Celebrating Downsview Graduates

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By Matias de Dovitiis

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There is an awesome pool of talent in Downsview schools. Last year, I started a program in 20 schools to hand out bursaries that would award students for their academic success and their civic engagement in their school communities.

I plan to keep doing this as I recognize that there is a need to engage and award those students that do well, but that also have the inclination to lead and demonstrate to their peers the value of participation.

Graduates1

These students are already building better communities, even at a young age.

This year, 15 schools participated, and 15 students were nominated for the award by their teachers and principals.

Graduates3

Each recipient of the bursaries has definitely left their mark on their school community.

Here is wishing them, and all of the graduating classes this year a great success as they move on to a new chapter in their lives!

You can follow Matias on Twitter @MatiasdeD

Out of Order

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By Howard Moscoe

OutOfOrder

I’m disabled. Like thousands of Canadians, as the population ages, more and more of us begin to function less efficiently.

In this article I provide information on some of the best places around Downsview to find these scooters, and some stores to avoid if you require a scooter.

In my case I have a breathing disability resulting from heart surgery, and I also have an ailment called ‘drop foot’. I am unable to walk long distances. You learn to adapt. I drive with hand controls and when I shop I look for stores that provide scooters.

You know, those electric wheeled shopping carts you pick up at the store entrance that allow you to zip around the supermarket like you used to be able to do. They are usually found at the larger chain stores.

Conscientious businesses that want to keep their customers have them, but unfortunately not all large businesses do.

I do my food shopping mostly at Coppa’s Fresh Market (formerly Highland Farms) on Dufferin Street, and from time to time at Costco on Wilson. One of the reasons I do is because not only do they provide scooters, but they keep them charged up, clean, and well maintained.

There is nothing that makes you feel more helpless than having a scooter give up on you after you’ve spent an hour selecting your groceries.

Last week I went into the Home Depot on Steeles Avenue between Keele Street and Dufferin. In the first place, their scooters are kept near the exchange counter entrance and you usually find them blocked by shopping carts full of returned goods.

They are in the same location in their Wilson Avenue store. They had two scooters. One of them had an “OUT OF ORDER” sign taped to the seat. It was the same sign I saw on it a month earlier. I dug out the second scooter, unplugged it, travelled the first ten meters and then it began to beep loudly and conked out. I ended up leaving the store as I wasn’t provided any assistance.

Just to be sure, a few days later I returned to see if anything had been done. Nothing had changed and both scooters were still

inoperable.

This time I did get to see the manager. He identified himself as Dominic and in response to my story was, “I’ll put in a service request”

Another customer told me that she had reported the same broken scooter to Home Depot’s head office a year ago and nothing was done about it. It’s kind of ironic that a “fix up store” doesn’t seem to care enough to keep their scooters in good repair.

If you experience any of these issues, I suggest you complain, sometimes it helps.

I once tried shopping at the Loblaw Superstore at Dufferin and Steeles. It has an east and a west entrance. The service counter is somewhere in between. I entered at the east entrance and asked a clerk where to find the scooters. “Oh they’re at the other entrance.” So I trekked over to the other side of the store and located a scooter but I couldn’t use it because it required a key.

How do I get a key?”

You have to pick one up at the service desk,” said a clerk.

What’s the point of having scooters to help disabled people get around the store if they have to walk a kilometre to get one?”

I wrote in a complaint to the manager. The next time I came into the store there was a scooter at each of the entrances and each of the scooters had a key wired onto it. SMART!

Unfortunately, not all stores are as accommodating. The Walmart on Keele and Broadoaks has received numerous complaints from disabled customers. A customer, who had used a scooter to shop, was on her way to her car in the parking lot when she was confronted by a Walmart greeter who told her she couldn’t take the scooter out of the store.

To make a long story short the same incident happened twice even after the store claimed to have ‘fixed’ the problem.

This matter is now before the Ontario Human Rights Commission.

Hopefully all large stores in the Dowsnview area and beyond will soon accommodate those of us with mobility issues.

Have you had similar issues

while trying to shop?

Send us your stories at

info@downsviewadvocate.ca

Made in Downsview: Piccadilly Fashions creates and manufactures clothing locally

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By David Ros

Picadilly

In an era when most of the clothing we wear is made in places like China or Bangladesh, Picadilly Fashions has been bucking that trend by manufacturing the overwhelming majority of their products here in Downsview.

According to Jack Dombrowsky, Picadilly’s founder and owner, the company manufactures 90 per cent of their clothing at their more than 30,000 sq.ft., facility located on Chesswood Ave., employing roughly 90-100 workers.

