Archive for the 'Toronto' Category



19
Oct

Calamity, Jane?

Like many, I was ready to back Jane Pitfield before I was even completely familiarized with her politics. This otherwise irrational stance is fuelled largely by the inaction and waffling of present mayor David Miller. From rise in gun crime to the fights over noise bylaws, Miller has failed to take any definitive stance or provide a roadmap for how he plans to tackle the city’s major problems. While the mayor squabbled with police over funding for more officers, the city gladly footed the bill for billboards warning us that dog poop left on our lawns might bother the fish in Lake Ontario.

Pitfield’s agenda seems to be inline with the center-right political wave put the federal conservatives in power. She favors banning panhandling, advocates lowering business taxes to stem the exodus of commerce to the 905 region, supports the island airport and has suggested curbing the bargaining power of the city’s omnipotent unions.

However two recent incidents suggest that Ms Pitfield -well aware that being fiscally conservative wins few friends among Toronto’s political elite- needs to polish her delivery and response to potential scandals.

The first incident involved alleged plagiarism. Pitfield recently got caught up in a mini-scandal involving entries in her “blog”, which of course implied that the thoughts were coming directly from her (a la Monte Soleberg or the considerably less fortunate Garth Turner). However, Spacing Magazine charged that material from had been copied verbatim onto Pitfield’s blog page without proper citation:

This past weekend under the headline, “Pitfield takes Spacing’s word — literally,” Spacing magazine accused Pitfield of lifting several sentences in her Oct. 7 campaign blog from a column that appeared the day before on SpacingVotes, a daily blog about public space issues that’s been running during the 2006 municipal election.
There were also passages from a Globe and Mail article that appeared July 10, according to the magazine.

Toronto’s CityNews detailed Pitfield’s underwhelming response:

“It’s never appropriate to plagiarize and … I’m saying that was a mistake that someone on my campaign made and it won’t happen again,” she vows.
But she was less able to explain why a volunteer is actually writing the blog that bears her name. “I will from this point on,” she assures.

While it is entirely likely that this little “gaffe” will fade from voter memory before Election Day, it does signal that Pitfield may not be running a very tight campaign (which calls into question her ability to manage an entire city). To state the obvious:

  • First of all it is highly improper to use a ghost blogger when trying to “connect” with voters. While not itself plagiarism, it is at least dishonest in a Milli Vanilli fashion.
  • Secondly, if one’s going to use a ghost-blogger, at least check what’s being written. Even the stage acts for Milli Vanilli would have been able to tell if, say, their recorded music was being lifted from C+C Music Factory.

The second eyebrow-raising incident involves more recent statements Pitfield made about extending the subway line –

Meanwhile, mayoral candidate Jane Pitfield said Toronto should build two kilometres of subway line and open a new station every year for the next 25 years.
But Pitfield was vague on explaining how she’ll pay for the new subway service, which she estimated would have a yearly price tag of $250 million.
Questioned afterward, she said she’d investigate having private funding cover part of the cost - perhaps selling naming rights to subway stations to corporations.
While Pitfield urged more spending on transit as part of a multi-pronged transportation strategy, she acknowledged she rarely uses public transit herself.
“I will admit I don’t ride the TTC as often as I would like to,” she said. That means once or twice a month normally - but less now that she’s running for mayor.
“I am all over the city these days, and the TTC doesn’t even go where I need to be,” she told reporters.
“If I relied on the TTC, I would get nowhere on time.”

Torontonians seem to be growing immune to the empty subway promises bandied about every election, but this is less troublesome than Jane’s admission that the TTC’s coverage of the city is inadequate. If she believes this to be the case then why would she spend $250 million per year on 2km of subway that will largely benefit York Region when the current array of rotting busses and streetcars are inadequate to service center city? Anyone who actually has to use the 32 Eglinton West bus or Queen Street streetcar during rush hour knows the TTC should certainly put a few more vehicles on the road and have them arrive in much shorter intervals. Surely center city should receive priority over regional expansion?
These might seem like minor quibbles and indeed they are not enough to deter me from backing Pitfield against Miller and his narrow-interest hordes. However, Jane -as a relatively conservative candidate- must learn to choose her words more carefully in a city dominated by unions and left-leaning special interest groups. It may not be long before these interests target Pitfield politically and ill-advised quotations come back to haunt her.

If you are interested in Toronto politics, be sure to watch the mayoral candidate debate on CityTV this Sunday (October 22) at 8pm.

06
Aug

Caribana 2006 Jump Up Pt 2

Click on Pictures to Enlarge
As promised here are some more shots from Caribana 2006

100_3949.jpg

I didn’t attend the Irie Festival so there isn’t much else to say about the Caribana happenings. Looking at some other blogs, Americans were impressed with Toronto’s cleanliness and friendliness. People also seemed to be happy with the organization of the event, which is no surprise since it is being run by the same association that ran Caribana during its only profitable year to date.

