August 13 East

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CHICKEN SATAY SMILE: Isabel Lin, 3, enjoys chicken satay during Scarborough Summerfest 2013 multi-cultural event at the Chinese Cultural Centre of Greater Toronto on Saturday. For more photos from the event, please see page 12.

Sexual Assault Care Centre proposes to move counselling MIKE ADLER madler@insidetoronto.com

insidetoronto.com

For Scarborough residents who are poor and hungry, summer is the leanest season at their local food bank. Thousands of area families are regular clients year round, but most items stocking the food bank shelves are gathered at only three times a year - Christmas, Easter and Thanksgiving. These are the times the Da i l y Bre a d Fo o d Ba n k , which supplies food banks in Scarborough, holds its major food drives, so they are when Torontonians think of giving, said Michelle West-Martin, community engagement manager at Scarborough Centre for Healthy Communities. But there is no major drive to build up food supplies in summer, a time when members of groups making donations are often away. “Though the supply >>>SUMMER, page 15

The Scarborough Hospital is proposing to move followup care and counselling for patients at its Sexual Assault Care Centre into new commu-

nity facilities. The hospital and Scarborough Centre for Healthy Communities, a community health centre, submitted a business case for their “voluntary integration” of the program last month to the Central East Local

Health Integration Network, regional overseer of health care. Under the plan, which the LHIN may approve during an Aug. 28 board meeting, the “acute care portion” of treatment for victims of sexual

assault and domestic violence – pregnancy prevention, tests and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases, taking forensic evidence for police – would continue around the clock through physicians and specially trained nurses at the

emergency department of TSH’s Birchmount campus. Follow-up care and counselling would be done through SCHC, which has clinical campuses at Markham Road and Lawrence Avenue, Brimley Road >>>CHANGES, page 15

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SCARBOROUGH in brief wash helps out food bank wCar

Local MP in Cabinet wShadow

Foster KIA on Sheppard Avenue hosts a charity car wash and barbecue on Wednesday, Aug. 21, to collect donations for the Daily Bread Food Bank. The event runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and is part of KIA’s Drive Change initiative. On Aug. 21, residents who bring in a non-perishable food item donation will receive a free car wash at Foster KIA, 3445 Sheppard Ave., near Warden Avenue. Cash donations also accepted. Participants are also welcome to a hot dog from the barbecue and a drink while waiting for the car wash. Most needed items by the food bank include baby formula, rice, beans, lentils, cann fruits, peanut butter, dried pasta and canned fish. For more info, visit www. fosterkia.com

Scarborough Southwest MP Dan Harris was recently named NDP Critic for PostSecondary Education in the House of Commons. The appointment was made Opposition leader Tom Mulcair, leader of the federal NDP. In a statement, Harris said he hoped to make “a substantive contribution to post-secondary education policy and to bring forward exciting proposals for the NDP platform in 2015. Harris had previously served at Deputy Critic for Industry in the Opposition’s Shadow Cabinet.

tours in Guildwood wWalking

Guildwood residents are reviving popular walking tours of Guild Park, a historic 88-acre park in their lakefront subdivision known for its gardens, sculpture and architectural fragments of vanished Toronto buildings. Starting at 6:30 p.m., the 45-minute tours will meet on Wednesdays and Thursdays until Aug. 29 at a flagpole by the front driveway of the former Guild Inn on Guildwood Parkway. People taking a tour through Aug. 11 can stay for an outdoor production of The Misanthrope by the Guild Festival Theatre.

medical clinic to open wFree

The official opening of the Muslim Welfare Centre’s free medical clinic is set for this Saturday at 1 p.m. The clinic is located at 100 McLevin Ave., Unit 2A. The clinic is for patients not covered by OHIP including refugees, new immigrants, visitors and students. For more information on the clinic, call 416-754-8116 or visit www.muslimwelfarecentre.com youth to display art wLocal

Young artists in the SteelesL’Amoreaux area will be exhibiting their works this week. The exhibit is the culmination of the Healthy Critters program, a summer workshop for kids in the Glendower Circuit apartment and townhouse complex. The program used the arts to explore ways of living a healthy lifestyle. “This program is important because it taught the values of healthy living and eating in a tangible, fun and relevant way” said program co-ordinator Alicia Clarke in

a statment. “This is an area of great need for the residents of Glendower, and the growth and progress the kids have made has had such a great impact in a short time span”. The art exhibit is tomorrow at the L’Amoreaux Community Centre, 200 McNicoll Ave., from 5 to 7 p.m. For more info, visit www. artstarts.net supply drive at Bridlewood Mall wSchool

Bridlewood Mall in Agincourt starts counting down to the return of classes by asking shoppers to donate school supplies for the community’s children. Anyone who donates five or more items through Sept. 8 at the Centre Court of the mall at Warden and Finch avenues will receive a gift in return. “School supplies are an integral part of a student’s success. Our goal is to help youth in our community get off to a great start this back-to-school season,” Chris Couch, Bridlewood’s marketing director said in a release Monday. Countdown to Class starts this Friday, Aug. 16, at 11 a.m. The non-profit Agincourt Community Services Association will distribute donated supplies throughout the drive, which is sponsored by The Scarborough Mirror. A long list of items suggested for donations include backpacks, pens, pencils, paper, memory sticks, notebooks, scissors, binders, erasers and alarm clocks.


3 | SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013

community

Staff photo/IAN KELSO

Toronto police surround a house on Elward Boulevard, near Mansion Avenue, Saturday night in connection with a home invasion investigation.

Man, woman arrested in home invasion WHEELS ON THE DANFORTH: Wayne Wistaff and his daughter Taylor, 2, look under the hood of a 1997 Corvette Stingray during the Wheels on the Danforth Festival held Saturday between Victoria Park and Warden avenues.

Let it shine

A man and a woman were arrested in connection with a home invasion in south Scarborough Saturday. The incident happened just before 8 p.m. on Elward Boulevard near Danforth and Pharmacy avenues. Police set up a command post at Danforth and Elward and called in the emergency task force. Const. Tony Vella said police took a man and a 24-year-old woman into custody and recovered a firearm. sought in sex assault on bus wSuspect

Margaret Hucker, left, and Ken Gibbon check out a 1972 Plymouth Barracuda at the event.

