Ward 29 Community Rallies Over TTC
Community Bonds Mean Everything
by Chris Caldwell
This is not about the questionable behaviour of the TTC suddenly dropping off notes to Toronto Ward 29 residents, telling them of plans to expropriate their houses. That has been covered adequately in the media in the past few weeks. This is about community, strong bonds, and being democratic.
In an age of transition, a settled family is a rarity and a valuable anchor for a community. Taking this iconic structure away from Toronto communities is like ripping a plant out by the roots – it will die.
The taking of one’s house by force, even with compensation, would be an emotional and trying ordeal for anyone. The taking of one’s home is another story. The years of emotional and social investment, the raising of children, the experiences that have become stories over time and the eyes and ears that have seen a community evolve over 50 years, become monetized in the purview of bureaucracy and expropriated in the name of ‘the code’.
There has been a positive to the ordeal. The community has rallied and come together to spread a message, one that screams “We live here and this is our neighbourhood!”. Someone who is not familiar with the community could see NIMBYism – ‘we don’t want blight in our backyard!’ (and who does?). But, in Toronto communities if something is for the greater good, we all consider compromise.
The devil is not in the TTC plans but in the approach and ethic, or lack thereof, that seems to plague an ever-centralizing government. This abrupt and inconsiderate letter delivery is a denouement for this Council which will hopefully write its final chapter this fall.
We clearly have a community that has risen to gather its intellectual and social capacity to produce an outstanding rebuttal that makes more sense than anything the TTC has put together in recent times. They should be very proud, and continue to draw on the energy to create a permanent change in a planning process to everyone’s benefit. In the spirit of Jane Jacobs, this community has shown us that antiquated policies will tear down our communities, if we let them.
Than
k you Ward 29, and particularly Strathmore residents!
Chris Caldwell has his Masters in Environmental Studies, Sustainable and Strategic Urban Planning with a Graduate Diploma in Business and the Environment, from York University. He is Ward 29 candidate for Toronto City Council in the 2010 Municipal Elections, and he is passionate about community and sustainability. www.caldwellforcouncil.ca
Earth Tones: ‘Glocalization’
Close to home
by Chris Caldwell
For decades Canadians – like most Western nations – have been focused on economic growth and progress, whatever that may mean. For baby boomers especially, economic growth and progress are rogues, or perhaps phantoms, that prosper with the few. What I mean is progress is a matter of perspective.
The melding and homogeneity that globalization causes in local communities is almost complete in suburban areas, at least from my viewpoint. ‘Glocalization’ has replaced the distinction and values of separate communities. It offers the hollow shell of an efficient, homogenized yet monotonous lifestyle. It encourages consumerism to go unfettered.
When I lived in the suburbs for three years – in Vaughan – most of what I saw was rows of housing with blandly uninteresting streets that begged to be by-passed. I had no urge to walk around these so-called communities. As you approach the suburbs, on every main corner resides a chain drug store or equivalent as if to remind us that this type of development really does make us sick. Think on it a little, and you will realize that the locations of major grocery stores – at least those north of Eglinton - force us to drive great distances for every little amenity.
Our parents and grandparents used to walk to local stores, in the heart of their communities. Strip malls keep their distance from the sidewalk to beckon the multitude of over-sized vehicles with single drivers. We drive everywhere. We walk nowhere.
Born and raised in Toronto, I remember the joy of browsing family-owned shops by walking to them, by spending time chatting with the proprietor. Local store owners would know people’s names. It would be commonplace to drop in to say hello to the local butcher and ask about the best cut of meat to consider today. It is the fabric of relationships that binds a community together. It is in the knowing nods and smiles of the shopkeeps, and how they positively effect on our lives.
With all local distinction being eroded for this artificial promise of progress, everything franchised and all looking similar, there is no impetus to visit other towns or communities because they all look the same. Unless we mold progress for ourselves, it will be dictated to us in the form of modern economics with as little creativity and care as a balance sheet.
We strive to create a sense of identity within our own homes. We admire a distinct and cultural ambiance that surrounds us and our families with warmth and c
omfort, and yet we show little of this outside our front doors, on our suburban streets. We do not demand the same of the planners and developers who fail to seek enough of our input. I contest that we are losing our sense of place and with it, ourselves.
Chris Caldwell has his Masters in Environmental Studies, Sustainable and Strategic Urban Planning with a Graduate Diploma in Business and the Environment, from York University. He is Ward 29 candidate for Toronto City Council in the 2010 Municipal Elections, and he is passionate about community and sustainability. www.caldwellforcouncil.ca