100_3958.jpg

Of course there were the usual trolls who used Caribana to vent their grievances with black people. I’ll spare you the lecture about tolerance and point out that Trinidad, the mother nation of the carnival, is nearly half South Asian. Moreover the steel pan bands are made up of many groups including local Caucasians, while people jumping up appeared to range from 16 to their late 60’s and appeared to cover every major ethnic group in Toronto (at one point I saw a Muslim lady covered head to toe pushing a stroller alongside a float).

100_3927.jpg

Continue reading ‘Caribana 2006 Jump Up Pt 2′

05
Aug

Caribana 2006 - Jump Up!

Click on Pictures to Enlarge

Toronto Caribbean Carnival? No, everyone -from the carnival emcees to the media- still calls it Caribana. The main parade for North America’s largest Caribbean festival took place at Exhibition Place today and it was one hell of a party.

100_3901.jpg

The weather could not have been more agreeable – sunny, not terribly humid (thanks to thunderstorms a few days prior) and a cool Lake Ontario breeze that flowed over heated revelers. That said, heat exhaustion and heat stroke were a very real risk (at one point my group scrambled to find a bottle of water for an elderly reveler who was on the verge of fainting) and so liquids were in great supply. For the most part the water was free, handed out by the bands … but of course there were enterprising minds who were willing to sell much colder water for a dollar.

100_3886.jpg

Spectators had the choice of paying $15 to get into the preferred grounds (lined along the interior of the parade route, next to the major CNE buildings) or could otherwise jockey with the masses on the strip of land next to the harbor for a view of the action. A few clever individuals from the “free” side breached the security fence and got right into the parade action, dancing with the band participants and getting some choice photo/video.
Continue reading ‘Caribana 2006 - Jump Up!’

28
Jul

Just a Wee bit Creepy …

The following student rental listing was posted at the University of Toronto (Mississauga Campus):

-master bedroom available, walk in closet, master bathroom, hardwood, ceiling fan 36″ sony wega tv
-family room with 36″ sony wega tv
-digital cable with movies and sports, phone and high speed internet free
-ravine backyard
-easy going landlord 35 years old, self employed Chartered Accountant
-upscale neighbourhood
-5 minutes bus/car to University of Toronto Erindale Campus
-female & non-smoker preferred
-parks nearby
-local transportation provided when possible
-located at Mississauga Rd and Eglinton area
-8 to 12 month committment reqd
-large kitchen with all ameneties, freezer, dishwasher, stove, fridge and bar b q
-parking free
-credit check or prepayment for year
-supermarket, go station, erin mills town center (shopping mall), parks, fast food and hospital nearby
-5000 square foot house, a lot of space

I’d love to give the man benefit of the doubt, but this just seems suspect. I advised my kin against it.

24
Jul

Murder in Flemingdon Park

A few weeks ago, a pleasant evening of gaming was rudely interrupted by what sounded like a fight just outside my window. I looked outside to see 3 shadows involved in conflict. The two younger looking figures appeared to be picking a fight with an older gentleman and eventually did jump him a cowardly manner. I jumped out of my seat and headed down the stairs but another local resident beat me to it, chasing the young hooligans away. Within minutes, residents from several buildings were swarming the street, flagging down an ambulance (which was remarkably slow despite multiple 911 calls) and falling over each other to give statements to police. Though most of us only knew each other in passing, we were united by a profound disdain for lawlessness in our middle-class / working-class corner of the GTA.

In other words, our response was a far cry from the recent mayhem in the city’s east end.

Last week, the body of 17 year old Omar Wellington was found in a wooded area close to his Flemingdon Park home. Wellington was stripped to his underwear, severely beaten and later stabbed several times. Like the assault in my neighborhood, Wellington’s beating was also witnessed by many residents. However, instead of intervening or alerting authorities, residents simply went inside and looked the other way. The Toronto Star reported that some residents even came outside to alert mothers to bring their children inside to avoid becoming witnesses. Investigators believe the silence is out of fear of retribution from the assailants, who are rumored to live in the area.

As Wellington was laid to rest over the weekend, several mourners (including Omar’s mother) wondered aloud why neighbors didn’t have the courage or decency to contact police or call for help. According to the police, a significant amount of time –possibly 22 hours- elapsed between the time of the beating and the discovery of Wellington’s body.

omar.jpg

At first glance, Wellington’s death and the apparent apathy from local residents does appear to be symptomatic of Toronto’s cultural decline. The ‘hood mentality has taken over in many quarters - youths wear t-shirts embroidered with the phrase “Stop Snitchin” while adults live in fear of exercising the moral authority that would have been expected in previous generations.

