ACA 2011 Toronto Delegates, Exhibitors, Workshop & Meeting
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BY EMAIL and E-FILE May 27, 2021 Mr. Jean-Denis Charlebois
Hydro One Networks Inc. Tel: (416) 345-5393 7th Floor, South Tower Cell: (416) 902-4326 483 Bay Street Fax: (416) 345-6833 Toronto, Ontario M5G 2P5 [email protected] www.HydroOne.com Joanne Richardson Director, Major Projects and Partnerships Regulatory Affairs BY EMAIL AND E-FILE May 27, 2021 Mr. Jean-Denis Charlebois Secretary of the Commission Canadian Energy Regulator 517 Tenth Avenue SW Calgary, Alberta T2R 0A9 Dear Mr. Charlebois: File: OF-Fac- IPL-H117-2020-02 01 - Hydro One Networks Inc.’s Application to Perform Component Replacement Station Work at St. Lawrence Transmission Station Impacting International Power Lines L33P and L34P, (EC-11) & (EC-18) - Information Request Responses Please find attached Hydro One Networks Inc.'s ("Hydro One") responses to the Canadian Energy Regulator’s Information Requests received May 20, 2021, in regards to Hydro One's Application pursuant to section 69 of the Canadian Energy Regulator Act, to perform station and related facilities work at St. Lawrence Transmission Station (“TS”) impacting International Power Lines (“IPL”s) L33P and L34P in Cornwall, Ontario. File: OF-Fac- IPL-H117-2020-02 01. An electronic copy of the Information Request Responses has been filed using the Canadian Energy Regulator’s electronic submission system. Sincerely, Joanne Richardson Cc: Julia Gonzalez and Whitney Punchak - CER Staff Filed: 2021-05-27 L33P and L34P Exhibit I Tab 1 Schedule 1 Page 1 of 8 1 CER INTERROGATORY #1 2 3 Reference: 4 Environment Matters 5 Project Activities and Potential Soil Contamination 6 i. Hydro One, Application to Perform Component Replacement Work at St. -
The Politicization of the Scarborough Rapid Transit Line in Post-Suburban Toronto
THE ‘TOONERVILLE TROLLEY’: THE POLITICIZATION OF THE SCARBOROUGH RAPID TRANSIT LINE IN POST-SUBURBAN TORONTO Peter Voltsinis 1 “The world is watching.”1 A spokesperson for the Province of Ontario’s (the Province) Urban Transportation Development Corporation (UTDC) uttered those poignant words on March 21, 1985, one day before the Toronto Transit Commission’s (TTC) inaugural opening of the Scarborough Rapid Transit (SRT) line.2 One day later, Ontario Deputy Premier Robert Welch gave the signal to the TTC dispatchers to send the line’s first trains into the Scarborough Town Centre Station, proclaiming that it was “a great day for Scarborough and a great day for public transit.”3 For him, the SRT was proof that Ontario can challenge the world.4 This research essay outlines the development of the SRT to carve out an accurate place for the infrastructure project in Toronto’s planning history. I focus on the SRT’s development chronology, from the moment of the Spadina Expressway’s cancellation in 1971 to the opening of the line in 1985. Correctly classifying what the SRT represents in Toronto’s planning history requires a clear vision of how the project emerged. To create that image, I first situate my research within Toronto’s dominant historiographical planning narratives. I then synthesize the processes and phenomena, specifically postmodern planning and post-suburbanization, that generated public transit alternatives to expressway development in Toronto in the 1970s. Building on my synthesis, I present how the SRT fits into that context and analyze the changing landscape of Toronto land-use politics in the 1970s and early-1980s. -
James T. Lemon Fonds
University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services James T. Lemon Fonds Prepared by: Marnee Gamble Nov. 1995 Revised Nov. 2005 Revised Nov 2016 © University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE…………………………………………………………………………1 SCOPE AND CONTENT………………………………………………………………………...2 Series 1 Biographical……………………………………………………………………….3 Series 2 Correspondence…………………………………………………………………...3 Series 3 Conferences and speaking engagements…………………………………………...4 Series 4 Publishing Activities………………………………………………………………4 Series 5 Reviews…………………………………………………………………………...5 Series 6 Research Grants…………………………………………………………………..5 Series 7 Teaching Files……………………………………………………………………..5 Series 8 Student Files………………………………………………………………………6 Series 9 References………………………………………………………………………...6 Series 10 Department of Geography………………………………………………………..7 Series 11 University of Toronto…………………………………………………………….7 Series 12 Professional Associations and Community Groups………………………………8 Series 13 New Democratic Party…………………………………………………………...8 Series 14 