Skip to content
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Your Preferences
    • Editorials
    • Gastronomy
    • Health & Medicine
    • Interviews
    • Community
    • News Updates
    • Opinion
    • Podcasts & Videos
    • Politics
    • Show Biz
    • Sport
  • Contact Us
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup

“Downtown Core – Toronto”

Ricky Castellvi, October 29, 2023October 29, 2023

TORONTO – I was born in the city of Manila, Philippines, and have been a city dweller ever since.  When I immigrated to Toronto in the early 70s, a relative offered me lodging in the suburbs, but I respectfully declined.  At the time, I was juggling two jobs.  Both were in the city.  And I was not about to add an exhausting commute to the picture.  What figured into my decision was the knowledge that living in a city, whether in the Philippines or any country for that matter, has more advantages than disadvantages.  Work opportunities are within reach.  So are churches, supermarkets and schools.  On a serious note, if there is a medical emergency, you can be transported to a downtown hospital within minutes. 

Toronto has changed over the last 40 years. And I welcome this change. When I first moved here, I found this city to be somewhat laid back. Now, there are condos being erected on what once were idle lands. We have become a Tourism hub.  Something to be proud of. 

Unfortunately, with progress come glaring changes that I cannot ignore. Driving in the city has become a nightmare. This is a very noisy place with deafening sirens. There is a perpetual traffic jam stemming from the volume of cars and endless road constructions. Road closure signs appear overnight, all the more confusing motorists.  Four-lane roads dwindle to two lanes; the rest, overtaken by cyclists and parking spots.  I am a cyclist too, but I am not about to be sideswiped by angry motorists.  Bicycle vs. car – not a fair match.  Oftentimes, the end result is lethal.

Yonge & Queen has become the new Yonge & Eglinton, with subway construction that is anticipated to stretch on for 4 years.  And with that, two blocks along Queen have been lopped off.  Might I add that the quoted 4 years is a projection at that.  Lest we reminder ourselves that it has taken 12 years (and counting) for Eglinton construction to come to completion.  Meanwhile, local residents and commercial establishments continue to suffer.  Another change in our city that is hard to swallow.

Homelessness.  We cannot discuss the state of Toronto without addressing the elephant in the room.  This issue is not unique to Toronto, as it exists in every major city in North America.  With the rise of condos, came the rise of homelessness.  One has only to cast a glance at Allan Gardens Conservatory downtown to witness the despair of people who are living in tents, even in coldest of weather.  Where all of these people are coming from is anyone’s guess.  They could be new immigrants, refugees, victims of trauma, etc.  The bottom line is that the growing divide between the haves and have-nots is becoming a gaping chasm.  From sleeping on a hard sidewalk, on the stoop of a vacant store, to even taking over that narrow space on concrete islands that divide major streets – there is not a corner in downtown Toronto where you look and not see a homeless person.

From traffic jams to homelessness to now, drug use.  Cocaine was a thing of the 70s, emerging in major cities.  Today, there are opioids.  Safe injection sites were established by our municipal government to put this crisis in check.  Notice that Yonge & Dundas Square has changed?  You can thank the safe injection site just around the corner for that.  And where exactly is it located?  It abuts Toronto Metropolitan University (TMU, formerly known as “Ryerson”), a place for students, in what is meant to be a family-friendly zone.  Now, we must look over our shoulder when passing through this area.  In all honesty, the safe injection site has done little in addressing the true underlying origins of drug use in Toronto.  Like the homeless, I see addicts popping up everywhere downtown, at all hours of the day, panhandling for money.  If not addicts, then the mentally unstable, who scare pedestrians to their wits’ end.

Without a doubt, Toronto continues to grow.  But with great progress come even greater problems.  It is time for our new Mayor to address the traffic jams, homelessness and drug use that plague what is supposed to be our beautiful City of the North.  A place certainly worth visiting by tourists. 

Pics by Ricky Castellvi

Canada English Featured News Updates Opinion Politics Toronto

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Status update of Covid-19 cases worldwide

April 24, 2021August 25, 2023

…

Read More
Canada

CORRIERE CANADESE / Vita troppo cara: un canadese su quattro fa un lavoro “gig”

October 9, 2024

…

Read More
Faith & Religion

CORRIERE CANADESE / Papa Francesco: nella bara da povero, con le scarpe consumate

April 29, 2025April 29, 2025

…

Read More

Latest Articles

  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Scienziati d’Italia in Canada, assegnato il premio ‘Ingegno Italiano’ April 22, 2026
  • Réseaux sociaux et IA interdits aux mineurs : une fausse bonne solution selon les experts April 22, 2026
  • Ban social media and AI under 16? Experts: “It’s not the solution” April 22, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Cusma, ecco il nuovo Comitato consultivo: Flavio Volpe unico italocanadese presente April 22, 2026
  • Une pétition demande la reconnaissance de l’endométriose et de l’adénomyose comme invalidités au Canada April 21, 2026

Search Articles by Date

April 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
« Mar    

Our Sponsors

Lido Construction Pascale_Di_Poce
©2026 Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes