annual Spring Thaw Concert at Beaches Presbyterian Church, 65 Glen Manor Drive, 6 p.m. Featuring eclectic music in the indie pop, folk and jazz genres, with Ewen Farncombe, Emily Schultz and Zinnia, supported by Julian Anderson-Bowes, Leah Holtom, and Chris Pruden. Tickets $30, children under 12 free. Ticket includes a beverage of your choice – beer by Leftfield Brewing, wine, coffee and tea. Tickets available at door via e-transfer or cash. Net proceeds go to support the BPC Refugee Fund and ARISE ministries www.ariseministry.ca

MAY 26: Sunday Funday at RCL Branch 11, Clubroom, 9 Dawes Rd. 1-7 p.m. Entertainment: David Wildsmith 2-6 p.m. Dinner 4 p.m. Menu: Salzburg steak, potatoes, vegetables, dessert. Dinner Tickets $15 pp (cut off May 26). Dinner tickets sold at the Bar or Susan Squires 647-657-8817. No cover charge. All welcome.

MAY 27: R H McGregor Elementary School 100th year anniversary celebration at 555 Mortimer Ave., 1-4 p.m. School tours, historical archives, light refreshments, student performances and swag available for purchase. Info and RSVP at https://sites.google.com/view/rhmcgregor100/home

JUNE 3: Acoustic Harvest 25th Anniversary Gala Fundraiser at St. Paul’s United Church, 200 McIntosh St., 8 p.m. Acoustic Harvest is celebrating 25 years! Please join us for our Gala Anniversary Fundraiser! Tickets: Tickets: $40 at www.acousticharvest.ca or $45 at door. No Refunds.

JUNE 6: Community Centre 55 Annual General Meeting at 97 Main St., 7 p.m. for the purpose of considering and taking action with respect to the following: to approve the financial statements of Community Centre 55 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022; to receive our Program report; and to fill 1 vacancy on the Board of Management. Additional info: Reza Khoshdel, Executive Director, Community Centre 55 at 416-691-1113 ext. 225

JUNE 10: Bowmore Road Jr. and Sr. Public School 100th Anniversary Celebration, 12 noon-4 p.m. Student performances, school tours, refreshments, archives, school swag for purchase, and a carnival in the park. Free takeaway for first 200 visitors. Info and RSVP: https://sites. google.com/view/bowmores-100th-anniversary/home

JUNE 17: Slobberfest at the Leuty Pavilion on the Boardwalk, foot of Lee Ave., 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Hosted by Community Centre 55. Join the Pack Parade at 9 a.m. for a chance to be crowned Slobber King or Queen. Contests, vendors and more. Dogs must be leashed. Info: Jade 416-691-1113 ext 224, jade@centre55.com

KEW BEACH LAWN BOWLING CLUB & Croquet

Open Houses will be held May 28, June 3 and June 17, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Try it for free. Coaching and equipment provided. All ages welcome. Info: kewbeachlbcinfo@ gmail.com, 416-694-4371, www.kewbeachlbc.ca

BEACH INTERFAITH OUTREACH LUNCHES, 11 a.m. •Mondays at Corpus Christi Church (16 Lockwood Rd.). Sit in. Bag lunch. Chair lift. •Tuesdays – alternating locations: St. Nicholas Anglican Church (1512 Kingston Rd.), May 9. Hot meal. Wheelchair accessible.; St. Aidan’s Anglican Church, (2423 Queen St. E), May 2, 16. Bag lunch. Wheelchair accessible. Coffee available. •Wednesdays at Beaches Hebrew Institute (109 Kenilworth Ave.). Bag lunch. •Thursdays at Beach United Church (140 Wineva Ave.). Hot meal. Wheelchair accessible. •Fridays at Kingston Road United Church (975 Kingston Rd.). Hot meal. Wheelchair accessible. Please note: Lunch format may vary site to site. Last lunch is May 19. Info: 416-691-6869

ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION, 243 Coxwell Ave. •Seniors Luncheon at Royal Canadian Legion, 243 Coxwell Ave. 12:30 p.m. Doors open at 12 noon to a swing band with luncheon served shortly after. $5 for lunch, free for seniors 65 and over and veterans. May 2, May 16, May 30 and June 13 •BINGO every Sunday 2-5 p.m. in the Club Room. Please arrive 10 minutes earlier to get cards and a seat.

•May 6th DJ Derek 8 p.m., May 13th Hot Traxx Karaoke

8 p.m., May 20 Live Band - Reckless 8 p.m. All events in The Club Room. No cover charge. Info: 416-465-0120

BEACH PHOTO CLUB. Are you interested in photography? We invite all shutterbugs to check out our local photo club. We offer a range of activities including guest speakers, mentorship, opportunities to share your work, photo excursions, competitions, practical seminars and more! We meet the 1st and 3rd Thursday of each month from September to June, 7-9:30 p.m., at Beach United Church, 140 Wineva Ave. (unless specified in program). Info: beachphotoclub.com or email beachphotoclub@gmail.com

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS at Community Centre 55, 97 Main St., Saturdays

10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Info: 416-691-1113

AL- ANON at Community Centre 55, 97 Main St., Wednesdays 7:15 p.m. Alateen members are welcome to attend. Info: 416-691-1113

SPRING FOOD DRIVE - Calvary Baptist Church Food Bank, 72 Main St. Please help us feed families in need in this community by dropping off non-perishable food items Wednesdays 10 a.m.-1 p.m. or Thursdays 5-6 p.m., and/or make a donation (for a tax receipt) to Calvary Baptist Church (note it is for the food bank). Know that all donations will be used to feed our neighbours in need, on a weekly basis. Please check expiry dates prior to making donations. Info: gpcc@calvarybaptist-church.ca Adrienne Scott, Executive Director

CHURCHES

ST. SAVIOUR’S ANGLICAN CHURCH, 43 Kimberley Ave. (at Swanwick Ave.). All are welcome. Sunday services at 10:30 a.m. - both in person and via Zoom. Call the church for info: 416-699-6512. Outside Blessing Box - Take what you need, give what you can. Info: www.stsaviours.ca, www.facebook.com/ churchwithreddoor/. Sermons available on Proclamation! Podcast (now available for free on iTunes).

ST. AIDAN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH, 2423 Queen St. E. at Silver Birch welcomes you to join us for Sunday worship at 8:30 am in person, or at 10:30 am (with children & youth programs) in person or on Zoom. Wednesdays: Mid-week service, 10:30 am. Our energetic, active church offers varied opportunities for spiritual growth, vibrant Children’s and Music programs, Youth activities, and a strong commitment to action on social justice and environmental issues. Info: www.staidansinthebeach.com, 416-691-2222 BEACHES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 65 Glen Manor Drive. (S of Queen). We are an inclusive and affirming congregation in the heart of the Beach. BPC has strong commitments to community service and social justice issues. We provide non-perishable food for those in need through our Free Food Pantry located outside the church building. Our Refugee Commitee has been in operation for many years helping families and individuals arrive and start a new life in Canada. On the 2nd Wednesday of every month we host a Coffee Outreach from 1-3 p.m., an opportunity for people in the neighbourhood to gather for coffee, snacks and fellowship. May 16th at 7:30 p.m. there will be a film screening and discussion about Sex Trafficking for Victims and Survivors of Crime Week hosted by Tamara Cherry and ARISE Ministries. Our annual Spring Thaw concert is back on May 20th at 6 p.m. Sit back with a beverage and enjoy an evening of jazz and original songs. Proceeds go to support BPC’s Refugee Ministry and ARISE Ministry. Links and info: www.beacheschurch.org or 416699-5871. Minister: The Reverend Katherine McCloskey ST. JOHN’S CATHOLIC CHURCH, 794 Kingston Rd. Weekend Masses: Sat. Vigil at 4:30 pm, Sun. 9 & 11 am. Weekday Masses with Rosary: Tue. - Fri. Doors open and Rosary begins at 7:45 a.m. followed by Mass at 8:15 a.m. Confessions every Sat 3:45 to 4:15 p.m or by appt. Church website and phone: https://stjohnsto.archtoronto.org, 416-698-1105

GRANT AME CHURCH, 2029 Gerrard St. E. All are welcome every Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to worship service in-person, Facebook, ZOOM, or YouTube livestream with Pastor Kenesha Blake-Newell. Join us on our prayer line every Wednesday from 11a.m.-12 noon. Bible study on ZOOM every Wednesday at 7 p.m. We provide non-perishable food, fresh fruits and vegetables on Fridays from 3:30-6 p.m. at our food bank located in our fellowship hall. Registration is required. New clients must present identification for each household member. Links and info: www. grantame.com, grantamechurch@yahoo.ca, 416-690-5169

8 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023
Nathaniel Erskine-Smith M.P. Beaches-East York info@ beynate.ca 416 . 467. 0860
EAST TORONTO RCL BRANCH 11 S�����, M�� 28 club room 1:00-7:00pm meal served 4pm Free admission Meal �ckets $15/person available un�l May 26 from Susan Squires 647-657-8817 MAY: the month of 9 DAWES RD. 416-699-1353 1974 Queen St. East 416-690-5224 ...in the Beaches, 7 days a week www.seagullclassics.com BEACH LANDMARKS POSTER The Beach by Jennifer Cline Poster in a tube $29.95 Laminated plaque $89.95 • Fairney & Sons Home Improvements | Since 1971 Waterproofing Foundation Repair Concrete Work (all types) Masonry & Brickwork Interlocking • • • • • Roofing (all types) Siding & Eavestrough (all types) Kitchens & Baths Home Repair & Renovations Decks & Fences 416.659.7003 ALLWORK GUARANTEED FREE ESTIMATES Let’s Build Something Together - Call Us Today! LICENSED PROFESSIONALS TO TAKE CARE OF YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT NEEDS www.webuildit.ca Metropolitan Licence B531 Serving Your Community For Over 30 Years Happy Mother’s Day May 14

Open House, Pub Nights slated for Malvern’s 120th anniversary

‘Malvern’ from Page 1

and other students written on “gold” leaf. That then stopped, but Kaskens has returned the tradition of honouring the school’s scholars along the walls though no longer on the large wooden panels.

“When you walk the halls you are walking the history of the school,” she said.

Though she did not attend high school at Malvern, she also has a strong family connection to the school. A neighbourhood resident for 27 years, Kaskens’ daughter, stepdaughter and two stepsons all went to Malvern.

Randy Deflett, president of the Malvern Red and Black Society (which is the alumni association), attended the school in the 1970s and agreed that there has always been a closeness and strong sense of community among the students and the teachers at the school.

The vast majority of alumnae did their entire high school careers at Malvern and had lived in neighbourhood their whole lives so they also went to elementary schools together as well before going to Malvern, he said.

“We found that the vast majority had been there for the entirety, they didn’t just come for a year or two,” said Deflett.

“They were there for their whole high school career and for their public school as well. People don’t move, they stay here.” He said the connections that were built among the former students remain strong, and that is one of the reasons why there is so much interest in the upcoming 120th anniversary celebrations and the events surrounding it.

“I met my best friend there and still socialize with people from high school,” said Deflett. “Even if you moved out somewhere, the vast majority had positive memories of their time at Malvern.”

Organizers said there is interest by many who will be coming for the 120th anniversary to walk the halls of the school again, while for others the thought of the Pub Nights and meeting old friends from their high school years is what is making them look forward to May 13.

“The Red and Black Society found that

overwhelmingly people want to have the social events,” he said of the various Pub Nights and gatherings being organized for former students.

“Some also want the opportunity to go to back to the school once more.”

So far, he said more than 1,400 people are expected to attend the Open House at the school, while more than 600 tickets have been sold by the different Pub Night organizers. For those attending the Open House, all floors of the schools will be open with Decade Rooms also set up.

An official Welcome Ceremony is planned for 2 p.m. in the school auditorium that will feature a performance from the Malvern Alumni Band and the Alumni Quartet along with greetings from dignitaries.

The following Pub Nights and social gatherings have also been organized:

A Pub Night for students and staff from the 1940s (and before), the 1950s and the 1960s is set for the Tara Inn on Kingston Road in Scarborough. A Pub Night for students and staff from the early 1970s is at the Quarry Cafe on Gerrard Street East.

A celebration for students who attended in the middle 1970s is at the Ashbridge’s Bay Yacht Club starting at 6 p.m. This event is not organized by the Malvern Red and Black Society but any profits will be donated to the Society. For info on this gathering, go to www. eventbrite.ca/e/fifty-years-since-malvernmore-or-less-pub-nite-tickets-571139322087

A Pub Night for former students and staff from the late 1970s will be at the Royal Canadian Legion Hall Branch 13 on Kingston Road.

A Pub Night for students and staff from the 1980s and onwards is at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 73, on Robinson Avenue.

For Pub Night tickets, and more info on Malvern 120 celebrations, please visit the Malvern Red and Black Society’s website at https://malverncollegiate.com/events/reunions/mci-120/

Residents in the area of the school are reminded there will be additional cars in the neighbourhood on May 13 as those attending the Open House will be looking for parking.

Beach Metro Community News

Lucky Volunteers for May 2

This edition, Beach Metro Community News extends thanks to the Volcke Leskew family, who signed on in September 2021 to deliver the paper on Leuty Avenue. Shown are (clockwise from left) Tanya Volcke, Asher Leskew, Jack Leskew, and Greg Leskew.

“We decided to deliver the paper as a family since it would be a great ‘first job’ for our boys” Tanya wrote to us in an email. “It gives them a sense of pride and responsibility to ensure that each paper is carefully delivered and it helps to promote local news and businesses along the way. We’ve met several wonderful people along our paper route including one special lady and her dog who the boys really look forward to seeing.”

As Lucky Volunteers, Tanya and family will receive a gift certificate to Fearless Meat.

