“Way beyond a charitable model”: This collaborative initiative is transforming Scarborough’s Golden Mile

The Inclusive Local Economic Opportunity Initiative brings together residents, community organizations, corporations, and city officials to boost local economic opportunity

Why It Matters

While economic development of suburban communities can decrease poverty, it may also come at the expense of local residents through an increased cost of living, pushing them out of their own neighbourhoods due to unaffordability. This is our eighth piece in a series in partnership with the United Way Centraide of Canada.

var TRINITY_TTS_WP_CONFIG = {"cleanText":"\u201cWay beyond a charitable model\u201d: This collaborative initiative is transforming Scarborough\u2019s Golden Mile. Cynthia Du Mont\u2019s fondest childhood memories take place in Scarborough\u2019s Golden Mile.\u00a0 \u201cIt was like this really exciting day\u2026 It wasn\u2019t just shopping, it was a whole experience,\u201d Du Mont said of one of Canada\u2019s first model industrial areas, located along Eglinton Avenue East, east of Victoria Park Avenue in Toronto.\u00a0 Du Mont grew up near the neighbourhood in the mid-60s to mid-70s, and remembers donning white gloves and a hat on visits to the area with her mom and brother. As a child, she would frequent the theatre, browse records at Sam the Record Man, and order egg rolls from a local Chin

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