Plus, a Toronto woman’s years-long search for her birth parents
In today’s edition of This City: the bone-rattling reality of Ontario Line construction. Plus, one woman’s years-long search for her birth parents, how a renter scored her first solo apartment in Scarborough, and more. For all of our city coverage, visit torontolife.com or subscribe to our print edition. |
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Toronto residents in the path of Ontario Line construction are living in a bone-rattling, foundation-cracking, rat-infested hellscape. In our September issue, true tales from the epicentre. |
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| Elana Milman was adopted into a family in Israel after the Second World War and spent decades working to solve the mystery of her identity. At 77, she found the answers she’d been seeking—along with a whole new family. Her story, here. |
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| In July of 2021, Jasmine Boateng, originally from Ghana, was studying marketing at the Toronto School of Management and working part time. Tired of her shared student housing, she started looking at apartments close to transit. But, after months of searching, nothing. By mid-2022, Jasmine’s work had picked up, so she raised her budget. Here’s what happened next. |
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| In the latest issue: the expensive, obsessive, addictive quest for a perfect life. Plus, the bone-rattling reality of Ontario Line construction, an old-money-versus-new-money clash in Rosedale, the city’s most drool-worthy home libraries, and more. Still not receiving Toronto Life at home? Subscribe today. |
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