Accessibility to All

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4 supporters are talking about petitions related to Accessibility to All!

The prevention of motor vehicles access into the largest park area in Toronto defies community logic. as a 25+ year resident in Ronis fail village. I have both used car bike and walking to access the park. there are simply time and places to use cars that are needed, especially with ageing population of those wishing to enjoy the fruits of this 600 acre gem located on the Grenadier Pond and Lake Ontario. The planned 7-day ban of car access strikes a negatife blow to an entire community of eager taxoayers who have until recently had unrestricted entry to simply enjoy this tax- supported landmark. Banning cars is NOT a worrhy or sensible bylaw!!! I will be protesting to my Councillor and at any public meeting opportunity.
Nicholas supported: HIGH PARK-ACCESS FOR ALL
Everyone should be allowed to enjoy the park on weekends. If it means more parking options within the park or a free shuttle, we would be okay with that. However, my dog and I can never come to visit with my family on weekends as he is large and has mobility issues so we rely heavily on the park to be able to socialize him. Weekday access is biased and unfair when so many people support bike lanes, why are cars being vilified?
Magdalena supported: HIGH PARK-ACCESS FOR ALL
I think accessibility for all to this beautiful park is paramount. There should be at least one weekend day where people can come in with cars so the elderly or individuals with mobility issues can come to the park. Or at least additional parking locations outside the park and a free shuttle train/bus for individuals to move throughout this large park.
Silvia supported: HIGH PARK-ACCESS FOR ALL
"I’m signing because this fight is personal. I carry the legacy of residential school survivors in my bones—Cree and Mi’kmaq bloodlines that were never meant to break, only to burn brighter. The trauma they endured didn’t die with the buildings; it echoes through our families, our dreams, our silences. Now, they want to cut mental health support? That’s not just budget talk. That’s another chapter in a long history of erasure dressed up as policy. We’re not numbers. We are living stories. The children who never came home still whisper through the trees, through the smoke, through our skin. Healing is sacred. Mental health isn’t a luxury—it’s ceremony. To slash funding is to suffocate the very breath we’re just beginning to reclaim. It’s violence in a new disguise. I am part of The Fire Never Left: Bloodlines Rising, a movement born from ash, built by memory, and fueled by a fire colonialism could never extinguish. We are the ones who remember. The ones who resist. The ones who rise. We are firekeepers—and we will not let this betrayal pass unnoticed. No more silence. No more cuts. No more forgetting. We are still here. And the fire still burns."
Randolph supported: Reverse the Cuts to Indigenous Residential School Funding for Mental Health

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