Photos by William Meijer Jeff Morris puts the finishing touches on his 1970 Olds 442 convertible.

Police have released a security camera image of a man wanted in a sexual assault on board a TTC bus. Police said a woman was on the 17 Birchmount bus in the Birchmout Road and Lawrence Avenue area when

Police are seeking information on this man in connection with an investigation into a sex assault on a TTC bus.

a man came on board and sexually assaulted her July 24.Police recently released the suspect’s image. store thief sought by police wJewelry

Police are seeking the public’s help in identifying a jewelry

thief. Police allege a man entered the Malvern Town Centre at 31 Tapscott Rd. before the stores opened for business on the morning of July 28. He then allegedly broke into a jewelry store and stole jewelry. The man is 20 to 30 years old, 5’3” to 5’8” tall, 145 to 150 pounds with short black hair and a very large tattoo on his left upper arm. He was wearing a red Detroit Red Wings cap, a red and white T-shirt, long black shorts and black shoes and was carrying a black backpack. Anyone with information on these or other crimes can call Crime Stoppers anonymously at 416222-8477. To see an image of the jewelry store suspect, visit www. insidetoronto/4028562-policeseek-help-indentifying-suspectin-jewelry-theft

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Kennedy Road bridge work to begin The City of Toronto is starting nine months of rehabilitation for a Kennedy Road bridge over railway tracks south of Danforth Road. Work on the bridge and on Kennedy between Raleigh Avenue and Mewburn Avenue will prolong the bridge’s life and preserve its integrity,

the city said in a notice last week. Though “some pedestrian and traffic restrictions will be necessary” the city will keep one traffic lane in each direction and one sidewalk throughout construction, it said. The first stage of the proj-

ect from August to December involves work on the western half of the bridge, while the second from December to May 2014 involves the eastern half. Residents in the area will be told about any significant changes to the project or its schedule, the city said.


SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013 |

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opinion

The Scarborough Mirror is published every Tuesday and Thursday at 175 Gordon Baker Rd., Toronto, ON, M2H 0A2, by Metroland Media Toronto, a Division of Metroland Media Group Ltd.

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Speed up coroner’s inquest process

O

ntario’s chief coroner has announced an inquest into three shooting deaths by Toronto police involving people who were carrying edged weapons and “may have been experiencing the effects of a mental disorder at the time of their deaths” over the past three years. The similarities to the fatal shooting of Sammy Yatim, 18, on a streetcar in the Dundas and Bathurst streets area on July 27 are many. The coroner’s inquest set for October will look into the deaths of Michael Eligon, 29, in February of 2012 in East York; Sylvia Klibingaitis, 52, in North York in October of 2011; and Pickering resident Reyal Jardine-Douglas who was shot after stepping off a TTC bus on Victoria Park Avenue in August of 2010. It’s too bad inquests were not called earlier as the question of how police deal with people who may be having a mental health crisis is an extremely important issue which needs clear and consistent guideacross Ontario. our view lines As it stands, Ontario’s Ombudsman Andre Marin is set SIU director to review the Yatim shooting. The province’s Special Investigations first called Unit (SIU) is also looking into that shooting to determine if police for inquest actions were justified. In the shooting deaths of Eligon, Klibingaitis and Jardine-Douglas, the SIU said the Toronto police officers were justified in using lethal force. However, it’s important to note that in its report in May of last year into the Eligon shooting, SIU director Ian Scott said the incident raised a number of questions beyond his organization’s mandate. He said those questions would be best answered by a coroner’s inquest. Among Scott’s questions were: Should front-line police officers receive different training to deal with these situations and should front-line police officers be issued Tasers? In the Eligon shooting, the front-line officers responding to the call did not have Tasers. They also did not have access to the services of a crisis intervention team consisting of a mental health professional and specially trained police officer to help deal with such situations. The same scenario played out in the Yatim shooting. A crisis team was not on hand and the officer with the Taser did not board the streetcar until Yatim had been shot. We called for such an inquest in a May 2012 editorial and while we’re pleased action is now being taken; it should have been called sooner.

Write us The Scarborough Mirror welcomes letters of 400 words or less. All submissions must include name, address and a daytime telephone number for verification purposes. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject letters. Copyright in letters remains with the author but the publisher and affiliates may freely reproduce them in print, electronic or other forms. Letters can be sent to letters@insidetoronto.com, or mailed to The Scarborough Mirror, 175 Gordon Baker Rd. Toronto, ON, M2H 0A2.

column

The Ex gears up while summer winds down

T

he Ex starts Friday and I can’t wait. The truth is, I’ve been thinking about it nonstop for the last two weeks. The moment August arrives, I begin counting down the doughnuts – days, days. I meant days. Honest. I don’t count down the Tiny Tom doughnuts until I actually get there. The point is, I always look forward to the Ex. I have since I was a kid. You couldn’t help but long for its return each year when I was growing up. It was the place to be this time of year. That’s because the Ex had the last two weeks of August through Labour Day all to itself. The Blue Jays hadn’t been born. Canada’s Wonderland wasn’t around. There was no Wild Water Kingdom. We weren’t tasting streets. Or dancing in them. In short, it was a much less cluttered entertainment landscape. With all the competition over the years, the Ex

jamie wayne BUT SERIOUSLY seems to have lost a bit of its mojo, but one gets the feeling it could be making a comeback. That it is about to be rediscovered by those who once had it circled on the calendar but hadn’t dropped by for awhile and those new to the city who know the name, but have yet to go through its gates. I hope so. I’d hate to see the Ex disappear one day. To me, summer wouldn’t be summer without it. I’ve never lost that loving feeling when it comes to the grand old lady by the waterfront. I was lucky enough to go to Disneyland when I was 10 years old and I can tell you that didn’t stop me from feeling that the Ex was still as cool as ever when I came back home. So what was the big attraction to the Ex? That’s the crazy thing about it. It wasn’t one big thing, it’s a whole a lot of little things.

