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Opinion

A glimmer of hope in the midst of Toronto’s affordability crisis

Of all the high-profile items at the recent city council meeting, nothing was as personal for Mayor Olivia Chow as this one.

Updated
2 min read
Olivia Chow

Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow has said that expansion of the school nutrition program is a priority for her.


I remember as a child, attending school in what was then one of Toronto’s poorest neighbourhoods, being jealous of friends whose parent would give them a couple of dollars instead of sending them to school with a lunch. They’d go out and get a bag of chips, a Fun Dip and a pop while I was stuck sipping soup out of a Thermos or eating peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and carrot sticks. Imagine: junk food for lunch, every day! 

It was only later that I realized the scrounged spare change they brought was not a sign of privilege but of deprivation; that the kind of diet they were eating represented a real hurdle to both their physical and mental health; that rather than feeling jealous, I should feel lucky. 

Edward Keenan

Edward Keenan is a Toronto-based city columnist for the Star. Reach him via email: ekeenan@thestar.ca

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