ganjavih
Senior Member
Police have finally released images of the arson suspect...
Actually, I think one subtle reason why it was taken for granted is that it *already* underwent a sort of renewal/restoration in the 1970s, when all the Edison Hotel signage was removed and the brick sandblasted--evidently, they were trying to channel some of that Gloucester Mews mojo further south on Yonge. Unfortunately (and ironically), the sandblasting may have weakened the brick to the point where it precipitated last year's collapse, as well as compounding whatever weakening effect the present fire caused...
Setting the bar a tad low, aren't we?
As for LA- well I'm not even sure it has any historic structures lef
Police have finally released images of the arson suspect...
You will be shocked to know that unlike us, LA has completed their inventory of properties so they can protect them. Their Conservancy does a great job.
Your anger at the building owner is one thing but the fact that you completely let the city off the hook is another. At the end of the day where was the city? Where are the laws, regulations and codes to protect from this kind of thing? This simply shouldn't happen, and certainly not at the heart of Yonge/Dundas.
... and enough already with turning this into yet another divisive partisan issue. Lets not pretend that the issues that have plagued this building for years - and what those issue represent in a more profound way - are anything to do with Ford. I mean, it's sort of like blaming Obama for stimulation spending! If the worst Ford has done is to keep his mouth shut on something he probably doesn't know very much about then he's certainly done far better than Miller thus far. In the meantime we must lobby Ford and the province for responsible improvements to building/heritage legislation.
The US stimulus package and a non-visible Mayor are eggs and oranges. This is hardly partisan, all I expected was a statement from Ford to signal he cares about heritage properties or is concerned about what has happened here. That's three or four minutes for an aid to write up a piece for media distribution, but he has remained silent. The City Councillor in my Ward and where the fire took place, Kristyn Wong-Tam, took the time to respond to me with a lengthy letter, I copied her in my correspondence to Mayor Ford. I've seen her in several media pieces too. I'm pleased to know that she's in the loop and on the job.
police have finally released images of the arson suspect...
Who really cares whether Ford values heritage or not, or whether he comes out and reads some carefully prepared statement? For all the lip service and pretence of other mayors and councils we still managed to fall into this deplorable state of affairs... and so it must be reiterated that this is nothing to do with fat old Ford and his crew of philistines no matter how little better they will likely prove themselves to be on this score, and that your outrage could be far better directed, imo. That said, the people of Toronto (or Brantford or any other town for that matter) get the heritage laws or civic/government responsiveness to these issues they demand... or deserve I should say. All of us should be outraged by this, and not just a minority of UT geeks or heritage watchdogs, and not just those who would have voted Smitherman or any other candidate that wasn't Ford.
... and again wrt whether Ford values heritage or not can we really be all that shocked that he may not when almost nobody else does? Can we really be surprised if buildings are dropping in a community/culture such as Toronto where for all intents and purposes there is nigh on zero tangible or meaningful interest in any ideas of Heritage, History or anything else that might amount to any notion of a collective past, not to mention zero value attached to it? For God's sake this is an almost three hundred year old city of almost three million people that doesn't even have a museum of history! No history and no story, in other words. So why be surprised if development and commercialism, expansion and profit, personal rights of property and ownership, and almost any other consideration you can think of manage to trump Heritage time and time again? This was the same under Miller as it will be under Ford, whether one chooses to talk purty about it or not, unless the people of Toronto miraculously have a change of mind about these things. Then again, maybe empty words make some people feel better about these things, or maybe it's simply just another opportunity to score political points.