Heck, just getting to the Ex was fun. The streetcars were so jammed and everybody inside was so psyched up that when the doors burst open you hit the CNE grounds running. Well, walking actually. The Ex was about walking. And walking. And walking. We had to see everything that was there. So we’d walk from one end to the other and back. Several times. We hit the midway to check out the rides we were afraid to go on and check out the games that all looked impossible to win. We lined up on the streets to hear salesmen pitching frying pans. We saw animals, we listened to music. We walked to the Food Building for free samples and then over to a pavilion. Back to the Food Building for more free samples and then over to another pavilion. Back to the Food Building for more free samples and over to yet another pavilion. And then we did it all

again. We walked and walked and walked until we were all walked out. It felt like a happening place from the moment we arrived until the moment we left. Much of that atmosphere had to do with it always being crowded. Daytime, nighttime, it was packed. And maybe that’s the secret ingredient that’s been missing over time. Those huge crowds. Perhaps if people come back in those same numbers, then the return to those feelings the city had for the Ex in yestersummers will also return. A lot of new acts and rides have been added this year, so the Ex is clearly putting its best foot forward to make it happen. Beginning Friday, we’ll start finding out if our feet decide to follow its lead. Jamie Wayne is a lifelong columnist, who takes writing very seriously. The topics? Not so much. His column appears every Tuesday. Contact him at jamie.wayne@sympatico.ca

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5

Hike through Highland Creek New subway strategy confusing Watershed not so easy anymore To the editor: Re: ‘Take a hike,’ Special Feature, July 25. I read with interest the feature on Hiking the Highland Creek Watershed. Our house backs onto a part of the watershed and there are a couple of other thoughts that need to be considered. My wife and I have walked through the nearby park quite happily for more than 20 years and just recently, my wife said she doesn’t feel comfortable walking along the path any more. The path has been neglected and requires users to fight through the mentioned dog strangling vine, etc... No effort has been made by park maintenance staff to clear this path, which has been used for at least 50-plus years. Perhaps Toronto Parks bureaucrats would rather that, instead of hiking through

the parks, the public stay out of the parks altogether. However, some of the fat from the bureaucratic budget could be cut and more maintenance staff hired to make the parks a place that the public can access and enjoy. Six-feet high thistles, dog strangling vines, sundry other weeds and Manitoba Maples, which after a few years topple over, are abundant. These maples are not cut back but are allowed to spread over grass or in a few cases, a path. The public then have to pick their way around the fallen maple, through brush to continue to use the path. If this is the object of the bureaucrats, well they have certainly excelled. Another great concern we have is the number of fallen dead, full-sized cedars and other trees, fallen dead branches and the amount of sundry brush that has been

allowed to collect in the woodlands. By chance, last year I happened to notice that some people had lit a fire in the park behind our house. When I went down to investigate, another neighbour, who had also noticed the fire, had also come down. We noticed another fire deeper into the woods and called the fire department who came and extinguished the fires. If we hadn’t noticed this and these fires had got out of hand, there would have been an enormous amount of dead wood and brush around to feed a really damaging fire. I hope that something can be done to rectify this situation before a fire gets out of hand and causes serious damage. There are many houses very close to these woods. Tom Rice

To the editor: The on-again, off-again strategy of our elected officials is time wasting, money wasting and downright confusing. Our city spent a lot of our money to come up with a plan – the consultations where there, the public input was there and the experts were consulted. Other systems in other parts of the world were examined. The process was not something that happened at a barbecue, nor was it formulated as a dream in the middle of someone’s sleep. The fact the new plan is born during a byelection is suspect. I, in fact, live in the riding

of Scarborough-Guildwood and the new plan and the old plan will do nothing to enhance transit in this part of Scarborough. Transit City and the LRT to Centennial College at Morningside and Ellesmere avenues would serve many more people and open up much more economic development. A few phrases come to mind – Time is Money and Location, Location, Location, both which are wasted with this new plan. In the future, if the winds and minds don’t change, the riding of ScarboroughGuildwood will be looked upon as the unwitting buyers of a new car that does not

work and the whole city is paying for it. I am sure some people will say I am against a subway. I am for a subway, but one which enhances transit for all of Scarborough and to do that it should proceed north on Kennedy Road to the hydro corridor and follow that east to the zoo and beyond. Thinking like a big city, the hydro corridor should be buried with a subway and the above-grade lands used for transit enhancing residential or employment development. Glenn Kitchen We love letters. Send them to us at letters@insidetoronto. com

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Suspend police officers without pay To the editor: I was a serving member of the police force in my country of origin. During my service, and still, when a policeman is

suspended he receives no pay. In the event of him being cleared of any charges, then he will be paid for the time of his suspension. It makes no sense sus-

pending a policeman with pay because during that time he could be earning another salary. Kenneth Singh

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| SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013

letters


SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013 |

6

the mirror takes a closer look at centennial college’s hype program

our exclusive look

A second chance at education

MIKE ADLER madler@insidetoronto.com

J

ermaine Carter stopped going to school in Grade 11. “At the time, I was living a different life,” said Carter, 25, who grew up in Malvern and was “doing a lot of stuff I wasn’t proud of,” and which he can’t take back. Carter became a father. He wanted to return to school and, for six weeks this summer at Centennial College, he did. This taste of post-secondary life at Centennial, which is called the HYPE program, gave Carter a dream - doing social work on the streets of his community - he never considered before. Holding his black graduation gown at the Progress Campus Athletic and Wellness Centre last week, Carter said he could offer himself as an example to youth living the gang life now, showing them they can change.

Staff photos/DAN PEARCE

GRADUATION CELEBRATION: Above, Chante Gray accepts her certificate at the HYPE (Helping Youth Pursue Education) graduation ceremony at Centennial College. Below, graduate Jermaine Carter accepts his certificate from Ann Buller, college president, at the HYPE (Helping Youth Pursue Education) graduation ceremony.