If you’re not receiving the Beach Metro at your home, there may be an opportunity for you to join our distribution team as a volunteer carrier on your street. Please contact Melinda Drake at melinda@beachmetro.com for info.

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Notre Dame students to perform at provincial finals of National Theatre School Drama Festival

STUDENTS AT Notre Dame

Catholic High School have been chosen to represent Toronto at the provincial championships of the National Theatre School Drama Festival.

Formerly known as the Sears Drama Festival, the National Theatre School Drama Festival sees thousands of students showcase their performance and production skills for a chance to win scholarships to theatre arts schools across Canada.

The drama students from Notre Dame were picked as one of two schools to represent Toronto at the festival’s Ontario Showcase set for

next week at the University of Toronto.

The Notre Dame students will perform their original rock musical, From the Wreckage

The provincial showcase will happen between May 10, and May 13, with evening performances at the Hart House Theatre at the University of Toronto, 7 Hart House Circle.

From the Wreckage is about a young musician struggling to find her voice. When she falls for a new girl Noa, she “must weigh the possibility of hurt, hoping to connect with love, art, selfdiscovery, and the future of rock n’ roll.”

This performance by

Notre Dame is completely original, with the script, music, and lyrics being developed by the students.

In addition to heading to the provincials in May, From the Wreckage was awarded the B.J. Castleman Best New Play Award and an award of Excellence for Production at the Toronto Regional Finals of the festival.

The official soundtrack for From the Wreckage was released in early April, and has already received 2,100 plays on SoundCloud.

For more information on the National Theatre School Drama Festival (presented by Scotiabank), please go to https://ent-nts.ca/en/intronts-dramafest-ontario

55 Division Community Police Day set for May 13 at Jimmie Simpson Park

THE 55 Division Community Police Liaison Committee will be hosting its Community Police Day on Saturday, May 13.

The event is taking place at Jimmie Simpson Park, 872 Queen St. E. at Booth Avenue, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The free Community Police Day event is open to everyone to attend.

It will include a variety of events including police vehicles and bicycle safety.

Slobberfest in the Beach slated for June 17 Community Centre 55 is inviting residents to pack up the pooch and head down to Slobberfest on Saturday, June 17, in the Beach.

The fun will take place at the Leuty Pavilion on the Boardwalk, at the foot of Leuty Avenue, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The event is a fundraiser for Community Centre 55.

Slobberfest will feature

a number of activities for dogs and their owners, and also dog-related displays by vendors. Schedule of events for Slobberfest includes the Pack Parade and crowning of the Slobber King and Slobber Queen beginning at 9 a.m. There will be a costume and fashion show starting at 9:30 a.m. and a number of other activities as well.

For more information on Slobberfest, please call Jade 416-691-1113, ext. 224.

Beach Metro News AGM set for June 14

THE ANNUAL general meeting of Ward 9 Community News Inc, the publisher of Beach Metro Community News, will be held on June 14, 2023, starting at 7 p.m., for the purpose of receiving the financial statement and reports of the officers and staff, to elect officers for the coming year, and to deal with any new business.

The meeting is open to members of the above association and will take place at the Beach Metro Community News office, 2196 Gerrard St.

E.

MEMBERSHIP is outlined in the newspaper’s Constitution, as follows:

“ 1. Any member of the community where the newspaper is distributed, who is willing to support the aims and objectives of the organization, will be accepted on payment of the current year’s fees ($5.00), and will be a member in good standing, and is eligible to vote if in attendance at the annual general meetings, as long as the current year’s fees are paid.

2. No member shall be under the age of sixteen.

3. No membership will be sold within seven days before the annual meeting (cut off date June 7, 5:00 p.m.).

4. All members of the distribution team, who have worked with the team for a minimum of six months in the year (continually since Dec. 22, 2022), shall be given an automatic membership in Ward 9 Community News Inc for the current year. There are two provisos:

a) Where the distributor is under age, the membership will be in the name of a parent or guardian.

b) Only one free membership will be allowed per family.”

(Distributors may check their status by contacting Melinda at 416-698-1164 ext.27 or emailing melinda@ beachmetro.com).

ELECTIONS are outlined in the newspaper’s Constitution as follows:

“1. Election of officers shall be held at the annual meeting.

2. Nomination for officers

of the organization shall be received in writing, addressed to the secretary by Friday, May 26, 2023 at 3 p.m. Nominations should be accompanied by a description of the nominee’s background with regard to the organization and the general community. The names of those seeking office, together with a brief biography, will be published in the issue of Beach Metro Community News immediately preceding the annual meeting (May 30 issue) in order that the membership be able to weigh the merits of each candidate and vote accordingly. Notice for the final date for receiving nominations shall be published in the two issues immediately preceding that date (May 2, and May 16, 2023).

3. Where more than one person is nominated for any office, the chairperson of the meeting shall count the ballots and declare the nominee receiving the most votes elected.

4. Nominees for the board and nominations shall be members of the Ward 9 Community News Inc. (See paragraphs on membership).

12 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 Join us at Redwood Stables Offering Summer Horse Camp and Lessons 7-Days a Week Redwood Stables offers: • All disciplines • Indoor arena • Heated viewing room • Outdoor ring • Cross-Country ring • Show Team • Miles of trails for hacks and trail rides Owned by a Beacher and as close to the Beaches neighbourhood as a full-service horse barn can be, Redwood Stables offers summer day camp for kids ages 6-13, and year-round lessons to riders of all ages and levels. info@redwoodstables.ca (416) 294-3237
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Jane’s Walks planned for East Toronto this weekend

A NUMBER of Jane’s Walks are planned for May, 5, 6 and 7 in the East Toronto area.

The walks are in honour of urbanist, activist and longtime Toronto resident Jane Jacobs, and celebrate the communities that make up Toronto.

Local walks include:

• Water Ways: Histories of the Don on Friday, May 5, from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. This walk looks at the connection between water and community in the Don Valley and will be led by an Evergreen Brick Works volunteer.

“Everything you are – everything you know – it has been shaped by water. You are made of water, you need water, and the land upon which you stand is an intricate sculpture carved by ancient waterways. But just as water carves, it also builds: systems and communities and history,” said Evergreen Brick Works of this walk. “In the Don Valley, these themes coalesce, and at the Brick Works, the story of water and community is alive.”

Participants will meet in front of the Water Shed Wall at the Evergreen Brick Works, 550 Bayview Ave. The walk will begin and end at the Water Shed Wall as it travels a loop through the Don Valley and Brick Works site.

Those attending are reminded that a free shuttle

bus runs to the Brick Works from just north of Broadview station.

• Creating a New Park: West Scarborough Rail Trail on Saturday, May 6, from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. This walk looks at the Scarborough Junction area and follows a hydro corridor and abandoned rail lines. The walk is led by Sam Wong of the Scarborough Junction community.

“First proposed more than 50 years ago by University of Toronto students, the West Scarborough Rail Trail has garnered renewed interest from Scarborough Junction community members due to an increase in planned and proposed development in the area,” said the organizer.

Participants will meet at Warden Hilltop Community Centre, 25 Mendelssohn St., just off Warden Avenue and north of St. Clair Avenue and the Warden subway station.

• Don Valley: Past, Present and Future Opportunities on Sunday, May 7, from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. This walk looks at the southern end of the Don River and will be led by Floyd Ruskin and friends.

“Before the 1790s, the Don Valley was wild and unspoiled. Over the next two centuries, the river was harnessed, channelled, polluted, moved and ignored,” said the organizers. “This walk

will look at how humans have impacted the valley and how it is being reclaimed as vital green space at the heart of the city.”

Participants will meet at St. Matthew’s Clubhouse, 450 Broadview Ave. The walk will conclude at Todmorden Mills, 67 Pottery Rd.

• Bain Co-op: it takes a village walk is on Sunday, May 7, from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. This walk looks at the more the history of the Bain Co-op in Riverdale. The walk be led by Bain residents Alice Dixon and Laura Sikstrom.

“Built as Riverdale Courts in 1913/14, it is one of Canada’s earliest examples of social housing. Its aim was quality affordable housing for workers, including single working women. It was designed by Toronto Arts and Craft’s architect Eden Smith, who imbued the development with an air of quality, respectability, and as it turns out, functionality,” said the organizers. “The co-operative was formed as one of Canada’s first, by residents in 1974. Thus it remains social housing today.”

Participants will meet at the northwest corner of Bain and Logan avenues. The walk will end within one block of the starting point.

For more on Jane’s Walk, please go to www.janeswalkfestivalto.com

Beach Metro Community News Supporter Today Three easy ways to donate: 1 QR CODE Scan this QR code 2 ONLINE www.beachmetro.com/support 3 MAIL or CALL US 2196 Gerrard St. E. Toronto, ON, M4E 2C7 alan@beachmetro.com 416-698-1164 It’s here! from every dip purchased in MAY supports kids! Maya varietyontario.ca/thatsamore LEARN MORE Emal

Far from slowing down, ageless wonders are still active on screen

Reel Beach: Movies in East Toronto Bernie Fletcher

On Earth Day, April 22, the Fox Theatre hosted a screening of What You Won’t Do for Love presented by our local Beaches-East York MPP Mary-Margaret McMahon. The film shares the love that environmental activists Dr. David Suzuki and Dr. Tara Cullis feel for each other and for our planet.

It poses the question: What if we loved the planet as deeply as the couple love each other?

“I don’t think that we as a society think very much about what kind of world we are leaving to our grandchildren.”

-- David Suzuki

At 87 years young Dr. Suzuki signed off as host of The Nature of Things on April 7 after over 40 years at the helm.

Modern society should

listen to the Wisdom of the Elders as Suzuki titled one of his many books.

Suzuki isn’t the only ageless wonder hitting our screens and streets these days.

Toronto is having a senior

moment.

Age is just a number to Hollywood stars like Arnold Schwarzenegger who was spotted cycling around the city last summer while filming the eight-episode spy thriller FUBAR for Netflix

(out May 25).

Arnie’s back, baby!

The Terminator star shot action sequences on a sailboat on Lake Ontario (near Ashbridges Bay or Bluffer’s Park?). Arnie’s True Lies co-star Tom Arnold filmed a

fight scene in the Beach.

Don’t go using the “o” word (“old”) around Arnie. (He’s 75…shhh!) He’s liable to toss you in the lake.

“Hasta la vista, baby”!

“It’s a Jungle Out There” -- Monk theme song

From Monk to Matlock everything old is new again.

(Tell that to my knees!)

A spry 69-year-old Tony Shalhoub is here in Toronto this month filming

Mr. Monk’s Last Case: A Monk Movie (streaming on Peacock).

Shalhoub credits COVID-19 as the “driving force” behind the return of the obsessive-compulsive detective Adrian Monk “because everyone was wondering, ‘What would Monk be doing during and post pandemic?’

So that’s kind of where we find the character when we open the movie.”

Although set in San Francisco, the first season of Monk (2002-2009) was actually filmed in Toronto.

In the episode Mr. Monk Takes a Holiday Bluffer’s Park Beach stood in for a resort (photo, above left). Even scarier than Arnie is Kathy Bates’ character in Misery (1990) which won the 74-year-old an Oscar. Bates was in town last month filming a genderswapping reboot of Matlock for CBS.

It’s a reworking of the legal drama starring Andy Griffith which ran from 1986 to 1995.

Last, but not least, Richard Gere, still a heartthrob at 73, was here for Longing, a feature film about a man searching for his long-lost son.

Some say you’re only as old as you feel. (Tell that to my hips…hips don’t lie.)

Remember, respect your elders. You might run into the Terminator or worse, Kathy Bates.

“Face it, girls, I’m older and I have more insurance.”

-- Fried Green Tomatoes, 1991

14 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 04-2022 Mother's Day Weekend 15% OFF on Everything Spa for Mom Includes all bath and beauty products, essential oils, incense, and candles. Enjoy an herbal tea while you shop. Enter to WIN one of three gift baskets. Moms receive a free bedding plant while quantities last. Saturday May 13 & Sunday May 14 2136 Queen St. E. 416.699.3747 beaches@hoopershealth.com Mon. – Fri. 9 – 7 | Sat. 9 – 5 | Sun. 11 – 4 1978 Queen St. E., 416 907 2029 www.charmingparrot.com @shopcharmingparrot charmingparrot NEW ARRIVALS WEEKLY! 30-50% OFF SELECTED ITEMS! CLOTHING ACCESSORIES FOOTWEAR GIFTS CANDLES BODY CARE KIDS Imported Gifts & Sterling Silver Jewellery Family Owned and Operated since 1990! The Artisans Stay Safe and Healthy. 1974A Queen Street East | 416.690.1663 Mother’s Day Sunday, May 14 Honour Mom with a Gift as Unique as She Is
Tony Shalboub, in suit and hat, sits on the Bluffer’s Park Beach in Scarborough during filming of the Monk episode Mr. Monk Takes a Holiday.
15 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023

HEALTH

DR. KARIN RUMMELL & ASSOCIATES OPTOMETRISTS

1914 Queen St. E. (E. of Woodbine) Mon.- Sat. by appointment 416-691-5757

BALSAM DENTAL Family Dentistry * Open 6 days a week * * Evening hours available * New patients always welcome 2200 Queen St. East (at Balsam) 416-691-8555 www.balsamdental.com

BEACHES OPTOMETRY CLINIC

Dr. Linda Chan, Optometrist and Associates 951 Kingston Rd. (West of Victoria Park) 416-691-1991

DR. LINDA WINTER Psychologist Consultations • Therapy

Individuals • Couples Over 20 years experience. Located at Queen & Wheeler 416-691-1071

Dr. Linda Iny Lempert Psychologist & Psychoanalyst Individuals & Couples Services disponibles en français Insurance Coverage 47 Main Street (at Lyall Ave) 416-694-4380 www.drlempert.ca

PSYCHOTHERAPY

Tara Shannon M.Ed. Counselling Psychology, RP Registered Psychotherapist Psychotherapy for Individuals and Couples Insurance clients welcome Evening & weekend sessions available 579 Kingston Rd (corner Main) 416 698-6960 tara@tarashannon.ca

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

WELLNESS missfit.ca

in-home personal trainer 416 888 6465 mimi@missfit.ca

SPIRITUAL

CHARTERED

Beaches Family Law and MEDIATION

Linda Bronicheski, J.D. 47 Main Street (at Lyall) 416-763-6884 Linda@BeachesFamilyLaw.com

Shelly Pereira, Paralegal

Janet D’Arcy DC, FRCCSS (C) Chiropractor Sports Injury Specialist 2455A Queen St. East 416 690-6257 Open Saturdays

William F. Deneault Chartered Accountant

• Corporate & Personal Tax

• Specializing in small to medium business

• Financial advice 21 St. Clair Avenue East, Suite 502 Tel: (416) 962-2186

Kriens LaRose, LLP

Chartered Professional Accountants

• Accounting services for owner-managed businesses.

