The Scarborough Mirror, South, March 2, 2017

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First year culinary student Jeehun Oak prepares lamb at Centennial College’s student-run restaurant called The Local where fresh and local ingredients, along with quality, are surprising patrons

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COMMUNITY

3 | Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017

The Local: where ’taste is king’

Centennial College restaurant is staffed by students, open to the public MIKE ADLER madler@insidetoronto.com

There are no chicken burgers under heat lamps here, no trays of mac and cheese. The Local, below the new residence for Centennial College’s school of hospitality, tourism and culinary arts in Scarborough, is the place for students seeking lunch and dinner, and it’s a real restaurant, open to the public. Some people come with lower expectations, but the quality and talent at the Local surprises them, says Amanda Tarrant, the school’s general manager of restaurants and events. "Taste is king. We are blowing their expectations away." Entirely run by hospi-

tality students either in class or industry placement, the Local serves "nothing made from a box," said Tarrant. It uses fresh ingredients, local where possible. For its popular signature burger with a caramelized fried onion ring sitting on top, not just the burger and bun are homemade, but also the ketchup and pickle. The Local’s lunch menu changes every three weeks, and choices are influenced by Scarborough and the school’s multicultural environment. "We like to keep it globally inspired and locally made," said Alison Iannarelli, the executive chef. Iannarelli, who came to Centennial this past spring from private clubs, is responsible for overall food operations and said the Local "really has its own flair." Supervising the kitchen, she said, are talented chefs from hotels, clubs and downtown restaurants who know what the industry’s looking for now.

The students learn cooking skills - such as making stocks and sauces and work in all parts of the restaurant, getting "experiential learning" other colleges don’t provide, Iannarelli said. The school at 937 Progress Ave. opened the restaurant and attached café on Oct. 12, later increasing operating hours, adding dinner and weekend brunch service. In January, the Local started staying open seven days a week. It’s licensed and serving local wines and beers. Most customers are students, "but we want to welcome the community too," said Tarrant, adding the restaurant keeps prices "approachable" not just for students but Scarborough residents. To sweeten that deal, Centennial offers complimentary parking, through vouchers, to community members who come for lunch or dinner. Also, there’s no tipping. "We just let guests know

Dan Pearce/Metroland

First year culinary stuent Si Dinh serves lunch to customers at the Centennial College’s school of Hospitality, Tourism and Culinary Arts restaurant. that’s not necessary," Tarrant said. Dinner at the Local is plated, but lunch is "market style" instead of a traditional buffet. Customers get passports stamped as they are served. There’s always a vegetarian option. On one February day it was red curry with broccoli, green beans, and cauliflower, a good por-

tion on a lemon-scented rice pilaf. With many students in lime green T-shirts available, service is abundant. "The thing that you get from the people here is warmth," said Srilalitha Kalidindi, a server who’s in the school’s two-year hospitality and tourism program because "I love travelling and I love to cook."

The café, next door to baking and culinary labs, features grab-and-go foods, plus a state-of-the-art espresso machine in Centennial’s distinctive shade of green. On top of the eight-storey residence, an event centre can handle 400 people in areas with seasonal views, and has an "intimate" private dining room.

WELLNESS

Merged Scarborough hospital faces some ’hard decisions’ Merged hospitals still unsuccessful in getting province to pay $28-million bill MIKE ADLER madler@insidetoronto.com

Staff/Metroland

Andree Robichaud

Scarborough and Rouge Hospital made "very good progress" in the first months since it was created through the merger of Scarborough’s two hospitals, says Andree Robichaud, interim CEO. Acknowledging some employees of what used to be The Scarborough Hospital and Rouge Val-

ley Health System’s Centenary campus remain nervous, Robichaud said many "are cautiously optimistic". The hospital has posted results of a work plan covering the first 100 days since the Dec. 1 merger. It’s been unsuccessful in getting Ontario’s Health Ministry to pay $28 million in outstanding merger costs, though, Robichaud is hopeful it will allow costs to be

phased in over several years. The report says hospital officials asked the ministry for a "three-year relief program to address the projected working capital deficit". "There’s no question the budget’s tight, and we’ll have to make some hard decisions," Robichaud said on Feb. 23. The merger came with support for long-awaited hospital projects in Scarborough, operat-

ing rooms at the General campus, emergency rooms at Birchmount and Centenary, and eventually a comprehensive new hospital campus. A year-long planning exercise was recommended before these could proceed. Robichaud said the merged hospital could hire a CEO as soon as April, but the planning exercise might begin before a CEO is in place.

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EDITORIAL | OPINION

• OUR VIEW •

ABOUT US

Let’s not shoot the messengers There’s a troubling trend taking place in the political discourse of late. The news media is in the crosshairs and coming under increasing fire by those who would prefer to be the subject of propaganda instead of public scrutiny. The latest salvo came Friday when U.S. President Donald Trump delivered a double whammy, with White House press secretary Sean Spicer barring a number of news agencies, including the New York Times and CNN, from the daily briefing and the commander-inchief himself again referring to the media as "the enemy of the American people" in a speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference. It’s an escalation of a campaign intended to sow distrust in the media that’s been ongoing since Trump’s election campaign, with Orwellian terms such as "alternative facts" and "fake news" now entering the lexicon. A free press is an institution so integral to a functioning democracy that Thomas Jefferson is famously quoted as having said: "Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter." That’s among the reasons why many academics and experts have expressed concern with the Trump administration’s repeatedly adversarial stance toward the media with retired Navy Admiral William McRaven, leader of the 2011 operation that killed Osama bin Laden, calling it "the greatest threat to democracy in my lifetime" and Republican Senator John McCain cautioning that suppressing the press is "how dictators get started." While the hostility toward the media is not as prevalent here in Canada, it’s becoming more common to see eerily similar rhetoric dotting the comments sections of news websites and social media feeds. A big part of the news media’s role is holding elected officials, at all levels of government, to account for their actions and the decisions they make and to protect your right to know. At the same time, we’re accountable for our coverage to you, the public. It’s OK for politicians and the public to disagree with the manner in which a story is covered or offer additional information that can make the narrative more clear but there’s a massive difference between that and allegations of fabrication and deliberate falsehood. By all means, don’t hesitate to critique and question news stories, we welcome it but let’s also be careful not to shoot the messenger.

The Scarborough Mirror, published every Thursday, is a division of the Metroland Media Group Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Torstar Corporation. The Metroland family of newspapers is comprised of more than 100 community publications across Ontario.