Keep going

I’ve been in a gang; I’ve been shot. I made it through all of that. – Jermaine Carter, graduate

“I’ve been in a gang; I’ve been shot,” he said. “I made it though all of that.” Over a decade, HYPE (Helping Youth Pursue Education) has sparked many dreams in Scarborough youth who left high school early. It’s not clear how many have come true, since people who enrol in the program continue to face tough challenges afterwards. Centennial’s president, Ann Buller, said she hoped putting on the gown is not the last step program graduates take toward a different life. More than 50 of the 130 young men and women at last Thursday’s ceremonies, she noted, had applied to come to the college to con-

“There were times when I felt I couldn’t do it,” she said, but staff, career counsellors and mentors encouraged her to finish and, she is confident, will help her continue through the three years of study to be a paralegal. “They help you find yourself. They help you self-motivate and they motivate you,” said Allen, who plans on going into the paralegal business for herself, something HYPE showed her she could do. Carter, who wants his five-year-old daughter to look up to him, said the program was different than he expected. “There’s opportunities you don’t know about” and wouldn’t know about “until you put yourself out there,” he said.

tinue studies next month. Buller called on them to take advantage of every helping hand, to change the way they see themselves and what they can do, to resist the easy way out. Do all that, she suggested, and years from now “one of you could be standing here” as college president. Nikeshia Allen, 28, said

she took HYPE to try to inspire her four small children. Work not working From the KingstonGalloway-Orton Park area, she dropped out in Grade 10 and joined the workforce, but said the workforce wasn’t working for her. Allen said she realized

even a full-time job, which she has, can only take her so far. “Education’s important, and without education you end up nowhere.” She said she tried going back to school, but never met the right people until she heard about HYPE. Though she came with an open mind, Allen had been out of school for close to 10 years, and adjusted step by step.

Jermayne James, the program’s valedictorian, said he thought HYPE was a waste of time at first. “I came from the penitentiary. I just wanted my parole officer to get off my back,” he said in his podium address. Now enrolled at Centennial for the fall term, he said it’s up to him and the other HYPE graduates to keep going and not focus on the past. “Look in the mirror and find yourself, because you’ve got a lot of people counting on you,” added James, who twice singled out Mede Ovbiagele, his mentor, for thanks, saying, “This brother didn’t give up on nobody.” Ovbiagele, also the college’s youth outreach co-ordinator, was born in Flemingdon Park, a North York neighbourhood which combined low family incomes with few resources, much like Scarborough areas such as Dorset Park, KGO and Scarborough Village that are the main sources of HYPE youth. Helping HYPE graduates

We reduce as many barriers as possible. – Anthony Bertin, Centennial College

with financial aid applications, Ovbiagele found a lot of their stories and struggles “reminded me of myself.” Unlike himself, he said, they tend not to have much support at home; they’ve lost hope and lack dreams. “A lot of them are sick of being in a certain situation. That’s why they’re here.” HYPE began as a twoweek drumming program, called the Malvern Project, at Centennial in 2004, but its core came together in 2007 with a provincial Youth Challenge Fund grant. That money ran out, but Centennial still provides the program free and covers costs including meals, TTC fares and educational materials. Respected “We reduce as many barriers as possible,” said Anthony Bertin, manager of the college’s community outreach office. A third of HYPE graduates over the years have applied for post-secondary courses, and that number is rising. Many who don’t immediately apply, or who enter a college but break off their studies remain in touch and return years later, said Bertin. Whatever happens, HYPE graduates get a Centennial credential, and they feel respected, Bertin said, noting more than half of HYPE students now come to the program by word of mouth instead of being sent by social agencies, teachers or the justice system. “We have former students bring their friends in the door,” said Bertin of the program.

i

For more on Centennial’s HYPE program, visit www. centennialcollege.ca/hype


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SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013 |

8

sports schedule WEST ROUGE SOCCER CLUB

U5-A*

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14 w Columbus vs Los Angeles w Dallas vs Kansas w Vancouver vs Portland w Colorado vs New England w Salt Lake vs New York * 6 p.m. at West Rouge

active@insidetoronto.com w Salt Lake vs Toronto * 6:30 p.m. at Elizabeth Simcoe

PITCHING IN

U10* WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14 w Vancouver vs Dallas, at 6 p.m. w Colorado vs Kansas, at 6 p.m. w Portland vs New York, at 7 p.m. * at Bill Hancox

Scarborough Stingers’ pitcher Jayden List, centre, tags Etobicoke Rangers’ base-runner Robert Calisti during Toronto Baseball Association minor peewee division action at Neilson Park on Thursday evening. Etobicoke went on to win the game 13-7.

U5-B* WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14 w Chicago vs Montreal w Washington vs Houston * 7 p.m. at West Rouge U6* THURSDAY, AUG. 15 w San Jose vs Seattle w Salt Lake vs Toronto w Portland vs Colorado w Philadelphia vs Dallas w Vancouver vs Los Angeles * 6:30 p.m. at West Rouge U7* WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14 w Montreal vs Columbus w Kansas vs Houston w New York vs Washington w New England vs Chicago * 6:30 p.m. at Elizabeth Simcoe U8* THURSDAY, AUG. 15 w San Jose vs Philadelphia w Seattle vs Los Angeles

CLAIRLEA-WESTVIEW S.C.*

U5

MONDAY, AUG. 19 w Our Lady of Fatima vs St.Bede at J.McPherson Park W w Westminster vs All Hallows at J.McPherson Park Mid

Photo/JOSE ARMANDO VILLAVONA

UPCOMING GAME

U6

In rep baseball, at the minor midget level, the Scarborough Stingers host a double header against the West Toronto Wildcats on Tuesday, Aug. 13, 6:30 and 8:30 p.m., at Wishing Well Park.

TUESDAY, AUG. 13 w Tue. Aug.13, Westminster vs Our Lady of Fatima at J.McPherson W w Tue. Aug 13, All Hallows vs Fallingbrook at J.McPherson Mid THURSDAY, AUG 15 w St.Bede vs Fallingbrook at Regent Park U7 WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14 w St.Bede vs Fallingbrook at J.McPherson W w All Hallows vs Our Lady of Fatima at J.McPherson Mid MONDAY, AUG. 19 w St.Bede vs Westminster at Regent Park

U8

U10

TUESDAY, AUG. 13 w St.Bede vs Fallingbrook at J.McPherson W THURSDAY AUG. 15 w All Hallows vs Our Lady of Fatima at J.McPherson Mid w St.Bede vs Westminster at Regent Park

U12

TUESDAY, AUG. 13 w St. Bede’s vs. Fallingbrook at Anson Park w All Hallow’s vs. Kingston Road at N.Cook THURSDAY, AUG. 15 w Westminster vs. Our Lady of Fatima at Anson Park P.S.

