North American Body Shop of the Year
Serving MIMICO, LONG BRANCH, STONEGATE-QUEENSWAY, ALDERWOOD and NEW TORONTO
Proudly Serving Etobicoke for over 40 years
Design, print and distribute direct mail
416-774-2363
inside Etobiocoke disability advocate Jewel Kats dies / 10
Find something to do in the community with our listings / 14
photos Etobicoke sees action on and off the ice / 30
shopping wagjag.com amazing deals on group discounts
shop.ca
shop and earn, every time!
save.ca
coupons-flyers-deals-tips
keep in touch @ETGuardian www.facebook.com/ etobicokeguardian
more online
insidetoronto.com
thurs jan 21, 2016
www.etobicokeguardian.com
Help shape the future of Toronto Social Planning Toronto (SPT) is set to host a series of community meetings this month to discuss its future direction and priorities. “We all know that social planning is important to the future of the city and the wellbeing of its residents. We also know that the city is changing,” organizers from SPT said in a statement. The organization’s mission includes a commitment to “building a civic society in which diversity, equity, social and economic justice, interdependence and active civic participation are central to all aspects of life.” The meetings will be at: n Etobicoke/North York Thursday, Jan. 21 at 5:30 p.m. Thistletown Multi-Service Centre, 925 Albion Road (one block east of Islington Avenue), Ted Hodgson Room, 3rd Floor Register at http://sptconsultationetobicoke-northyork. eventbrite.ca n York Tuesday, Jan. 26 at 10 a.m. Social Planning Toronto Office, 1652 Keele St. Register at http://sptcommunityconsultationyork.eventbrite.ca For questions about the meetings, contact Caryl Arundel at carundel@sympatico.ca Visit www.socialplanningtoronto.org/about-us to learn more about the organization.
395 Evans Avenue • 416-259-6344
®
Making waves
Staff photo/BENJAMIN PRIEBE
all in: Kevin Chau particpates in the freestyle race, during the Etobicoke Swim Club's A-B meet on Saturday at the Etobicoke Olympium. The annual two-day meet, which has been in existence for 20 years, attracted 1,100 swimmers from across Ontario, including Sudbury and Windsor.
Fear of rent hikes unfounded, EYCC hears Community council rejects development proposal, despite tenants’ support TAMARA SHEPHARD tshephard@insidetoronto.com Etobicoke York Community Council unanimously rejected a developer’s proposal to replace five existing 3.5 storey rental
buildings in the Kingsway. The developer is seeking to replace them with six new apartment and condominium buildings, reaching six to 16 storeys. At its regular monthly meet-
ing Tuesday, Jan. 19, community council voted to send city planners and city lawyers to the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) to defend city planners’ opinion that the proposal is “inappropriate and represents over-
development of the site.” “The proposed height, density and scale is not compatible with the existing context of the local apartment neighbourhood,” a Dec. 16 city planning >>>twenty, page 2
s