The Scarborough Mirror is a member of the National NewsMedia Council. Complainants are urged to bring their concerns to the attention of the newspaper and, if not satisfied, write The National NewsMedia Council, Suite 200, 890 Yonge St., Toronto, ON M4W 2H2. Phone: 416-340-1981 Web: www.mediacouncil.ca

newsroom@insidetoronto.com facebook.com/InsideToronto @InsideTOnews

Serving universities, living in poverty They serve meals on Toronto campuses, but can they afford meat for their families? They deal with hundreds of customers a day, and are expected to smile. Until now. Food servers at York University and University of Toronto Scarborough are on strike. Keisha Latty, on the job at York for 11 years, says the pay is insulting. She needs $1,200 for rent, plus babysitting money and food for her three kids. Last week, she hadn’t paid her February rent, and March was just days away. "You can’t afford to buy food in the city anymore. There’s no affordable rent in the city anymore," Latty says. And TTC fares go

MIKE ADLER Edges of Toronto up, "so when you go home, you go home with nothing." Latty actually has one of the highest salaries in her unit, $15.41 an hour. Most of the 220 people represented by UNITE Here, Local 75 on York’s Downsview campus, and 60 at UTSC, get $11.50 to $12.21. After 10 years, Maddelena Funarolo’s pay is

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$12.21, not up even by $2. "How do you feed a family?" she asks. "How?" Their contracts are not with the universities but Aramark, a U.S. company. Meanwhile, servers at U of T’s St. George campus, working for U of T directly, get $18 or $20 an hour. Servers at the suburban campuses deserve those same wages, wages they can live on. Darrell and Maureen Jansen have served UTSC students and staff for 10 years. Maureen gets $11.50, Darrell $12.66; he was promoted recently but Aramark didn’t increase his pay. Their two children are in college. The Jansens rent a north Scarborough house for $1,000 a month, have no savings, and while

on strike, no income. Like other servers, they say their fight isn’t just for money but the next generation. They also want more respect from an employer constantly pushing more work on them. "We are strong. We will fight to our last," Maureen says. Growing fast and planning big things, York and UTSC say they’re "anchor institutions" committed to raising up the communities around them. That’s a lie if full-time employees on those campuses don’t make a living wage. Edges of Toronto is a column about how people see life in Toronto differently, depending on where they live. Reach Mike Adler at madler@insidetoronto.com

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CITY

5

and up to Toronto Council to approve and determine its location. He pointed to a third party review of construction estimates attached to the report - which estimates a price of $2.7-billion in 2021dollars for building a new station, bus terminal plus a subway tunnel leading from Kennedy Station representing 64 per cent of construction- as evidence significant cost-savings are possible. "(The report) does show substantial savings can be achieved depending on choices made in construction of the subway extension," said Tory during a media appearance Tuesday morning on the Scarborough RT platform at Kennedy station. "We know there is at least a few hundred million dollars in potential savings that can be found over the life of this project to help keep costs as low as possible." While the project which would replace the obsolete

RAHUL GUPTA rgupta@insidetoronto.com Toronto’s mayor defended another cost hike to the one-stop Scarborough subway extension, claiming hundreds of millions in savings is possible for the project. John Tory and several staunch allies of the controversial transit plan reiterated their support for the Toronto Council-endorsed plan, which according to a new staff report which projects costs for building a single subway station at Scarborough Centre at $3.34 billion - an additional $187-million over the most recent estimate. The additional cost stems from construction of a new underground bus terminal at the new subway station, which is recommended by city staff over a street-level design. Tory said a decision on the bus terminal is separate from the subway extension

Staff/Metroland

Ward 35 Scarborough Southwest Councillor Michelle Holland (right) greets Mayor John Tory, TTC chair Josh Colle and Councillor Glenn De Baeremaeker (Ward 38, Scarborough Centre) as they step off the Scarborough RT at Kennedy station. plan which also includes a 17-stop eastern extension of the Eglinton Crosstown LRT between Kennedy and

SRT, it has engendered controversy and fierce council debate, morphing from a three-stop extension down to two-stop and finally the latest proposed routing along the McCowan Road transit corridor. Last year Council approved by majority a $3.5-billion network

CORRECTION The column Lyon Around which appeared in

University of Toronto Scarborough (UTSC), projected to cost $1.6-billion. With the additional cost for the subway project eating further into the overall budget, Tory conceded the light rail plan will require a funding commitment from the federal government if it’s ever to be constructed. Newly elected Scarborough-Rouge River city councillor Neethan Shan blamed the spiraling cost for the subway extension on decades of inaction on local transit improvement, dating before amalgamation when the borough was an independent municipality. Shan said the one-stop plan would especially benefit marginalized persons of colour pushed out to areas under-serviced by transit. "Whether you look at it

economically or environmentally, this is an investment for Scarborough," said Shan who was joined at the press conference by fellow Scarborough councillors Glenn De Baeremaeker and Michelle Holland along with TTC chair Josh Colle. But transit activist Brenda Thompson described the the Scarborough subway extension as a "house of cards" lacking strong evidence of its benefit for local residents. "If we’re going to go ahead with this project we need the evidence that shows it’s a good value for money," said Thompson, a member of Scarborough Transit Action. The mayor’s executive committee will debate the report at its Marc h 7 meeting.

the Feb. 23 edition of The Scarborough Mirror contained incorrect information. Ted and John Foster

own the long-standing Foster’s Shoes on Lawrence Avenue in Scarborough. The Mirror regrets the error.

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| Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017

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Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017 |

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MONEY MATTERS

Middle class Torontonians feeling the squeeze Residents struggle to stay afloat as income disparity in Toronto grows

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JOANNA LAVOIE jlavoie@insidetoronto.com North York resident Cathleen Trinh, mom to three-year-old Charlie, keeps a fairly tight rein on her finances. Trinh, who works in Richmond Hill, directs a notable portion of her earnings to child care. "It is manageable with my income. I’m pretty lucky, but it could be better," said Trinh, who is on a waiting list for a child care subsidy. "The Canada Child Tax Benefit helps me a lot." Since becoming a single mom a year ago, Trinh said she’s learned a lot more about how to access government resources and tax breaks. She’s currently working to save up enough money to purchase a property in the city. "One of the major financial challenges is trying to own something. It’s basically impossible," admitted Trinh, who came to Canada from Germany 14 years ago. "I have not given up hope on home ownership, but I’m not ready for it yet. Maybe in the next year if the prices aren’t crazy." Trinh’s situation is a common one for people in Toronto who earn between $40,000 and $90,000 annually. Danielle C., a mother of young two sons from East York, would love to own her own home in the city but realizes it’s just not possible with her family’s $80,000 annual income and their current monthly expenditures, which includes $2,000 for daycare. "We could afford the mortgage payment but the challenge is to pay down our consumer debt and save for the down payment," said Danielle, who asked to not use her full name for privacy reasons. "Five years would be the

Submitted photo

Cathleen Trinh and her son Charlie, 3, are feeling the financial pressures of living in Toronto. earliest my partner and I could consider a house, if all things fall into place." Regardless, she said the benefits of city life, notably its diversity, walkability, and access to public transit, outweigh the dream of home ownership. A decade ago, University of Toronto professor David Hulchanski published a groundbreaking report, Three Cities Within Toronto, which looked at income polarization in Toronto by neighbourhood from 1970 to 2005. In early 2015, Hulchanski and his team of researchers provided an update to that initial report. They found that the city’s wealth is becoming even more concentrated in the central part of the city with less affluent areas growing

in Toronto’s outer limits. The findings, which still ring true today, also show that the average income is

rising significantly in downtown and the north end, essentially pushing out those who earn less.

