etobicoke apartments june 23, 2016

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GIVEYOUR LOVEDONE S a gift of HEAL TH SHOPWITH US A T THE Largest Health Food Store in the GT A 1000 Islington Avenue, Unit 3, Etobicoke, ON M8Z 4P8 416-259-5197 RidleyFuneralHome.com 416-259-3705 3080 Lake Shore Blvd. West. SHE WAS COMMITTED 100% TO THE ENVIRONMENT. Celebrate a loved one’s life in a way that would reflect their tastes, their interests, their personality, the way they lived their life. Create a service that’s exactly how they would have wanted it. We made sure her casket was too. North American Body Shop of the Year Proudly Serving Etobicoke for over 40 years 395 Evans Avenue • 416-259-6344 You’ll find complete Etobicoke News coverage at www.etobicokeguardian.com thurs june 23, 2016 With Canada’s weak dollar pushing up the price of international travel, why not turn your summer vacation into an epic Canadian staycation? Our home and native land boasts stunning scenery, amazing adventures and fabulous food from coast to coast. Every province and territory has something special to offer that can’t be found anywhere else in the world, so pack a bag, hit the road and get ready to experience excitement like only the true north can offer. To help inspire your adventure, we rounded up five world-class Canadian staycation destinations. Visit one, or all, of the locations and say hello to some of your fellow Canucks. Early polls by CAA and other travel organizations show more Canadians are planning to spend summer holidays on home soil this year. Turn to Page 12, then start packing! insidetoronto.com www.facebook.com/ InsideToronto KEEP IN TOUCH @InsideTOnews MORE ONLINE INSIDE Find out the true roots of celery in Etobicoke / 4 SHOPPING AMAZING DEALS ON GROUP DISCOUNTS SHOP AND EARN, EVERY TIME! wagjag.com shop.ca CITY: Find out the future of Storefront Humber/ 5 COUPONS-FLYERS-DEALS-TIPS save.ca Check out what’s going on in the community / 14 Cynthia Reason/Metroland Sgt. Brian Beadman (left) of the Toronto police 23 Division Somali Liaison Unit joins parent volunteer Cecilia Ahumada and students Saheba Fakhri, 13, and Anjie Bibiresanmi, 12, in serving up hot lunches to Dixon Grove Junior Middle School students. CYNTHIA REASON [email protected] In addition to serving up hearty helpings of pasta, salad and garlic bread at Dixon Grove Junior Middle School last week, Sgt. Brian Beadman also dished out plenty of high fives, selfies and smiles. Over the last five months, Beadman and a team of handpicked officers from 23 Division’s Somali Liaison Unit (SLU) have become weekly lunchtime fixtures at the Etobicoke elementary school – quickly becoming many students’ most popular lunchmates every Wednesday. “This is what community-based policing is all about. Every time we come out, the kids all have big smiles on their faces – and that says a lot right there,” a uniformed Beadman said while sitting amongst of group of Grade 7 students in Dixon Grove’s lunch room earlier this month. “The whole goal and objective of this pro- gram is to help foster and promote an open dialogue with not only the kids, but their >>>PROGRAM, page 11 Cops and kids enjoy regular lunch meet-up

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Page 1: Etobicoke Apartments June 23, 2016

Give YourLoved onesa gift ofHealtH

Shopwith uS at theLargest Health Food Store in the GTA

1000 Islington Avenue, Unit 3, Etobicoke, ON M8Z 4P8416-259-5197

RidleyFuneralHome.com

416-259-37053080 Lake Shore Blvd.West.

SHE WAS COMMITTED100% TO THEENVIRONMENT.

Celebrate a loved one’s life in a

way that would reflect their tastes,

their interests, their personality,

the way they lived their life. Create

a service that’s exactly how they

would have wanted it.

We made sure hercasket was too.

North AmericanBody Shop of the Year

Proudly ServingEtobicoke for over 40 years

395 Evans Avenue • 416-259-6344You’ll find complete Etobicoke News coverage at

www.etobicokeguardian.comthur

s ju

ne 2

3, 2

016

With Canada’s weak dollar pushing up the price of international travel, why not turn your summer vacation into an epic Canadian staycation?

Our home and native land boasts stunning scenery, amazing adventures and fabulous food from coast to coast.

Every province and territory has something special to offer that can’t be found anywhere else in the world, so pack a bag, hit the road and get ready to experience excitement like only the true north can offer.

To help inspire your adventure, we rounded up fi ve world-class Canadian staycation destinations. Visit one, or all, of the locations and say hello to some of your fellow Canucks.

Early polls by CAA and other travel organizations show more Canadians are planning to spend summer holidays on home soil this year.

