T.O. Greenspiration Events: We are Rising!

Angela Bischoff greenspi at web.ca
Sun Mar 3 15:33:07 EST 2013


T.O. Greenspiration Events

Pass this onto a friend...
-a

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Remembering Tooker and All Those Who Have Passed Before Us
 
Sun. March 3, 7 - 9 p.m.
Friends House, 60 Lowther Ave. (St. George subway)
 
Annual community memorial service on the anniversary of Tooker Gomberg's passing.
All welcome. Free. Bring something for the alter that represents any loved ones you'd like to remember who have passed before us.
Together we'll laugh, cry, tell stories, breathe, sing...
 
More info: greenspi at web.ca
https://www.facebook.com/events/101661890020692/
 
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Human Rights Watch Film Festival

March 2 - 7
TIFF Bell Lightbox, 350 King W.
$12, stu $5

Screenings of films about human rights issues including the struggle of refugees, sex trafficking and bullying.
Info: 416-599-8433 or www.hrw.org

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Toronto Pig Save weekly vigils to bear witness

Please join us at this week's vigils and leafleting events. There's nothing like bearing witness as a collective... Please contact us beforehand if you'd like to learn more...

• Sunday, March 3: Toronto Pig Save vigil at 677 Wellington St. W. outside "Quality Meat Packers" slaughterhouse
• Monday, March 4, Toronto Cow Save, 5-7 am at St. Helen's (1 Glen Scarlett Road, one block northwest of St. Clair and Keele)
• Tuesday, March 5, Toronto Pig Save vigil 2-4 pm on "Pig Island" at Lake Shore and Strachan
• Please join Guelph Pig Save at vigil for the pigs at Conestoga "Meat Packers" 8-10 am (313 Menno Street, Breslau, Ont.) * Please note: we need carpools from Toronto--anyone planning to go and can carpool? 
• Sunday, March 10, 1-3, Leafleting at Dundas Square

https://www.facebook.com/events/478898792177463/?fref=ts

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Lemon Action! Visions into Deeds

Monday, March 4, 7-9pm  
St. Michael's and All Angels, Wychwood and St. Clair

Our January "Lemons into Lemonade" visioning session produced an amazing burst of ideas - some very ambitious, others modest and easily doable.  Now it’s time for the next step - choosing a few of the very best ones to put into action. To make our task easier, Andrew Knox and the team who led our January event have turned all our scribblings on chart paper into an excellent report. It lays out a broad and enticing menu of options. Our upcoming meeting will employ a version of the "Open Space" method to see which of these ideas are both exciting and practical enough to generate teams that will work to make them happen.

Presented by Transition Toronto and Green!Neighbours 21
http://gn21.ca/sites/default/files/images/Lemons%20into%20Lemonade%20Event%20Write-up%20FINAL.pdf

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Responsibility to Protect -- For and Against
A Philosophers for Peace Debate 

Monday March 4, 3 0 5 p.m.
Jackman Humanities Building, Room 418, U of T

Steven Lee is a visiting research scholar this term at the Centre for Ethics. He is Professor of Philosophy and Donald R. Harter ?39 Professor in the Humanities at Hobart and William Smith Colleges (Geneva, New York). He received both his BA and MA in Philosophy from the University of Delaware, and his PhD from York University. He has authored a number of scholarly articles and books, including Morality, Prudence, and Nuclear Weapons (Cambridge, 1996), and most recently Ethics and War (Cambridge, 2012).

John Duncan is director of the Ethics, Society, and Law program, and interim director of the Margaret MacMillan Trinity One Program in ethics, international relations, and public policy at Trinity College, Toronto. He is founder of the society for the study of Existential and Phenomenological Theory and Culture, and co-founder of its journal PhaenEx. He has edited a volume on the thought of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and written on the history of philosophy, continental philosophy, and politics. His feature article on close air support and civilian casualties in Afghanistan, ?Death from Above,? was re-published in Tightrope Books? Best Canadian Essays: 2011.

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The Right to Food in Canada: Community Conversations
 
On March 4th by webinar from Geneva, the UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, will present the report of his mission to Canada and have a conversation with people across Canada. The webinar will be live-streamed:

Monday, March 4, 11:30 am - 1:30 pm
University of Toronto, Claude T. Bissell Building, Room 205, 140 St. George Street
Includes introductory speaker and informal post-discussion.

Contact Charles Levkoe - charles.levkoe at utoronto.ca.
 
Or join the webinar from your personal computer at noon: http://www.foodsecurecanada.org.

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Decongesting Toronto
Building a great city by changing the way we move. 

Mon. March 4, 6 – 8 p.m.
Jane Mallett Theatre, at the St. Lawrence Centre for the Performing Arts on Front St. and Church

Moderated by the CBC’s Matt Galloway
Keynote speech by Larry Beasley, former co-director of planning for the City of Vancouver
 
Panelists:
Jennifer Keesmaat, Chief Planner City of Toronto,
Carol Wilding, president and CEO of the Toronto Regional Board of Trade
Councillor Peter Milczyn, chair of the planning and growth committee
Councillor Michael Thompson, Chair of the Economic Development Committee

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Avoiding Activist Burnout
with Angela Bichoff, Taylor Chelsea and Petra Hanzlik

Tuesday, March 5, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
OISE, U of T

This workshop aims to break down the stigma surrounding activist burnout, offer some constructive solutions for how to get back from the brink of burnout, and tips how to prevent it in yourself and members of your group. 

Register: http://www.eventbrite.ca/event/4652339272/eorg

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Working Together to Move the GTHA

Tues. March 5, 7 - 9:30 p.m.
Evergreen Brickworks, BMO Atrium
$10

Explore how civic engagement models and strategies for collaboration are being  applied to the challenges and opportunities facing the GTHA region in order to accelerate investment in regional transportation infrastructure.

Moderator: Matthew Blackett, Spacing Magazine
Panellists:
Cherise Burda, Pembina Institute
Dina Graser, Metrolinx
Richard Joy, Toronto Board of Trade
Linda Weichel, Greater Toronto CivicAction Alliance

http://ebw.evergreen.ca/whats-on/special-events/innovation-talks

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Roadmap to Apartheid
Eron Davidson and Ana Nogueira / US / 2012 / 95 min / english

Tuesday, March 5, 6:45 Pp.m.
Bloor Hot Docs Cinema, 506 Bloor Street West
Suggested donation $2-10 
INFO: cinemapolitica.org/bloor 

A convincing comparison of the policies of White South Africa & Israel, this provocative doc is an original contribution to the ongoing discussion of Palestine and Israel. This special screening is in collaboration with Israeli Apartheid Week Toronto and will feature special guest speakers including Professor Randa Farah, Department of Anthropology, University of Western Ontario.

https://www.facebook.com/events/413963755364575/ 

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The Resilient City

Tues. Mar. 5, 9 a.m. - noon
Toronto City Hall, Committee room 2, second floor (Queen and Bay)

Presented by the City of Toronto, and chaired by Chief Planner, Jennifer Keesmaat. The goal is to produce a series of actionable items that will identify immediate steps and set the stage for the future.  If you can't make it, the roundtable will be live streamed on the Rogers TV website. 

RSVP by emailing chiefplannerroundtable at toronto.ca
More info: http://www.toronto.ca/planning/chiefplannerroundtable

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Weekly Idle No More Teach-in

Tuesdays, 6 - 9 p.m.
439 Dundas Street East

www.councilfire.ca
For everyone else worldwide we will be livestreaming this LIVE at www.livestream.com/occupytoronto

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Where will our Children Live? Affordable Housing 

Tues. March 5, 7 – 9 p.m.
Ralph Thornton Community Centre, 765 Queen St. East 

Where will our kids be able to live? Can downtown housing remain affordable for the coming generation? Featuring:
➤ Can the private sector build affordable housing? with Jill Black
➤ The inclusionary zoning opportunity with Richard Drdla
➤ Non-profit affordable home ownership with Mike Labbe
➤ Social housing that works with Onik Khan

http://www.ralphthornton.org/community-matters-town-hall-tuesday-march-5-2013-where-will-our-kids-be-able-to-live/

