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Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Toronto trustees narrowly approve black-focused school

CAROLINE ALPHONSO AND JAMES BRADSHAW

From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

January 30, 2008 at 12:49 AM EST

TORONTO — In a tight vote, Toronto District School Board trustees Tuesday night approved a contentious proposal for a black-focused school that opponents argued would be the equivalent of segregation.

The 11-9 vote in favour came after an evening of impassioned pleas both for and against the school from community members, including one from the mother of slain 15-year-old Jordan Manners.

Tuesday night's vote means that an alternative Afro-centric school will open in the city in September, 2009, but its location and grade levels are still to be determined.

“This is a bold decision. We're opening ourselves up for real change in the system,” trustee Michael Coteau, said after the vote.

Angela Wilson, a community member who brought the idea forward, added: “It's a bittersweet thing because it should have happened a long time ago and it shouldn't have brought all this pain back to our black community.”

Trustee Josh Matlow, who opposed the motion, said that it would simply lead to more divisiveness among students.

“We don't believe that students should be divided by race, even if it's with the best of intentions,” he said.

Earlier in the evening, Loreen Small, Jordan's mother, urged trustees to quash the proposal.

“Black school is segregation,” Ms. Small said. “It's not right.”

She was among 20 speakers who addressed trustees on the issue. Her son, Jordan, was shot to death in the hallway of C.W. Jefferys Collegiate Institute in North York last May.

About 200 people packed a boardroom and an overflow room Tuesday night, along with the media, to hear the conclusion of the long-simmering debate.

Speakers in favour of the school said it's misleading to equate it to segregation of black students.

“It's not about segregation, it's about self-determination,” said Ms. Wilson, who first proposed the idea to the school board.

Another speaker, Arlo Kempf, a father and former teacher, said that the board approving a black-focused school would be something “courageous.”

“Seeing themselves [black students] in the curriculum, in their instructors is what's needed,” Mr. Kempf said.

But Courtney Betty, a Toronto lawyer, argued that creating such a school would be failing students.

“We cannot look at knee-jerk, Band-Aid solutions any longer,” Mr. Betty said.

Others added that the proposal offered few specific details.

TDSB statistics reveal that many black students are struggling. The dropout rate for students of English-speaking Caribbean descent is highest among all groups at 40 per cent compared with 23 per cent for those with Canadian roots, according to tracking data of a cohort of students between 2000 and 2005.

The proposal for the Afrocentric alternative school was in response to a request submitted in July by members of the black community, who were alarmed by the high dropout rate.

“We recognize that opening one school is not going to solve the problem, but we are committed to closing the achievement gap,” Christopher Usih, a superintendent at the board and one of the authors of the proposal, said in an interview Tuesday.

Trustees Tuesday night voted on four recommendations that come with an initial price tag of $820,000:

- Open a black-focused alternative school in September, 2009, and set up a team to determine such things as grade level, location and appropriate curriculum.

- Set up a three-year pilot program in three existing schools that will integrate the history, culture and experiences of blacks in society.

- Team up with York University and other postsecondary institutions to establish a centre for staff development, research and innovation to track data and test best practices to help marginalized and vulnerable students.

- Have the director of education look at other proposals and develop an action plan for improving achievement among underperforming students.

The idea for a black-focused school has been around since at least 1995, when a royal commission recommended it.

However, Premier Dalton McGuinty has expressed reservations about a black-focused school in Toronto. It will be the second such school in Canada: An elementary school in the predominately black community of North Preston, N.S., has an Afro-centric philosophy.

Education Minister Kathleen Wynne fears that it will spur other cultural and religious groups to lobby for their own separate schools within a public system.

“My preference is that we have all our kids learning together,” Ms. Wynne said in an interview before Tuesday night's board meeting.

“My preference is the initiatives around curriculum are expanded,” she said.One Grade 11 student attending Jarvis Collegiate Institute echoed that sentiment.

“There's no need to make a whole different school for just black people; you can just make certain programs in regular schools and get them focused there,” said Jamaal Thomas, who was making his way to class yesterday.