Turn to Page 12, then start packing!insidetoronto.com

www.facebook.com/InsideToronto

KEEP IN TOUCH

@InsideTOnews

MORE ONLINE

INSIDEFind out the true roots of celery in Etobicoke / 4

SHOPPING

AMAZING DEALS ON GROUP DISCOUNTS

SHOP AND EARN, EVERY TIME!

wagjag.com

shop.ca

CITY: Find out the future of Storefront Humber/ 5

COUPONS-FLYERS-DEALS-TIPS

save.ca

Check out what’s going on in the community / 14

Cynthia Reason/Metroland

Sgt. Brian Beadman (left) of the Toronto police 23 Division Somali Liaison Unit joins parent volunteer Cecilia Ahumada and students Saheba Fakhri, 13, and Anjie Bibiresanmi, 12, in serving up hot lunches to Dixon Grove Junior Middle School students.

CYNTHIA REASON [email protected]

In addition to serving up hearty helpings of pasta, salad and garlic bread at Dixon Grove Junior Middle School last week, Sgt. Brian Beadman also dished out plenty of high fi ves, selfi es and smiles.

Over the last fi ve months, Beadman and a team of handpicked offi cers from 23 Division’s Somali Liaison Unit (SLU) have become weekly lunchtime fi xtures at the Etobicoke elementary school – quickly becoming many

students’ most popular lunchmates every Wednesday.

“This is what community-based policing is all about. Every time we come out, the kids all have big smiles on their faces – and that says a lot right there,” a uniformed Beadman said while sitting amongst of group of Grade 7 students in Dixon Grove’s lunch room earlier this month.

“The whole goal and objective of this pro-gram is to help foster and promote an open dialogue with not only the kids, but their

>>>PROGRAM, page 11

Cops and kids enjoy regular lunch meet-up

Page 2: Etobicoke Apartments June 23, 2016

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Page 3: Etobicoke Apartments June 23, 2016

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TAMARA SHEPHARD [email protected]

Orwell Art, public art monuments by Etobicoke Catholic high school students to depict the struggle for democracy and the power of global citizenship, recently exhibited at Metro Hall, the same week the Ontario government included the Ukrainian famine-genocide, the Holodomor, in the Ontario cur-riculum.

Nadia Guerrera, 37, found her-self teaching about the Holodomor in spring 2015 to her Grade 12 Canadian and world issues stu-dents at Michael Power/St. Joseph Catholic Secondary School during classroom discussions about cur-rent affairs in Ukraine, the pro-democracy Euromaiden, the President Vladimir Putin-directed Russian invasion, and the history of Ukrainian-Russian relations.

“The main message of my course had been, ‘You matter and the world needs you, You’re the one per cent of the world with access to post-secondary education. Speak for people who have been silenced or who have difficulty being heard,’” she said in a recent interview in her classroom.

The Holodomor is a genocidal famine engineered by the Soviet Union led by Joseph Stalin that killed an estimated 10 million Ukrainians in 1932 to 1933.

A cascade of events aligned and Guerrera, a 15-year educator, expe-rienced what some may call flow.

Guerrera urged her students to connect on social media with people in the news, and with jour-nalists reporting on it.

She took her own advice. Guerrera tweeted Andrea Chalupa, author of Orwell and the Refugees: The Untold Story of Animal Farm, to share that she was talking about Chalupa’s book in class. The two had met through Ukrainian Canadian Congress connections.

Animal Farm is George Orwell’s 1945 allegorical novel that uses farm animals to reflect on events of the Russian Revolution in 1917, and the Stalinist era of Soviet Russia, of

which Orwell was a critic.Chalupa called. Guerrera shared

her idea for a study unit leveraging Chalupa’s book.

“I told her that her book would help students understand the his-torical backdrop (of current affairs in Ukraine),” Guerrera recalled.

“I said, ‘You’re going to lecture my class through Skype. They’re going to create public art. We’ll have an art monument show about the fragility of democracy and safe-guarding it around the world that will tie into the larger lesson on civic engagement and the role it plays in a healthy democracy.’”

Chalupa was thrilled. “She said, ‘I love it. It’s exactly what Orwell would do,’” Guerrera said of Chalupa’s reaction.

That first year Guerrera’s class produced Orwell Art, found at #OrwellArt on social media.

This year, her class joined four other Toronto Catholic classrooms – and five classrooms in Ukraine – who took Guerrera’s Orwell Art class simultaneously.

Ukrainian students Skyped at night from America House with

their Toronto counterparts.“We have the same rights as you

have. We just don’t get to exercise them,” Guerrera recalled one Ukrainian student saying. “It was such profound learning.”

Chalupa conducted a lecture over Skype with Toronto and Ukrainian students simultaneously.