• Personal and corporation income tax preparation.

• Audit and consulting services for not-for-profit organizations www.krienslarose.com 416-690-6800

Melani Norman CPA, CMA Accounting Issues and Systems, Bookkeeping, Personal and Corporate Taxes Call 416-471-0337

COUNSELLING

Catherine Allon, BSc, MEd Caring Solutions for Relationship Issues 416-694-0232

www.energyawakening.com

Spiritual Counselling

CHRISTINE KATO, B.Sc., D.V.M.

ANIMAL HOSPITAL

in the comfort of your own home.

Dr. Barbara Houghton 647-221-5516

Emily C. Larimer CPA, CGA BOOKKEEPING & PERSONAL TAX RETURNS INCLUDING TAXES IN ARREARS Call: 416-693-2274 emily@eclarimercpa.com www.eclarimercpa.com

Patrick Ruiz Professional Corporation CPA, CA An accountant you can count on For your Small Business Self-employed income & investments Real Estate Rentals 647-300-4062 • patrick@prtaxcpa.com

Dashwood & Dashwood Barristers & Solicitors

Geoffrey J. Dashwood 961 Kingston Rd. Tel. 416-690-7222 Toronto, M4E 1S8 Fax. 416-690-8738

Snider & DiGregorio Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries. 978 Kingston Road, Toronto, Ont., M4E 1S9

Tel: 416-699-0424

Fax: 416-699-0285 Email: info@sdlegal.ca

O’Reilly, Moll & Mian Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public 300 Main Street 416-690-3324

DENISE BADLEY-CASTELLO

Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Family • Wills & Estates Real Estate 2069 Danforth Ave. (Woodbine) 416-690-6195 dbadleylaw@rogers.com

KATHRYN WRIGHT

Barrister & Solicitor Family Law & Mediation

416-699-8848

2239 Queen Street East www.kathrynwrightlaw.com kathrynwrightlaw@gmail.com

GARRY M. CASS

BARRISTER & SOLICITOR, TEP Wills/Estate Administration/Advice to Estate Trustees 416-767-CASS (2277) x 207 416-795-4899 (cell) 416-491-0273 (fax) garry@garrycass.com

Kirsten Johnson B.Sc, DipTIRP, RP Psychotherapy for Individuals/Couples

LGTBQ+ / Anxiety / Depression more... Insurance welcome BeyondTheBlueTherapy.com

Glover & Associates

Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries

Real Estate, Family, Litigation Wills & Estates, Corporate 416-691-3700

Queen and Hammersmith

Commissioner/Notary, Small Claims, Landlord & Tenant/other Tribunals, Municipal Offences, Letters & Mediation. Call for a Free 30 min. Consultation 647-693-6240 Toronto info@toronto-paralegal.net

Peter J. Salah Family Law Lawyer 124 Merton Street, Suite 300 We Collaborate, Negotiate & Litigate 416.752.8128 peter@salahlaw.ca www.salahlaw.ca

KAMRULHAFIZAHMED

REAL ESTATE LAWYER 416 690 1855 [P 416 690 1866 [F 2972 DANFORTH AVE.

QUINN Family Law

Shelley C. Quinn, LL.B., LL.M. (Family Law) 662 Broadview Ave. t. (416) 551-1025 www.QuinnFamilyLaw.ca

John H. BJARNASON, D.C. Chiropractor 1906 Queen St. E. (1 block east of Woodbine) 416-694-2868

BEACHES WELLNESS CENTRE Dr. Johanna Carlo Chiropractic & Registered Massage Therapy 2130 Queen Street East 416-698-7070

ASHBRIDGE’S HEALTH CENTRE

Dr. Emily Howell & Associates Chiropractic, Acupuncture, Orthotics ashbridgeshealth.janeapp.com 1522 Queen St. E. 416-465-5575 www.ashbridgeshealth.ca

MASSAGE THERAPY

advancedapproaches massage.com Su Willson, B.MUS, R.M.T. & ASSOC 927 Kingston Rd. (W. of Vic Pk) • Open 7 Days a week • Voted “#1 Spa and Best Massage Therapist in Toronto” 416-694-6767

Stephen G. King, Architect B. Arch. OAA, MRAIC “Serving the Beach since 1987”

Residential, Restorations, Home Inspections, Commercial, Interiors, Landscapes

COMPLETE PROJECT SERVICES FROM DESIGN THROUGH CONSTRUCTION (416) 694-8181

www.stephenkingarchitect.com

Member Ontario Association of Architects

Jen Goddard, R.M.T. Neville Park Health Group 2455A Queen St. East 416-690-6257

FUNERAL SERVICES eco Cremation & Burial Services Inc. Life Celebrations.

Done Differently. In Service with St. John’s Norway Cemetery & Crematorium. 647.660.5056 www.ecofuneral.ca
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16 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023
ACCOUNTANT Bert van Delft Complete financial services for the business owner, manager, entrepreneur & self-employed Corporate and Personal Income Tax Services Bus: 416-270-9898 98 Scarboro Beach Blvd.
THERAPY LOUNGE Megan Evans, RMT, CRHP & Associates Massage Therapy • Reflexology 2245 Queen St. East • 2nd floor • Open 7 days per week • www.therapylounge.ca 416-916-7122
CALM THERAPEUTICS Stephanie Gage, RMT Kristina Pearsal, RMT 1789 Queen St. East, Unit 6 www.urbancalm.ca 416-698-3157 CHIROPRACTORS INSURANCE Leane Besky Insurance Agency Inc. DESJARDINSINSURANCE Auto, Home, Life, Critical Illness, Disability, New & Used Vehicle Loans 2243 Queen St. E. 416-690-7900 www.leanebesky.com VETERINARIANS ARCHITECTURE/DESIGN LAWYERS/LEGAL Cont. LAWYERS/LEGAL ACCOUNTING Lisa Romano-Dwyer
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SERVICES Guardian Mortgages Kinga and Allen Chin Commercial / Residential / Investor Services P: 416-315-0355 955A Kingston Rd, Toronto, M3E 1S8 E: info@guardianmortgages.ca W:www.guardianmortgages.ca Serving the Beaches & GTA Powered by Mortgage Architects License #12728 Divorce Doesn’t Have to be Adversarial: Choose Collaborative Practice BRIAR DOWNEY - FAMILY LAWYER DOWNEY LAW 674 Kingston Rd @ Main briar@downeylaw.ca 416-915-3173 Carolyn Dallman Downes Registered Psychotherapist Depression, Anxiety, Grief, Relationships. www.CarolynDallmanDownes.com 416-363-0065 PARLIAMENTARIAN Difficult Meetings? A Professional Parliamentarian can help with training and advice. MichaelMouritsen.ca Real Estate, Wills & Estates Alessandra P. Goulet Barrister & Solicitor 1637 Gerrard Street East Toronto, ON M4L 2A7 Tel: 647-496-7956 Cell: 416-702-7131 Fax: 647-243-2482 Monica Dhanraj RN REIKI MASTER/SPIRITUAL HEALER Golden Energy Healing Transformation ~~Raise your awareness of self~~ soulconnections11@outlook.com 647.887.5501 Design INGenuity Modify your home in order to stay home, without moving to a retirement home. We will help you design and renovate it nicely! 416-704-5533 diane900000@icloud.com www.designINGenuity.ca NEXT DEADLINE May 8 CAROL-ANN’S PERSONAL TRAINING Specializing in STABILITY, MOBILITY and STRENGTH • CEP-CSEP girlonbike1@gmail.com 416-465-8941 References Available Upon Request /BeachMetroNews @beachmetro www.beachmetro.com/support @beachmetronews BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS 50 ANNIVERSARY 1972•2022 Subscribe to our e-newsletter at beachmetro.com/mailchimp-subscription or visit beachmetro.com and click the NEWSLETTER button on the homepage IN THE NEWS THIS WEEK Kerry Bowser WEDDING OFFICIANT kerry@kerrybowser.com www.kerrybowser.com 416-807-3094 Free Consultation Available Interested in advertising your business in our Professional Directory? Contact carolin@beachmeto.com or 416-698-1164 x 22 for rates. Your Professional Directory ad also appears on our website: beachmetro.com
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Deja Views

Remembering Mac’s Milk in the 1970s

How many Beachers remember Mac’s Milk? Once, they were everywhere.

This photograph at the top of the page was taken sometime in the 1970s. The view is looking northward on Kingston Road standing on Queen Street East.

Do you have an old photo of Queen Street East or Kingston Road? Why not share it with our readership? Please contact me at: gdvandyk61@gmail.com

Art show and sale set for Queensbury Ave.

EAST TORONTO residents are invited to an art show and fundraising event on the weekend of May 27 and 28.

The Art Show-Sale at 64A Queensbury Ave. in southwest Scarborough will help raise funds for the Inspire: Educating Indigenous Youth organization.

The works of 16 artists working in mediums from ceramics to painting to textiles will be featured at the show. Show times are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on May 27 and 28.

The show flows through the house and into the backyard. There will be refreshments and treats.

Community Centre 55

AGM on June 6

THE ANNUAL General

Meeting (AGM) of the members of Community Centre 55 will be held on Tuesday, June 6, at 7 p.m.

The meeting will take place at Community Centre 55, located at 97 Main St.

The purpose of the AGM is considering and taking action with respect to the following: to approve the financial statements of Community Centre 55 for the fiscal year ended Dec. 31, 2022; to receive the Program report; and to fill one vacancy on the Board of Management.

For additional information on the Community Centre 55 AGM, please contact Reza Khoshdel, Executive Director, Community Centre 55 at 416-691-1113 ext. 225.

17 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 ONLINE, PHONE, DELIVERY, CURBSIDE, ONSITE WE’RE OPEN FOR YOU! 1618 Gerrard St. E. 647 352 6066 furballspetstuff@gmail.com Your Neighbourhood Pet Store We may be small but we carry it all! Come visit us and bring your furry friends too. WE OFFER FREE DELIVERY! 249 Coxwell Ave - Ph: 416 463 1164 www.butlersapplianceservice.com Parts Radio/TV Appliances Proudly Serving The Neighborhood For Over 93 Years Home Service – Major Appliances THE FOOT GUY David Allison, D. Ch. CHIROPODIST 952 Kingston Rd., Suite 207 416.691.4348 info@thefootguy.ca www.thefootguy.ca Call us: 416•556•8368 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE • 7 DAYS A WEEK Residential • Commercial Furnaces • Boilers • Air Conditioning Preventative Maintenance & Safety Inspections Repairs • Installations All Makes and Models • Licensed and Knowledgeable Technicians Book an estimate today! Nathaniel Erskine-Smith M.P. Beaches-East York info@ beynate.ca 416 . 467. 0860
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By Jayson Dimanno

will be presenting the theatrical musical The Nae Project (The Rice Seedling) this month.

The show, which Kusano also performs in, mixes Japan’s theatrical, musical, and festival traditions to examine a story of extreme human pain, compassion, and determination Nae will be on stage from May 5 to 7 at the Harbourfront Centre.

“We’re most excited to share it with people who are not of Japanese background,” said Kusano in an interview with Beach Metro Community News

“We took this play, which was written a couple of years ago, and was written all in Japanese. We wanted to make it more accessible to the audience. We captioned it in English and Japanese; more than 70 per cent was converted into English.”

Kusano added that the production kept the Japanese for the poetry and some of the music as Japanese was the language that sounded and felt right.

The story of Nae is about Kusano going through a hard time in life, with his father dealing with bone

PHOTO: SUBMITTED

The Nae Demon is shown from the production of The Nae Project (The Rice Seedling) which takes the stage at the Harbourfront Centre starting on May 5. marrow cancer. Kusano said this was a “dark, depressing time.”

In the performance, he uses the arts to cope with his emotions. Given what many people have dealt with over the past few years, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, there is a lot that people can relate to, he said, as the characters express these thoughts and feelings in the story.

“It is not a story meant to directly relate to my experience. It talks about people dealing with circumstances that are out of their control and how people persevere through these situations,” said Kusano.

Born and raised in the Beach, Kusano’s mother is of Scottish descent (from Northern Ontario), and his father is of Japanese descent (born in Neys, Ontario). When his father moved to Toronto, they settled in the Riverdale area. His grandfather had a house along Courcelette Road for many years, and Kusano himself grew up in Upper Beaches on Kingswood Road while attending Kew Beach and Adam Beck schools growing up.

“I’ve always bounced back to the Beaches,” he said. “It’s funny because it has changed over the years, but it does not change all that much over time.”