Sean Meagher, executive director of Social Planning Toronto, spends his days advocating for affordability for Toronto’s roughly one million households. Together with his team, he works to build a Toronto where everyone has the "means to participate" in society. "We don’t want people pushed into pockets. We want people to be able to live everywhere in the city and afford to do so," he said. "I think it’s valuable (to the city) and an investment we have to make." Recently, the council has been pushing Toronto to do better in a campaign of the same name. Part of "Toronto Can Do Better" includes lobbying the city to look at the bigger picture and invest in transit, good jobs, and affordable housing in its 2017 budget. "Our view is, let’s budget smart. We want a plan that makes sense. It’s about making choices that meet our needs versus the numbers we like," he said, pointing to the importance of considering interconnections like the health benefits of providing people with affordable, quality housing when it comes to city budgeting. Social Planning Toronto has also been working to help politicians better understand how budget cuts directly impact real people’s lives and how adding to the city’s coffers through a small property

tax increase can be beneficial for all. WoodGreen Community Services, a long-standing social service agency in east Toronto, is one of many organizations across the city helping Torontonians find ways to afford their lives and thrive. "Income stress affects all income levels. You don’t have to be in the lowest income bracket to feel the stress of affordability," said Diane Dyson, director of research and public policy. "We help people who are trying to find resources." Dyson and her colleagues work to better understand how decisions made by the government directly affect people’s lives, and identify and improve the "missing pieces" in the system. A major part of their work is addressing the lack of affordable housing in Toronto. For Steven Vanderherberg, the agency’s director of strategic initiatives, it’s all about helping people living with less find the right balance of income and expenses, and to help them be autonomous and better "afford their lives." WoodGreen runs yearlong income tax clinics as well as a host of Financial Empowerment Services to help people increase their financial literacy, manage their debt, create a budget, access government income sources. -with files from Torstar News

MIDDLE CLASS CHALLENGES ANDREA GASCA A Beach resident for 16 years, Andreea Gasca is prepared to make sacrifices so that her 12-year-old daughter Nikita can reap the benefits of growing up in a diverse, multicultural city. "I’m staying in Toronto because of what it can teach my child. I want my daughter to have an open mind. From an arts and culture standpoint, Toronto offers so much," shared Gasca, who works for the Attorney General’s office. Originally from Montreal, Gasca said to stay afloat she’s had to find creative ways to stretch a dollar. "We’ve developed an addiction to Value Village and the Facebook (buy and sell) groups. You have to find ways to make it work," said Gasca, who has only taken one vacation in 12 years. "It’s tough to get ahead, to make ends meet." Gasca said inflation is a key reason why she struggles to get ahead even if her income has increased in recent years. ALICIA PENNY Scarborough resident Alicia Penny, her partner, and their two-year-old son, Elijah, are also working hard to stay afloat. Toronto is home and she feels her family has the right to live here. "Our roots are here. It’s just too much to up and move somewhere else where you don’t know anybody," she told Metroland Media Toronto. Penny, who has lived in the city for the majority of her life, said one of the challenges her young family faces is the cost of housing. "It requires a lot of juggling," she admitted. Both Penny, who works in landscaping, and her partner, a mechanic by trade, are both currently receiving disability benefits. She said the challenge is that any extra income earned or any savings or assets they had are counted against them. "It’s tough to get ahead," she said.


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LEASE PAYMENTS INCLUDE FREIGHT AND PDI. EXCLUDES LICENCE AND HST. DEALER ORDER/TRADE MAY BE NECESSARY. Limited time lease offers available through Honda Financial Services Inc. (HFS), to qualified retail customers on approved credit. Weekly payments include freight and PDI (ranges from $1,595 to $1,695 depending on model), EHF tires & filters ($18.75), A/C charge ($100), and OMVIC fee ($10). Taxes, licence, insurance and registration are extra. Representative weekly lease example: 2017 Civic LX Sedan 6MT (Model FC2E5HE) // 2017 Accord LX 6MT (Model CR2E3HE) on a 60-month term with 260 weekly payments at 1.99% // 0.99% lease APR. Weekly payment is $55.86 // $66.92 with $0 down or equivalent trade-in and $200 // $75 total lease incentive included. Down payments, $0 security deposit and first weekly payments due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $14,524.85 // $17,399.70. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometres. PPSA lien registration fee of $45.93 and lien registering agent’s fee of $5.65, due at time of delivery are not included. ^$750 // $1000 Honda Financial Services Inc. (HFS) lease & finance dollars are deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. Lease & finance dollars apply to retail customer lease or finance agreements through HFS for 2017 Civic Sedan and Coupe // Accord Sedan models concluded between March 1st, 2017 and March 31st, 2017 at participating Ontario Honda Dealers. For all offers: licence, insurance, PPSA, other taxes (including HST) and excess wear and tear are extra. Taxes payable on full amount of purchase price. Offers only valid for Ontario residents at participating Ontario Honda Dealers. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Colour availability may vary by dealer. Vehicles and accessories are for illustration purposes only. Offers, prices and features subject to change without notice. See your Ontario Honda Dealer or visit HondaOntario.com for full details.

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We’re looking for people like you, who may be experiencing difficulty hearing in noisy environments to evaluate a remarkable new digital hearing aid and a rehabilitative process that could be the solution to your difficulties. There’s no cost or obligation to participate! Call us toll-free today to see if you qualify for this Field Test. Potential candidates will be given a FREE hearing test to determine their candidacy. Selected participants will be given a FREE in-office demonstration and the opportunity to evaluate the latest, most advanced hearing aid technology for 30 days. This latest digital technology solves the biggest challenge for hearing aid wearers – hearing well in noisy environments. Nobody will notice it because of its minute size, fitting snugly and comfortably just behind the ear. Everything works automatically, so you can get back to enjoying your relationships, rather than thinking about your hearing. Following your 30 day Field Test, these hearing aids will be available for purchase, including everything you need for 3 full years.

"Since I was five, I have been fascinated by the human body," said Burhan Butt, who recently received the Dean’s Scholar Award and Opportunity Scholarship to begin his medical education at Ross University School of Medicine. Butt is a recent graduate from the University of Toronto where he received an honours degree with distinction in biology. What established his pursuit of medicine was his trip to Pakistan to visit family. At age nine, Butt was inspired by his uncles who were physicians. He witnessed their knack for treating their patients’ medical conditions while maintaining meaningful connections with them. "One uncle who was a family physician really inspired me as I observed him interacting with patients every day," said Butt. "The ability to understand the human body as well as being able to relate to people with different personalities and experiences was a huge in-

Submitted photo

Burhan Butt received the Dean’s Scholar Award to begin his medical education at Ross University School of Medicine. fluence in my decision to pursue medicine as a child." Now as a young adult, one of Butt’s biggest inspirations to become a physician is his older sister, Ifrah Butt, who is currently completing her last semester at Ross in a clinical clerkship at St. Joseph Mercy Oakland in Michigan. "Her experiences in clinical settings

SAMKO & MIKO CALL NOW - Candidates are being selected. The selection process for this test period will end March 31st, 2017.

Book your FREE appointment today! See the list of clinics below or visit ListenUPcanada.com • Scarborough Centenary | 212-2863 Ellesmere Road | Call toll-free 1-888-228-2404 • Scarborough East | 3434 Lawrence Avenue East | Call Stephanie at 1-888-228-2753

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What is uReport uReport enables our readers to submit photographs and videos from local events, written reports on things happening around Toronto, letters to the editor and event listings. Submissions, made through insidetoronto.com or via email at newsroom@insidetoronto.com, are reviewed by an editor before being published on our website. Select submissions will appear in the newspaper.

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and her daily schedule confirms I made the right decision going to medical school," said Butt. Butt aspires to volunteer with Doctors Without Borders and hopes to use his language skills to reduce barriers to health care - he is fluent in English, Urdu, Hindi and Punjabi. "I want to get a medical degree so that I can use my skills and experience to make health care much more accessible to everyone," said Butt. "I want to treat people for an affordable cost." He goes on, "I believe health care should be a right, not a privilege."