Dr. Teresa Kramarz, director of Munk One, a program for first-year undergrads at the Munk School of Global Affairs in Toronto, also did a lecture for students.

“We’re architects of the possible, I teach my students,” Guerrera said. “If I need it to happen for the greater good, there is no reason why it can’t.”

This year, the Orwell Art exhibit by Guerrera’s students ran May 31 to June 4 at Metro Hall, the same week the Ontario government announced

the Holodomor would become part of the Ontario curriculum.

“That had a lot to do with Premier (Kathleen) Wynne and (Etobicoke C e n t re M P P ) Yv a n B a k e r,” Guerrera said of the inclusion of the Holodomor in the province’s education curriculum.

Earlier this month, Wynne and Baker came to Michael Power/St. Joseph to meet Guerrera and the Orwell Art students, and to experi-ence the 60-minute lesson in the Holodomor National Awareness Tour’s state-of-the-art, 40-foot-long Holodomor Mobile Classroom bus.

The Canada-Ukraine Foundation conceived the bus project to raise awareness of the Holodomor. It is supported by the Ontario, Manitoba, and federal governments.

Wynne surprised students by speaking on their morning announcements.

The premier said the Holodomor Mobile Classroom allows students to “reflect on the importance of multiculturalism, tolerance and diversity in Canada and around the world.”

She added, “We have a responsi-bility to remember the horrible acts inflicted on the Ukrainian people, as we vow to never let atrocities like these happen again. Together, we must remain vigilant in our fight against hate and violence, as we build an Ontario free from discrimi-nation.”

$750,000 grant

Baker worked with the Ontario government to secure $750,000 last year to support the creation of the Holodomor Mobile Classroom.

“Premier Wynne and the provin-cial contribution to the Holodomor Mobile Classroom has been instru-mental in raising cultural awareness, spreading diversity and tolerance, and increasing access to informa-tion about the Holodomor,” Baker said in a statement.

Now, Canada-Ukraine Foundation officials have asked Guerrera to create the second study unit – Orwell Art – on the Holodomor bus.

For more info, visit www.orwellart.org and www.holodomortour.ca

Submitted photo

The Holodomor National Awareness Tour bus along with Premier Kathleen Wynne and MPP Yvan Baker (Etobicoke Centre) visit Michael Power/St. Joseph Catholic Secondary School on June 2. Grade 12 world issues teacher Nadia Guerrera is developing the next study unit for the national touring education bus.

High school students’ Orwell Art explores the Holodomor

We must remain vigilant in our fight against hate and

violence, as we build an Ontario free from discrimination.

– Premier Kathleen Wynne

JerkFest 2016 promises to offer up its spiciest celebration yet this summer in honour of its 15th year.

The annual Grace Jerk Food Festival – one of Toronto’s largest celebrations of jerk cuisine and Caribbean culture – returns to Etobicoke’s Centennial Park from Aug. 5 to 7.

Featuring a fusion of jerk food, pulsating music, family-friendly entertainment and good vibes, JerkFest has continued to grow over the last 15 years and has become a “highly anticipated calendar event for residents of many cultures,” said Anthony Plummer, executive director of the festival.

“The amazing jerk food and live

music are definitely highlights, but the festival has really gained a repu-tation for its community together-ness and celebration of culture,” Plummer said in a statement.

15th year

“We’re excited to continue that legacy in our 15th year.”

For food lovers, JerkFest is all about the unique tastes, mysterious flavours and captivating aroma of jerk cuisine.

But JerkFest 2016 is more than just a food festival – the three-day event also boasts a stellar music lineup on Saturday and Sunday that will be headlined by reggae legends Third World, with additional acts

including Etana and L.U.S.T.There will also be a vendor

market, kids zone and the Grace Experience Tent, where visitors can learn how to make traditional jerk dishes.

Centennial Park is at 256 Centennial Park Rd. For more information about JerkFest 2016, visit www.jerkfestival.ca

JerkFest 2016 at Centennial Park is more than just a food festival

Page 4: Etobicoke Apartments June 23, 2016

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Dana RobbinsJohn WillemsJoanne BurghardtGeorgia BalogiannisCheryl Phillips

Braden SimmondsMike Banville

PublisherGeneral ManagerEditor-in-ChiefManaging EditorRegional Director of AdvertisingRetail Sales ManagerDirector of Circulation and Distribution Operations

®

The Guardian is a member of the Ontario Press Council.

Visit ontpress.com

The Etobicoke Guardian is published at 175 Gordon Baker Rd., Toronto, ON, M2H 0A2, by Metroland Media Toronto, a Division of Metroland Media Group Ltd.