Kusano said he has played many instruments and covered many different musical genres over the years, something that traditional Japanese composers usually do not do, as they only specialize in one genre and one instrument. However, he plays the Shinobue (transverse bamboo flute) and the Shakuhachi (vertical bamboo flute), but Kusano said his favourite is the drums.

“I love the drumming. It is a big part of the performance,” said Kusano, who performed with the Taiko Drumming Team when he

was younger. The Nae Project is about much more than the music, he said.

“It is not about the acrobatic musical performances or the musical performers as the centre stage, but how can we complement the costumes, the acting, and the story with the music we play,” said Kusano. “That is the project I wanted to create. This is what the production has become, and I am very pleased with it.”

He said he hopes The Nae Project can go on to play to audiences across the country as some of the other performers are also from Quebec, British Columbia and Alberta.

“[I] hope we have a successful launch and promote it where people want to see it. It was originally written to be performed at the Japanese Cultural Centre in Toronto, but they were not available,” he explained, hoping to find a later date to perform there.

Showtimes at the Harbourfront Centre are 8 p.m. on May 5; 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. on May 6, and 2 p.m. on May 7. For more info about the performances and to purchase tickets, visit https://.harbourfrontcentre.com/event/ nae-the-rice-seedling

Beach residents campaign for the release of Canadian Huseyin Celil

WHEN THE “two Michaels,” Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, were incarcerated in China in 2019, they became the focus of national attention. After nearly three years, 1019 days to be exact, they were set free.

But another Canadian unjustly imprisoned still languishes behind bars in China. He is Huseyin Celil, held for 17 years and counting.

Beach residents and other members of Amnesty International Group 164/123 (Toronto East) are campaigning to win his release. They ask local residents who share their concern about human rights to take part in a postcard campaign to bring this man home. Everyone is welcome to pick up a prepared postcard from one of the locations below, sign it, and mail it. It’s addressed to China’s ambassador to Canada and urges him to press his government to release Celil.

The two Michaels were incarcerated in retaliation for the house arrest in Canada of Meng Wanzhou, wanted on a U.S. warrant for bank fraud in connection with the technology firm Huawei. That story ended well for the two Michaels. Both were set free within 24 hours of Meng’s return to China after she obtained a deferred prosecution agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice. Meanwhile, Celil’s story goes on with little attention and no release in sight.

In 2001, Celil knew he had to get out of China – as an Imam in northwest China, peacefully advocating for the rights of Uyghurs to practice their religion, he had already been imprisoned for 18 months. On his release, he went to Uzbekistan where he met, and eventually married, Kamila Talendibaeva. After obtaining refugee status from the United Nations Human Rights Commission, Celil made his way to Canada and settled with his family in Burlington.

In 2005, Celil obtained his Canadian citizenship and in 2006 the family made a fateful trip to Uzbekistan to visit his wife’s parents who were in poor health. Unbeknownst to him, China had an extradition arrangement with Uzbekistan that resulted in his detention and transfer to China. There, he was charged with terrorism and “splitism,” the pursuit of factional interests independent of the official Communist Party

position. Celil’s trial was a sham with no evidence linking him to terrorism. During his trial, authorities prevented him from speaking to his lawyer or presenting evidence on his own behalf. Though a Canadian citizen, he was denied consular representation. Initially, Celil was sentenced to death, which was later commuted to life in prison. In 2018 his sentence was changed to 20 years, starting afresh! Since 2016, no one has been able to contact him; both his location and the status of his health are unknown and he has been denied, and has never received, consular visits. His trial and imprisonment mocks China’s commitment to abide by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and violates China’s own constitutional guarantee of the right to freedom of expression.

In lobbying for Celil’s immediate release, Group 164/123, along with several other groups across Canada, conduct such activities as letter-writing campaigns to Canadian and Chinese government officials and raising money to support Celil’s wife and four sons, one of whom he has never met. The goal of the current postcard campaign is to send over 2,000 cards to the Chinese ambassador. In his speech to Canada’s Parliament on March 24, U.S. President Joe Biden made this remark about “our” citizens: “They’re human beings with lives and families that must be respected. And I’m very glad to see the two Michaels, Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, are safely back with their families after more than 1,000 days — 1,000 days in detention.” A standing ovation followed for the two Michaels seated in the gallery. Sadly, no mention was made of our other citizen, Huseyin Celil.

-- Written by Andrew Wilson and Brian Deming on behalf of Group 164/123 Toronto East. Postcards can be picked up at: Beach Metro News, 2196 Gerrard St. E.; Beaches Recreation Centre, 6 Williamson Rd. – see the Community Bulletin Board in the lobby; or, Juice & Java Café, 2102 Queen St. E. – see the Community Board upstairs. This article is based on research provided by Amnesty International and a white paper published by the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights. Amnesty International Group 164/123 meets the first Tuesday of every month. For info, email ai164toronto@gmail.com

18 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023
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Beacher Kokichi Kusano presents The Nae Project at Harbourfront

Beach Memories

Reflecting on history of local parks

Gene domAGAlA

Iwas in Kew Gardens watching and listening to the breeze whistling through the trees; watching people walk and play and enjoy the park all through the day.

I often wondered did they know the origin of these parks and recreation areas in our city, and how they began and grew?

So here, dear Beachers, is a short history of our parks and recreation in the great City of Toronto.

One of the first parks in Toronto was referred to as Garrison Common, located in the west end of the city near Old Fort York around 1840. Even further west was High Park, owned by John G. Howard and donated to the city in 1873.

Towards the east in 1861 was Allan Gardens with its historical horticultural glass building. There was also a part not as well known in the King Street and Bathurst Street area known as Victoria Square. This park also served as a cemetery to our soldiers buried there during the War of 1812.

There were parks-andrecreation-minded people also involved in the building of programs for the city. In 1884 the city appointed John Chambers as the first Superintendent of Parks. In 1903, recreation programs were introduced and were held in schools prior to permanent recreation centres which came at a later date.

Brown formed what was called The City Playground – forerunner of the modern playgrounds in the city.

A couple of years later, S.H. Armstrong was named Chief Supervisor of the Playgrounds and Recreation Branch of the Parks Department. He was responsible for bringing in new ideas and programs that stabilized the parks and rec system. In his honour they named a city playground after S.H. Armstrong in the East End.

Later, another innovator and executive in the parks department named George Bell was responsible for the building of the city’s Parks and Recreation system in 1955.

In 1965, the person who became most responsible for building the modern Parks and Recreation community centres was Ivan Forrest, a Beach resident. He became Parks Commissioner, and Ivan Forrest Gardens in the Beach is named after him.

Now we come to the Riverdale area. The land for Riverdale Park was purchased by the city in 1856, the Riverdale Zoo opened in 1894.

Kew Gardens opened in 1907 when the city purchased 20 acres from Joe Williams for park purposes for the residents of the area, for programs and events.

legendary local sportsman and journalist Ted Reeve, a skating rink was opened in 1954.

There are just too many rinks, pools, wading pools and more across the city to mention them all. Our parks also have tennis courts, baseball diamonds, soccer fields, lawn bowling, fitness trails and more. The community centres offer programs for seniors and children, and fitness facilities and training for all ages.

Readers should know that the wading pool in Kew Gardens was built with donations from the Lions Club in the 1950s. Let’s end on some programs and centres in our Beach community.

The Donald D. Summerville Pool in 1963 was named in honour of the late Mayor Summerville who died while taking part in a charitable activity.

And if I do say so myself, the jewel of all recreation centres in the city – the Beaches Recreation Centre on Williamson Road – was opened in 1972.

We also have Community Centre 55 on Main Street at Swanwick Avenue in what used to be the former police station.

Canadian Navigable Waters Act

Ordinary people became involved in 1911. A group of citizens formed under the leadership of Mr. C. A.

In later years, there have been many more playgrounds, swimming pools (both indoor and outdoor), ice rinks and more built in city parks and as part of community centres. The first indoor pool was at the John Innes Recreation Centre, on Sherbourne Street, in 1953. The first indoor skating rinks operated by the city were introduced in 1951.

Locally, in honour of

A reminder I will be conducting an historical walk on Saturday, May 13. It will be along Queen Street East. It starts at 1 p.m. at Corpus Christi Catholic Church, at Lockwood Road and Queen Street East, and then travels east along Queen to finish at Beach United Church on Wineva Avenue. Along the walk we will see the Beach Fire Hall, just east of Woodbine Avenue; the Beach Hebrew Institute on Kenilworth Avenue; a number of old theatre locations and more.

submission has been added to the Common Project Search (online pursuant to the paragraph Common a description

Canadian Navigable Waters Act - Public Notice

The City of Toronto Economic Development Corporation c.o.b. CreateTO hereby gives notice that a submission has been added to the Common Project Search (online registry) pursuant to the Canadian Navigable Waters Act described herein and its description.

Pursuant to paragraph 4.1 and 9.1 of the said Act, the City of Toronto Economic Development Corporation c.o.b. CreateTO has deposited with the Minister of Transport, on the on-line Common Project Search Registry (http://cps.canada.ca/) and under registry number 7636, a description of the following work:

Critical Dockwall Repairs in, on, over, under, through or across Toronto Inner Harbour (Ship Channel and Turning Basin) at 0 and 109 Basin Street, located at (43.650680, 79.333710) Toronto Harbour, City of Toronto, Ontario, in front of 29 to 75 Basin Street and 475 Commissioners Street, Toronto, Ontario.

Posted at Toronto, Ontario this 2nd day of May, 2023

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Scarborough Music Theatre’s Godspell set to take the stage from May 4 to 20

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Godspell first opened OffBroadway in 1971 where it ran for more than five years.

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A Toronto production the following year featured such future luminaries as Eugene Levy, Gilda Radner, Martin Short, Victor Garber and Paul Schaffer.

Presented through songs, games and biblical parables, Godspell explores the story of eight individuals who are searching for answers in a fractured and fractious world.

It features many wellloved songs such as Day by Day, which reached Number Seven on the Canadian Top Singles list.

Many people make the mistake in thinking that Godspell is a dated, 1970s poprock Jesus musical at the tail end of the free love movement. This show is about so

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It’s about the discovery and formation of a community and a sense of belonging.

In 2023, we are seeing the world grow further apart, communities being bifurcated, people shouting at each other on social media.

The Scarborough Music

Theatre production of Godspell shows what happens when people stop shouting, and instead come together to spread the word of love and acceptance – oh, and have a lot of fun along the way!

The show runs from May 4 to 20 at the Scarborough Village Theatre, 3600 Kingston

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Rd., on the northeast corner of Markham Road.

Tickets are available at https://theatrescarborough. com/scarborough-music-theatre/productions/godspell/ or by calling the box office at 416-267-9292. Use the discount code BEACHES for a 10 per cent discount.

The Redwood Theatre on Gerrard Street East welcomes Bill King from Beaches Jazz Festival as artistic director

IN AN unassuming yet blossoming region of Toronto, The Redwood Theatre, at 1300 Gerrard St. E. (just east of Greenwood Avenue) is thriving.

The Redwood Theatre was originally built as a vaudeville theatre in 1914. It was a cinema until the late 1950s, when it became a Pennyworths Department Store Warehouse. The interior reflects that history.

Born as The Classic Theatre and home to the most inviting vaudeville performers at the turn of the last century, the Classic strengthened with the times.

In the 1940s and 1950s, the theatre adapted, introducing the ‘talkies.” From 1956 until the late 1980s it operated as Pennyworth’s department store. Then, in 2005, the Zero Gravity Circus rented the theatre, and began presenting cabarets and offering aerial circus classes.

In 2017, Maria Karam and Rob Indrigo took over operations. The couple introduced a farmer’s market and began programming various musical and theatrical events.

As with many clubs and events spaces, COVID-19 placed a heavy burden on those established and those on the upswing, bringing closure as we sat out the darkest hours of the pandemic. Many of the most endearing and dependable establishments vanished. Those who

endured reap the benefits.

Prior to COVID, it was all about north, east, west, and south. There were plenty of facilities within driving or TTC distance one could inhabit for a night of live entertainment. Not so much now. The escalating price of real estate and owners unwilling to open entertainment venues is changing the way we view our city.

We now migrate wherever there may be music, social interaction, and demographics that speak to us.

The Redwood Theatre engages an audience willing to factor in a few extra moments of travel time in search of a safe, high-end social experience where music and the arts are the backdrop of a grand night out.

“It was Whisky Jack’s Duncan Fremin who made several attempts to coax me farther east than I’d ventured the past three years,” said Bill King, the new artistic director.

“I spent 30 years biking and riding transit as artistic director for the Beaches International Jazz Festival and now Director of Strategies and Engagement for SING! Toronto’s International Vocal Arts Festival. Those memories of Kew Gardens, the street scene, burn in my heart to this day. I love the community and those bands – Jeff Healey, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Lar-

nell Lewis, Archie Alleyne, Emilie-Claire-Barlow, Joey DeFrancesco, Trombone Shorty, Angelique Francis – bringing music of this calibre to the east end was always a passion and mission of mine.”

King sees the future, and it’s the Redwood Theatre.

“The moment I met theatre owner Maria Karam, I knew I was entering a special world. It was those chat sessions. The blaze of ideas and how our visions complement one another’s. The long-range plans. Music, art, theatre, training, skills, reaching out,” he said.

After posting various photos on Facebook, programming at the Redwood Theatre took shape. Enter long-time club owner and music promoter Tim Notter of the twodecade running Orbit Room, once a landmark of College Street West side. The Orbit was a casualty of COVID but didn’t diminish the spirit and will of Notter to revive and reinvent.

Notter moved and has been programming the best of the Orbit; Soul Stew, Pretzel Logic, the Dave Murphy Band, LMT Connection, Jordan John and others. Notter and King have teamed up with Karam and are planning a launch of Tuesday night, Get Your Groove Back – a call to a generation who loved getting out for the social, the meet and greet and

dance to the soul, funk and reggae classic. They will begin on May 23 with singer Michael Dunston and the Rhythm Express.