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Connect Hearing, with a leading hearing researcher at Ryerson University, seeks participants for a hearing study investigating the factors that can influence better hearing. All participants will have a hearing test provided at no charge. The data collected from this study will be used to further our understanding of hearing loss and improve life-changing hearing healthcare across Canada.

often find they can “get by” without help, however as the problem worsens this becomes increasingly harder to do. By studying those people having difficulty in noise or with television, we hope to identify key factors impacting these difficulties and further understand their influence on the treatment process.

Why Research Hearing Loss?

1. Cruickshanks, K. L., Wiley, T. L., Tweed, T. S., Klein, B. E. K., Klein, R, Mares-Perlman, J. A., & Nondahl, D. M. (1998). Prevalence of Hearing Loss in Older Adults in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin: The Epidemiology of Hearing Loss Study. Am. J. Epidemiol. 148 (9), 879-886.

Deep inside our ears are several thousand microscopic “hair cells.” These cells are arranged in rows and each cell is responsible for hearing a specific pitch, similar to the keys on a piano. As we age, some of these cells become damaged… from loud noises, chronic conditions, or the process of aging itself. Just like a piano with damaged keys, an ear with damaged hair cells will make things sound muffled and distorted.

Interested people can register to be a part of this lifechanging hearing study* by calling: 1.888.242.4892 or visiting connecthearing.ca/hearing-study.

For some people this loss of clarity is only a problem at noisy restaurants or in the car, but for others it makes listening a struggle throughout the entire day.

| Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017

Major University hearing study seeks participants.

2. National Institutes of Health. (2010).

It is estimated that 46% of people aged 45 to 87 have some degree of hearing loss,1 but most do not seek treatment right away. In fact, the average person with hearing loss will wait ten years before seeking help.2 This is because at the beginning stages of hearing loss people

*Study participants must be over 50 years of age and have the option to participate. No fees and no purchase necessary. ADP, VAC, WSIB, NIHB accepted.

ACTING TODAY CAN PREVENT AN ACCIDENT TOMORROW. At CP, we want to make the safest railway in North America even safer. Changing legislation and regulations to allow the use of video and voice recorders in the cabs of our locomotives could prevent accidents, protect communities and save lives. Find out more at CPRailSafe.ca.

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Passover Food Drive helps needy families Canned food, juice needed for drive March 19 to 29 More than 2,000 food boxes will be assembled and delivered as part of this year’s Passover Food Drive to help Jewish families in need celebrate the holiday. Each of the 2,500 boxes will contain most of the essentials needed for two meals for up to three Greater Toronto Area (GTA) residents who may be living in poverty, are recent immigrants, have disabilities or are in financial dire straits. The Passover Food Drive, organized by the National Council of Jewish Women of Canada, Toronto Section (NCJWC-TS), will run Sunday, March 19 to Wednesday, March 29, with delivery day set for Sunday, April 2. Of the estimated 200,000 Jewish people living in Toronto, some 26,000 live below the poverty line, according to NCJWC-TS. The boxes, filled with traditional Passover food, will be packed and delivered to those in need in Toronto and the GTA. Volunteer drivers are needed April 2 to deliver boxes between 8:30 and 11:30 a.m. starting from 4700 Bathurst St. Along with volunteers, the food drive is also looking for monetary donations, with

cash going toward purchasing perishable items, such as chicken. Passover, which celebrates the deliverance of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt, begins the evening of Monday, April 10 and ends the evening of Tuesday, April 18. Food items, including apple juice, apple sauce, cake mix, canned fruit, canned tuna, cereal, sweets, farfel, grape juice, jam, and vegetable soup mix can be dropped off in Toronto and York Region at Sobeys, 9200 Bathurst St. at Rutherford Road; Longo’s, 9306 Bathurst St. at Rutherford Road; Loblaws, 396 St. Clair Avenue, east of Bathurst Street; Longo’s, 808 York Mills Rd., east of Leslie Street; Pat’s No Frills, 270 Wilson Ave. at Bathurst Street; Metro in Lawrence Plaza, 3090 Bathurst St. at Lawrence Avenue; and Metro, 600 Sheppard Ave. at Bathurst Street. The Passover Food Drive began in 1983 when members of the NCJWC-TS noted there were some members of their community in need of food during Passover. That year, 25 kosher for Passover food boxes were packed and delivered. For information, to donate, or for driver volunteer information email pfd@ncjwctoronto.org or call 416-633-5100.

Take our shopping survey to win up to $5,000 Contest runs until April 17 Participate in the 2017 Pulse of Metroland Media and Shopping Survey and you could win between $500 to $5,000 in cash prizes. This contest runs until April 17. Metroland Media wants to find out more about how you shop. The information you provide will assist businesses in making decisions for the future. The questions are simple and all we need is a little of your time. Pulse Research is conducting the shopping survey for us. It does not release your personal information. To access the survey and see full contest rules, visit www.pulsere-

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Employment. Education. Entrepreneurship. These are the three pillars upon which the Millennial Mission is built. Metroland Media has embarked on a conversation with a generation of people who are currently finding their niche in a competitive world. Through this conversation our journalists will investigate if students currently enrolled in post-secondary education in Ontario are being adequately prepared for the constantly changing workforce. We ask students in colleges and universities to answer the question:, "Why are I here?" And their answers, on video, are as unique as should be expected from a demographic that won’t be pigeonholed. We look at the job market from all sides and ask

those in the know to predict where savvy wage earners should place their hopes, dreams and aspirations for a rewarding career. We also talk to employers about their expectations from the education system, from workers and where they are placing their bets for a secure economic future. This is a demographic that defies description and

for many individuals in their 20s and early 30s, a job just won’t cut it. Entrepreneurship is as likely a path to a successful future as a job or handful of degrees and Millennials are creating their own future through creativity, daring, hard work and sheer will. Our conversation focuses on their journey as well. The Millennial Mission is now live on our website at insidetoronto.com/millennialmission Visit us and see what young people are saying now about the future. And then visit us again because we’re not done yet. This conversation is lively, pointed, and informative and it will go on for as long as you have questions to be answered about possible future paths. Come talk with us. We’re listening.

The City of Toronto is considering a stormwater charge

Tell us what you think Visit toronto.ca/stormwatercharge to: • Learn more about the proposed stormwater charge • Get a complete list of the public consultation dates and locations • Complete the survey What is stormwater? Stormwater is rain and melted snow. When not absorbed into the ground, it runs off properties onto streets, down storm drains and through a complex network of pipes that carry it into local waterways or, in some cases, wastewater treatment facilities. Generally, the more hard surfaces a property has the more stormwater it adds to the stormwater system.

RESIDENTIAL Assumes annual water use of 265 cubic metres and a lot size of 0.037 ha (approx. 4,000 sq ft)

An increase in extreme storms, combined with more hard surfaces in the city is resulting in more water making its way into the stormwater system. Too much water can overwhelm the system leading to flooded basements and poor water quality in local waterways, including Lake Ontario.

How is stormwater managed? Making infrastructure improvements is necessary to manage the impacts of stormwater. To help manage stormwater, the City is creating new holding ponds, tanks and tunnels, and overhauling some sewer infrastructure that is more than 100 years old.