Dombrowsky said that since the company, which sells mostly women’s clothing doesn’t usually require big volume orders, there is a real advantage to manufacturing locally and in house.

We produce mostly knit work goods, so we’re doing it locally, sometimes it’s cheaper than to do it in China, like with all the transportation and the duties and everything,” Dombrowsky said. “We don’t need to order a big volume, we only need to order what we can produce and we’re finding out that it’s not a big advantage of doing it overseas, it’s harder to control and it’s much more complicated.”

By manufacturing in small volumes, Picadilly is able to adapt and react to changing trends in women’s fashions, giving them the ability to quickly put new clothing on the market to meet those needs. By manufacturing locally, Dombrowsky said that Picadilly is better able to control the quality of the products that they put to market.

Picadilly Fashions is currently in its 40th year of operations after Dombrowsky founded the company at King and Spadina in 1975 with around 15-20 employees.

Since then, Picadilly has become truly a global brand carving a niche for itself, selling its locally made garments in small boutiques around the world from the United States to Europe to Australia and South Africa. The company also boasts showrooms in New York City and Dusseldorf, Germany.

To find out more about Piccadilly please visit their web site at 

www.picadillyfashions.com

10 Things to Consider Before Renovating a Bathroom

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By Len Drewnowsky

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Undertaking any renovation in your home can be stressful, but preparing yourself with the proper questions to ask your contractor, and knowing what to look out for can certainly make the process seem far less worrisome.

Many of the homes in the manor were built in the 1950s and have not been updated since then. The following things to consider will help to put you on the right track when thinking about updating your bathroom.

1) First and foremost, you must determine if the plumbing is outdated and, if so, are you prepared to strip all the walls down to the studs to upgrade the pipes. Upgrading from galvanized to copper is a must, and will increase water pressure and flow in most cases.

2) How many bathrooms are currently in the home, and do they all have bathtubs? The trend today is to keep one bathroom with a tub, preferably the main bathroom, and convert the bathtub in the ensuite to a large walk-in shower

3) Consider electric floor heating as an alternative to conventional forced air heating – This especially useful if you have an older home with hot water radiators. Electric floor heat eliminates unsightly radiators and frees up additional floor space.

4) Is there adequate ventilation in the bathroom? Years ago builders were only required to have a window in the bathroom in order to meet the criteria for ventilation. Today a fan is not just a convenience, but a must in ensuring proper ventilation - both for the sake of expelling excess humidity from the room, as well as fumes. Excess humidity leads to the formation of mould in corners and mildew on the grout. Make sure that the fan you select is large enough for the size of the room.

5) Do you want a pre-moulded tub or shower, or a customer built shower with natural stone or tile? These are all personal preferences and your contractor should be able to show you examples of both.

6) Now for the fun part - selecting plumbing fixtures. In most cases today, toilets are water savers so your choice for a toilet should be narrowed down to elongated or regular shape, and raised or standard height. Selection of faucets and shower controls become a personal taste issue. Choose from double handles to single lever. My personal choice is to always select a pressure balance control for the shower to eliminate the risk of burns due to drops in pressure while showering, which can happen when someone else in the home flushes a toilet while you’re in the shower.

7) Electrical considerations should include having a GFCI (ground fault circuit interrupter) in the bathroom, as well as lighting in the shower or over the tub with a separate control switch. Pot lights add a lot of light without being obtrusive and should also be considered as a great option.

8) Choices of tubs is always a major component. Whether it be a higher soaker tub, a jet tub, or a therapeutic bubble jet, discuss your options with your contractor. He or she will guide you to a recommendation that best suits your needs.

9) Layout changes are a major consideration when remaking your bathroom. If you have a closet in a spare room that backs onto the bathroom, it may be possible to give you the flexibility to have both a soaker tub and walk in shower and increase the value of your home. A competent contractor can assess these possibilities.

10) Finally, when you consider a bathroom renovation, be prepared to be inconvenienced for at least a couple of weeks, and make sure you’re comfortable with the people that are working in your home. Remember that you will be seeing a lot of them during the project. Your contractor should be professional and friendly, as well as his employees. Is your contractor punctual? When he says he will be at your place at a certain time, is he? Remember, the contractor that you choose will make your project either a pleasure, or a nightmare, so select wisely!

Len Drewnowsky, LD

Construction and Landscapes Inc.

Owner of LD Construction and Landscapes Inc.,

Len has over 30 years experience in the home

renovation, landscaping and design industry.

Operating the family-run business, Len takes pride

in the workmanship and detail that is put into every job that him and his team undertake.

ldconstruction.ca

len@ldconstruction.ca

416.677.3459