In July and August, the Redwood is partnering with SING! Toronto International Vocal Arts Festival and I Love to Sing! which is a summer program free for kids wishing to learn the art of vocalizing. The eight sessions will be led by Elaine Overholt (vocal coach for the Academy Award musical Chicago, CODA, and international sensation Shawn Mendes), Micah Barnes – Music Director of Canada’s Got Talent and Jeannie Wyse, Associate Music Director of the Randolph Academy for the Arts.

Upcoming events at the Redwood Theatre include:

• May 12 -- The Sattelites.

• May 13 -- Sound Streams.

• May 16-21 -- Wee Festival.

• May 20 -- Soul Stew.

• May 23 -- Get Your Groove Back Tuesdays

• May 27 -- Stevie Wonder Tribute.

• June 2 -- Lou Pomanti & Oakland Stroke.

• June 8 -- Dan Hill.

• June 24 -- Jordan John.

• July 15 - Carol Pope: Up Close and Personal.

For more information on the The Redwood Theatre, please visit the website at www.TheRedwoodTheatre. com

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PHOTO: TAYLOR LONG The cast of Scarborough Music Theatre’s Godspell in rehearsal. Performances run from May 4 to May 20 at the Scarborough Village Theatre. much more than that.

The f8 Photography Collective hosts an exhibit titled It’s All About The Colours from May 3 to 14 at the Leslie Grove Gallery.

It’s All About The Colours presented by the f8 Photography Collective

THE F8 Photography Collective will be hosting an exhibition at the Leslie Grove Gallery this month.

The title of the show is It’s All About The Colours and it will take place from May 3 until May 14.

The Leslie Grove Gallery is located at 1158 Queen St. E., just west of Jones Avenue. Gallery hours are noon to 5 p.m. on Wednesdays to Sundays.

This exhibit offers a wide latitude for interpretation among the photographers taking part.

Each of the eight photographers taking part has a unique perspective, so visitors to the show will see images with diverse subject

matter or representation.

An image may show a dash of colour in an otherwise black and white scene or a multitude of colours exhibiting the beauty of the subject.

The colours may be left in their natural state or manipulated to provide a different perspective on the subject presented by the maker.

The images may be abstract or architectural, from nature or from the street.

What is certain is that all the images will inform the viewer of the impact of colour(s), or lack there-of in each work of art.

Taking part in the Leslie Grove Gallery exhibit are f8 members Maureen Little-

wood, Catherine MacKinnon, Rod Trider, and John Wallace alwong with guest artists Lily Markovic, Colleen Pollack, Anthony Schatzky and Jonathan Ward.

An Artists’ Reception for It’s All About The Colours, will be held on Saturday, May 6, from 1 to 5 p.m. at the gallery.

Formed in 2010, the f8 Photography Collective grew out of the Beach Photo Club and a desire by members to show and sell their images publicly along with honing their skills.

For more information on the f8 Photography Collective, please go to www.f8photographycollective.com

Acoustic Harvest to host 25th Anniversary Extravaganza Fundraiser on night of June 3

ACOUSTIC HARVEST will celebrate its 25th anniversary with performances from a number of musicians next month.

The 25th Anniversary Extravaganza Fundraiser takes place on Saturday, June 3.

It will start at 8 p.m. at St. Paul’s United Church, 200 McIntosh St. in southwest Scarborough.

“Acoustic Harvest has contributed 25 years of community building and bringing the finest, Juno nominees and winning artists to our east end communities,” noted artist director Lillian Wauthier in a note to Beach Metro Community News.

Musicians slated to peform at the June 3 show include Chrs McKhool and The Sultans of String; Garnet Rogers; Mary Kelly; John Prince and A Piece of the Rock; John Sheard; Alex Sinclair; Taivi; Anne Walker; Ken Whiteley; and David Woodhead.

Doors for the show will

open at 7:30 p.m.

Tickets to the Gala are $40 in advance and $45 at the door.

To order advance tickets online, please visit Acoustic Harvest at www.acousticharvest.ca

Rick Miller’s Boom X set for Crow’s Theatre EAST TORONTO performer Rick Miller will present his Boom X show at Crow’s Theatre from May 10 to 28.

Crow’s Theatre is located at 345 Carlaw Ave. on the northeast corner of Dundas Street East.

Miller, who lives in the Danforth and Monarch Park avenues area, is known for his award-winning shows MacHomer and Bigger Than Jesus

In his show Boom X, Miller performs the voices and mannerisms of more than 100 notable characters from music, pop culture and politics from 1970 to 1995.

In Boom X, Miller is immersed in a multimedia time

capsule that tells the story of some of the iconic moments in pop culture from those years.

Boom X is the second in the Boom trilogy spanning the lives of Baby Boomers, Generation X, and Generation Y and Z.

Boom X picks things up at the famous Woodstock outdoor rock concert in 1969, and takes audiences all the way to the second Quebec referendum.

It is Miller’s own story that forms the spine of this sequel to the first Boom, as he experiences the growing angst – and many of the polarizing experiences – that impacted Generation X.

Performance times for Boom X are 7:30 p.m. on May 10, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26 and 27. There are also 1:30 p.m. matinees on May 13, 14, 20, 21, 27 and 28.

Tickets start at $45. For more information, or to order tickets, please go to www.crowstheatre.com

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Toronto Beaches set to open Ontario Junior Lacrosse League season this month

THE TORONTO Beaches Junior A lacrosse team will play its Ontario Junior Lacrosse League (OJLL) season opener in Whitby on Tuesday, May 16.

With the renovation work now taking place at Ted Reeve Arena, the Beaches team has relocated to play its home games at the Scarborough Centennial Arena for the 2023 season.

Reilly O’Connor, head coach of Toronto Beaches commented on the move and the impact it would have on the team and its fans.

“The team is confident that the fans who attended the games last summer at Ted Reeve Arena will travel out to watch them in Scarborough,” he said.

The Beaches will host the Whitby Warriors on Thursday, May 18, at Scarborough Centennial Arena for their first home game of the season. The game begins at 8 p.m.

Scarborough Centennial Arena is located at 1967 Ellesmere Rd., just west of Markham Road.

After their loss to the Edmonton Miners in the Minto Cup (Canadian championship) semifinals last summer, which ended their season, the Toronto Beaches main goal this season is to win the Minto this year and to also help players drafted into the National Lacrosse League (NLL).

According to O’Connor, some of the key players returning for Toronto Beaches this season are Will Johnston, who is the reigning goalie of the year; Jacob Hickey, the team’s captain; Dylan Robinson, who played for the Buffalo Bandits in the NLL; Willem Firth, the reigning OJLL MVP; and Matt Collison.

O’Connor comments said the game night experience for fans attending Toronto Beaches games in Scarborough will be as exciting as it was last season at Ted Reeve Arena.

“We saw great crowds last year that got bigger and bigger, the further we went and the better the team did,” he said.

Girls

“The guys feed off that energy as well, so it’s so important. I’m confident the fans will travel as there is a deep passion for the sport in the Beaches and it’s very cool for the Beaches community to interact with the current players on the team.”

Toronto Beaches will play a total of 20 regular season games from late May to early July, followed by the OJLL playoffs in midJuly.

After that, the 2023 Minto Cup will take place in Edmonton, and being there is the goal of the Toronto Beaches team

“We are very excited to get going! We hope to be active in the community by giving back and growing the game in the Beaches community, through coaching and volunteering with the next generation of kids,” said O’Connor.

Here is the full 2023 regular season schedule for the Toronto Beaches Junior A lacrosse team:

May 16 – @ Whitby Warriors

May 18 – Whitby Warriors

May 21- Orangeville Northmen

May 24 – @ Burlington Chiefs

May 25 – Brampton Excelsiors

June 1 – Six Nations Arrows

June 3 – @ Oakville Buzz

June 5 – @ Peterborough Lakers

June 8 – St. Catharines Athletics

June 10 – @ Mimico Mountaineers

June 11 – @ Brampton Excelsiors

June 15 – Kitchener-Waterloo

June 18 – @ Orangeville Northmen

June 20 – Peterborough Lakers

June 22 – Burlington Chiefs

June 28 – @ St. Catharines Athletics

June 30 – @ Kitchener-Waterloo

July 5 – Mimico Mountaineers

July 6 – Oakville Buzz

July 9 – @ Six Nations Arrows

For more info on Toronto Beaches Junior A lacrosse, visit the Facebook page at www. facebook.com/BeachesJrA

school lacrosse season underway

LOCAL GIRLS’ high school varsity lacrosse teams are getting their season underway in early May.

Local Toronto District School Board high schools with girls lacrosse teams include Malvern Collegiate; Riverdale Collegiate; East York Collegiate; and Birchmount Park Collegiate.

On the afternoon of Monday, May 1, at Birchmount Stadium, Malvern and Birchmount played.

On Tuesday, May 2, East York Collegiate will host two games. First the Mal-

vern girls will face Leaside High School at 2:30 p.m.; followed by East York taking on Riverdale at 3:45 p.m.

On Wednesday, May 3, Birchmount Park will play Humberside Collegiate at RH King Academy in Scarborough at 2:30 p.m.

On Tuesday, May 9, two games will take place at East York Collegiate. In the first game, Malvern will take on Riverdale at 2:30 p.m., followed by Birchmount Park up against East York at 3:45 p.m.

On Wednesday, May 10,

Riverdale will take on RH King Academy at 2:30 p.m. at Leaside High School.

On the morning of Friday, May 12, East York Collegiate hosts a pair of games. The first game sees Riverdale against Birchmount Park at 8 a.m. The second game features East York against Leaside starting at 9:15 a.m.

For the complete TDSB girls high school lacrosse schedule and more info on high school sports, please go to www.tdsb.on.ca/sports

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PHOTO: SUBMITTED This photo shows the 2022 Toronto Beaches Junior A lacrosse that made it all the way to the Canadian championships. Toronto Beaches begins its 2023 regular season in the Ontario Junior Lacrosse League later this month.

Neighbourhood Stops and Shops

Redwood Stables in Uxbridge a perfect venue for Beach horse riding enthusiasts

Beacher and lifelong equestrian Abdulla Ward’s Redwood Stables is the perfect venue for horse riding enthusiasts in the Beach of all ages and levels.

Located less than an hour away from the Beach at 809 Wagg Rd. in Uxbridge, the 13-acre stable represents one of the closest, full-service barns to the Beach with 15 excellent horses, as well as best-in-class staff led by Ward himself.

After some time away from horses due to immigrating to Canada and attending post-secondary school, Ward was able to return to his passion following his family’s purchase of Redwood Stables late last year.

Since then, Ward has worked tirelessly to procure and care for the best horses as well as establish the ideal curriculum for riders of all levels. The courses range from beginners to calm trail rides to dressage, which refers to the execution of precise movements to barely perceptible signals from its rider. But jumping and eventing (a combination of jumping, dressage and cross-country) is where most of his students focus their energy.

“Three of my kids are dreaming of becoming Olympic riders and I could see it happening if they keep it up,” said Ward.

“It’s hard to find equestrian programs for kids that are close. One of the many advantages of living in the Beaches is that you’re closer to downtown; but downtown is not a place where you traditionally find horses and stables. But Redwood is an amazing full-service stable and as convenient as it gets for us eastenders,” said Deborah Wilson, a Beach resident whose daughter rides there four times per week.

As a child, Ward got his start riding in Saudi Arabia thanks to a horse from Riyadh that was gifted from his great uncle. Ward impressed his great uncle and earned his stripes by taming the wild stallion, thus igniting Ward’s love of horses and riding.

Although Ward was thrown in the deep end when he was learning to ride, he takes a decidedly lighter approach with his students.

The courses are suited to the rider and come in private, semi-private and group rides, and the facility offers an indoor ring, an outdoor ring and a cross-country ring”, said Ward.

Wilson can attest to Ward’s credentials and

teaching style as she and her daughter followed Ward to his new stable from his prior post in Newmarket.

In addition to Redwood’s seasonal offerings, registration is underway for its summer camp for children aged six to 13 of all riding levels with the promise of a chartered “Beaches” bus should they pass the threshold for signups.

“The summer camp is tailored for kids of all levels but particularly kids who are just starting out and want to learn about horses,” said Ward. “It’s all about horses. So they get an hour lesson, they get to groom and play with the horses, and other activities such as arts and crafts and games all have horse themes.”

Whether its summer camp or year-round lessons, Ward seeks to make horseback riding as accessible and welcoming as possible by running an affordable program welcome to all.

While money may not be the limiting factor at Redwood Stables, both Ward and Wilson acknowledge that there is a time commitment involved in getting riders back and forth. So Ward has instituted numerous amenities to make Redwood as comfortable as possible for riders and parents alike.

“I have built a heated viewing room that is comfortable and warm for the parents,” said Ward. “There’s a treadmill, fireplace and there’s always a pot of coffee brewing. We share laughs and stories and we have pizza days, as well as volunteers coming to work on the weekends that help us out. Saturdays in particular is a busy and fun time in the barn.”

“There’s an office here with strong WiFi if the parents want to work, as well as a bar top where they can put their laptops so that they can

work while watching their kids,” continued Ward.

Furthermore, the growth of Redwood Stables has afforded both students and parents more options to make the trip to Uxbridge.

“The good news is that because there’s so many kids coming here from the Beach, carpools are starting to form more often,” said Wilson. “I was just speaking to a mom, and she and I are going to start sharing the drive.”

Most of all there are numerous benefits to horse riding, according to Ward.

Redwood teaches its riders responsibility and humility, as the riders are charged with grooming and cleaning up after their horses. The activity keeps kids engaged with animals, in an outdoor setting and offers an opportunity for children and parents to spend time together.

