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Community editorial board: The humble pay phone is a critical piece of access to justice

Community editorial board: The humble pay phone is a critical piece of access to justice
countyweeklynews.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from countyweeklynews.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

People want to transform an old Toronto bridge into a nature trail

People want to transform an old Toronto bridge into a nature trail Stay in the loop Sign up for our free email newsletter. Unsubscribe anytime or contact us for details. The Don Valley has many of Toronto s best trails and wild areas in the city, and some people would like to see the city go a step further and create a unique trail over an old bridge. The Wonscotonach Trail would transform an old railbed and bridge into a spectacular urban trail, area resident Chris Williams tells blogTO. Wonscotonach is the Anishnaabemowin place name for the Don River. The view from the Half Mile Bridge is beautiful. Photo via Chris Williams.

Community editorial board: Consider planting your own urban forest

Article content Earlier this year, I read a couple of books that made me want to plant a forest. So, that’s what I ended up doing. The first book was Barkskins, by Annie Proulx, and the second was The Ministry for the Future, by Kim Stanley Robinson. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser. Community editorial board: Consider planting your own urban forest Back to video Barkskins is set in early New France and tells a story of several generations of foresters. Spanning the globe and exploring the cultural and economic relationship of humans with forests and trees, this is a story about forest industrialists, Indigenous peoples, and the loss of old-growth forests.

Bolton resident goes green after winning home makeover

May 13, 2021   ·   0 Comments By ROB PAUL Local Journalism Initiative Reporter Everyone dreams of winning a home makeover, but Bolton’s Alessandra McIntosh had that dream become a reality thanks to an initiative of the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority and West Bolton Sustainable Neighbourhood Action Program (SNAP).  The initiative is called the Green Home Makeover Program, it was created through the Green Home Program to showcase ways that West Bolton SNAP residents can reduce water and energy use while increasing tree canopy, improve stormwater management, and garden ecologically.  In 2019, the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority received application from West Bolton homeowners to participate in the Green Home Makeover Program and McIntosh and her family were selected as the winners. As a result, they’ve received a grant and energy and landscape retrofits to help make their home green.

ZAS Unveils a Wood-Based, Net Zero Carbon design for TRCA s new headquarters

ZAS Architects, in a joint venture with Bucholz McEvoy Architects, designed the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority’s (TRCA) new headquarters. Sitting adjacent to the Black Creek ravine system, the organization envisioned a holistic and “wood first” approach with a light-filled and flexible workplace. From the elevator core to the exterior cladding, the building uses a […]

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