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Showing posts with label parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parks. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Community Meeting for East Mall Park - Justin Di Ciano

Community Meeting for East Mall Park

Date: Tuesday April 14, 2015

Time: 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Location: St. Elizabeth Catholic School, 5 Redcar Avenue


East Mall Park – Park Improvements

Councillor Di Ciano, together with City of Toronto Parks staff invites you to learn more about

upcoming Park Improvements at East Mall Park. Come share your thoughts on equipment options

and take a peek at the new water play features that will be added.

Park Improvements will include:

New Water Play

  • Variety of spray features (above ground and in-ground)for all age groups
  • Separate play zones; Toddler Bay, Family Bay Teen Bay
  • Rounded boulders to divide play zones and provide seating
  • A "no spray zone" to surround the water play area


New Playground

  • New Junior and Senior Play equipment
  • New sand play area 
  • Three options for equipment will be shared for comment and may include:
    • Senior Climber – rope or traditional
    • Junior Climber – traditional
    • Spin + Rock Climb Features
  • Spring toys + Panels


Other Improvements

  • Replace and widen existing asphalt pathways 
  • Install new accessible pathway (3.0m wide) from parking lot to play area
  • New benches and seating
  • New trees


I hope to see you there!

Justin J. Di Ciano

Toronto City Councillor

Ward 5 Etobicoke – Lakeshore

Monday, June 4, 2012

Emerald Ash Borer: Tree Damage Reports

If you have ash trees on your property, you are about to suffer a big hit to the appearance of your property. Emerald Ash Borer has been detected on Prince Edward Drive and is undoubtedly spreading throughout our leafy residential  neighborhood. 
The insect was first detected in North America in 2002  and is doing huge amounts of damage killing trees. The Ash Tree is an important part of the Toronto tree canopy and is largely planted on streets and along the ravines network therefore it is important to protect these trees. You can wait for the City and its dwindling budgets and resources to try and wrestle this  huge problem to the ground for you, or you can  shrewdly assess your own property. This affects city and private trees alike: take action now and have the trees on and abutting your property treated.

The Emerald Ash Borer is a small green beetle that looks for Ash Trees to feed and lay it’s eggs in. These eggs turn into larva that feed on the sap wood of the tree so not as many nutrients travel through the canopy of the tree. Here in the City of Toronto, if an Emerald Ash Borer infected tree is not treated, the tree will be dead within 10 years.

There are a number of local tree service companies that can treat your trees  with a chemical injection that has a good track record but the important thing is to go look at your trees after reading up  on superb websites such as:  
http://www.bioforest.ca/index.cfm?fuseaction=content&menuid=34&pageid=1062
http://www.toronto.ca/trees/eab.htm

Map of infestation: www.toronto.ca/trees/pdfs/EABupdatemap.pdf  
This map shows mortality on Prince Edward Drive, South of Bloor  as of February, 2012

While its not the KPRI's job or purpose to  direct you to specific tree services, we include the following local companies (who won't charge you a premium to travel long distances to assess your trees) . We submit the following list in the interests of swiftly addressing a spreading problem:
- Davey Tree  416-241-7191
- Cohen and Master  416-932-0622
- Forest Glen 416-738-4536
- Greenlawn:  905-290-1834
 Thank you


F.T.Campbell , Director

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Montgomery's Inn, among other Toronto museums, are slated for closure...

Hume: City museum closures loom
November 12, 2011

In a city consumed by the cost of things, it’s easy to lose sight of the value of things.
Torontonians will be reminded of the difference later this month when Mayor Rob Ford unveils the city budget.
Among the measures included will be the closure of four of the city’s 10 museums. Sources tell the Star that those chosen to be shut are the Market Gallery, Gibson House, Montgomery’s Inn and Zion Schoolhouse.