TUESDAY, AUG. 13 w OLF vs. Westminster at Edge Park w Kingston Rd vs. All Hallow’s at Sandown Park THURSDAY, AUG. 15 w All Hallow’s vs St. Bede’s at Edge Park w Westminster vs. OLF at Sandown Park * league games begin at 7 p.m.

SPORTS SCHEDULE For more sports news, visit www.insidetoronto. com/scarboroughtorontoon-sports/

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No purchase necessary. The Contest is open to residents of Scarborough, Ontario 18 years of age or older. Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received. One (1) grand prizes will be awarded.Approximate retail value of grand prize is $100. Entrants must correctly answer, unaided, a mathematical skill-testing question to be declared a winner. Contest closes August 18, 2013 at 11:59pm. To enter online and for complete contest rules visit www.insidetoronto.com and click on CONTESTS under Local Interest.


9 | SCARBOROUGH MIRROR e | Tuesday, August 13, 2013

sports

National team action

Photo/COURTESY

Rachel Marcus, left, and Cadence Currie earned the gold medal at the top girls’ under-18 level during the recent provincial beach volleyball championships.

Currie, Marcus team up for beach volleyball gold A couple of Toronto high school students formed a short, but productive partnership that resulted in the provincial beach volleyball championship at the top girls under-18 level. Cadence Currie, from Scarborough’s Sir Oliver Mowat Collegiate Institute, and Rachel Marcus, from Toronto’s Bayview Glen School, only teamed up nine days prior to the mid-summer

championships, which were held at Ashbridges Bay on the east Toronto waterfront. And in that time they only managed three practices together. But that didn’t stop them from earning the gold medal. What they lacked in familiarity they definitely made up for in accomplishments. For Currie, who has been a member of the Scarborough Titans volleyball club with

coach Mark Sutton for the past four years, it marked her fourth straight summertime provincial beach title, all with various partners. And for Marcus, a member of the Scarborough-based Toronto Diamonds volleyball club, she improved to gold after earning the silver medal last summer.

i

For more local sports stories, visit us online at www.scarboroughmirror.com

Staff photo/DAN PEARCE

ON THE COURT: Canada’s under-23 wheelchair basketball players play a intra-squad game at University of Toronto Scarborough Campus Friday in advance of next month’s world championships in Turkey.

You are invited to a special evening in celebration of music… 2013 Durham Region Mayors’ Gala supporting Ontario Philharmonic Friday, September 13, 2013, 6:00pm Ajax Convention Centre - 550 Beck Crescent, Ajax (Hwy 401 at Salem Rd. Exit) Your evening includes: Cocktail Reception, Gourmet Dinner, Host Bar, Entertainment, Live & Silent Auction, Raffle & Draw Prizes Dress: Black Tie Ticket: $250 For further information contact: laura@ontariophil.ca or louise@ontariophil.ca Tel: 905-706-2159 or 905-706-5799 or Hayley Preziosi at: contact@ontariophil.ca/Tel: 905-579-6711

TOWNSHIP OF


community calendar

happening in

scarborough

SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013 |

10

it’s happening w Wednesday, Aug. 14

Advance Care Planning Workshop WHEN: Noon to 1 p.m. WHERE: The Scarborough Hospital, 3050 Lawrence Ave. E. CONTACT: 416-438-2911 COST: Free Workshop on Advance Care Planning and what to discuss with your loved ones. Photo Organizing and Sharing WHEN: 1 to 3 p.m. WHERE: St. Paul’s L’Amoreaux Centre, 3333 Finch Ave. East CONTACT: Sivanesan, 416-2933333, sivanesan@splc.ca COST: $50 for Non members for 4 sessions Learn to use popular software to organize digital photos. Create photo albums to share with your family and friends. Walking Tour at Guildwood Park WHEN: today and tomorrow from 6:30 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. WHERE: Guildwood Park, 201 Guildwood Parkway CONTACT: John Mason COST: Free A 45-minute guided walk through historic Guild Park. Meet at flagpole. Taoist Tai Chi WHEN: 7 to 9 p.m. WHERE: Wexford Heights United Church, 2102 Lawrence Ave. East CONTACT: 416-2981886, scarborough@taoist.org COST: varies

Wednesday night 7 to 9 p.m. or Thursday morning 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.

looking ahead

w Thursday, Aug. 15

Scarborough Afro-Caribbean Festival WHEN: Aug. 24 and 25 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. WHERE: Albert Campbell Square, Scarborough Civic Centre, 150 Borough Dr. CONTACT: Madeline Nwokeji, 416-345-1613 COST: Free Two-day event showcasing the arts, music, dance, fashion, culture and couture of the African and Caribbean communities in Toronto.

Swing Dance Classes WHEN: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion Branch 614, 100 Salome Dr., 100 Salome Dr. CONTACT: Carolyn Cross, 416-447-9774, COST: $35 per session First class free, session of five classes $35. New session every six weeks.

w Friday, Aug. 16

Healthy Eating on a Budgetsession1 WHEN: 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. WHERE: Immigrant Resource Centre-IRC (CICS), 2330 Midland Ave. CONTACT: Zarmeena Khan, 416-7078259 COST: Free Learn about Canada’s Food Guide. Tips for vegetarians. Preparation of fruit parfait by the participants. SAAAC’S Dancethon WHEN: 5 p.m. to midnight WHERE: Queen Palace Banquet Hall, 1173 Brimley Rd. CONTACT: Geetha Moorthy, 416-824-8847, info@saaac. org COST: $30 Fundraising charity event for children with Autism. Goal is to dance seven hours straight to help fund raise for South Asian Autism Awareness Centre for its arts and music program.

w Wednesday, Aug. 21

w Saturday, Aug. 24

Check out our complete online community calendar by visiting www.scarboroughmirror.com. Read weeks of listings from your Scarborough neighbourhoods as well as events from across Toronto.

w Saturday, Aug. 17

Community Fair WHEN: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. WHERE: Hallelujah Chinese Evangelical Free Church, 393 Middlefield Rd. CONTACT: Andrea, andrealkarent@ gmail.com COST: Free Garage sale, live mu- sic, games, prizes, face painting, magic show, basketball tournament. Free free barbecue, food limited, first come, first serve. Saturday Night Dance WHEN: 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. WHERE: Birkdale

Community Centre, 1299 Ellesmere Rd. CONTACT: Jim, 416-267-6621, COST: $6 Everyone welcome. Club SOLO WHEN: 7:30 p.m. to midnight WHERE: Cedarbrooke Community Centre, 91 East Park Blvd. CONTACT: Pat, 416-447-1537 COST: $10 Couple and singles. Everyone welcome.