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No Casino Toronto & Peter Tabuns, MPP invite you to a pub night with Sandy Garossino

Tues. Mar. 5, 7:30 - 9:30 p.m.
Dora Keogh Irish Pub, 141 Danforth (near Broadview)

Sandy Garossino is a co-founder and chief strategist of Vancouver Not Vegas, one of the few successful casino opposition groups in North America. Sandy is also a Vancouver business owner, community advocate and former Crown prosecutor. @garossino 

Peter Tabuns, MPP for Toronto-Danforth has a long record of public service. At City Hall, with GreenPeace and Queen's Park, Peter consistently brings people together around new ideas that create good jobs, cut emissions, enable a new energy economy and envision sustainable communities. @peter_tabuns

NoCasino Toronto - a group of concerned citizens who believe that a mega casino will be detrimental to Toronto. Contrary to the claims of Paul Godfrey, the OLG Chair, and popular misconceptions, a mega casino does not make economic sense; it will not bring in tourist dollars but rather will have a devastating impact on local restaurants, bars, hotels and theatre. It will also have a serious social impact including increased crime, problem gambling, bankruptcies, traffic gridlock and parking problems. @nocasinotoronto

Sign the petition: http://nocasinotoronto.com/take-action/
https://www.facebook.com/events/402021213227223/

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Public consultations on Proposed Home Energy Retrofit Program 

The City of Toronto is holding a series of public consultations to explore ways to help families save money on energy bills by improving the energy efficiency of their homes. The City is proposing a new home energy retrofit program and wants input from residents, community associations, ratepayer groups and apartment industry associations. If you want to learn more and share your ideas on the role that the City can play in addressing barriers to home energy retrofits, please attend one of the two sessions.

Tuesday, March 5, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Metro Hall, Room 308, 55 John Street (at King Street)
Closest TTC station: St. Andrew

Thursday, March 7, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
North York Civic Centre, Members Lounge, 5100 Yonge Street (North of Sheppard Avenue) Closest TTC station: North York Centre

More info at http://www.toronto.ca/teo/residential-energy-retrofit.htm#a06

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MissRepresentation Documentary Screening

Wed. March 6, 6:30 pm screening, panel discussion to follow
The Royal Cinema, 608 College Street
$15
 
Vireo Research is hosting a screening of MissRepresentation - a documentary on how women are misrepresented in the media, and the subsequent impact on young women. 

View the trailer here: https://vimeo.com/42433365  
Get Tickets here: http://vireomissrepresentation.eventbrite.ca/  or purchase at the door.
For More Information: jacquelyn at vireoresearch.com
 
This initiative is a non-profit endeavour, where all proceeds will be donated Plan Canada's initiative, Because I am a Girl. 
 
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Trouble in the Peace
D: Julian T. Pinder | Canada | 2013 | 80 min | Toronto Premiere

Wednesday, March 6 @ 6:30 & 9:15 pm
Thursday, March 7 @ 6:45 pm
Bloor Hot Docs Cinema, 506 Bloor Street West
 
Trouble is brewing in the Peace River region. As Big Oil and Gas moves in, family farms suffer from lethal gas leaks and flarings, and the government fails to regulate safety standards, being instead preoccupied with catching a pipeline bomber. The community begins to fracture, with many residents expending vast amounts of time and energy on ineffectual protests and petitions. In the midst of this, cowboy, sculptor and father Karl Mattson struggles to make sense of what is happening to his town and its residents. As the situation continues to deteriorate, Karl embarks on a startling plan to save his daughter and reunite his community.
 
http://www.hotdocs.ca/docsoup/doc_soup_toronto/#screening

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Seedy Wednesday at Seedy Hall

Wed. March 6, 12 - 2pm 
Toronto Seedy (City) Hall

Occupy Gardens and friends are inviting the public to share the seeds of a most radish revolution. We will gather indoors, near the Toronto Public Library on the 1st floor. Sharing Seeds & Public Info/Brainstorming session on the new Toronto Seed Library. 

