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| | By Ashley Okwuosa | | |
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| | | MUST READS | | |
| Ramon Ferreira/Toronto Star photo illustration | | |
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| Abigail Romeril/For the Toronto Star | | |
| THE THIRD ACT | | On Jersey Island, the Call & Check program engages postal workers to look in on the elderly living at home with a five-minute doorstep greeting to see how they’re doing and take care of any immediate needs. Jersey Post workers have made 79,867 official visits since its inception. Could something like this work in Canada? The National Institute on Ageing thinks so. NIA's paper found that a similar program could boost revenue for Canada Post and help more older Canadians age comfortably at home. Moira Welsh reports on the possibility of replicating Call & Check here and what it would mean for our seniors. | | | |
| R.J. Johnston/Toronto Star | | |
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| Lance McMillan/Toronto Star | | |
| Opinion | | As more incidents made headlines, city columnist Edward Keenan rode the TTC for hours in the mornings, afternoons, and evening rush hours over two days. While nothing of note occurred, he observed a system suffering signs of neglect, one that has increasingly and troublingly sheltered vulnerable people without other options. The city’s immediate response is to deploy dozens of officers across the TTC, but will that be enough? Here’s why Edward believes the real work to fix the TTC will take more time and why it’s essential to do it. | | | |
| Fred Thornhill/For the Toronto Star | | |
| Real estate | | Doug and Mardi Tindal are two of seven people ranging from their 50s to their 70s who are transforming a Haliburton-area inn and marina into a shared home. They are excited about the living arrangement they envision — a lakeside house with a full veranda ringing with laughter, boisterous and quiet conversations, and shared meals and wine. One expert says the experiment in co-living could help alleviate two urban afflictions: the high cost of housing and social isolation that is especially prevalent among seniors, reports Tess Kalinowski. Here’s a look at how this group launched their unique housing plan with community at its core. | | | |
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| | | EAT THIS | | | Paige Taylor White/Toronto Star | | |
Tâm, a pho restaurant at 369 Keele St., offers a pared-down version of the expansive menus most Torontonians are used to in Vietnamese restaurants, writes Karon Liu. Of the dozen or so items on the menu, almost half are vegan, drawing on the cuisine’s centuries-old history with meatless cooking and satisfying hungry vegetarians in the area. If you want to try a restaurant with a unique spin on traditional Vietnamese dishes, here's how this restaurant stands out. | | | | |
| Thanks for reading. You can reach the First Up team at firstup@thestar.ca, and I will see you back here tomorrow. | | | |
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