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As the school year comes to a close, Firdaus Shallo couldnt be more relieved.By all accounts, the Grade 12 student from C.W. Jefferys Collegiate Institute in North York has survived 鈥?and thrived 鈥?in a year like no other: she will graduate next month, has accepted an offer from a U.S. university, and has started her summer job.But when she reflects on the year that has passed 鈥?with Ontario students spending the vast majority of the year learning remotely, including those who had opted to learn in person 鈥?Shallo doesnt mince her words. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Has this year been a lost year Definitely, said Shallo. One hundred per cent a lost a year. There is no other way to put it. It fel
stanley thermosflasche t like you were getting nothing done, and nothing was moving forward, added Shallo. She says that while she managed to stay afloat, she has serious concerns about how her siblings, friends and community members have fared.But the bi
stanley cup gger concern, Shallo says, is not whats been lost, but what happens next.
stanley bottles ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW One of the things students at my school are worried about is, how will we catch up And I think depending on where you live in the city 鈥?there is a worry that there will be a huge gap between students who are at the level they need to be and those who arent, said Shallo, whose family had opted for remote learning, worried about the high rate of the virus in their neigh Jaaz Potential buyers eye Zoetic Theatre
Carrying cans of soup out of a No Frills on Victoria Park Avenue, Suman Roy met a middle-aged man who asked for a can.Roy, a chef trying to fill food baskets for families in Scarborough, returned to the store twice for more cans.Each time he came out, he s
stanley cup aid, a different person asked him for food. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW It just broke my heart to see the need. That need was already easy to see in southwest Scarborough, particularly in Oakridge, a neighbourhood with one of Torontos highest family poverty rates. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW COVID-19 just makes things worse.Some Scarborough food banks have shut down. School breakfast
stanley cups s and snacks families relied on are suddenly gone. Communal meals feeding hundreds each week have stopped. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW On March 16, the Bluffs Food Bank in Birch Cliff announced it was closing for two weeks, at least. It supplied 350 families a week. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Where are they going now What are the options, asked Roy, who met some neighbours and with them started a temporary food bank, the Scarborough Food Security Initiative. We will take it over, and we will do what we can, said Roy, who was trying to organize a food bank for Oakridge when the crisis hit.Now, he and other volunteers are receiving foo
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