The justification will be the nearly $1 million in savings, a tiny fraction of a city budget that in 2010 stood at $9.2 billion.
For thousands of residents who visit and use these facilities, the impact will be more about the quality of their lives than the depth of their pockets.
The 10 museums operated by the City of Toronto Culture Division cost taxpayers about $5.3 million yearly. The institutions themselves raise $1.3 million through rentals, admissions and gift shop sales.
Annual attendance is about 250,000.
Except for the Market Gallery, located downtown in the St. Lawrence Market, the venues slated for closure are in the former North York and Etobicoke.
Montgomery’s Inn has been a landmark in Etobicoke since the 1840s, when the current building was constructed. It is one of the former borough’s few surviving links to its past.
Zion Schoolhouse, which was built just two years after Confederation, remained in service until 1955. The modest but elegant structure on Finch St. E. was built by families in what was then the farming community of L’Amoreaux.
Gibson House, an impressive 1850s Georgian mansion west of Yonge St., north of Park Home Ave., is also in the former North York.
Though shuttering these attractions is unlikely to stir up the same sort of outrage as did Ford’s threats to close Toronto public libraries, it will inflict further damage on a sector already under pressure.
“Heritage is not gravy,” insists Councillor Joe Mihevc (Ward 21). “These museums are local community hubs. . . the unsung gems of our city. They offer vigorous programs for school kids. But this administration has made it clear it wants some very, very deep cuts to arts and heritage.”
As Mihevc also points out, the city has no plans yet about what to do with these historic buildings once they’re closed. Unless they are to be abandoned and left to fall apart, they will have to be sold to the private sector or maintained by the city, which costs money.
“I think the city will try to sell them,” says Mihevc. “But no one wants to see these iconic buildings turned into bars or restaurants. That would be disastrous.”
In the case of the Market Gallery, founded in 1979 as “the official exhibition space and storage of the city’s permanent art collection,” closure would mean significantly reduced public access to Toronto’s material history.
However, unless Ford is prepared to put city-owned artworks on the block, killing the gallery won’t leave the city with any saleable assets.
Culture has never figured prominently in official Toronto; the major arts institutions in this city depend on federal and provincial funding as well as private philanthropy and the box-office. Even the city’s museums receive $430,000 from Queen’s Park every year.
Perhaps the most serious long-term threat of closing these civic institutions is that Torontonians will lose faith in the city’s cultural sector, and stop contributing the cash and artifacts on which museums depend.
“It will breach the integrity of the city museums system,” Mihevc charges, “leading to a lack of trust among potential donors, funders and partners across the 10 sites.”

- Toronto Star, November 12, 2011

Friday, May 20, 2011

Archived Article: Colonel Samuel Smith Park

COLONEL SAMUEL SMITH PARK
In 1793, Colonel Samuel Bois Smith of Queen's Rangers was granted 1680 hectares of Crown land by Lieutenant Governor John Graves Simcoe. The land extended from Lake Ontario to Bloor Street and from Kipling Avenue to Etobicoke Creek. Colonel Smith was one of Etobicoke's first settlers and played a role in the public administration of Upper Canada.

Except for a mill built about 1820 and a trail which crossed through the property roughly following today's Lake Shore Boulevard West, Col. Samuel's large estate remained undeveloped, impeding local settlement and east-west transportation during the colony's early years. The south eastern most portion of his land is now part of this waterfront park.

The park includes lands associated with the former Lakeshore Psychiatric Hospital which was established and operated by the province from 1888 to 1979. The former hospital farms and gardens are now a significant public greenspace and heritage resource.
An additional 21.5 ha landfill area created by the Metropolitan Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (M.T.R.C.A.) brings the park to its present size of 78,756 hectares. Naturalization and habitat restoration projects have been undertaken including the creation of a wetland and Carolinian tree and shrub plantings.
The area was known to support small population of smallmouth and largemouth bass and was an important migratory stopover for waterfowl, shorebirds and songbirds. Significant opportunities were identified to enhance habitats for fish, resident and migrating bird species, amphibians, reptiles and small mammals.
In 1993 the Waterfront Trail through Col. Samuel Smith Park was completed and a 3.6 ha wetland creation project was initiated. The wetland was expanded to include a second complex adjacent to the boat basin. The two areas were connected in 1995 by a wet meadow. Another wetland complex was created in 1996 along the south shore of the bat basin. Habitat improvements have included mud flats, seasonal flooded areas, underwater and shoreline fish habitat, turtle nesting and basking locations, snake hibernating areas and amphibian ponds.

Colonel Samuel Smith Park is located at the foot of Kipling Avenue at Lake Shore Boulevard West. Public transit includes the Kipling South 44 bus and the Queen Street 501 streetcar. Vehicles should enter the park at the Lake Shore Boulevard/Kipling Avenue entrance. Pedestrians and cyclists can also enter the park along the Waterfront Trail at Lake Promenade to the west or the Lake Shore Drive to the east.