CONTACT US: NEWSROOM

PH: 416-493-4400 | FAX: 416-774-2070CIRCULATION

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If you have news tips, ideas for photo opportunities or have an opinion to share, contact the newsroom at the number above or by email: [email protected]

HERITAGE

Robert H. Tier was known for his prized celery at a time when the vegetable was considered high class In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the humble celery plant was considered a status food that only the wealthy could afford.

Tall, cut-glass “celery vases” were used to serve company an entire head of the vegetable vertically, with the leaves still attached.

Celery began to lose its aura of prestige by the 1920s when cheaper variet-ies became available.

This change was refl ected in a new canoe-like shape for celery servers: long, narrow, low and made of less expen-sive pressed glass.

Robert H. Tier was a market gardener in Islington in exactly the right time period to capitalize on celery’s social prominence.

He arrived in Canada from Sussex, England, in 1861. In 1863 he married Sarah Ide at St. George’s on-the-Hill Anglican Church.

The Tiers purchased a 15-acre property on what

today would be the southwest corner of Islington Avenue and Dundas Street West.

They built a large house i n a n O n t a r i o G o t h i c Revival style facing north on Dundas.

Behind the house, the land dropped down into the Mimico Creek valley where the dark soil was rich in nutri-ents and perfect for market gardening.

Robert also bought a former Temperance Hall s i t t ing empty west of Burnhamthorpe Road and moved it to the west side of his house.

He used the main fl oor to sell his vegetables, and the second fl oor was available for use by community groups such as the Boy Scouts and Red Cross.

Tier grew many differ-ent types of vegetables, but

his specialty was celery. He would painstakingly cover each stalk with white paper, resulting in plants that pro-duced less chlorophyll and had a sweeter taste.

Every summer, retailers

would drive for miles to buy Tier’s high-quality product.

In 1910, he was honoured when the Ontario Celery Growers Association held its annual meeting on his property.

Robert and Sarah Tier had six children: two boys and four girls. Sarah Tier died in 1907 and Robert Sr. in 1913.

T h e y a re b u r i e d i n St. George’s on-the-Hill Anglican Cemetery. Their sons, Thomas and Robert Jr., married two sisters from Islington: Edith and Eva Johnston, respectively.

Thomas worked as a sales agent for the Massey Farm Implement Company. He was an Etobicoke councillor from 1918 to 1924, and reeve from 1925 to 1926. Robert Jr. remained on the home farm and was a market gardener.

The next time you’re munching on celery, take a few minutes to remember Robert Tier and his family, and the role this vegetable once played in our society.

Denise Harris is the Heritage Offi cer of the Etobicoke Historical Society. Her column appears every second

Thursday. Reach her at [email protected]

i

Photo/SUBMITTEDThe convention of the Ontario Celery Growers Association met in 1910 at Robert Tier’s Islington farm. In the background are Dundas Street West and the iron bridge over Mimico Creek.

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TAMARA SHEPHARD [email protected]

Storefront Humber will con-tinue to operate in a city-owned, two-storey red brick building on the Etobicoke waterfront.

Etobicoke York Community Council voted unanimously at its recent meeting to adopt an Official Plan amendment to extend the non-profit organization’s 21-year lease, required since the 2445 Lake Shore Blvd. W. property is designated Parks and Open Space.

The length of the exten-sion has yet to be determined but Storefront Humber has requested a five-year lease extension.

The non-profit organiza-tion provides myriad pro-grams to more than 3,000 south Etobicoke seniors, including personal care, bath-ing, home help, transporta-tion, lawn cutting and snow shoveling.

Lynda Ryder, Storefront Humber’s chair, told council-lors the agency had invested $1 million in capital improve-ments to the building, citing a new furnace, creation of a seniors’ cooling centre, foun-dation and roof repairs, as well as additions.

Ryder reported Storefront Humber officials met in recent weeks with some residents groups with objections to a lease extension; they cited concerns over inadequate park parking and requested public access to rent the lake-front building at night and on weekends.

“We asked the community to talk with us,” Ryder said. “The (Mimico-by-the-Lake) BIA people, Birds and Beans,

residents’ groups. We’re trying to take all their concerns into consideration and create a big package to address them.”

David Pritchard, Mimico-by-the-Lake BIA chair, requested councillors con-sider a public process to determine the “highest pos-sible use” for the buildings around Amos Waites Park, including Storefront Humber, an area designated Mimico’s cultural and recreational hub in the Mimico Secondary Plan.

“If you approve (this) item without also requiring that the area undergo a proper, open and transparent community consultation to determine how best to use our water-front assets for all commu-nity members, you will be perpetuating, entrenching and condoning the institu-tional deafness we have been experiencing on this issue,” Pritchard wrote in an email to community council.

