Councillor Josh Matlow

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    Josh in the Community

    My Staff and I are here to assist you with any questions or concerns you may have about your neighbourhood and/or your home. We’re working every day to make our community safer while improving Midtown’s parks, main streets, and the many valued services we rely on including recreation, childcare, and waste collection. I hope to see you out in our community soon!

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    Josh at City Hall

    On your behalf, I am advocating for a more thoughtful, creative, and responsible approach to policy issues at City Hall. I take very seriously the responsibility to make informed decisions that are based on evidence, community consultation, and the merits of arguments – rather than partisanship. I will continue representing our community at Council meetings on transit, tenant concerns, childcare, green space, and other issues that matter most to Midtown residents. Or, you can reach us by phone at 416 392-7906.

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    Current News Updates

    610, 2016

    CBC News: Summerhill residents angry as Hydro One unexpectedly cuts down trees

    October 6th, 2016|Councillor Josh Matlow in the News|

    Hydro One says the trees, which served as a sound barrier against nearby train tracks, were cut by mistake

     

    September 10, 2016

    CBC News

     

    Coun. Josh Matlow says the residents he represents are angry Hydro One cut down mature trees that served as a natural sound barrier after promising not to at a community meeting.

    Coun. Josh Matlow says the residents he represents are angry Hydro One cut down mature trees that served as a natural sound barrier after promising not to at a community meeting. (CBC)

     

    Roberston Davies Park was a quiet midtown green space — until Hydro One cut down the natural sound barrier provided by 29 maple trees that lined the nearby train tracks.

     

    Summerhill-area residents say they were blindsided by the clear-cutting, and Hydro One says it was taken aback, too.

     

    The power company had crews there last week to prune the trees away from power lines, but says workers chopped the trees down without permission.

     

    They've issued an apology, but local councillor Josh Matlow isn't satisfied, and told CBC News the community isn't either. Matlow said the utility said it would need to do some pruning to protect power lines at a public meeting in past years, "but they did promise us that they did not have to, nor would they, clear-cut all these trees."

     

    "This doesn't just affect our community; this affects the entire city and the province," Matlow said.

     

    610, 2016

    Urban Toronto: NXT City Talks: How Tech Can Disrupt and Enhance Public Space

    October 6th, 2016|Councillor Josh Matlow in the News|

    September 26, 2016

    Momin Ahmad

    Urban Toronto

     

    As Toronto continues to grow, technology and more specifically the role of technology in urban growth has become a fixture of much academic and political discourse. NXT City, a non-profit organisation that helps to connect young urban leaders with city-builders and facilitates the shaping of Toronto's public places, focused on this discourse in their latest quarterly NXT City Talks event held on September 22, 2016.

     

    Titled 'Smart Spaces: Will Tech Disrupt Public Space?' the panel discussion focused on the roles that technology can play in public programming for urban spaces as well as how newly emerging services like public Wifi, wayfinding apps and developments in mapping affect the public realm. The panel consisted of Ward 22 City Councillor Josh Matlow, Co-Founder of Civic Tech TO Dorothy Eng, Co-Founder of ProjexityMarisa Bernstein, and Co-Founder & Global Advisor of YouthfulCities Sonja Miokovic.

     

    NXT City Co-Founder Mackenzie Keast delivering opening remarks

    NXT City Co-Founder Mackenzie Keast delivering opening remarks, image by Craig White.

     

    610, 2016

    Metro: Midtown ravine must be saved from erosion, residents say

    October 6th, 2016|Councillor Josh Matlow in the News|

    Community groups have noticed the banks of the Vale of Avoca by Rosedale and Summerhill are deteriorating.

     

    September 13, 2016

    May Warren

    Metro

     

    John Bossons, a member of the Summerhill Residents’ Association poses next to a damaged staircase in the ravine next to his home. Bossons and his neighbours say the sought after green space is being damaged by flooding.

    John Bossons, a member of the Summerhill Residents’ Association poses next to a damaged staircase in the ravine next to his home. Bossons and his neighbours say the sought after green space is being damaged by flooding.

    Concerned Summerhill and Rosedale residents are ringing the ravine alarm bell.

     

    Users of the Vale of Avoca ravine near Yonge Street and St. Clair say the sought after green space is being ruined by flooding and are calling on the city to take action.

     

    John Bossons, a member of the Summerhill Residents' Association said the narrow strip of nature is under threat from increased storm water draining into Yellow Creek and eroding its banks.

     

    “Storm water surges have hugely increased thanks to global warming,” he said, noting flooding has already washed out walking paths, one of the ravine’s two bridges, and a pedestrian staircase.

     

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