Christian Youth Groups………………………………………………………….8 Series 15 Family Papers…………………………………………………………………….9 Appendix 1 Series 12: Professional Associations and Community Groups 10 Appendix 2 Series 7 : Teaching student essays B1984-0027, B1986-0015, B1988-0054 12 University of Toronto Archives James T. Lemon Fonds BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE: Raised in West Lorne, Ontario, James (Jim) Thomas Lemon attended the University of Western Ontario where he received his Bachelor of Arts in Geography (1955). He later attended the University of Wisconsin where he received a Master of Science in Geography (1961) as well as his Ph.D. (1964). In 1967, after having worked as an Assistant Professor at the University of California, Prof. Lemon joined the University of Toronto Geography Department, where he remained until his retirement in 1994. His career has been spent in the field of urban historical geography of which he has written numerous articles, papers and chapters in books. -
Freedom Liberty
2013 ACCESS AND PRIVACY Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner Ontario, Canada FREEDOM & LIBERTY 2013 STATISTICS In free and open societies, governments must be accessible and transparent to their citizens. TABLE OF CONTENTS Requests by the Public ...................................... 1 Provincial Compliance ..................................... 3 Municipal Compliance ................................... 12 Appeals .............................................................. 26 Privacy Complaints .......................................... 38 Personal Health Information Protection Act (PHIPA) .................................. 41 As I look back on the past years of the IPC, I feel that Ontarians can be assured that this office has grown into a first-class agency, known around the world for demonstrating innovation and leadership, in the fields of both access and privacy. STATISTICS 4 1 REQUESTS BY THE PUBLIC UNDER FIPPA/MFIPPA There were 55,760 freedom of information (FOI) requests filed across Ontario in 2013, nearly a 6% increase over 2012 where 52,831 were filed TOTAL FOI REQUESTS FILED BY JURISDICTION AND RECORDS TYPE Personal Information General Records Total Municipal 16,995 17,334 34,329 Provincial 7,029 14,402 21,431 Total 24,024 31,736 55,760 TOTAL FOI REQUESTS COMPLETED BY JURISDICTION AND RECORDS TYPE Personal Information General Records Total Municipal 16,726 17,304 34,030 Provincial 6,825 13,996 20,821 Total 23,551 31,300 54,851 TOTAL FOI REQUESTS COMPLETED BY SOURCE AND JURISDICTION Municipal Provincial Total -
Archives and Records Management
ARM FACULTY OF INFORMATION Master of Information with Concentration in Archives and Records Management The Archives and Records Management concentration focuses on the social, institutional, and personal practices affecting the creation, use, and re-use of recorded information. The concentration explores the multiple perspectives that inform documentary practices over time, and draws on diverse foundational disciplines, including: Management theories for organizational records; Archival theory of arrangement and description; Appraisal theories and practices for diverse organizations; Preservation principles and technology migration management; and History of records and record keeping. REQUIREMENTS: WHO HIRES ARM GRADUATES? Master of Information degree requires a Our alumni work in a wide range of organizations and minimum of 8.0 full-course equivalents (FCE). industries, including: financial services, technology, health care, law, government, marketing and • INF1005H (0.25 FCE) communications, non-profit and more. Information Workshop I • INF1006H (0.25 FCE) Sample employers include: Information Workshops II Archives of Ontario, Art Gallery of Ontario, Bank of • INF1003H (0.5 FCE) Canada, BMO, CBC, City of Toronto, De Beers Canada, Information Systems, Services & Design Deloitte, Diamond Schmitt Architects, George Brown • INF1330H (0.5 FCE) College, House of Commons, Mattamy Homes, Ontario Archives Concepts and Issues Public Service, Osler Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, SNC • INF2175H (0.5 FCE) Lavalin, St. Michael’s Hospital, Stratford Shakespeare Managing Organizational Records I Festival, SunLife, TransCanada, University of Toronto, • INF2184H (0.5 FCE) among others. Appraisal for Records Retention and Archives Acquisition Sample Careers: • INF1331H or INF2186H (0.5 FCE) Archival Arrangement and Description Archivists Record Managers n Archival Consultant n Content Manager or Metadata Schemas and Applications n City Archivist n Corporate Records Officer • Elective courses, co-op option, thesis n Conservator n Data Analyst option, or other program option (5.0 FCE). -