However there are three aspects to this case that don’t quite fit the “bad neighborhood” cliché:

  1. Flemingdon Park has a checkered history but it is far from the worst neighborhood in Toronto. According to the Toronto Star, only 1 of last year’s 78 murders (Tate Best) occurred in the region.
  2. There was no gunplay involved in the attack. Groups of youths brawling can be found in virtually any neighborhood. Depending on the observers’ distance from the mêlée, a 6 on 1 fight could have looked like a 4 on 3 fight. In a rougher neighborhood, such a conflict would not have necessarily earned a call to police.
  3. Even in their beatified recollection after death, friends and relatives of Omar Wellington were forced to admit his checkered past. Most importantly, Wellington was fingered for a robbery that occurred shortly before the beating took place.

Hence neighborhood fear is but one possible explanation. It’s also possible that residents saw a fight in progress (which may be irregular in your neighborhood but not necessarily theirs) and didn’t want to get involved in case it escalated into something serious. It’s possible that Omar Wellington’s prior criminal activity won him enemies and some residents were happy to see him receive street justice.

Hopefully the media doesn’t let this story slide away. The outcome should be fairly interesting.

Update: Arrests Made in Killing of Omar Wellington

03
Jul

Mitgating the Second Summer of the Gun

Authorities raced to Dundas St. East near Shuter around 4am, for a report of a man being shot.
When they arrived in the area, they were in for a surprise - the gunman started taking shots at both the lawmen and the EMS attendant who came to help the wounded victim. A bullet hole hit the ambulance but missed narrowly missed District Supervisor Brian Toshoff.
-CityNews Report

Less than 24 hours after a public plea by police, accused shooter Quinn Borde, age 23, turned himself in. Toronto has officially graduated to the Hollywood-style violence that smug Canadians once associated with the United States. Recent news reports suggest that Winnipeg and Edmonton aren’t faring much better, with police in the latter reeling in its own high profile shooting.

Where is David Miller now? Since the mayor’s inaugural pledge to clean up the city, violence in Toronto has spun out of control. A recent CityNews article confirmed what most residents already know – Toronto’s violent crime is getting worse:

Violent Crime: up 4.7% overall
Homicides: 79 in 2005, up 23.4%
Sexual Assaults: 2,723 in 2005, over 200 more than in 2004.
Non-sexual assaults: Up by 3.7%
Robberies: up 5.7%
(Compared to base year 2004)

6 months ago, Mayor Miller and police Chief Bill Blair haughtily dismissed Curtis Silwa and the Guardian Angels, claming they did not need help in fighting crime. Yet violent crime is becoming not only more frequent but more brazen, as illustrated by the Borde shooting.

As the Canada Day weekend closes, traditionally signaling the start of the Ontario heat wave, Toronto can probably look forward to many more public shootings by incompetent and unprofessional “gangstas” as well as violent robberies and sexual attacks by predators.

We’ve heard enough platitudes from politicians, social activists and pundits who want to pedal quick-fix solutions that have at best short term gains. It’s time for partisans to accept that a reduction in crime will only result from a multi-faceted, unflinching assault on criminals and the conditions that allow them to prosper. Based on the rise in Toronto gun violence alone, the following measures could prove helpful to mitigating the Summer of the Gun II:

Punishment:

  • Amend the Young Offenders Act to exempt violent and gun-related offenses. While there may be wisdom in trying to anonymously refocus kids caught stealing from department stores, there is nothing youthful about murder. Light sentencing for juvenile killers is not going to save them from becoming hardcore criminals – they’re already there. Treat them as such.
  • Pass laws forcing judges to automatically deny bail to offenders charged with gun or gang-related crimes. Unfortunately, judges don’t seem so concerned about public safety: 20 year old Andrew Smith, out on bail when he participated in the melee that resulted in the murder of Jane Creba, was just granted a hearing for what will be his third bail in under a year.

Community:

  • Welcome the Guardian Angels and other watchdog groups to assist in “neighborhood watch” initiatives. A police force is impotent without community support, and Toronto should do everything it can to assist citizens willing to patrol city streets when the police are not around.
  • Offer facilities and other non-monetary support to non government affiliated youth groups. The best programs to reach wayward youth are often started and run by other youths, rather than by headline-seeking preachers or professional activists. Support could come in the form of free hall rentals or material donations. In short, give the youth something positive to do.