Workshop WHEN: Noon to 1 p.m. WHERE: The Scarborough Hospital, 3050 Lawrence Ave. E. CONTACT: 416-438-2911 COST: Free The Scarborough Hospital is hosting a workshop on how to start a small business.

w Thursday, Aug. 22

Discover Canada WHEN: 6 to 8:30 p.m. WHERE: Burrows Hall Library, 1081 Progress Ave. CONTACT: Rubeen Chauhan, 416-588-6288 COST: Free Citizenship education mentoring circle until September.

w Saturday, Aug. 24

Nearly New Clothing Sale WHEN: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. WHERE: St. Stephen’s Presbyterian Church, 3817 Lawrence Ave. E CONTACT: June Crawford, 416-724-9004, COST: Free

get listed!

The Scarborough Mirror wants your community listings. Sign up online at scarboroughmirror. com to submit your events (click the Sign Up link in the top right corner of the page). We run non-profit, local events in print twice a week in The Mirror.

One-stop shopping for savvy couponers

Get your coupon at www.save.ca facebook.com/savedotca

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Gone are the days of spending hours huddled over the kitchen table snipping away at newspaper discounts and flyers. Shoppers now have the liberty to access savings straight from their computer, iPad or smartphone at their convenience, thanks to the merger of Save.ca and Flyerland.ca. The two staples in the online couponing business in Canada have joined forces under the brand Save.ca. “This site has been transformed to cater to the growing number of Canadians looking for online savings to help them keep their household budgets in check,” says Doug Guan, director, digital retail, Save.ca. “For the first time in Canada, one site will bring together savings through coupons and flyers, and with our new shopping list option — the only one of its kind in Canada — we streamline the online deals and purchasing process, something no other site does for Canadians.” Among a whole host of enhanced features, the re-launched

Save.ca: • linksdealstoretailerstostreamline shopping • offers a convenient printable shopping list • provides access to the most comprehensive offering of online savings of popular brands and digital flyers • offers the option of printing deals on the spot or mailing a hard copy to your mailbox • eliminates the hassle of having to flip through multiple news-

papers and flyers to find deals • allows shoppers to search for savings from their computer, smartphone, iPad or mobile device For 13 years, Save.ca, which boasts over two million members, has been Canada’s top site for digital flyers and online coupons. It’s a wholly-owned subsidiary of Torstar Corp., owner of Metroland Media Group, a publisher of community newspapers, including The Scarborough Mirror.


11

Financial district area wupgrades A makeover of the financial district’s most prominent intersection is nearly complete. New banners and street pole wraps are up at King and Bay streets, part of an extensive streetscape renovation commenced in early summer. Representing the first major undertaking by the Toronto Financial District BIA, the renovation includes new street signs, black metal garbage receptacles to replace the less durable plastic “turtle” bins and a thorough power wash of the intersection’s sidewalk to make the concrete “fresh” again, according to BIA communications manager Tim Kocur. Pape station closure set to start The TTC is set to shutter Pape Station to complete extensive renovation work. The station has been under construction since 2009. It will close for 12 days as of Monday, Aug 19, to speed up the remaining projects, which includes

w

rahul gupta TO in TRANSIT installing an elevator, tiling and ceiling work and finishing the redesigned station bus bay and new enclosed passenger waiting area. Also scheduled for completion are new station gardens and bike racks. The shutdown was initially planned for June but delayed by a job action by tile workers. To learn more about the Pape station renovations visit www.pape.ttc.ca. track replacement work wStreetcar

The intersection of King Street West and Spadina Avenue remains shut for another week as streetcar track replacement work continues. The intersection was closed Tuesday, Aug. 6, for two weeks. On Aug. 20, one lane in either direction on King and two lanes south on Spadina will re-open as construction crews work to complete track and road work at the intersection and surrounding area. While the closure con-

tinues both the 504 King and 508 Lakeshore streetcar lines as well as replacement buses for the 510 Spadina route will divert around the intersection. The work is scheduled for completion by Aug. 31.

Montessori Pre-School Ages 2 to 6 Students can start at 2 years of age (with or without toilet training) � Enrolment Year Round � 3 to 5 Half Days or Full Days � Language, Mathematics, French, Computer studies, Physical Education and Orff Music Program

subway supports removed wCancelled

Last week, construction crews began relocating overhead power lines along Eglinton Avenue West to pave the way for the removal of constructs belonging to a long cancelled subway project. While the first stage of tunnel construction for the Eglinton Crosstown light rail transit (LRT) project proceeds below Eglinton towards Allen Road, Metrolinx must remove the support piles located east of the Allen - vestiges of the old Eglinton subway halted in 1995 –so as not to interfere with future tunnelling. The work is expected to last several weeks. Visit www.thecrosstown. ca for more information. Rahul Gupta is the Mirror’s transit reporter. His column runs every Tuesday. Reach him on Twitter: @TOinTRANSIT

i

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| SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013

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SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013 |

12

community

Scarborough Summerfest fun

Photos/WILLIAM MEIJER

MUSIC AND CRAFTS: Above, Leon Hu, 2, works on some crafts during the Scarborough Summerfest 2013 multi-cultural event at the Chinese Cultural Centre of Greater Toronto on Saturday. Right, Omoy Jackman, 14, and the rest of the Forest Creek Steel Orchestra perform at the event.

capture & share

Your Next Quest: CITY SECRETS

Toronto’s 140 neighbourhoods are full of hidden gems. Whether it’s a one-of-a-kind café, a hidden boardwalk in the park or an undiscovered patio, your next quest is to capture and share your city secrets. It’s time to reveal your favourite haunts, tucked away in the nooks and crannies of your neighbourhood.

Your Mission Completed: TASTE OF THE DANFORTH

Opa! The 20th annual Taste of the Danforth festival took place over the weekend and we asked you to capture the authentic sights, sounds and delicious foods of Greektown. From sizzling souvlaki to Zoba dancers, here are the festival highlights — from your lenses.