Exploring Historical Literacy in Manitoulin Island Ojibwe
Exploring Historical Literacy in Manitoulin Island Ojibwe ALAN CORBIERE Kinoomaadoog Cultural and Historical Research M'Chigeeng First Nation This paper will outline uses of Ojibwe1 literacy by the Manitoulin Island Nishnaabeg2 in the period from 1823 to 1910. Most academic articles on the historical use of written Ojibwe indicate that Ojibwe literacy was usu ally restricted to missionaries and was used largely in the production of religious materials for Christianizing Native people. However, the exam ples provided in this paper will demonstrate that the Nishnaabeg of Mani toulin Island3 had incorporated Ojibwe literacy not only in their religious correspondence but also in their personal and political correspondence. Indeed, Ojibwe literacy served multiple uses and had a varied audience and authorship. The majority of materials written in Ojibwe over the course of the 19th century was undoubtedly produced by non-Native people, usually missionaries and linguists (Nichols 1988, Pentland 1996). However, there are enough Nishnaabe-authored Ojibwe documents housed in various archives to demonstrate that there was a burgeoning Nishnaabe literacy movement from 1823 to 1910. Ojibwe documents written by Nishnaabe chiefs, their secretaries, and by educated Nishnaabeg are kept at the fol lowing archives: the United Chief and Councils of Manitoulin's Archives, the National Archives of Canada, the Jesuit Archives of Upper Canada and the Archives of Ontario. 1. In this paper I will use the term Ojibwe when referring to the language spoken by the Nishnaabeg of Manitoulin. Manitoulin Nishnaabeg include the Ojibwe, Potawatomi and Odawa nations. The samples of "Ojibwe writing" could justifiably be called "Odawa writ- ing. -
Heritage Property Nomination Form 2018
HERITAGE PRESERVATION SERVICES Heritage Property Nomination Form Please complete this form. Attach additional pages as necessary. A. Address/Name of Property Nominated: Area (boundaries): Ward No.: To find the ward number: https://www.toronto.ca/city-government/council/members-of-council/ Map: Please attach an extract from a street map, marking the individual property, properties, street or area being nominated B. Please check one box. Nominated for: Listing on Inventory Designation under OHA C. Name of Nominator: Address of Nominator: 1 1. Reason for Nomination: I am nominating this property/group of properties/area because: The property is part of a group and I believe this group stands out because: 2. Classification (for each property): Building Type: (i.e., house, church, store, warehouse, etc.) Other: (outbuilding, landscape feature, etc.) Current Use: (residential, commercial, etc.) 2 3. Description (for each property): Photograph: Please attach 4x6" colour photographs showing (1) the street elevation and other applicable views for each property and (2) a group shot if the property is part of a group. Historical Name: Date of Construction: Architect/Builder/Contractor: Original Use: Significant Persons/Events: Alterations: 4. Sources: Please indicate whether you have consulted the following sources; please attach research information and full references (list of archives/libraries attached): __ Land Records (Land Registry Office) __ City Directories __ Goad's Fire Insurance Maps __ Building Permits __ Historical Photographs __ -
2018 Statistical Report
2018 STATISTICAL REPORT Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario Privacy and Accountability for a Digital Ontario CONTENTS 1 Requests by the Public under FIPPA/MFIPPA 2 Provincial Compliance 10 Municipal Compliance 26 Summary of Appeals — 2018 vs. 2017 36 Judicial Reviews 39 Summary of Privacy Complaints — 2018 vs. 2017 42 Requests by the Public under PHIPA 43 Compliance 60 Summary of PHIPA Complaints — 2018 vs. 2017 63 Reported Privacy Breaches under PHIPA ACCESS Requests by the Public under FIPPA/MFIPPA There were 58,812 freedom of information requests filed across Ontario in 2018, a two per cent decrease over 2017 when 59,807 were filed. TOTAL FOI REQUESTS FILED BY JURISDICTION AND RECORDS TYPE Personal General Information Records Total Municipal 18,670 16,434 35,104 Provincial 8,221 15,487 23,708 Total 26,891 31,921 58,812 TOTAL FOI REQUESTS COMPLETED BY JURISDICTION AND RECORDS TYPE Personal General Information Records Total Municipal 18,487 16,160 34,647 Provincial 7,810 16,206 24,016 Total 26,297 32,366 58,663 TOTAL FOI REQUESTS COMPLETED BY SOURCE AND JURISDICTION Source Municipal Provincial Total Individual/Public 21,160 4,485 25,645 Individual by Agent 7,698 5,698 13,396 Business 3,336 12,094 15,430 Academic/Researcher 137 130 267 Association/Group 439 422 861 Media 587 682 1,269 Government (all levels) 739 324 1,063 Other 551 181 732 Total Requests 34,647 24,016 58,663 OUTCOME OF REQUESTS BY JURISDICTION Source Municipal Provincial Total All Information Disclosed 8,328 5,626 13,954 Information Disclosed -