Immigration:

  • Automatic deportation of any immigrants or guest workers convicted of a violent offense, as well as their immediate families.
  • Limit the landed immigrant status of lower-wage workers and give negative incentives for single workers to bring children at a later date. Contrary to popular belief, a lot of gang members are not the sons of welfare queens who sit around the house all day but rather hotel employees and other low-wage earners who work 10+ hour shifts and have little time to monitor the activities of their offspring. This isolation can drive already-alienated immigrant children to seek “family” elsewhere
  • Set immigration limits for different nations, proportional to the violent crime rates of both immigrants and their second-generation offspring. Immigration should always serve the economic and social interests of the host nation. An identifiable group that requires a large amount of social assistance beyond what is generally needed to assimilate newcomers is a liability to Canada rather than an asset. To avoid possible discrimination, this measure should be employed only after extensive criminal studies have been completed and after the previous measure has been implemented for a number of years.
13
Jun

Deaths = 1, Arrests = 25, Lessons Learned = 0

The GTA breathed a collective sigh of relief today as police announced no less than 25 arrests related to the December 26 shooting death of Jane Creba. Charges ranged from second degree murder to conspiracy to traffic in cocaine, with the actual murder being attributed to 8 of the suspects. For all 10 of you who are unfamiliar with the story, Jane Creba was the 15 year old girl who was killed accidentally in the crossfire of a daytime gang shootout near the Eaton’s Center. The Toronto Star is reporting that the shootout was between two West Toronto gangs and may have started when someone’s hat was knocked off – a noble reason for public execution if ever one existed.

When news of the shooting first broke, the involvement of black youths led to a strong outbreak of hysterical bias throughout Canada, which was of course followed by a hysterically defensive reaction from the black community. The ensuing circus included a warmly-received and brief (though terribly expensive) visit from famed US preacher Eugene Rivers, credited for spearheading the crime-fighting “Boston Miracle”. The Guardian Angels also came to town, but were given the cold shoulder by a defiant mayor and police chief who swore they needed no help. An all-too-brief spotlight was shone on good grassroots groups like the Toronto Youth Cabinet, who launched their own initiatives to address crime and the conditions that cause crime within their communities. Their media coverage didn’t last past January.

And finally, with a federal election looming, leaders from all 3 major parties assured Canadians in the strongest possible terms that they would get tough on street crime (and medicate some of the conditions leading to street crime). Mayor David Miller and Premier Dalton McGuinty joined the chorus, even holding a conference where they were so kind as to send representatives to speak about possible solutions (community activists who had been tracking the escalating violence were not invited).

Now that the suspects have finally been caught after 6 months, Canada can finish writing this circular story:

  • Probably no more than ½ of the suspects charged directly with Creba’s death will serve significant jail time, due in part to the fact the shooting was accidental and due in large part to Canada’s lax criminal code
  • Municipal, Provincial and Federal governments will share credit for “cleaning up Toronto”. They will conveniently forget that the few anti-crime measures launched thus far have not offset Toronto’s crime rate in any meaningful way. David Miller has failed to embrace any particular strategy to reduce Toronto crime, while Stephen Harper felt street racing was a higher priority than gun crime (notwithstanding the CPC’s attempts to dismantle the national gun registry, which was done against police wishes)
  • Community activists will gripe about the lack of funding they’ve received since Stephen Harper was elected into office, completely ignoring the fact that the communities where these hoodies were raised decayed steadily under +10 years of Liberal rule.
  • Bigots who like to call themselves “conservatives” (hence tarnishing the name of real conservatives) will continue to assail one ethnic community for the Boxing Day Murder. They won’t waste precious time looking at the names of the accused to discover that several groups were likely involved in the shootings (unless there are actually a lot of black people with surnames like Tran and Mijatovic)
  • More details will emerge about the suspects, illustrating the same cause/effect patterns that tend to lead to criminal behaviour if left unchecked. Already, details about 20 year-old Andrew Smith (charged with manslaughter) have emerged – no father in the home, mother works multiple jobs, “minor” brushes with the law that were dismissed as trivial, etc
  • Most Canadians will openly support the maximum possible sentences for the offenders … then flush the entire story from their minds
  • Most Canadians will forget who Chantal Dunn is (if they ever knew) and the irony behind her death
  • Most Canadians will wait for the next “big media event”

In other words, history will show that we adequately fulfilled our functions as humans - we reacted to a growing problem only when it was deemed an emergency, emoted profusely/conveniently while in a state of shock and subsequently failed to follow up with any promised preventive action once the story left the front of the newspaper. For most people, the murder became a cash cow, a political bargaining chip or an excuse to air unrelated grievances in a public forum. And as always we blamed the police for failing to ease our collective conscience with speedy arrests, despite knowledge of the copious witnesses on Yonge Street who conveniently caught amnesia. Essentially we primed ourselves for the next high-profile murder, with full intention of espousing the same “shock and grief” we displayed for the murder of Jane Creba.

See you then.




Further Research




Categories


Archives