“Instead of begging us to go to a party or staying in their rooms all day, kids are begging us to bring them here on a Saturday or Sunday,” said Wilson.

“There’s a lot of research that shows that horses are good for your mental health, for depression and even autism,” continued Ward.

“It’s because it’s a live creature and their hearts are gentle. They have this way of making you forget about what is troubling you that heals your heart and your soul.”

Additionally, horse riding is all a full body exercise which Ward promises will work out muscles you didn’t even know you had!

The courses also bring together children and adult riders with like-minded horse-loving peers.

Redwood Stables harkens back to a time in her youth when children would play outside as opposed to spending their days inside and glued to their electronic de-

vice of choice, said Wilson.

“When I was a kid, you would go play in mud and stay out late and you could do things that were outdoorsy,” said Wilson. “Kids today don’t have a lot of opportunities to get dirty. My child comes home and is absolutely filthy. Because she’s been mucking stalls and gathering horses and picking hooves. She’s got dirt under your fingernails and smells like a barn and I love that.”

Ward has taken the close knit and family-friendly atmosphere famous in the Beach to Uxbridge and hopes to serve as a bridge for those in the city searching for a horse riding outlet for themselves or their children.

Ward arrived in the Beach in 2014 to the Ramona building on Hubbard and Glen Manor and immediately embedded himself in the community. “I got to know my neighbours quickly and we’ve got a nice little community going on in the Beaches,” said Ward. “I always wonder why anyone would live anywhere else.”

Ward now splits his time between the Beach and Uxbridge, but definitely tries to bring the vibe of the Beach to his stable.

“Whenever a new student comes in, we say ‘welcome home’ because this is a home for my students,” said Ward. “And not only are the students welcome, their families are welcome as well.”

To learn more about Redwood Stables please visit their website at www.redwoodstables.ca/

Please go to https://docs. google.com/forms/d/e/1FAI pQLSdB3TpVRxIY3sDGzv2 bK6-FOrr5RhE4YdRLrLxP7SwHm5F4uw/viewform to register for Redwood’s summer camp.

23 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 SOCIAL MEDIA EXPERT Part-Time Person Wanted To promote two bicycle shows and a shared, furnished office rental company. Contact josie@telsec.net Renovation Project Planning Design Drawings Budget Development Est. 1988 www.totalrenovations.com 416-694-2488 Design Build Renovate Providing Professional & Quality Construction Services for over 20 years 416.564.0149 pawconstruction.ca • Renovations • Additions • • Project Management • Masonry Work • • New Home Construction • • Design & Permit Services • ✓ Bonded & Insured ✓ WSIB Registered ✓ All Work Guaranteed We’re here for you 1821 Danforth Avenue • 416-690-1032 mmcmahon.mpp.co @ liberal.ola.org @beachmetronews
PHOTO: SUBMITTED Redwood Stables in Uxbridge has a strong connection to the Beach with Abdulla Ward (green shirt) having lived in the community for many years. – BMN Sponsored Content–

Earth Day cleanup in Glen Stewart Ravine

Design & Style

Time to get your home ready for summer

As the days grow longer and warmer, it’s time to start thinking about getting your home ready for the summer season.

As an interior designer, I know that a few simple changes can transform your home into a refreshing oasis that’s perfect for enjoying the sunshine and warmth. Here are some tips on how to get your home ready for summer entertaining.

1.) Bring in the Light: Summer is all about natural light, so make sure to let it in! Start by cleaning your windows to allow as much sunlight as possible to filter into your home. Consider swapping out heavy drapes for lighter curtains or sheer blinds that will allow light

to filter through while still providing privacy. Cleaning your windows and all window treatments will keep your house cleaner once you open things up and let the fresh air in.

2.) Create an Outdoor Oasis: Take advantage of the warm weather by creating an inviting outdoor space. Whether you have a backyard, balcony, or patio, make it an extension of your home by adding comfortable seating, outdoor rugs, and plenty of greenery. Invest in outdoor furniture that is durable and weather-resistant, so you can enjoy it throughout the summer season. Consider adding a firepit/fire table for the cooler nights so you can enjoy the outdoors for longer.

3.) Lighten Up Your Fabrics: Swap out heavy fabrics like velvet and wool for lighter ones like cotton and linen. Opt for light and breezy curtains, throws, and cushion covers that will help your home feel fresher. Consider changing your bedding to lighter materials and colors for a fresh and summery feel in your bedroom.

4.) Declutter and Refresh: Summer is a great time to declutter and refresh your home. Store away heavy winter decor and accessories and bring out lighter, summery pieces. Consider rearranging your furniture to change things up a bit. Donate or sell items that you no longer need or use to create more space and give your home a renewed and rejuvenated look.

5.) Add Natural Elements:

Incorporating natural elements into your home can create a soothing and calming atmosphere that evokes the spirit of summer. Consider adding potted plants, fresh flowers, or even a small indoor herb garden to bring the outdoors in.

Woven baskets, linen table runners and Jute rugs can be added for texture and interest.

Outside, be sure to get some large planters and create container gardens – vary the heights of planters and the plant materials. Tall grasses/plants add visual interest and can serve to section off areas and create an intimate environment.

6.) Get Your Air Conditioning Ready: With summer comes the need for air conditioning. Make sure to clean or replace your air filters and check your air conditioning unit to ensure it’s in good working condition.

Consider getting a professional tune-up to ensure optimal performance during the hot months ahead.

7.) Consider building a covered structure, or covering an existing deck or patio area. It extends the outdoor season, keeps things clean and dry and creates a more inviting and cozy atmosphere.

If this isn’t possible, add height to your outdoor spaces to create drama –stringing lights across a patio works well to create a contained space.

8.) Create a Refreshment Station: Set up a beverage station indoors and out and stock up on a variety of re-

freshing drinks like iced tea, lemonade, or infused water. Add a stylish bar cart or a tray with glasses, pitchers, and garnishes for a functional and stylish setup or install a more permanent outdoor bar so you can entertain outdoors. Choose durable, weather resistant materials and if possible, run electrical and water supply so it’s fully functional. Add in some bar stools and this will become the hub of your outdoor space.

9.) Just like inside your home, create “Zones” for your outdoor spaces. Lounge areas with more comfortable seating (maybe even an outdoor projector for movie nights!), dining area with seating and table and lighting above, garden spaces to add green and life to the area.

10.) Consider Outdoor Lighting: Summer evenings are perfect for outdoor gatherings and dining al fresco. Consider adding outdoor lighting, such as string lights and lanterns and update your outdoor light fixtures to a more stylish option. Adding up lighting to trees can add a beautiful, dramatic nighttime vibe.

Our summer season is short, so plan ahead and get things ready now so that when the warm weather is here you can sit back and enjoy it!

-- Local resident Christine Roberts is an Interior Designer and Stylist. Reach her at 416-873-3982; www. christinerobertsdesign.ca; on Instagram at @christinerobertsdesign

24 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 Stop in, call or click. I can help you find the insurance coverage and financial services your business needs to succeed. 1201462CN.2 From one business owner to another Desjardins Insurance refers to Certas Home and Auto Insurance Company, underwriter of automobile and property insurance or Desjardins Financial Security Life Assurance Company, underwriter of life insurance and living benefits products. Desjardins, Desjardins Insurance and related trademarks are trademarks of the Fédération des caisses Desjardins du Québec, used under licence. Leane Besky Insurance Agency Inc. Leane Besky CIP, Agent 2243 Queen St E Toronto, ON 416-690-7900 leanebesky.com In September 1922, RH McGregor’s school doors first school performances ⁕ learn what life at RH was like over the past 100 years ⁕ school tours ⁕ refreshments Nathaniel Erskine-Smith M.P. Beaches-East York info@ beynate.ca 416 467 0860 www.beachmetro.com Next advertising deadline is Monday, May 8
PHOTO: ADAM OWEN-GILL Residents take part in an Earth Day cleanup of the Glen Stewart Ravine on Sunday, April 23. The community cleanup event was organized by the Friends of the Glen Stewart Ravine.
25 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023

C L A S S I F I E D S

Ads are available in two sizes: WORD AD BLOCK AD

(includes HST) for the first 20 words, plus 35¢ each extra word.

Computer

EXPRESS JUNK REMOVAL

Best Prices/Free Estimates

RILEYS’ WINDOW CLEANING

A family business since 1956

Window & Eaves Cleaning

Gutter Filter Installation

416 421-5758

Garden & Tree

BEACH PROPERTY MAINTENANCE

25$16. 00$25.

1.5” wide x 1” deep (includes HST)

Contact: carolin@beachmetro.com or 416-698-1164 x 22 Ads must be paid for at time of placement. Classified ads also appear on our website: www.beachmetro.com The advertiser is responsible for checking the accuracy of the advertisement after the first insertion. Beach Metro News is not liable for errors and non-insertions in subsequent issues. Beach Metro News accepts advertising in good faith and does not endorse any advertisers or advertisements.

or Deadline for May 16 issue is May 8

Announcement

Commercial Space for Rent

OFFICE SPACE

McArthur & Son Business Centre Air conditioning, boardroom, kitchen area, copier, etc. Individual offices from $425/mth. 577-579 Kingston Rd. @ Main St. Paul McArthur 416-821-3910 pmcarthur577@gmail.com www.mcarthurbusinesscentre.com (r)

UPPER BEACHES OFFICE SPACE

Ideal for medical professionals, lawyers or accountants 416-690-2880 (r)

Opportunities

Healthcare Professionals Clinic space available www.fallingbrookwellness.com

Email: Nicola@fallingbrookwellness.com or call: 416-737-0046 (6)

Apartment/

Home for Rent

LANDLORDS For Peace of Mind Call Harding & King R.E. Services Inc. Brokerage We make owning real estate & being a Landlord painless, easy & profitable. Call now 416-699-9714 x8 www.hardingandking.com

BEACHES LUXURY APTS High-Rise - VIEWS - Some New Reno Studio,1,2 Bed, Lake/Gardn/City views. Some

647-235-6690 (5.)

DEMOLITION EXPERTS

Demolition & Removal of Garages, Porches, Fences & Concrete. Howard 416 565 8569 (5.)

Well Trained Handy Husband

Call, email or text to discuss. Glenn 416-709-2930 superglenn@bell.net (5r)

CTD Handyman Services

General repairs indoor/outdoor. Drywall, painting, carpentry, pressure washing. Demolition and waste removal. Call or text: 647-336-8030 (5.)

HANDYMAN / HELPER

Garage Cleanups & Junk Removal Other various jobs 20 yrs exp. Quality work. Good prices. Call Greg 437 230-4824 (5$)

SCRAP CARS

Call me 416-521-6287

We Pay Top Dollar For Unwanted CARS, VANS, TRUCKS & SUVs FREE TOW in 2 HRS • 24/7 (5r)

MAN WITH PICK-UP TRUCK

For light moves/deliveries, junk removal, cleanups, etc. Efficient. Best rates. 647-806-7620 (5.) Unwanted vehicles to be picked up and paid for in cash in a professional manner. Call Len 416-819-8464 (5r)

Pet Services

Kuri K9 Massage I am a mobile Certified Canine and Feline Massage Therapist working in the Toronto area since 2013. I offer Swedish massage and other massage therapies and modalities to your fur babies in the comfort of your home. Phone/Text 416-471-3955 kurik9massage.com (5)

Pest Control

RACCOON CONTROL

lake. $3177 +hydro Viewit# 227136 Sarah 416-981-6902 sarah.wu@torontohousing.ca (5)

Humane removal of raccoons and babies from ATTICS, DECKS, PORCHES, GARAGES, SHEDS WWW.RACCOONCONTROL.CA 647-557-7932 (22/24)

rileyswindowcleaning.com (r)

BEACHES LAWN MAINTENANCE

LAWN CUTTING

416 414 5883 info@blpm.ca (5r)

Who has the time to clean anymore? I have the time, so give me a call.

Roxanne 647 886 8303 (5.)

EXTREME CLEANING

I provide excellent cleaning services for residential homes and condos.

Contact Martha @ Cell: 647-206-1415 (5$)

EUROPEAN CLEANING LADIES

offer complete and thorough cleaning service for your house • office • condo Call Ilona 416-427-3815 (5.)

Irene Seliotis

Quality House Cleaning

Telephone: 416.690.3739

Cell: 647.278.7490

Dependable service for over 20 years (6)

Music

Beaches Suzuki School of Music

We share our love of music using the Suzuki Method by providing gentle encouragement, inspiration, and musicianship in Violin and Piano. Online teaching available

Ines 416 726 5729 (5.r)

THE TWO FOURS

Your local Rock ‘n’ Roots Revival Band Is ready to rock your party or event. Book your spring or summer date now. thetwofours@eol.ca • 416-690-5442 https://facebook.com/thetwofoursband

NEXT DEADLINE

May 8

Tutoring

HELP WITH MATH & ENGLISH call ALBERTO 416 690 9389 for

• COVID CATCH-UP •

• in-depth homework/test help •

• essay-writing + study skills •

• numeracy + literacy support •

-Lawn Cutting -Spring/Fall Property Clean-Ups -Hedge Trimming 416-414-5883 info@blpm.ca (5r)

Beach Lawn Care

LAWN CUTTING SERVICES

*STARTING AT $20 416-691-8503 beachlawncare2020@gmail.com (5r)

FOUR SEASONS SERVICE

• All tree work

• Gardening

• Hedge Cutting

• Leaf Raking Steve 647-216-8588 (5.)