Tim Dobson, Lakeshore Planning Council chair, said in a letter that Mimico residents have long wanted public access to the Storefront Humber building.

“The proposal to redes-ignate the property from Parkland to SASP (Site and Area Specific Policy) 265

specifically, and needlessly in law, frustrates residents’ objectives that, in the shorter and long-term, this building and property at 2445 Lake Shore Blvd. W. will be open to the public/area residents to serve as a community centre or some similar purpose.”

Mimico resident Eric Code showed countless photo-graphs of the parking lot behind Storefront Humber: full with cars double parked 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays during the agency’s operating hours, and largely empty after 5 p.m. and on weekends.

Parking oPtions

Storefront Humber has 158 staff. Ryder said officials have arranged for staff parking at TD Bank across the street.

Code requested councillors consider a parking audit.

Councillors voted in support of a motion that Etobicoke-Lakeshore Councillor Mark Grimes, who represents the area, work with the president of the Toronto Parking Authority to identify options to increase available parking.

In fact, parking concerns,

and whether residents groups could rent space in Storefront Humber’s building, consumed the majority of the two-hour meeting.

That is, until Neil Cresswell, director of community plan-ning with Etobicoke York District, advised councillors the singular issue before them was “to allow” Storefront Humber’s lease to extend beyond 21 years.

“The lease itself is not before Etobicoke York Co m m u n i t y Co u n c i l ,”

Cresswell told councillors. “There has been a lot of

conversations about the lease itself. The issue before you is to allow the lease to extend beyond 21 years. The lease agreement, and the parties involved, is not before you.”

Wa rd 7 ( Yo r k We s t ) Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti took direct aim at residents and residents’ groups and organizations seeking to negotiate public access to the lakefront building through the community council debate on allowing an extension of Storefront Humber’s lease.

“Some people may see this as an opportunity to change the use in the building,” Mammoliti said. “We need

to put that to rest. I think (the building) shouldn’t be opened up, in any way, to meetings of the BIA or community groups. I only support the seniors.”

Earlier this year, a public firestorm ignited after a city notice of a public meeting to discuss Storefront Humber’s lease referred to a city “dis-posal” of the land, which is city parkland.

Some residents reacted strongly, mistakenly inter-preting the notice to mean the city was considering selling the property.

Cresswell put the matter to rest at Tuesday’s meeting.

“The first (public) meet-ing notice we talked about ‘disposal of parkland.’ In the second notice, we spoke of a lease extension,” Cresswell said.

“The unfortunate reality is the Toronto Municipal Code defines a lease that exceeds 21 years a technical sale or disposal of land.”

City council will make a final decision on the matter at its July 12 meeting.

Cynthia Reason/MetRolandStorefront Humber’s lease has been extended.

Storefront Humber gets lease extension, length to be determined

the lease itself is not before etobicoke

York Community Council ... the issue

before you is to allow the lease to extend

beyond 21 years.– City planner neil Cresswell

We’re trying to take all their concerns into

consideration and create a big package to

address them.– Storefront chair lynda Ryder

Page 6: Etobicoke Apartments June 23, 2016

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$4.99Reg. $12.99

Carpets24”x36”

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Ragalta NonstickWok/

Fry PanKitchenAid 3qt.Oval Stoneware

KitchenAid AnodizedNonstick 10pc. Pot Set

Spice Rackw/16

Spice Jars

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$19.99Reg. $39.99

Baker’s SecretRoasting PanFr

Bella 3x1.5 qtTriple Buffet Server

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$12.99Reg. $24.99

gNonstick 10pc. PS

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KitchenAid Professional 6qtCast Iron Casserole

Stainless SteelHot & Cold

Water CoolerGrab & Go

Fire Pitw/Cooking

Grate

Reo Kitchen Utensils

Our Price

$79.99Reg. $199.99

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$29.99Reg. $79.99

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$29.99Reg. $79.99

G

w

Our Price$2.99Reg. $9.99

Dr. Scholl’sAdjustable

BackMassager

Talking Caller ID TelephoneRevlon Nano Diamond BloDrye

Dr. Scholl’sRelax

PedicureSpa Kit

RevlonTourmaline

CeramicStyling Iron

Laptop LearnerVS Solutions20pc.Hair

SetterOur Price

$9.99Reg. $29.99

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Revlon Nano Diamo DA

lowyer

p p

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$16.99Reg. $39.99

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Renew 6pc.Dust & Shine

Kit

Spray &WashSystemr H e & Car

Slim FastProtein Meal

Shakes1.2kg

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r Price

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14.99Reg. $29.99

P M Sweep & T

$R

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Nivea InvisibleDeodorant

43gMoroccoArganHair Oil52ml

AXE3pc.