He said that students are taught some black history in schools, “but it could be a little bit more. All we have is, what, Black History month? So we could get more in some other months.”

Article Source: http://preview.tinyurl.com/2o4tlr

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Saturday, January 05, 2008

Billionaire Shnaider May Bid for Maple Leafs, Toronto Star Says

By Ian McKinnon

Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Canadian billionaire Alex Shnaider is consulting investment bankers and may bid for the holding company that owns the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs, the Toronto Star reported, citing unidentified sources.

Shnaider has expressed an ``initial interest'' in buying closely held Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, an unidentified spokesman for the 39-year-old was quoted as saying in the Toronto newspaper.

Maple Leaf Sports, which also owns the NBA's Toronto Raptors, may be valued at as much as C$1.75 billion ($1.74 billion), the Star reported, quoting an investment banker it didn't name.

Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, which owns about 59 percent of the holding company, was unaware of Shnaider's interest, spokeswoman Deborah Allan said in the article.

Shnaider was the 14th-richest Canadian with a net worth of $1.8 billion, according to an October story in Forbes magazine, the Star said.



Article Source: http://preview.tinyurl.com/36t6cb

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5¢ Toronto streetcar tickets found in Titanic wreck

Posted: January 03, 2008, 4:15 PM by Rob Roberts

A piece of Toronto transit history went on display today at the Ontario Science Centre, tying the city to one of the greatest disasters of the 20th century: the sinking of the ocean liner Titanic.
A dozen 5¢ Toronto streetcar tickets dredged up from the famous shipwreck, which lies on the bottom of the north Atlantic nearly four kilometres beneath the surface, will be part of the science centre’s Titanic exhibit, along with dozens of other personal belongings from the more than 1,500 passengers and crew who died when the huge liner struck an iceberg and sank in 1912.
The five-cent tickets belonged to Major Arthur Godfrey Peuchen, a first-class passenger aboard the Titanic who was travelling back to his home in Toronto on the liner’s maiden voyage, and who survived the sinking. Peuchen, the vice-commodore of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club, left the tickets and other belongings behind as he fled the sinking ship.
The tickets were recovered during a 1987 expedition to the wreck, along with a RCYC season ticket.
“For the TTC to be associated in a small way with the history of this grand tragedy is indeed humbling,” said Councillor Michael Thompson, a commissioner of the transit system.
To mark the inclusion of the long-lost streetcar tickets, the transit commission is joining the science centre to offer a 20% discount on science centre admission to holders of transit passes.
But the re-appearance of the tickets also put Mr. Thompson on the spot over the perennial issue of transit fare increases. “It would be nice if we were able to offer a 5¢ fare today,” the councillor said with a smile. “That would be a pretty good deal.
“But while going from 5¢ to $2.75 seems like quite a large increase, it has been almost 100 years ... [and] the system in 1912 wasn’t nearly as well developed as it is today: we didn’t have a subway for instance.”
A nickle from 1912 is worth $1.06 today, according to the Bank of Canada’s inflation calculator, less than half of the current cash fare for TTC riders.
Mr. Thompson, however, pointed out that the wooden, horse-drawn and electric streetcars in 1912 were run by a private firm, the Toronto Railway Company, and only ran along Yonge Street and Bloor Street. And the Bloor route stopped at the Don Valley, which was not bridged until the 1930s. “So we’ve come a long way in this city in terms of public transit.”
But then, as now, the transit system drew controversy, Mr. Thompson added. When the streetcar company tried to change the way it collected fares in 1910, from a conductor moving through the car to collect tickets to a “pay-as-you-enter” system, the reaction was not positive, he said.
“Riders protested and several streetcars were damaged in street riots,” Mr. Thompson said. “Even in 1912, Torontonians were passionate about their public transit system.”
The science centre has extended its special Titanic exhibit until March 16.

— Story by Chris Wattie, photo by Peter Redman, National Post

Article Source: http://preview.tinyurl.com/3ccoqg

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