EVERGREEN TREE CARE

YOUR LOCAL, FAMILY RUN TREE PRESERVATION SPECIALISTS

GARDENING

GREENWOOD

416-693-7214 (4v)

Parish Administrator St. Aidan’s in the Beach is hiring a full-time administrative assistant/bookkeeper to support the ministry of our church. Strong technological skills are highly valued. Full job posting including application details at staidansinthebeach.com (5)

Business Partner Wanted

Entrepreneur seeks M/F biz partner who is “computer savvy” and has a true passion for viewing motion pictures.

Kevin 416-463-6301 (19)

NEXT DEADLINE

May 8

All classified advertising may also be viewed at www.beachmetro.com

2 BEDROOM APT. 42 Hubbard Blvd #101 The rent is all inclusive $3,177. Building has laundry, A/C and is across from the beach. Parking is not on site. Karen 467-462-4250 karen.phillips@torontohousing.ca (5)

SQUIRREL REMOVAL

We remove squirrels in a humane way from attics, walls, sheds, decks, etc. 647-496-0815 www.SquirrelControl.ca (22/24)

PEST CONTROL

Cockroaches

Ants

EXTERIOR CLEANING 416-264-1495 CELL 416-567-4019 (7r)

MR. FIX-IT

MATURE, RELIABLE

AND REPAIRS 20+ years experience Plumbing, Electrical, Carpentry, Painting, and Handy Work. Randall 416-450-0599 torontomrfixit@gmail.com (5r)

Peter the Handyman

INDIV/GRP TUITION IN YOUR HOME

QUALIFIED + EXPERIENCED TEACHER, K-12

PROVEN SUCCESS - REFS AVAILABLE (5r)

Head Start Tutors

One on One Tutoring Grades 3-12

Keeping the Love of Learning Alive Sunday tutoring available.

www.headstarttutors.ca

416-272-9589 • hstarttutors@gmail.com

Proudly serving the Beach for over 25 years

Neil Bennett B.Ed./OCT Sally Vickers B.Ed./OCT (5r)

Centipedes

Landscapers

Green Apple

Rats

Wasps

Spiders • more THEEXTERMINATORS.CA 647-496-2211 (22/24)

Green

THE STUDY STUDIO

Individualized tutoring and programs for grades 3-12 in all subjects. Proven success with thousands of Beach area students for 20 years. On Kingston Rd. just east of Vic Park Andrew English B.Ed. 416-690-6116 www.thestudystudio.com (5r)

TUTOR FOR FRENCH & FI

(Beach area) by high school teacher. (dept head) 20+ years exp. in Public School Board, incl. AP French. Tutor for French/FI & Gr. 10 History.

German can be taught as well Online Tutoring Available 647-406-4681

References available upon request (5.)

Math Tutor for Grades 11-12

I’m JP, live in the Beaches and can tutor in my home, one-on-one. I am a retired Math Teacher with a rich and wide experience.

Email jpginestier@gmail.com

Cell 647-284-9264 (5r)

OLD TIME HYMN SING! NOURISH YOUR SPIRIT & *SWEET TOOTH Kingston Road United Church Choir is taking requests for your favourite *hymn. Join us on May 7 at 12:30 at KRUC. For a $10 donation select a hymn on the day, or to complete a form in advance, go to our website for details: www.kruc.ca * Sweet treats for purchase **All proceeds to KRUC Roof Fund Grantful Food & Fellowship Food Bank & Soup Kitchen NEEDS DONATIONS OF EMPTY EGG CARTONS to help its clients take home eggs. Donations of empty cartons can be dropped off at Grant AME church, 2029 Gerrard Street East on Tuesdays, Thursdays or Fridays between the hours of 11:00 am to 5:00 pm. For more info on the food bank which opens on Fridays from 3:30 to 6:00 pm, please call 416 690 5169 or visit www.grantame.com (5) Volunteer
Volunteers Needed to deliver BEACH METRO NEWS Routes available throughout the Beach Upper Beach, Danforth, Birchcliff STUDENTS EARN COMMUNITY SERVICE HOURS Contact: melinda@beachmetro.com Employment
AWARD WINNING LANDSCAPE DESIGNER requires part time crew for Garden Maintenance 647-545-5143 Kimpricelandscapedesign.com (5) Experienced Landscape Designer looking for labor for a project at King & Strachan The project will take place last 2 weeks in May - payment is $18 per hr, tools are supplied Job Description: - 27 front properties of a Townhouse development. - planting perennials, and mulching - you are responsible for your own transportation. If interested please email me at: kimpricelandscapdesign@gmail.com (5) GARDENING HELP required Seasonal work Apr-Nov in local gardens Experience appreciated - willingness to learn essential. Flexible hours - may suit parent of school age children. Please contact Alliso0n at: naturescapeconsult@yahoo.ca
Opportunities
Granite Kit & Bath, A/C, Jacuzzi, Micro, Dishwr, Balc, Marble/Hardwd, Sep. liv.& din. CCTV & Card Access. TTC. Lndry. Walk to Kew Beach & Queen St! Limited on site PARKG. Fr $1250 Inc ht & ht wtr. 416-693-5229 (5.)
BEDROOM APT. 5 Hubbard Blvd. #1 Beach Luxury Apt. Renoed, Dishwr, Lndry, ACs. Parking not on site. Close to TTC, all amenities,
2
Call/text Heidi 647-834-1815 (5) Garage Sale YARD SALE 18 Balmy Avenue Sunday, May 7 10 am to 2 pm Housewares furniture books & tools Free FREE Golden Retriever Puppies to Forever Homes! 1 Male,1 Female. Excellent temperament! House trained with very good trainable natures & perfect for families with children and other pets! I will not re home to just any-one. Please email me first at: staceymcclelland8@gmail.com and Text 312-270-0850 (5)
Month of July rental: 2br quiet Upper Beach pet-friendly detached home; Backyard, parking, all inclusive;
Services On-Site & Remote IT SUPPORT 416-800-2812 info@computer-assist.ca www.computer-assist.ca (5r) COMPUTER SERVICES On-Site & Remote Services Hardware/Software Support PC/MAC 416-438-6360 eaglescommunication.ca (5) Financial Services ABSTAX SPECIALISTS IN CDN AND U.S. TAXES GOV’T GRANT & LOAN APPLICATIONS HOME CALLS & PICK-UP SERVICES AVAILABLE E-FILE PERSONAL & BUSINESS TAXES 416-699-6641 BY APPOINTMENT ONLY 161 Main Street, Toronto M4E 2V9 Serving the Community for Over 40 years (22/24 EXACT TAX SERVICES TIM O’MEARA TAX ACCOUNTANT 416-691-7556 Personal • small Business CorPorate • BaCk Filing (10) Guerin Bookkeeping and Income Tax Affordable Rates Support Small Business 416-465-6249 (5) Expert Bookkeeping, Small business specialists, Strong on QuickBooks, Simply Accounting, “cloud computing”. A la carte services. Affordable rates. Antonella 416-464-2766 (5r) Household Services REG’S APPLIANCE IS ON VACATION (r) KLEEN WINDOWS Cleaning specialists •Windows •Eavestroughs •Decks •Siding 416-706-7130 905-706-7130 www.kleenwindows.ca (r) Home Decor Vienna Upholstery 2358 Kingston Rd. (w. of Midland) 416-698-9000 (r) General Services WAYNE’S RUBBISH REMOVAL & DEMOLITION SPECIALIST RECYCLING INTERIOR &
PROFESSIONAL,
RENOVATIONS
INDOOR / OUTDOOR General repairs: Drywall / Caulking / Painting / Decks / Fences Odd jobs: Fixtures, TV, Shelf & Picture install / Furniture assembly (IKEA)... & much more! Call/text Peter 416 577 4252 (4)
to small jobs around your home that others won’t do! Reliable & trustworthy with returning happy customers. $60 hour, one hour minimum.
Catering
GOT BEDBUGS?
Services HEALTHY HOME CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING • Bio-degradable, non-allergenic products used • Drying time 3-4 hours • Bonded, insured, certified Free At Home Estimates! Call 416-783-3434 (23/24)
• Mice
Bed Bugs
CALL PESTZERRO.CA 647-200-2687 905-392-1506 (9) Cleaning
Pruning, Cabling, Planting, Arborist Reports, Removals, Stumps, Milling Free Quotes! 416.546.4889 info@evergreentreecare.ca evergreentreecare.ca (r)
647 606 0970 freshgreenlawncare @gmail.com (17)
Another
mike@greenwoodtree.ca www.greenwoodtree.ca (17) Amelia Rose GARDENING & DESIGN ameliarosegardendesign.ca deb@ameliarosegardendesign.ca 416-804-0646 (5r( PLANTING & PRUNING Trimming & pruning - shrubs, hedges, small trees. Natives plants - pollinator gardens. Soil amendments, general gardening. Environmentally friendly, low noise. Greg 416-702-8678 carbontip-toe.com (6) LOCAL TREE SERVICE Tree
• Tree trimming Problem trees • Tree Removal Seniors Discounts Call
TREE COMPANY
Local Arborist Tree Pruning & Trimming, Tree Removals, Arborist Reports, Stump Grinding, Tree Planting Free Tree Evaluations, Quotes & Permit Assistance Mike - 416 992 7963
pruning
Dave 416-948-7633 (5r)
Award Winning Design & Build 25 years Experience Read our reviews on Homestars.com One-of-a-Kind Outdoor Living Spaces 416-288-1499 www.greenapple.ca (r)
Landscaping
Drawings
Apple Landscaping Front yard parking pads
• Permits • Build 416-288-1499 www.greenapple.ca (r)
www.stonehengedesignbuild.com (r) KIM PRICE Landscape design 647-545-5143 Creating Award Winning Gardens • Design and Construction • www.kimpricelandscapedesign.com (5) 26 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023 BEACHMETRO.COM
STONEHENGE LANDSCAPE • DESIGN & BUILD 416-467-6059

Piano concert on May 20

BEACH PIANIST and composer Jonathan Kravtchenko, 18, will be premiering new chamber music and piano solo compositions at Calvin Presbyterian Church 26 Delisle Ave., on May 20.

Kravtchenko’s compositions have gained a loyal following. The May 20 concert starts at 8 p.m. and is titled Dreamland. It features Kravtchenko on piano and other tal-

ATLANTIS

Scotstone

ented young Toronto musicians: Nadine Bargout, violin, Caara Yeung, flute and Barbie Fong, piano.

To order tickets for this concert, please go to https://www.eventbrite.ca and search Dreamland.

Can Pro

Mechanical

Heating cooling service & install Hvac ductwork Furnace, boiler, hydronics Large and small jobs 416 606 4719 (5r)

BLANK SLATE RENOVATIONS

Kitchens & bath, basement apts, doors, trim, crown molding, shelving, paint, drywall repair, tile, hardwood, fences, decks, interlock and more. Lic. & Ins. 416.274.5929 (5r)

Roofers LANIGAN’S

THOSE

them, call those roofers ALL TYPES OF ROOFS - Shingles & Flats- Repair & Tune ups - Cedar & Slate - Re-roofs & new work Doug 416-871-1734 Jeff 647-686-8103 Lic - Insured • Free Estimate (r)

ROOFING & SIDING?

SOLUTION!

Flat and Shingle Roofs

Re-roofing, Repair Eavestrough, Soffit & Fascia Workmanship Guaranteed Gus: 416-910-8033 (5r)

TORONTO ROOFING INDUSTRIES LTD.

L

CANADIAN

Beach Co Roofing Flat Roofing 647-309-8056 (5r)

K. R. ROOFING

All

BEACH

Outdoor Spray Painting 35 Yrs Exp • Refs upon request Free Estimates (5.)

THE STONE PORCH MASONRY

Brick • Block • Concrete Steel • Stone www.thestoneporch.com thestoneporch@gmail.com 416-988-2589 (5r)

UNDERPINNING & WATERPROOFING

Maximum General Contracting Inc. “Your basement lowering specialists” 416-826-3918 John www.mgcunderpinning.com maximumgen@gmail.com

MET# B16348 Since 1998 (13r)

Beaches Brickworks

• brick restoration

• arches, lintels & sills

• openings & enclosures

CHIMNEY SPECIALISTS 416 988-2589 danielmccaf@gmail.com (5r)

S.A.C Masonry

Brick, Block, Stone, Chimneys, Concrete, and all masonry repairs

Call Sergio 416 873 9936(45

CJ DRYWALL & PAINTING

Professional drywall and plaster work. Renovation and Repair. Very clean. No job too small.

Call C.J. 647 222 5338 (5.)

BEACHES HANDY WORKS

Dedicated precise worker.

All your build and repairs. Indoor or outdoor: dry-wall, flooring, built-in, landscaping, interlocking, sheds, fences, decks, etc. at a reasonable price!

Call Hamid at 647-300-2462 (5r)

JDB MASONRY

• Brick / Foundation

• Concrete / Stone

• Chimney & Parging

Restoration & Build

www.jdbuild.ca 416-738-2119 (5r)

BRICK SPECIALIST

Masonry & brickwork.

Experts at matching existing brick. New builds, tuckpointing, colour matching, parging. Stone & Block. Call Scott @ Scotstone 416.858.2452 scotstonecontracting@gmail.com (7)

KEW BEACH

GENERAL CONTRACTING Kitchens - Bathrooms Basements - Doors, Windows Garages - Fences, Decks For all your reno needs, no job too small. Metro lic 416 824-7901 (5)

ALANO TILE & RENO

• Expert Installation of Porcelain, Marble, Mosaic • Over 25 years experience

• Total Kitchen & Bath Reno • Plus Tile Repairs 416-561-8713 (15)

DRYWALL

Replacement and repair. Small to medium jobs only, please. Clean. Professional. 43

MATTCAM

416 698-3592 (14)

WATERPROOFING Act Fast Waterproofing 647-993-3466 www.actfastwaterproofing.ca

Licensed, local, award winning (5.)

FURNITURE REFINISHING + REPAIR Classic Restoration & Woodworking 40 Years experience 416 759-8878 classicrestoration@outlook.com (5.)