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$7.99Reg. $29.99

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Cotton Swab(500)

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Corningware Creations5pc. Set

Pyrex 18pc. Set

KitchenAid10” Skillet

Rachael Ray2pc.

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24 LED Lanternw/Bonus

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Laptop Tablet60 Games

& Activities

MagicBlueMicrofibreFlat Mopw/2 Pads

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Elbow, Knee & AnkleCompression Wraps

Elastic ClipBandages/Wraps

2 packs

O

$

Waterbridge IndulgenceMilk Chocolate Covered

Biscuits450g

Ou

5

Ganong Delecto AssortedMilk/Dark Cherries

2 pk

from$2.99

Triple Buffet Server

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$7.99Reg. $14.99

Lysol No-TouchSoap Dispenser

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Ragalta NonstickWok/

Fry PanKitchenAid 3qt.Oval Stoneware

KitchenAid AnodizedNonstick 10pc. Pot Set

Spice Rackw/16

Spice Jars

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$19.99Reg. $39.99

Baker’s SecretRoasting PanFr

Bella 3x1.5 qtTriple Buffet Server

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$12.99Reg. $24.99

gNonstick 10pc. PS

Our Price$4.99Reg. $19.99

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KitchenAid Professional 6qtCast Iron Casserole

Stainless SteelHot & Cold

Water CoolerGrab & Go

Fire Pitw/Cooking

Grate

Reo Kitchen Utensils

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$29.99Reg. $79.99

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G

w

Our Price$2.99Reg. $9.99

Dr. Scholl’sAdjustable

BackMassager

Talking Caller ID TelephoneRevlon Nano Diamond BloDrye

Dr. Scholl’sRelax

PedicureSpa Kit

RevlonTourmaline

CeramicStyling Iron

Laptop LearnerVS Solutions20pc.Hair

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Corningware Creations5pc. Set

Pyrex 18pc. Set

KitchenAid10” Skillet

Rachael Ray2pc.

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12 LEDMiniLantern

Laptop Tablet60 Games

& Activities

MagicBlueMicrofibreFlat Mopw/2 Pads

Scotch BriteShower Brush

Elbow, Knee & AnkleCompression Wraps

Elastic ClipBandages/Wraps

2 packs

O

$

Waterbridge IndulgenceMilk Chocolate Covered

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Ou

5

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2 pk

from$2.99

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Black Jack Hydraulic3 Ton Service Jack

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$4.99Reg. $19.99

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$7.99Reg. $14.99

Lysol No-TouchSoap Dispenser

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Clearance Warehouse • 375 Queens Plate Drive, Etobicoke Prices So Good it’s CASH ONLY! ATM on SiteMonday-Friday 10am-8pm • Saturday 10am-6pm • Sunday 11am-5pm

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ur Price

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Stainless SteelSteak Knives

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$7.99Reg. $29.99

Far5

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Ladies Secret Socks

Our Price$2.99

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20 pk Refill Pads

Electric Fireplace w/46”Mantel 1250W

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y

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30 Loads

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per pair

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Page 11: Etobicoke Apartments June 23, 2016

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said 13-year-old Nhi Tran. “It’s interesting getting to talk them because I didn’t really know any police officers before this.”

“It also just feels safe,” added Rida Shahid, 13. “The school feels safer because now with the police officers here with us, they can make sure things are safe.”

That welcoming attitude toward the police amongst Dixon Grove students and their parents wasn’t always the case, reported Principal Neil Quimby – it’s a relation-ship that took some foster-ing.

“Just a few years ago, our kids, our community, saw the officers as a one-off. They’d say, ‘You’re not part of our community,’” said Quimby, who’s made police relation-ship building one of his pri-orities in his eight years as principal at Dixon Grove.

“Now our kids see the offi-cers as just another teacher in the building...

“Now when we have to have what I call ‘courageous conversations’ with the police when our kids have made some poor choices, our community knows that these officers understand our kids, that they know our kids, and that they are well aware of where our kids come from – they’re not people that are new to what Dixon Grove is all about.”

Parent volunteer Cecilia Ahumada also had nothing but good things to say about the SLU officers’ participation in Dixon Grove’s hot lunch program.

“I think the relations between (the officers) and the kids is good. Before, the kids were sometimes afraid of them, but now it’s kind of a friendship kind of thing,” she said.

“Now they see that police are not only the person who gets people in trouble, they can also be your friend and someone you can approach for help.”

The officers’ participa-tion in Dixon Grove’s lunch program is, however, just

one of the ways the SLU is making inroads with youth in the Dixon Road area – which, along with Islington and Queen’s Plate, is one the communities that falls under the three-year-old unit’s man-date.