The proposal is to remove the portion paid for stormwater – currently embedded in the water rate – and show it as a separate charge on the bill. The water rate will decrease and a stormwater charge will be added. The amount paid for stormwater will be based on property size and the average amount of hard surfaces on properties of a similar size. Some bills will go up and some will go down. The examples on the right use proposed 2019 water rates. They are examples only, because water use and lot size differ for all properties.

Why is a stormwater charge being considered?

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300 Borough Drive Scarborough, ON M1P 4P5 jinnys.ca/pandorascarborough

APARTMENT & CONDO BUILDINGS Assumes annual water use of 2,557 cubic metres and a lot size of 0.088 ha (approx. 9,500 sq ft) PROPOSAL: CURRENT LOWER WATER RATE + STORMWATER CHARGE Water rate charge: Water rate charge: $7,771 $10,018 Stormwater charge: $860 Total annual bill: Total annual bill: $8,631 $10,018 Per day: $27.45 Per day: $23.65 Annual difference: -$1,387 -13.8% INDUSTRIAL, COMMERCIAL & INSTITUTIONAL Assumes annual water use of 532 cubic metres and a lot size of 0.052 ha (approx. 5,600 sq ft) PROPOSAL: CURRENT LOWER WATER RATE + STORMWATER CHARGE Water rate charge: Water rate charge: $1,617 $2,084 Stormwater charge: $530 Total annual bill: $2,084 Total annual bill: $2,147 Per day: $5.71 Per day: $5.88 Annual difference: $62 3.0%

Meet with City re presentatives by attending one of our formal presentations* • Scarborough Civic Centre Tu esday, March 7 • East York Civi c Centre Monda y, March 20 • Etobicoke Civi c Centre Thursd ay, March 23 • York Civic Ce ntre Tuesday, M arch 28 • Metro Hall Th ursday, March 30 (4 p.m. to 9 p.m.) • North York Civi c Centre Tuesda y, April 4 * Events start at 6 p.m. (except w here noted otherwise) and pr esentations begi n at 7 p.m.

insidetoronto.com

SCARBOROUGH TOWN CENTRE

There is a growing need for new and upgraded stormwater infrastructure. Toronto City Council will be considering the stormwater charge in the spring of 2017.

PROPOSAL: LOWER WATER RATE + STORMWATER CHARGE Water rate charge: Water rate charge: $805 $1,038 Stormwater charge: $225 Total annual bill: $1,038 Total annual bill: $1,030 Per day: $2.84 Per day: $2.82 Annual difference: -$8 -0.8% CURRENT

What is the challenge?

How will a stormwater charge affect water bills?

| Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017

Millennial Mission: everything you need to know


Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017 |

14

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| Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017

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866 KROSNO BLVD, PICKERING 3 bedroom bungalow! Hardwood floors, updated kitchen www.SueSellsScarborough.com and separate entrance to a 1 bedroom basement suite. Many recent updates - this house has been very well maintained! Close to schools, shopping, transit & GO.

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MORNINGSIDE / MCLEVIN 48 McKNIGHT DR. Absolutely Stunning! 3+1 Bedrooms Detached In A High Demand Area. Finished Bsmt With Sep/ Ent. It Feature A Living, Bedroom & Washroom. Freshly Painted! Eat-In Kitchen Walk-Out To A Fully Fenced Backyard. Bright And Spacious Rooms. Close To Schools, Park, TTC, Shopping, Library, Highway 401 And All Other Amenities.

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32 HOLLIS AVE. Don’t miss this solid, spacious, 3-bdrm brick, raised bungalow with B/I garage & private drive on a 33 x 120’ lot backing onto Hollis-Kalmar Park. The main floor will be vacant on closing and needs minor repairs, paint & hardwood refinishing. A new kitchen & bath would really make it shine! The large, 2-bdrm in-law suite is occupied by a clean, quiet tenant who may want to stay (no retrofit warranty). The ONLY opportunity to see this house will be at the open houses. Offers will be considered on Tuesday, the 7th. Call for more information and photos. $699,000

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37 NEAPOLITAN DR. BRIMLEY / ELLESMERE • Lovely Bungalow • Near Scarborough Town Centre • Sought After Location • Upgraded Kitchen Cabinets With Granite Counter & Ceramic Tile Floor

• Upgraded Windows • Hardwood Floor • Walk-Out To Sun Deck • Premium Size Lot • Separate Entrance To A Potential Basement Apartment

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16 Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017 |

FRANK LEO OPULENT kINGSWAY RESIDENCE Backing Onto Humber River, Premium 350 Ft Lot, Landscaped Resort Like Oasis, Inground Pool, Cabana, Patio, Amazing Views, Stately Renovated 5 Bedroom 2 Storey, 6 Bathrooms, Exudes Charm, Character & Luxury. Crown Mouldings, Heated Floors, Formal Dining Room, Gourmet Kitchen, Finished Bsmt, Nanny Suite, Master Bedroom Retreat, Walkout to Spectacular Balcony, Elegance Personified, Steps to Amenities & Subway! $3,127,000!

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ER ANOTH D L SO

Children’s Miracle Network & Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation SPECTACULAR MIDTOWN TORONTO RESIDENCE 6 Lots Combined to Build this Dream Home + Resort-Like Property. 7,500 Sq Ft of Living Space, Bright Open Concept Living Room, Custom Designed Chef’s Kitchen, Custom Loft with 9 Skylights. Walls of glass throughout, Master Bedroom Retreat, Rec Room with Floating Stage, Sound-Proof Theatre Room, 650 LED Pot Lights, Blue Quartz Pool, Plus much more! SOLD FOR TOP $$!!

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STEPS TO THE LAkE! Situated on a Magnificent 65 x 152 Ft Lot, Exquisite Custom Built Home, Luxury Appointments, Superb Craftsmanship, Elegant Open Concept Layout, Gourmet Kitchen, Built-In S/S Appliances, Centre Island, Massive Great Room, Stone Fireplace, Master Bedroom Retreat. Spa Like Bathroom, Walk-in Closet of your Dreams! Fully Finished Basement Walkout, Ideal for Entertaining, Large Back Yard! Simply Gorgeous! $2,295,000!

ER ANOTH D SOL

ER ANOTH SOLD

BREATHTAkING CUSTOM ESTATE!!

kING CITY LUxURY!!

Situated on a premium 2.24 acre lot, 4 car garage, long private drive, double door entry, 4 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, heated floor in huge kitchen, skylight, family room, great room with cathedral ceilings, office, indoor heated salt water pool, wrap around deck & interlock, year round oasis. SOLD FOR TOP $$!!

Absolutely Stunning Luxury 4 Bedroom Home Located In Desirable King City!! Approximately 3,800 S/F And Loaded W/ Custom Features. Large Open Concept Kitchen W/ Island, Professional Grade Appliances, Spacious Family Room, Separate Living & Formal Dining Room, Main Floor Library, Custom Mouldings & Feature Ceilings Throughout, W/O Basement W/ 9’ Ceilings! Amazing Property & Location – Must Be Seen, Only $1,998,000!!!

HUGE MONEY MAkING MACHINE! 3000 Sq ft 3 Level Store with Two 2 Bdrm Apts in South Etobicoke + Unspoiled Basement. Current Laundry Business included Earns $100k Net! 11.4% Cap! Successful Owners Retiring. Keep or Rent. Huge Opportunity! SOLD FAST FOR 100% OF ASKING

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ER ANOTH SOLD

RENOvATED 6 BEDROOM 2 STOREY

AN ENTERTAINER’S DREAM!!