How It Works RECEIVE THE QUEST Every Tuesday, @MetrolandTO will tweet, pin and post a weekly photo quest

COMPLETE THE QUEST Some quests will be easy while others will be challenging.

SHARE YOUR QUEST

How To Share Your Metroventure

Once you’ve completed your quest, share your photos for a chance to be published in our Tuesday paper.

Follow Metroland Media Toronto on Instagram and post a photo with the tag #Metroventure with your profile set to public Follow us on Twitter and tweet a photo with the tag #Metroventure Upload a post to Facebook and tag it with #Metroventure

Photo with a mascot. @mariangle5

Crowds. @jag_design23

Corn overload! @JamieLynnYoung

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man Tim’s finalist waLocal Scarborough resident Andrew Shepherd is among eight finalists in Tim Hortons Duelling Donuts. He was chosen out of 63,000 entries by Jason Priestley, etalk host Ben Mulroney, and members of the Tim Hortons executive team. His doughnut creation is The Tortoise Torte, a combination of chocolate, caramel and pecans. Shepherd, who lives in Scarborough now, grew up in Hamilton, the birthplace of the Tim Hortons doughnut and coffee chain. The winner of the contest will see their doughnut on the Tims’ menu, and also win $10,000. “I love food - I love cooking it, eating it, even thinking about it. I also love being creative. This contest was a chance to flex my creative muscles on my favourite topic. It was too sweet an opportunity to pass up. If I win the $10,000 I plan on taking my wife on a cheese and chocolate tour of Switzerland,” he said in a release.

alan shackleton Business in brief Canadians can vote for their favourite doughnut creation online at DuellingDonuts.ca until Aug. 18. ice cream in Scarborough wFree

Local residents can partake of some free ice cream later this month courtesy of Primus Canada. The 2013 Primus Canada Free Ice Cream Tour hits Scarborough on Sunday, Aug. 25. On that day, a Primus-branded ice cream truck will visit between 3:15 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Primus Value Ambassadors will be handing out the free soft serve cones, and balloons for kids, at the event which is one of many slated around the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area this month as part of a celebration of summer. To locate the ice cream truck on Aug. 25, follow @primusCAhelps on Twitter.

| SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013

business ‘Give and Take’ for wBeauty women’s shelters chain Trade Secrets launched its seventh annual ‘Give & Take’ program last Saturday in support of women’s shelters. The program collects gently used hair appliances – such as flat irons, and hairdryers – as part of a trade-in event. Those appliances are donated to women’s shelters, including Scarborough’s Rosalie Hall. Trade Secrets has shops at Centrepoint Mall, 6410 Yonge St. and Fairview Mall, which is at 1800 Sheppard Ave. E. Link event helps local youth wBlues

A concert set for Scarboro Golf and Country Club Sept. 5 from 6:30 to 10 p.m. will help for the local Youth Link. The concert is in partnership with the Toronto Board of Trade. Jully Black will be the featured performer. For tickets go to www.blueslink.ca

i

NADbank, ComBase: Adults 18+, print and online

If you have an item for The Mirror’s Business in Brief column, send it to scm@ insidetoronto.com

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SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013 |

14

175 Gordon Baker Road, Toronto, Ontario M2H 0A2 www.insidetoronto.com | Circulation: 416 493 4400

call: 416

798 7284

Business Hours: Monday - Friday, 8:30 am - 5:30 pm Telephone Hours: Monday - Friday, 8:30 am - 5:30 pm Cash & Interac Transactions: 9 am - 5 pm

Automotive

Automotive

fax: 905

Social Services

Social Services

Social Services

Foster Kia SALES PEOPLE NEEDED

Scarborough dealership needs permanent full time sales consultants for new/used vehicles. Experience preferred but we will train the right candidate .OMVIC license is an asset, and is required once hired. Apply in confidence: sales@fosterkia.com or by fax: 416-291-4421 General Help

General Help

MARKHAM AREA

Exp. Forklift Operator $16.00/hr. Exp. Press Operators $15.00/hr Assemblers $11.50/hr.

Become a Foster Parent! � Earn a Minimum of $1800/Month Tax Free � Receive Ongoing Support and Training � Be a Key Member of a Professional Team

Local 905-761-0333 Toll Free 1-866-427-7827 www.maplestarservices.com Articles Wanted

Articles for Sale

Lifting 40lbs required Assembly skills/ car an asset Afternoon shift 3:30pm-12am

24-7 HR Solutions T 905- 790-8367 F 905- 790-8003 E teresa@24-7hrs.com

Technical/ Skilled Trades

CABINET MAKER/SAW Operator required in Bolton (Hwy 50 & Healey Rd). 2-3 years prior experience in handling and cutting melamine and plywood sheets. Experience with Selco, Holzma, GIBEN or others. $14.50-$22/hour depending on experience. Send resume to: ascaricabinets@ gmail.com

Part-Time Opportunities

PART-TIME Sewing Instructor

required ASAP Experience necessary. Able to teach all levels. Vic Park/ Danforth area

416-659-0005 Domestic Help Wanted

FULL TIME live-in caregiver needed for 2 children. Private home in Scarborough. 40hrs/wk $10.77/hour. Please call Rolly or Evelyn 647-686-6082

ANTIQUES

HOT TUB (SPA) Covers Best Price, Best Quality. All shapes & Colours Available.

C a l l 1-866-652-6837. w w w. t h e c o v e r - ELLESMERE/ PHARMA- guy.com/sale

WOODWORKING Shaper Operator. Bolton, ON (Hwy 50 & Healey Rd) 4-5 years experience in setting up and machining panels and components. Must be able to read Imperial and Metric Tape measure. Send resume to: ascaricabinets@ gmail.com

Furnished Apartments

CY

bachelor in bungalow. Quiet home for responsible adult. $650 includes utilities, five box & parking. Phone 416-510-1422.

Townhouses for Rent

MOVING! GRAND piano in excellent condition. Bought for $25000. Now only $2790. German upright piano $750. 416-791-8595. Ask for Robert.

& Collectibles Wanted Cash for Older: Coins, Jewelry, Military, Watches, Toys, Barbies, Silver, Gold, Records, Guitars, Old Pens, Lighters & Old Advertising etc.