Beadman and his officers

also run a Monday night bas-ketball program for youth in the Dixon Grove gym, helped run a bike rodeo for the kids at the school just last week, launched the Big Blue Door games room at 340 Dixon Rd. in January, and are set to initi-ate a new summer rugby pro-gram alongside the Toronto Inner-City Rugby Foundation (TIRF) in Dixon Park in July, among other initiatives.

“My officers love it because it’s all about positive, commu-nity-based policing. And with that comes cooperation from the community, too – because we have community volun-teers here at Dixon Grove and we have community leaders that help run the programs on Dixon Road, too,” Beadman said.

“That’s part of community mobilization – we start the program, but we also help train community volunteers so that we can then give own-

ership of the programs to the community to sustain them. All the volunteers are excel-lent roles models from the community for these kids.”

One such volunteer-in-training, Beadman said, is 13-year-old Dixon Grove stu-dent Ibrahim Haji – a regular at the Big Blue Door games room.

“A big part of our mandate is to mentor youth, so I’m going to get him to start vol-unteering and, when the time comes, refer him to the YIPI (Youth In Policing Initiative) program,” Beadman said.

“A guy like that, he can go to university, he can do this or do that, he can do whatever he sets his mind to.”

And what Ibrahim has his mind set on now, he said, is following in Beadman’s footsteps.

“I want to be a police officer like him,” Ibrahim said with a smile. “He’s the best.”

community

Program also includes pick-up basketball, games room

Cynthia Reason/MetRoland

The Toronto police 23 Division Somali Liaison Unit’s Sgt. Brian Beadman joins Dixon Grove Junior Middle School students for a recent lunch.

>>>from page 1

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◗ Friday, June 24Community LunchWHEN: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. WHERE: St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 1579 Royal York Rd. CON-TACT: 416-247-5181 COST: FreeIncludes salads, sandwiches, desserts, tea/coffee/cold drinks. A donation of non perishable food is much appreci-ated.

Jane Austen Summer SupperWHEN: 7:30 to 10 p.m. WHERE: Montgomery’s Inn Museum, 4709 Dundas St. W. CONTACT: Karen Mill-yard, 416-578-1031, www.JaneAus-tenDancing.ca COST: $55Jane Austen’s Emma was published in 1816. To celebrate the bicentennial, the June menu is comprised of dishes contemporary to that time and place and includes minced chicken, scal-loped oysters and asparagus. Gowns are available for rent.

◗ Saturday, June 25Treasures in the Trunk SaleWHEN: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. WHERE: Dis-covery Community Christian Church, 6 Kilburn Place CONTACT: Karen Ewing, 647-242-2381 COST: FreeNew and used treasures, 50/50 draw and silent auction.

Strawberry FestivalWHEN: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. WHERE: St. Margaret’s Anglican Church, 156

Sixth Street CONTACT: Stephanie Goddard, 647-231-4143, [email protected] COST: Free entry; $5 for tea & dessert, $15 for lunchLunch: quarter chicken with corn and strawberry salad, hot dogs for the kids, dessert and a drink. Proceeds in support of St. Margaret’s outreach including Out of the Cold, Sixth St. Youth Space and more.

Westside Family FestWHEN: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. WHERE: Westside Long Term Care Center, 1145 Albion Rd. CONTACT: Sabrena Chunu, 416-745-4800 Ext.237 COST: FreeOpen house and fundraiser for the Arthritis Society of Canada. Vendors, hands-on exotic animals show, live entertainment and more.

◗ Thursday, June 30Toronto Ribfest 2016

WHEN: today to July 3 from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. WHERE: Centennial Park, 256 Centennial Park Rd. CONTACT:http://torontoribfest.com COST: See web site for infoCharity fundraiser. Help Rotary reach its goal of $500K for the community. Kidz Zone, Midway, entertainment on three stages and lots more.

◗ Friday, July 1Canada Day CelebrationWHEN: 1 p.m. WHERE: Royal Cana-dian Legion Branch 286, 11 Irwin Rd. COST: FreeBarbecue with back bacon, hamburg-ers and hot dogs. DJ Barry Pete with 50s and 60s music. Canada Day Hat contest. Prizes awarded.

◗ Tuesday, July 12Travelling CrittersWHEN: 4 to 7 p.m. WHERE: Parking Lot - Christ Church St. James Anglican Church, 194 Park Lawn Rd. CON-

TACT: Julia Graham, 416-231-7070 Ext.229, [email protected] COST: FreeThe critters will be on site starting at 4:30 p.m. Great for kids of all ages.