Quiet High Demand Neighbourhood, Situated on 390 ft Deep Lot, Stunning Open Concept Layout, Gleaming Hardwood Floors, Gourmet Family Size Kitchen, S/S Appliances, Formal Dining Room, Spacious Bright Large Living Rm, Massive Family Room, Walkout to Deck Overlooking Large Backyard, Finished Basement, Enclosed Sunroom, Double Garage Plus Much More! $1,450,000!

Stunning Custom-Built 4 Bedroom Home!! Amazing Open Concept Main Floor W/ Modern Kitchen, Separate Living & Dining Rooms, Large Master W/Ensuite, Finished Basement W/Sep Entrance, Incredible Backyard & Rooftop Patios Make This Home Perfect For Hosting Summer Parties! Absolutely Must Be Seen, Only $1,379,900!!!

DEvELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY! Huge 67 x 168 Lot on busy Queen St. W in downtown Brampton. Potential Condo Development Site. Large Bungalow with Circular Drive. 20 Car Parking. 2 Car Detached Garage. Run your business or develop. SOLD FAST FOR TOP $$!!

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Finished Walkout Bsmt Ideal for Entertaining or Nanny Suite. Premium Finishes & Exceptional Craftsmanship, Astonishingly Spacious Detached 4+1 Bdrm 2-Storey, Open Concept Layout, Premium Hardwood Flrs, Iron Railing Staircase, Gourmet Kitchen With Granite Countertops & S/S Appliances, Master Retreat With Luxurious Ensuite & W/I Closet. Interlock and much more, Close To Amenities, Steps To School, Must Be Seen, Only $999,900!

Situated on 50x200 ft lot, Detached Bungalow with finished basement, double garage, long private drive. Immaculately maintained by original owner. Currently residential, easily converted to commercial. Great location minutes to downtown & airport. Amazing value one of a kind for only $899,900!!

Prime neighbourhood and premium 50ft lot, surrounded by million dollar plus homes. Detached, stucco exterior finish, circular drive, open concept living room, formal dining room, finished basement, huge backyard, fantastic investment only $899,900!!

Rare Double Storefront with 2 Apartments above (3 bdrm and 2 Bdrm) plus Tenanted Basement Rooms. $75K in recent upgrades. Large 30x107 Lot. 6 Car Parking, Separate Meters. Approx. 7% Cap Rate! Only $899,000!

Gorgeous fully renovated 2 storey home. Beautiful custom kitchen with granite counters and s/s appliances.Walk-out to huge backyard from dining room. Crown mouldings, handcrafted woodwork and pot lights throughout. Separate entrance to stunning basement with kitchen, bedroom and huge living room. Double Car Garage, New furnace, new a/c, new stucco, New Windows and Doors.

ER ANOTH D SOL

ER ANOTH S O LD

ALDERWOOD OPPORTUNITY! Detached brick & stone, 3 bedroom bungalow with addition. Situated on a 156ft lot, large porch, open concept living & dining room, huge kitchen with walkout to sunroom, large finished basement rec room, gas fireplace, walkout to large backyard, private drive, high demand neighbourhood. Simply Must Be Seen. SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 115% OF ASKING!!

ER ANOTH S O LD

ER ANOTH D SOL

DETACHED BUNGALOW 4 Bdrm Brick Bungalow with Huge Addition on a Large 40 x 119 Lot. Like 2 Houses in 1! Can renovate, rebuild, or build new. Perfect for Contractors/Builders. Walk to Humber College and Lake. Rare Opportunity! SOLD IN 1WK FOR 156% OF ASKING!!

SPACIOUS FAMILY HOME

HUGE BACkYARD ON PRIvATE COURT!

LARGE TORONTO SEMI!!

Large 3 Bedroom home on a family friendly court, offered for the first time in 30 Years. Meticulously maintained home with Spacious Eat-In Kitchen, Dedicated Dining Room, Sunken Family Room, Finished Basement. Super Value! SOLD FOR 101% OF ASKING!!

Spacious & Exceptionally Maintained 3 Bdrm, Danforth-Area Home!! Separate Living & Dining Rms, Eat-In Kitchen, Separate Entrance To Finished Basement (In-Law Suite Potential). Vibrant Area Close To Schools, Subway, Restaurants & Cafes! Amazing Location & Opportunity.

ER ANOTH D L SO

YORkDALE-GLEN PARk GEM!!

AMAzING FAMILY HOME!!

LARGE 4 BEDROOM!!

Large & Well Maintained Detached 3 +1 Bedroom Home – Amazing Location Close To Yorkdale Mall!! Spacious SplitLevel Layout Features Eat-In Kitchen, L-Shaped Living/Dining Room, Master Bedroom W/ Ensuite. Separate Side Entrance (In Law Suite Potential). Many Recent Updates. Quiet Crescent Close To Subway, Highways & World-Class Shopping.

Spacious & Very Well Maintained 4 + 2 Bedroom, 2-Family Home!! Excellent Layout Features Large Kitchen W/ Breakfast Area, Living/Dining Rooms & Separate Family Room, Master Bedroom W/ Ensuite. Separate, Legal 2 Bedroom Basement Apartment Makes This Property An Ideal Investment To Live/ Rent! Amazing Neighbourhood Close To Parks & Schools.

Spacious & Well Maintained Semi-Detached Bungalow With Huge Potential!! Open Concept Living & Dining Rooms, Eat-In Kitchen, Large Bedrooms, Separate Entrance To Finished Basement (In-Law Suite Potential). Convenient West Toronto Location Close To Schools, Transit & Highways. Incredible Opportunity, Only $489,900!!

SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 122% OF ASKING

ER ANOTH S O LD

ER ANOTH S O LD

SPECTACULAR 2-STOREY

AMAzING vALUE Quaint 3 bedroom, 2 storey home. Hardwood floors throughout. Spacious eat-in kitchen with breakfast area and walk-out to backyard. Excellent location close to all amenities. Great opportunity!! SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 113% OF ASKING!!

CARRINGTON TOWER! Fabulous South view, 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, with open concept living & dining rooms and walkout to balcony. Low maintenance fee is all inclusive utilities & parking. Great Yonge & Steeles location. Amazing opportunity & Value. SOLD FAST FOR 100% OF ASKING!!

SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 153% OF ASKING!!

ER ANOTH D L SO

DOWNTOWN SEMI! Large 3 Bdrm Semi in Prime Location, Perfect for Starter Family, Investor, Or Renovators. Currently divided into Three 1 Bdrm Apts - Can Convert easily to Single Family. Great Walking Score. Incredible Value. SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 110% OF ASKING!

SUPER vALUE!! Wonderful Spacious 3 Bedroom Family Home With Finished Basement On Amazing Large Lot Nestled in a quiet neighborhood Close to shopping centres, medical centre, schools, and an anchor transit hub. Incredible Opportunity. SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 132% OF ASKING!!

ER ANOTH SOLD

ER ANOTH SOLD

Situated on a premium pie shaped lot, large bright foyer, custom kitchen with centre island, stainless steel luxury appliances, spacious open concept living and dining room, gas fireplace, walkout to back yard oasis, pattern concrete, hot tub with cabana cover, professionally landscaped, master bedroom, walk in closet, full ensuite. Gorgeous Décor. Plus much more. Simply Must See!

SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 137% OF ASKING

ER ANOTH D L SO

Bright, Detached 2-Storey Home With 3 Bedrooms and 3 bath. Renovated Kitchen With Granite Countertops, Backsplash, and Pantry. Finished Basement, Freshly painted, New Roof, Patterned Concrete Patio. Perfect location with great neighbours and amenities. SOLD IN 1WK FOR 121% OF ASKING!!

ER ANOTH S O LD

SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 118% OF ASKING

ER ANOTH D SOL

SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 104% OF ASKING!!

PRIME LOCATION!

LUxURY GUILDWOOD TERRACE

Spacious 1BR Unit in Prestigious Tridel Hullmark Condo With 5-Star Amenities. Steps to Whole Foods, Indoor Access to Subway, Theatre, Gyms, Popular Restaurants, Hwy 401 & DVP, Walkscore 93! Like NEW, Modern Kitchen with High End Appliances & Quartz Counters, 1 Parking and Locker included for only $449,900.

Spacious 2 bedroom + solarium. Almost 1200 Sq. ft. Modern eat-in kitchen with granite. Open concept Living & Dining Room with crown moldings. Master with ensuite, walk-in closet & balcony. Excellent amenities and great location.

SOLD IN 1 WK FOR 128% OF ASKING!!

****Certain Conditions may apply. Not intended to solicit persons under contract. ReMax West Realty Inc. does not guarantee the sale of your home. Exclusively offered by Frank Leo. Copyright© 2009 Frank Leo

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Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017 |

18

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New mid-Scarborough street will bear Denham Jolly’s name A street in a new midScarborough subdivision will bear the name of a black "pioneer" in Canadian broadcasting, the City of Toronto has announced. Jolly Way, near the intersection of Midland and Ellesmere avenues, will honour the many contributions of Brandeis Denham Jolly, the city said in a release on Feb. 28. Born in 1935 in Jamaica, Jolly is a past owner and publisher of the newspaper Contrast, and has been outspoken on social justice issues as a member of Toronto’s Black Action Defence Committee. He founded and led the city’s Black Business and Professional Association and launched Canada’s first black-owned radio station, FLOW 93.5. Jolly’s memoir, In the

Submitted photo

| Scarborough Mirror | s | Thursday, March 2, 2017

Scarborough to get new street named for Denham Jolly The City of Toronto is naming a new midScarborough street for Brandeis Denham Jolly. Black: My Life, is set to be published this year. Jolly was "instrumental in giving voice to the culture, achievements, challenges and aspirations of Toronto’s black and Caribbean communities when few channels for such messages were available," Scarborough Centre Coun. Michael Thompson said.

"It is most appropriate that approval to name a street after Mr. Jolly has come through today, the last day of Black History Month 2017." Temporary signs for Jolly Way are being prepared, with permanent ones to be installed when the subdivision is completed.

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Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017 |

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COLUMN

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A bad subway idea’s only getting worse

DAVID NICKLE The City were popular in Scarborough, and part of that popularity was a stoked sense of grievance among a significant number of Scarborough voters. Supporting it was a good strategy. Good strategy, but bad policy. After the election, Tory dealt with ballooning costs by supporting a stripped-down version: just a single stop at the Scarborough Town Centre, with other light rail improvements along Eglinton East to be paid for from the savings of eliminating those other two stations. And now? Well, nobody

should start planning their light rail commute to east Scarborough any time soon. The costs are up by another $197 million, to a total of $3.346 billion. Tory’s executive committee will have an opportunity to take another look at the plan, as the new report comes before it on March 7. Don’t expect big changes, though. On Feb. 27, Tory told reporters he thought the city could find savings in construction costs, and suggested that other orders of government might pay for the Eglinton light rail. As for the original plan? It seems as though a plan is still a plan. Same as it ever was. David Nickle is a reporter and columnist covering Toronto City Hall for Metroland Media Toronto. He can be reached at dnickle@insidetoronto.com. Follow him on Twitter at @davidnickle, and InsideToronto on Facebook

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There’s a reductive element to the thinking behind Mayor John Tory’s continued support of the anything-but-reductive Scarborough subway. It reduces to this: Council should stick with its decisions and not change its collective mind, especially if those decisions are big ones and even if they might have been bad ones. If it didn’t? Why, the public would be outraged. The trouble is that genuinely big, bad decisions have a tendency to get bigger, and also worse. So it is with the Scarborough subway plan, which was a bad idea from the get-go: the moment in 2013 that Toronto council trashed a fullyfunded light rail plan to replace the Scarborough RT, with a three-stop subway that served fewer communities and cost more. John Tory embraced that subway as a strategic position in the 2014 mayoral race; Rob Ford and then his brother Doug Ford

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Real cost of infrastructure is always high I have a humble request for Toronto’s elected officials, planners and transportation watchers, if only in the interests of my continued mental health: please, please, please don’t assume cost estimates for expensive and long-off infrastructure plans are a realistic gauge of the final price tag. Take the Scarborough subway extension, which could be in operation before the end of the 2020s. Its cost has steadily risen from $2 billion to a current total of $3.34-billion for the plan. Design work for the extension is barely at five per cent and the environmental assessment required for provincial approval hasn’t even started. In fact, this week’s announced price escalation only takes into account the cost of constructing an underground bus terminal at the new station, which is separate from construction for the actual subway extension.

RAHUL GUPTA TO in Transit In other words, the price is sure to rise. Probably by a lot. It’s entirely conceivable the next time the city delivers a substantive project update, the Scarborough extension could exceed $4 billion for the one solitary station. The issue isn’t limited to controversial subway plans. Light rail supporters like to compare the Scarborough subway with the Crosstown East LRT plan between Kennedy Station and the University of Toronto Scarborough, and how it will offer better local service and cost significantly less than a pricey

subway stop. All well and good, but don’t buy for one moment the cost of the 17stop LRT will stay at its current price point of $1.6billion. If I were the betting type, I’d put the final price tag north of $2 billion, not including operation and maintenance costs. I understand if you don’t see the importance of accuracy when it comes to reporting on projects that won’t be completed for years, if not decades. But seeing as how transit expansion will cost multiple billions of dollars, much of it depending on the benevolence of higher levels of government, it’s just not accurate or frankly helpful to the dialogue on mega-infrastructure if the cost estimates themselves are flawed from the start. Rahul Gupta is Metroland Media Toronto’s transportation and infrastructure reporter. Reach him on Twitter @TOinTRANSIT

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CORRECTION In the Michaels ad starting on February 24, 2017, the below offers were stated in error. • “Everyday Value $6 for Jar Candles by Ashland®” was stated in error on page 3. The statement should have read “Everyday Value $5.99 for Jar Candles by Ashland®”. • “Everyday Value $8-$25 for Belmont Frames & Shadow Boxes by Studio Décor®” was stated in error on page 4. The statement should have read “Everyday Value $7.99-$24.99 for Belmont Frames & Shadow Boxes by Studio Décor®”. • “Everyday Value $15 for Value Packs by Craft Smart®” was stated in error on page 4. The statement should have read “Everyday Value $14.99 for Value Packs by Craft Smart®”. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.