Email occupygardenstoronto at gmail.com to learn more and for future seedy updates!
https://www.facebook.com/events/658608677613986/?ref=ts&fref=ts 
 
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Toronto Council of Canadians Chapter Monthly Meeting -  Social Action!

Wednesday, March 6, 7 – 9 p.m.
Toronto City Hall, Room 3 (Queen Bay)
Everyone Welcome!

Guests: Raul Burbano (Common Frontiers) and Mark Calzavara (Council of Canadians, Ontario/Quebec regional organizer)

Both Common Causes and the People’s Social Forum were launched January 2013, adding to the growing landscape of social movements such as the Quebec student strike, related Casseroles events, Maple Spring and Idle No More. Come out and learn about these two new actions.  

Commons Causes - People in communities across Canada came together to express their objections to the Harper government's agenda in late January, as Common Causes, an assembly of social movements dedicated to defending democracy, the environment, and human rights, launched Canada-wide. Read more about this growing movement in , Common Causes: Progressive forces acting together to build a better society a report by Maude Barlow.   Visit commoncauses.ca to see photos from the January 28 events and to read more.

People’s Social Forum – Proposes a grassroots horizontal approach to organizing across Canada as a means of stimulating debate, discussion and further our sense of collective action.  
http://peoplessocialforum.webs.com/why-a-social-forum Read about the January launch event in Ottawa. 

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Can We Be Free of Nuclear Weapons and Still Have Nuclear Power?
With Gordon Edwards, Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility.
 
Thur. March 7, 7 – 9 p.m.
University College, 15 Kings College Circle, U of Toronto, Rm. 144
All welcome. No charge.
 
To honour the 2nd year anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe, Dr. Gordon Edwards will speak in Toronto. Dr. Gordon Edwards, co-founder of Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility, is a Math Professor at Vanier College in Montreal. He is Canada's foremost expert in all things nuclear. His website (www.ccnr.org) has for several decades been Canada's definitive go-to site for nuclear info including uranium, accidents, hazards, plutonium, medical isotopes, radioactive waste, economics of nuclear, and more. Don't miss this rare opportunity to learn from the best!

Co-Sponsored by University College Health Studies Programme, Canadian Pugwash Group, Science for Peace, and Voice of Women for Peace.
http://www.scienceforpeace.ca/can-we-be-free-of-nuclear-weapons-and-still-have-nuclear-power

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Opening Up Metro Hall as Emergency Shelter: NO MORE HOMELESS DEATHS!

Thur. March 7, 11 a.m.
Metro Hall (King and John)

There have been at least 8 homeless deaths since the beginning of 2013, and 34 deaths in 2012 alone. At the beginning of February the 700th name was added to the Toronto Homeless Memorial. If the City will not act then we will. On March 7, we are going back to Metro Hall to open it as a shelter and we are appealing for the broadest support in order to make this happen. We will be mobilizing homeless people who need shelter to join us that day but we also ask unions, community organizations, church congregations and people of conscience to come and stand with us for the basic human right to shelter.

https://www.facebook.com/events/278184258978285/

The Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP)   www.ocap.ca
@OCAPtoronto   416-925-6939

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Youth Cyclists Gearing up for Change

Thur. Mar. 7, 7 p.m.
Urbanspace Gallery, Ground floor, 401 Richmond Street West (at Spadina)

Come celebrate the opening of Charlie's FreeWheelers: Youth Cyclists Gearing Up for Change. 
Get your free tickets for the event at http://www.eventbrite.ca/event/5218970080/efblike#

This art exhibition will document the mobilization and empowerment of youth cyclists who are gearing up to take voice to support the development of cycling opportunity in Toronto. The exhibit will run until April 30.