◗ Thursday, July 14Make it and take it!WHEN: 2 to 3 p.m. WHERE: Richview Library, 1806 Islington Ave. CON-TACT: 416-394-5120 COST: FreeToday, cardboard challenge; July 21, TBD; July 28, rock painting; Aug. 4, musical instruments; Aug. 11, card-board challenge; Aug. 18, shadow puppets. For kids aged 6 to 12 years old. Drop in.

◗ Saturday, July 16Barbecue FundraiserWHEN: 1 to 5 p.m. WHERE: Royal Canadian Legion Branch 266/46, 3591 Dundas St.W. CONTACT: Royal Canadian Legion, 416-760-9190 COST: Charge for barbecue itemsBarbecue fundraiser in support of the Toronto Military Family Resource Centre. Menu: catfi sh on a bun; ham-burgers; hot dogs; beverages; silent auction and a raffl e.

◗ Sunday, July 17Society of Canadian Artists Open-ing ReceptionWHEN: 2 to 4 p.m. WHERE: Etobi-coke Civic Centre Art Gallery, 399 The West Mall CONTACT: Katriina Campi-

telli, 416-394-8628 COST: FreeAn exhibition from a national, future-minded artists’ organization dedicated to expanding the visibility and stature of the visual arts.

◗ Tuesday, July 19Wild Stars of the Australian SafariWHEN: 2 to 3 p.m. WHERE: Richview Library, 1806 Islington Ave. CON-TACT: 416-394-5120 COST: FreeExotic animals of the Australian Safari with hands-on exotics. Learn about various birds, reptiles, furries, and a Red Kangaroo from Australia.

◗ Wednesday, July 20Kingsway Organ Recital SeriesWHEN: 12:30 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. WHERE: All Saints’ Kingsway Anglican Church, 2850 Bloor St. W. CONTACT: 416-233-1125 Ext.0, COST: FreeFeaturing Gordon Mansell, organist and director of music at Our Lady of Sorrows Church.

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get listed!The Etobicoke Guardian wants your community listings. Sign up online at www.insidetoron-to.com to submit your events (click the Sign Up link in the top right corner of the page).

No purchase necessary. Skill testing question required. Limit of one (1) entry per person. Contest open to residents of Canada, excluding Quebec, over the age of majority in the province or territory of residence. Five (5) prizes are available to be won: one (1) grand prize of a $1,000 CDN cheque (ARV $1,000 CDN) and four (4) secondary prizes each consisting of one (1) $50 CDN WagJag Gift Card (ARV $50 CDN each). Draws will be held on June 6, June 27, July 18 and August 8, 2016. Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received up to 11:59:59 pm ET on the day prior to each draw date. All entries not selected in any draw will carry over and be eligible for selection in all subsequent draws until such time as the entry is chosen or the Contest Period ends, whichever occurs first. Contest Period opens at 12:00:01 am ET on May 16, 2016 and closes at 11:59:59 pm ET on August 7, 2016. One (1) prize per person. For instructions to enter and complete contest rules, visit www.travelalerts.ca/contest.

ENTER NOW AT: www.TravelAlerts.ca/Contest

LET US KNOW FOR A CHANCE TO WIN $1000!or 1 of 4 $50 WagJag Gift Cards

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DENTISTCosmetic & Complete Dental Care• Dental Implants & Laser Surgery• Cosmetic Dentistry - Smile Make Overs• BraCeS-Orthodontist-in-Clinic• Crowns and Bridges• Gum Disease Treatment and Surgery• White Fillings - Teeth Whitening*• Invisalign - Invisible Braces• root Canal withNew Technology

• Intra Oral Cameras,Digital PaN & X-rays

• Wisdom Tooth extraction• Dentures Full and Partial• Laughing Gas Nitrous Oxide• Friendly & Caring Staff

Open 7 Days | Mon-Sun: 10-8 pm*

New PatientsAlways Welcome

www.thefamilydentist.ca E: [email protected]

905-455-5200Brampton:

7990 Kennedy Rd, SON. L6W 0B3

(Steeles & Kennedy)

416-741-0002Etobicoke:

2599 Islington Ave.,ON. M9V 4A2

905-625-7800Mississauga:Dixie Park Centre

1550 South Gateway Rd.,333-335, ON L4W 5G6

Dr.Amanpreet ChopraDr.Amanpreet ChopraB.D.S, D.D.S.

*Som

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• All InsurancePlans Accepted

• Flexible PaymentPlans

SmileMakers!

We love Kids!• Sleep Dentistry in Clinic• Braces for Children• Kids Play area

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AUDIOLOGICAL SERVICES:Audiological hearing assessmentsHearing aids – all makes and modelsHearing aid accessories and batteriesOn-site repairs and adjustments

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