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You’ve heard it before, and you’ll hear it again: you have to take care of your teeth and see your dentist. But, if you don’t have dental coverage, an appointment to see the dentist can get pretty expensive. So, Ontario has made it easier for families to send their children to the dentist. The Healthy Smiles Ontario program now has about 85,000 Toronto children and youth enrolled, and approximately 320,000 across the province, the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care said. It is available to children aged 17 and under in Ontario from low-income families or those receiving social assistance. Ontario Dental Association (ODA) past president Dr. Jerry Smith, who leads the ODA’s advocacy to the province for the creation of such programs, said Healthy Smiles Ontario is important and he continues to push the province for more. "Dentists are very socially responsible and we understand the needs of this population, and we want to provide the service necessary for these kids. We believe that no child should go to bed in pain," he said. Prior to 1998, no such provincial program existed and ODA member dentists provided the work to their clients free, he said. In 1998, the province stepped up and created six dental programs; they were amalgamated into one Health Smiles Ontario program in Jan. 1, 2016. Member dentists continue to subsidize the work, as the provincial program does not cover the full cost of treatment, Smith said. Smith asks families to take advantage of the program. The ODA estimates there are around 500,000 children and youth across Ontario who are eligible. When patients don’t access care at the dental office, they end up in a hospital

DIY Oil Change Special!

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| Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017

Province funds dental care for 85,000 Toronto kids


Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017 |

26 EVENTS

l Friday, March 3 Scarborough Poetry Club WHEN: 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. WHERE: Agincourt Public Library, 155 Bonis Ave., Toronto CONTACT: 416-396-8951 COST: The group invites poetry enthusiasts and anyone curious about poetry to our monthly meetings. l Saturday, March 4 Saturday Night Entertainment & Dancing WHEN: 7 p.m. - 11 p.m. WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion Branch 614, 100 Salome Dr., Toronto CONTACT: 416-293-0872 COST: Join Jeff & Gary, Karaoke Masters, for an exciting evening of dancing to your favourite songs. Couples and singles welcome. Lots of free parking. l Sunday, March 5 Scarborough Model Railroaders Train Show WHEN: 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. WHERE: Scarborough Model Railroaders Club House, 17 Jeavons Ave, Toronto CONTACT: 416-262-9971 COST: Adults $5, Children $2, Seniors $3, Family $12 Two floors of Model Railroads with more than 28 scale miles of double-tracked mainline.

Knox Concert Series WHEN: 7 p.m. - 11 p.m. WHERE:

l GET

CONNECTED

Visit insidetoronto.com/events to submit your own community events for online publishing. Knox United Church, 2569 Midland Ave., Toronto CONTACT: 416-293-4424 COST: $25 Sixth Season continues with the Wychwood Clarinet Choir "Mid Winter Sweets". l Monday, March 6 Beyond Resume WHEN: 6 a.m. - 8 a.m. WHERE: Steeles Public Library, 375 Bamburgh Circle, Toronto CONTACT: rjeyanayagam@torontopubliclibrary.ca COST: Practical step-by-step guide to answering an interview’s toughest questions and tips on how to control your nerves and maintain positive body language. Call to register. l Tuesday, March 7 Volunteers Needed WHEN: 9 a.m. - 11 a.m. WHERE: Knox Presbyterian Church, 4156 Sheppard Ave., Toronto CONTACT: Betsy Prucha, 416-7500404 COST: Teachers needed for ESL School teaching conversational English on Tuesdays. No experience necessary. Call for more in-

formation. l Saturday, March 11 Cathedral Bluffs Symphony Orchestra presents Mozart Requiem and Faure Requiem WHEN: 8 p.m. - 10 p.m. WHERE: P.C.Ho Theatre, 5183 Sheppard Ave. East, Toronto CONTACT: 416-879-5566, www.cathedralbluffs.com COST: Tickets starting at $35 ($30 Students/Seniors) The Cathedral Bluffs Symphony Orchestra program includes Mozart’s Requiem in D minor and Faure’s Requiem in D minor, Op. 48 with combined choir of over 100 singers. l Monday, March 13 Newcomer & Settlement Service Drop In WHEN: 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. WHERE: Malvern Family Resource Centre Youth Centre, 1321 Neilson Road, Toronto CONTACT: Cathy Mwanza, 416 281 1376, cmwanza@mfrc.org, www.mfrc.org COST: Providing a monthly Saturday walk-in service to assist newcomers ad immigrants who live in the community.

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...for your feedback

insidetoronto.com

Visit: pulseresearch.com/toronto/ No purchase necessary. Skill testing question required. One (1) entry per person. The Contest is open to residents of Ontario who have attained the age of 18 as at the start of the Contest Period and have not previously completed the Metroland Readers Survey. Draw will be held at 1:00 pm PST on April 19, 2017. Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received. Six (6) prizes are available to be won: one (1) grand prize consisting of a cheque for $5,000 CDN (ARV $5,000 CDN), two (2) second prizes each consisting of a cheque for $1,000 CDN (ARV $1,000 CDN each) and three (3) third prizes each consisting of a cheque in the amount of $500 CDN (ARV $500 CDN each). Contest Period opens at 9:00 am ET February 6, 2017 and ends at 11:59 pm ET on April 17, 2017. For information on how to enter and complete contest rules visit pulseresearch.com/toronto/.

5 things to do this weekend l Friday, March 3 Curious Minds Weekend WHEN: 12 p.m. - 11 p.m. WHERE: Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema, 506 Bloor St W., Toronto CONTACT: 416-637-3123 COST: Various packages In-depth on-stage discussions, meet innovative thinkers and explore the most urgent and exciting issues of our time.

Toronto Light Festival WHEN: 5 p.m. - 10 p.m. WHERE: The Historic Distillery District, 55 Mill St., Toronto CONTACT: Kathleen Stelmach, kathleen@torchiacom.com, http://www.torontolightfest.com/ The Toronto Light Festival is on until March 12. Hours: Sunday to Wednesday, sundown to 10 p.m. Thursday to Saturday, sundown to 11 p.m. l Saturday, March 4 TMC hymn sing WHEN: 4 p.m. - 5 p.m. WHERE: Yorkminster Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge St., Toronto CONTACT: 416-598-0422 COST: $35 (general seating); VOXTIX (30 & under) $20

Justin Greaves/Metroland

The Toronto Light Festival at The Historic Distillery District.

Join in a stirring hymn sing with the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir, all accompanied by the great Yorkminster Park organ. l Sunday, March 5 SingONtario! WHEN: 1 p.m. - 9 p.m. WHERE: Christ Church Deer Park, 1570 Yonge Street, Toronto CONTACT: info@choirsontario.org COST: Various prices Ontario’s premiere choral event including non-competitive adjudicated choir performances, clinics,

workshops and massed festival choir. ORIANA Women’s Choir Concert WHEN: 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. WHERE: Grace Church on-the-Hill, 300 Lonsdale Rd., Toronto CONTACT: Laura Inostroza, 416-526-6257, info@orianachoir.com, http:// orianachoir.com/ COST: Adults $25. Seniors $20. FT Student $10 Two major works for women’s voices, from the 20th and 18th centuries.

2017 SMALL BUSINESS

MONEY FORUM Looking for ways to fund your business? Attend the City of Toronto’s 2017 Small Business Money Forum. Keynote Speaker:

Ilana Ben-Ari, Founder and CEO of Twenty One Toys A social entrepreneur’s story of how she’s still bootstrapping her way to the top. From sleeping on her best friend’s couch, to selling her award-winning toy to 1,000s of schools, homes, and offices in over 45 countries. www.moneyforum2017.eventbrite.com


27 | Scarborough Mirror | Thursday, March 2, 2017

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