Opening night will feature stories and reflections from past participants, and a key note talk from Dr. Tomislav Svoboda, who has been involved in transportation activism/advocacy for more than 20 years and has cycled year round for the same period of time. Most recently he was involved in activism related to the Jarvis St bike lane that included civil disobedience. He's been working to mobilize a group of physicians at St. Michael's Hospital calling for more bike lanes in the City. 

The show is comprised of a collection of stories, maps, drawings, anecdotes and video interviews from youth at Charlies FreeWheels. The display addresses how social and physical infrastructure must change to support new youth cyclists in our City.

https://www.facebook.com/events/482534675116555/

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Free University Course - Intro to Animal Rights

Thursdays 7 - 9:30 p.m.
Lash Miller Chemical Laboratories, 80 St. George, University of Toronto, room 161

This is a weekly two hour lecture and discussion with different guest speakers, covering the work of thinkers who have made a significant contribution to the field of animal rights ethics, philosophy, and discourse. It will run from January to mid May, and possibly beyond, if there is interest. There will be many different lecturers.

https://www.facebook.com/events/409385955794789/

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Promoting Women's Rights in a Cyber World

Fri. March 9, noon - 1 p.m.
Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, Rm. B150, 144 College

Special lecture by Faye Mishna, Dean and Professor. Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto
Hosted by University of Toronto's Angela Hildyard, Vice-President, Human Resources & Equity and Jill Matus, Vice-Provost, Students.

More info: vphrequity.events at utoronto.ca

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What Men Can Do to End Violence Against Women

Fri. March 8, 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
CSI Annex, 720 Bathurst, 2nd Floor, Meeting Room #1 (near Bloor)
Free

Join us for a multimedia presentation by Jeff Perera of the White Ribbon Campaign and Higher Unlearning. Jeff will explore the ways we create and enforce gender roles for men and women, pressures on men to live out limiting ideas of masculinity, and the effect of those limits on perpetuating violence against women. Together we'll explore what we can do to be a part of a positive change for all genders.

For More Information:  http://whiteribbon.ca
http://socialinnovation.ca/event/what-men-can-do-end-violence-against-women?utm_source=Innovators&utm_campaign=655ac4e885-Innovators_February_272_27_2013&utm_medium=email#sthash.TV2yxnmi.dpuf
 
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Go Home, Baby Girl
2006  46 minutes

Friday, March 8, 7 p.m. 
OISE, 252 Bloor St. West , Room 2-212 (St. George Subway Station:.
Everyone welcome. $4 donation requested. 

An internationally screened feature documentary about one family's heart-wrenching journey to find closure to the death of Norma George, one of hundreds of Native women who have been murdered or gone missing in Canada in the last thirty years. Through the eyes of her family, we learn how Norma's culture and home were stripped from her and how she ended up in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Film-maker Audrey Huntley will speak, followed by questions and discussion, on this global anniversary of International Women's Day.

For more info: www.socialistaction.ca or call 416 – 461-6942.
Presented by Toronto Socialist Action Presents 

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Human Chain Reaction to Shut Down Nuclear Power

Sat. March 9, noon - 1:30 p.m.
GE Hitachi Uranium Fuel Processing Plant, at 1025 Lansdowne Ave, north of Dupont St.

An international event connected with the second anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear catastrophy. With the «Human Chain Reaction», the event is to create a long human chain that will surround as much of the GE Hitachi Uranium Fuel Processing Plant as we can. In France in March 2012, 60 000 people created a human chain along the roads of France. Together we can assemble concerned people here in Toronto in order to obtain our goal of bringing awareness to the continuing danger of the Nuclear energy industry and send a strong message and image to our governments and the corporations involved in the nuclear business in Canada and in the world «United, we will win!».

https://www.facebook.com/events/491792764219281/

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International Women's Day - Fires are Burning, We are Rising - No more violence, no more abuse

Saturday, March 9
Rally, 11 a.m. OISE Auditorium, 252 Bloor St West 
March, 1 p.m.
Fair, 2 p.m., Ryerson Student Centre, 55 Gould St.
Dance, 8 p.m., Scadding Court Community Centre 707 Dundas (at Bathurst)