25 years experience. Richard & Janet 416-431-7180 416-566-7373

LAWRENCE/ KINGSTON Newer 3 bedrooms, 2 washrooms, garage, a/c, appliances, laundry, near 401, amenities. September 1st. Non-smoking/ pets. $1300+. BIRCHMOUNT/ DAN- MORNINGSIDE & Law905-668-8502 FORTH Rd. 2 bedroom rence- 2 bedroom basebasement. Immediately. ment, separate entrance, separate entrance. Park- parking, laundry, close MORNINGSIDE/ ing. Close to amenities, to bus. $900. September MILNER: 3 bedroom TTC. No pets/smoking. 1st. Non-smoking/ pets. townhouse for rent. N e g o t i a b l e . Garage, A/C & play416-287-8891, 416-269-0072. View ground. Close to 647-271-0554. weekends.

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schools & shopping. Now accepting applications. Move-in special offer to August 31st, 2013. 416-282-3976

Nannies/Live In/Out WANTEDLIVE-OUT nanny/ housekeeper for special needs female. Must have car. Call 416-724-8127

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2 BEDROOM basement, separate entrance, 2 minute walk to TTC, Scarborough UofT, Centennial College, near shopping. $800 inclusive. 416-816-2206. suthan_ve@hotmail.com

Call

853 1765

Adjustments: Every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of your ad. Please check your ad on the first insertion. For multiple insertions of the same ad, credit will be made only for the first insertion. Credit given for errors in connection with production on ads is limited to the printed space involved. Cancellations must be made by 2 p.m. one business day prior to publication date. Cancellations must be made by telephone. Do not fax or e-mail cancellations.

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OLD FINCH/ Morningside. 1 large/ 1 small bedroom basement, airconditioned. Separate entrance. TTC/ door. Family oriented. $900. Non-smoking/ pets. 647-774-8960 KINGSTON/ LAWRENCE 1 bedroom basement. Separate entrance. Newly renovated. Laundry, cable, internet, & utilities included. No smoking/ pets. $800. 416-724-2585

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Masonry & Concrete

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BUILDER/ GENERAL CONTRACTORS RESIDENTIAL/ COMMERCIAL. Finished basements. Painting. Bathrooms. Ceramic tiles. Flat roofs. Leaking basements. Brick/chimney repairs. House additions 905-764-6667, 416-823-5120

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Appliance Repairs/ Installation #1 APPLIANCES Licensed Refrigeration Contractor, 28 Years Experience, FREE ESTIMATE, 2 YEARS WARRANTY Refrigerator/ Stove/ Washer/ Dryer/ Hot Water Tank/ Furnace/ Air conditioning Robin: 416-418-1821 ALL CITI APPLIANCES. Appliances repaired professionally. 35 years experience. Fridge’s, coolers, washers, dryers, stoves. Central Air Conditioning & Heating. (416)281-3030

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15

Changes aim to improve services for those in need >>>from page 1 and Eglinton Avenue and at Kennedy Road and Sheppard Avenue. The proposal “would result in improved service for clients as they will be able to access the program at multiple locations, instead of just one, and there will be no reduction in services,” Holly-Ann Campbell, a TSH spokesperson, said in a statement recently. Both teenagers and adults have been treated by the program since 1987, when it was just the second regional centre created in Ontario to deal with sexual assault. It had 216 adult clients in 2011. In May 2012, the program’s counselling services and follow-up were relocated to

the Immigration Resource Centre, a community hub run by the Centre for Immigration and Community Services, on Midland Avenue. Short surveys The hospital and the health centre have not publicly said why they believe SCHC should host these services instead. Campbell said TSH started distributing short surveys on its proposal last month to clients of the care centre, hospital staff and physicians, family physicians in Scarborough and some other community partners.

i

For more on sexual assault care, visit the sexual assault care ontario website at www. sacc.to

East Scarborough Storefront seeks committee volunteers T h e E a s t S c a r b o ro u g h Storefront, a partnership of many agencies serving Kingston-Galloway-Orton Park, is seeking volunteers to be on its steering committee. In a notice last week, The

Storefront said it is looking for candidates who “understand and appreciate” its aims, care about the community, are connected to at least one local group, like to solve problems and will commit to attend monthly meetings for one

year. Seven residents and seven agency representatives are on the committee. Anyone interested in a membership can drop off a letter and resume at The Storefront, which is at 4040 Lawrence Ave. E.

Nominations will be accepted until Oct. 1, and an election will be held on the third week in October, the organization said. More information is available at www.thestorefront. org

Summer demand still high at food banks >>>from page 1 changes, the demand doesn’t,” West-Martin said. School food drives, a big contributor the rest of the year, are missing too, and demand at food banks may increase because local children lose access to breakfast and nutrition programs when they aren’t in school, she added. SCHC, which has 1,500 regular clients including families visiting its food bank

at the rear of an apartment building at 4100 Lawrence Ave. E., hasn’t had to turn people away this summer but is rationing what it gives. The same is true for the A g i n c o u r t Co m m u n i t y Services Association food bank which serves an estimated 800 adults and 500 children in the Dorset Park Hub at 1911 Kennedy Rd. Christine Markwell, ACSA’s food bank co-ordinator, said donations during the Muslim

holy month of Ramadan do help local food banks, but not on the scale of the three largest food drives. Baby formula needed The Dorset Park food bank is particularly now short of baby formula and wipes, baby cereal and diapers, Markwell said, adding it welcomes nonperishables and also fresh, perishable foods on the days it is open, Wednesday

to Friday each week. Open on the same days, the SCHC food bank needs perishable foods (milk, juice, eggs, any fresh vegetable or fruit), plus nonperishables (beans, pasta, tuna, tea and coffee), said West-Martin, adding donations can be dropped at 4100 Lawrence from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday to Friday.

i

For more local news stories, visit us online at www.scarboroughmirror.com

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| SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013

community


SCARBOROUGH MIRROR | Tuesday, August 13, 2013 |

16

TH

8 R E B M E T P E S 6 1 AUGUST TH

Support Agincourt Community Services Association and donate much-needed school supplies. Donate 5 or more items at centre court and receive a FREE gift. One gift per person, while supplies last.

Visit bridlewoodmall.ca or agincourtcommunityservices.com for a list of priority items required.


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