27 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023
PROPERTY MAINTENANCE LAWN CUTTING 416-414-5883 info@blpm.ca (5r) Lord of the Stone LANDSCAPE SPECIALIST • Patios • • Walkways • • Stone steps • • Retaining walls • www.thelordofthestone.com 647 906 6826 (5r) THE STONE PORCH LANDSCAPING Finely Finished Stone Work www.thestoneporch.com thestoneporch@gmail.com 416-988-2589 (5r)
BEACH
Traditional stone walls, steps, interlocking paths, patios & decks. Landscaping solutions to customize your space. Call Scott 416.858.2452 scotstonecontracting@gmail.com (7)
Specializing in Interlocking Stone • Planters Retaining Walls • Steps • Fences Decks • Sodding & Repairs rickscape@hotmail.com Rick 416-821-4065 (7) IN THE BEACH LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE SPECIALISTS • Weekly & Bi-Weekly Lawn Cutting • Spring Clean-ups • Fertilization & Aeration • Hedge Trimming & Pruning • Seeding & Sodding • Landscape Construction 647-210-LAWN (5296) www.BeachLawns.ca info@beachlawns.ca (16) ITB LANDSCAPING • Landscaping • Stone Work • Fences/Decks • Lawn Care • Maintenance www.itblandscaping.ca info@itblandscaping.ca 416-990-2286 * Free Estimates * (16) GRASS CUTTING 647 606 0970 freshgreenlawncare @gmail.com (17) GINGER GARDENS Garden Design & Makeovers Routine Maintenance Spring Clean Up 647.892.4737 info@gingergardens.ca (8) GREENHOUSE LAND SERVICES LTD. Complete Landscaping & Outdoor Solutions • Landscape Design & Construction • Garden Design & Installation • Property & Garden Maintenance • Light Construction & Renovations For consultations, estimates or fixed pricing, call 416-264-8286 • 416-893-9858 greenhouselandservices@gmail.com www.greenhouselandscaping.ca (5.) Movers “Always on Time and on Budget” • Small & Big Moves; Long Distance • All Kinds of Delivery Services incl. cottage country • Junk and Rubbish Removal Following COVID protocol www.thegoodmoves.com Call Hakan: 416 899-3980 (5.) STUDIO 1 CARTAGE & STORAGE 2 Men + Truck $100/hr Office • Apt. Deliveries 416-830-8183 (5r) A.S.M. MOVERS FULL SERVICE Local & long distance. Taking care of your possessions. 416-617-8548 All Season Movers (5.)) www.beachmetro.com Painters Larry’s Painting & Repairs Family owned & operated 26 years in business 416-690-3890 sales@larryspainting.ca www.larryspainting.ca (r) PROWAY PAINTING & DECORATING Interior • Exterior Residential • Commercial Plastering • Drywall 416.797.6731 proway.painting@gmail.com Free Estimates & References Available (19)
PAINTING Beach resident with over 30 years exp Interior / Exterior Work Proper Drywall & Plaster Repairs No job too big or small Have the job done right the first time. Referrals & Free Estimates Steve 647-853-6420 (5r) ‘As Promised’ Painting *** Free Estimates *** We stand by our contracts, big or small. Also do Drywall and Plaster Repairs and more Dianne 416 699 5070 (5.) WRIGHT PAINTING Interior & Exterior painting Drywall & Plaster repairs Free Estimates & Fair Rates Working locally in the beaches Matthew 416-802-5980 wrightpaintingtoronto@gmail.com (5.) KITCHEN CABINET PAINTING Sprayed finish in shop. 20 years exp. Excellent references. Quality work that will last. Tino 416-333-3773 www.ipaintkitchencabinets.ca (20/24) WG PAINTING Local resident w/38 yrs. exp. INTERIOR PAINTING All work guaranteed Fully insured • Free estimate Experienced Handyman Available 416-322-7692 warren_gamey@yahoo.com (6r) PERFECT Painting & Repair John 647-702-9502 Complete Renos • Basement • Kitchen Bathroom • Flooring • Carpentry info@perfectpaintingandrepair.com www.perfectpaintingandrepair.com (19) WG PAINTING Local resident w/38 yrs. exp. INTERIOR PAINTING All work guaranteed Fully insured • Free estimate Experienced Handyman Available 416-322-7692 warren_gamey@yahoo.com (6r)
Touch Painting A Company You Can count on Quality Since 1981 Interior • Exterior Pantelis Cell: 416-543-8254 We Don’t cut corners, we cut lines. (7)!
STONESCAPE
SERENITY
Master’s
Plumbers
PLUMBING
Repairs to complete houses Renovations 416 691-3555 50 years in the Beach (r)
PLUMBING Beach resident for 50 years. Discount for seniors and single parent. Lic. Master Plumber • Free estimates Patrick 647-404-7139 patrickj480@gmail.com (6) TOM DAY Plumbing & Drains All types of plumbing work. Smallest leak - complete bath reno. Internal & external drain excavating. Call the professionals 416-480-0622 24 hr. - lic# P1624 (5r) MASTER PLUMBER PLUMBER CONTRACTOR Fully licensed & insured. Lic #T94 George:
Small
NEIGHBOURHOOD
416-278-7057 or Gabston Reno: 647-342-2872 (r)
& DRAINS •Heating & Mechanical •Sprinklers •Complete Renovations •Boilers Repairs •Radiators •Improve water service 24 Hr Service LICENSED 416-265-4558 Cell 416-727-1595 (5) Mark The Plumber Master Plumber • Lic. & Ins. Complete Bathrooms Small Repairs Renovations 416-456-9999 Follow on Facebook (5.) Electricians LOCAL ELECTRICIAN Fault Finding Knob & Tube Rewiring Service upgrades Insurance certificates GREEN ISLE ELECTRIC DECLAN O’MEARA 416-698-6183 CELL 416-875-5781 ESA LIC# 7002668 (22/24)
ELECTRIC ECRA/ESA LIC#7001069 Knob & tubE rEwiring SErviCE upgrAdES frEE EStimAtES *Ask For Photo I.D.* CARL 647-787-5818 (r) MASTER ELECTRICIAN ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Fully licensed & insured. ECRA/ESA #7008706 George: 416-278-7057 or Gabston Reno: 647-342-2872 (5r) MBX ELECTRIC Master Electrician Lic. ESA ECRA #7000314 Residential • Commercial - Knob & Tube Wiring - Service Panel Upgrades - Renovations & Alterations Call Marc 416-910-1235 (5r) ELECTRICAL WORK 100/200 AMP Service Upgrades • New Wiring New Homes/Additions Lighting Installations Troubleshooting 416-694-6673 ESA/ECRA #7002084 Residential/Commercial (5r) LICENSED ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Panel & sub panel upgrades Knob & tube & aluminum rewiring Free estimates LED light & pot light installations 100A & 200A service upgrades Electrical problem solving Frank 647-889-5537 ECRA/ESA # 7010497 (5) MASTER ELECTRICIAN Licensed / Insured ESA 7006786 416-833-3006 (11) Carpenters CARPENTRY by Kevin Fences, Decks, Porches Flooring, Windows, Doors, Trim, Crown moulding, etc. Kitchens & Bath • Garage Restoration Serving the Beach for 15 yrs. Kevin 647 282 8375 (5r) Doggy needs a fence? Hubby wants a deck? And any house repairs CELTIC RENO Text Mac: 647-832-1742 (5r) WHYTELYON GENERAL CONTRACTING Small & Medium Renovations Interior & Exterior Repairs 10 yrs in the Beaches 416-998-1166 (5r) The Cliffside Carpenter 30 yrs experience in interior trim Custom Cabinet design. Hang doors, crown moulding and baseboards. cliffsidecarpenter.blogspot.ca gibsonpeterk@gmail.com Peter Gibson 416 578 3755 (15) VanDeursen Construction & Fine Carpentry Certified carpenter with 10+ yrs exp. serving the Beach. Fully insured &WSIB. Contracting service specialising in finish carpentry, home remodeling/additions, drywall/ plastering, decks/fences. And much more. Free estimates • 647 888 4805 mvdcontracting@gmail.com (5.)
PLUMBING
CEJA
Roofing & Aluminum An honest family service in the heart of The Beaches www.laniganscontracting.ca 416-569-2181 (r)
ROOFERS
call
Don’t
ocal •
416
Reliable
Professional Servicing the beach for 18 years.
694 0906 torontoroofingindustries.com (5r)
CONTRACTORS Shingles • Flats Roof Repairs • Metal Work Eavestroughing & Siding Waterproofing • Since 1984 Met. Lic. B-16-964 Steve 416-285-0440 • 416-605-9510 (5.)
types of Roofin= Eavestrough & Siding Over 40 years in the east end. Martin 416 579-6534 (5r)
REPAIRS DUN-RITE Shingles, Flats, Eavestroughs Fascia & Soffit Chimney tuck pointing 15% off for Seniors • All work guaranteed 647-857-5656 (15) C-STAR ROOFING INC. 416-902-2646 Serving Toronto & GTA for over 30 years Call today for free estimate. Licensed & insured. • SHINGLE ROOFS • FLAT ROOFS • ROOF REPAIR • SIDING • NEW EAVESTROUGHS (No Deposit Required) (6) Trades HANDYMAN SERVICES “No Job Too Small” •CARPENTRY •PLUMBING •ELECTRICAL •PAINTING •STAINING •DRYWALL REPAIR •PARGING •DECK & FENCE BUILD & REPAIR INTERIOR & EXTERIOR REPAIRS Marc Text/Call 416-617-7205 (r) WET BASEMENT ? Foundation rePair/WaterProoFing FAIRNEY & SONS LTD. Metro lic #B531 • All Work Guaranteed • Free Estimates 416-659-7003 www.webuildit.ca Serving Your Community Since 1971 (r) UNDERPINNING & WATERPROOFING Stonehenge Foundations 416 467 6735 www.stonehengefoundations.com Fully licensed local contractors (r) YOUR STUCCO Stucco • Moulding Wall Systems Drywall, Plastering, Taping 18 yrs Experience • Excellent Job Call Mike 416-854-7024 647 833 7024 Fax 647-341-6104 (5r)r SILVERBIRCH HARDWOOD FLOORING SPECIALIZING IN SANDING & STAINING JIM 647 405 8457 416 691 8457 (5.) QUALITY HOME IMPROVEMENTS & RENOVATIONS by Jim Ferrio Call Jim for a free estimate 416 660 4721 (5.) JOHN CLARKE Cell 416 434-2762 Painting - Basement Renos Plaster & Stucco • Interior & Exterior Any Renovation Jobs & Indoor/
ROOFING,
yrs experience. I won’t leave until you are 110% satisfied Please call Colin at 416-347-0974 for a free quote. (5.)
Drywall, Taping, Mudding & Painting. General repairs. Very reliable. Call Matt 647-833-2884 (13) MAT’S HANDYMAN SERVICES Small or big, we do it all! Drywall • Painting • Tiles • Small Plumbing Jobs • Repairs of many sorts. Demolition as well. Reasonable rates. Call Mat Now!! 416 888 8462 (5r) PRO A & R RENOVATION • Kitchens • Bathrooms • Basement Renovations 416-662-4450 ar-renovation.com Best of Homestars (5.) PERFECT PAINTING & REPAIR INC. John  647-702-9502 info@perfectpaintingandrepair.com www.perfectpaintingandrepair.com Complete Reno * Finish Basement Bathroom * Kitchen * Flooring * Carpentry (5.) Above All Awnings Local Trusted Family Business for 25 years Retractable Awnings & Much More! www.aboveallawnings.ca
CONSTRUCTION Professional
DECKS•PORCHES•HOME IMPROVEMENTS Professional, trustworthy, and local services to improve, repair and maintain your home. CALL OR EMAIL FOR A FREE QUOTE Ryan Purdy 647-355-3096 www.purdyhomeimprovements.ca info@purdyhomeimprovements.ca
Purdy Home Improvements
(5.)
28 BEACH METRO COMMUNITY NEWS Tuesday, May 2, 2023

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Redwood Stables in Uxbridge a perfect venue for Beach horse riding enthusiasts

14min
pages 23-27

Toronto Beaches set to open Ontario Junior Lacrosse League season this month

3min
pages 22-23

Acoustic Harvest to host 25th Anniversary Extravaganza Fundraiser on night of June 3

1min
page 21

It’s All About The Colours presented by the f8 Photography Collective

1min
page 21

rban Renewals

3min
pages 20-21

Scarborough Music Theatre’s Godspell set to take the stage from May 4 to 20

1min
page 20

Beach Memories Reflecting on history of local parks

4min
pages 19-20

By Jayson Dimanno

5min
page 18

Remembering Mac’s Milk in the 1970s

1min
pages 17-18

Far from slowing down, ageless wonders are still active on screen

4min
pages 14-17

Jane’s Walks planned for East Toronto this weekend

2min
page 13

Notre Dame students to perform at provincial finals of National Theatre School Drama Festival

4min
page 12

Open House, Pub Nights slated for Malvern’s 120th anniversary

3min
pages 9-11

Reader disappointed by publication of letter

9min
pages 7-8

Carbon dioxide letter prompts many responses

2min
page 7

Re-opening Little Ice Age discussion is neither interesting nor useful

1min
page 6

Residents need to examine priorities when choosing next mayor

4min
page 6

Celebration of Life for acclaimed author Peter Robinson planned

5min
pages 4-5

Grace Pascoe Food Bank dealing with high demand during its evening opening hours on Thursdays

6min
pages 2-4

MPP questions lack of affordable housing mandate in sale of Metrolinx land near Danforth GO Station

2min
page 1

Malvern Collegiate celebrates 120 years on May 13

1min
page 1
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