International Women's Day (8 March) is a global day celebrating the economic, political and social achievements of women past, present and future. In some places like China, Russia, Vietnam and Bulgaria, International Women's Day is a national holiday. IWD has been celebrated for more than 100 years. In Toronto, IWD has traditionally been a rally and march, and is organized by a committee of social justice, labour, health and women's rights activists.

https://www.facebook.com/events/490398371016665/

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Womyn: Destroy the Patriarchal Prison System
With Kelly Pflug-Back

Saturday, March 9, 8 p.m.
GSU Gymnasium (University of Toronto) – 16 Bancroft Avenue (Just East of Spadina, North of College)

Recognized author and Toronto G20 Political Prisoner will officially be launching her poetry book, “These Burning Streets” upon her release from Vanier Correctional Centre for Women. Kelly has spent the last 7 months in prison for having allegedly participated in the riots during the Toronto G20 Summit in 2010. She is a published poet and author as well as a well known activist for her work in anti-poverty and harm reduction organizing. She will also speak of her experience within the prison industrial complex, where prison serves as a Patriarchical tool to confine and dispose the bodies of those that do not conform to the norms of society, specifically in the case of women.

Special Guests:
- From Greece: Sofia Papagiannaki, Vangelis Nanos & Thanasis Xirotsopanos – On antifascist/anti-authoritarian organizing in Greece, the publication of Anti-authoritarian newspaper/magazine Babylonia and the state of the Anti-Authoritarian Movement.
- From Peterborough: Amanda Lickers (Anarchist Black Cross of Peterborough): Anti-authoritarian prison abolitionist on the Patriarchical nature of the Prison Industrial Complex from a radical feminist analysis.
- George Horton Norabuena (Anarchist Black Cross of Peterborough): Political Prisoner recently released on Bail Pending Court Appeal, convicted for his alleged participation in the riots during the Toronto G20 in 2010. George who was sentenced to 10 months imprisonment on September 28th, 2012 was released on December 10th after serving just over 2 months of his sentence, and will appeal his conviction in court beginning September 2013.

Poetry, Live Music, Video Shorts and Much More...

Presented and Organized by: The Women’s Coordinating Committee for a Free Wallmapu [Toronto]
More info at http://wccctoronto.wordpress.com/

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Have your say on improving transportation in Toronto

Over the past month, the City of Toronto has conducted four “town hall” consultations to gather public input on selecting and funding future transportation projects. If you missed the meetings, don’t worry – you have until Friday, March 15 to visit Feeling congested? http://feelingcongested.ca/#home  to voice your transportation concerns, total up the impact of your preferred revenue choices, and download a discussion guide to stimulate fascinating dinner conversation.

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Transport Futures Mobility Funding Symposium

April 8, 2013
Metropolitan Hotel, Toronto, Ontario
 
The public is being consulted on various taxes and user fees (aka revenue tools) that could generate needed funds for GTHA transport infrastructure. Are citizens being given the information necessary to provide meaningful input rather than gut reactions? Can politicians and government officials accurately evaluate each funding measure so that economic, environmental and social policies are met? To ensure that informed decisions are made, we invite you to learn from global experts about cost benefit analysis and other assessment frameworks that systematically examine which revenue tools best meet sustainability goals set out by Canadian and international governments.  Greenspiration supporters receive a 10% discount on our early bird rates.  Use discount code (DC) GRSP7 when registering.  

See www.transportfutures.ca/funding for more info.
 
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Creative Loft Living 

Starting March 1 (or inquire about earlier availability)
All inclusive $650 / month
4 floor walk up warehouse shared by 3
24/7 transit / laundry / parking  no smoking/ no pets
YOU ARE neat, clean, mature, responsible, independent self motivated, respectful, financially secure-mature, good listener and proactive communicator 
-I AM a community animator creating infrastructure  and planting seeds for a sustainable permanent culture
Please share with friends. Inquire and call for viewing now. 
416 273 8965  or email: pei.czech at gmailm.com

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