Survey of Research Resources on Old Town Toronto with Special Attention to Digital and Online Content S
Survey of Research Resources on Old Town Toronto with special attention to digital and online content S. E. Thompson September 2013 Contents 1 Introduction 1 2 Research Parameters 2 3 General Survey of Sources 3 4 Sample Search Results 6 4.1 Digital resources 6 Searchable Databases 6 Digital Exhibitions 7 Online Maps and Public Records 9 Research Guides 10 Websites of Historical Sites 10 4.2 Digitized images 12 4.3 Bibliographical resources 27 5 Directions for Future Research 29 1. Introduction This report comprises a survey of research sources on Toronto’s Old Town area, as requested by Balen Grillo Design. The survey covers online, archival, and bibliographical sources, but particularly the first of these. My aim has been to document highquality work that has already been done rather than to replicate it. Adriana Balen of Balen Grillo has suggested that this research is the exploratory phase of gathering accessible materials for inclusion on a website or webpage devoted to the Old Town. It is not yet decided whether this material will contribute to an expansion of an existing web presence, or to an entirely new website. Adriana also suspects that web resources on the Old Town are currently fragmented. Having conducted extensive web searches on the Old Town’s internet presence, I concur with her assessment. A site which aggregates these resources could be a valuable contribution to internet heritage resources on early Toronto. 2. Research Parameters The following outline reflects my understanding of evolving discussions about the nature of this project with Balen Grillo. Purpose. -
Paving the Way to Paradise
Teresa Casas PAVING THE WAY TO PARADISE: W.G. MACKENDRICK , WILLI AM JAMES, AND THE INTERCONNECTED DEVELOPMENT OF PARKS, SUBDIVISIONS AND ESTATES IN TORONTO AND OAKVILLE The car’s power to let one retreat to a home surrounded by parks and the corresponding destruction of the rural environment is one of the worst legacies of the last century. .MacKendrick’s contribution as a major road builder and promoter of city parks and gardens makes him an arch protagonist of this troubled story, captured in its earliest moments by pioneer photojournalist William James. TeresaCasas CONTENTS Introduction ................................................................................................................ 2 Chapter 1 ......................................................................................................................... ‘The Garden of Canada’ ........................................................................................ 13 Chapter 2 ......................................................................................................................... Design for Modern City Life: Toronto ............................................................ 26 Chapter 3 The Park ....................................................................................... 50 Chapter 4 Subdivisions ............................................................................... 74 Chapter 5 The Garden Gospel and the Pavement Wars .............. 118 Chapter 6 The Apocalypse and the Walking Sticks ....................... 139 Conclusion -
Conference Program, 6-8 June 2019 Toronto
Figure 1 Old Knox College at 1 Spadina Circle, n.d. University of Toronto Archives. University of Toronto. Department of Extension and Publicity, A1965-0004/026 [80.4]/ DIN: 2008-44-IMS Archival Origins 6-8 June 2019 Toronto Chelsea Hotel We acknowledge the land we are meeting on is the traditional territory of many nations including the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples and is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. We also acknowledge that Toronto is covered by Treaty 13 with the Mississaugas of the Credit. http://mncfn.ca/torontopurchase/ http://mncfn.ca/media-communications/treaty-lands-and-territory-recognition- statements/ Treaties, Surrenders and Purchases: LAC link Table of Contents Welcome to ACA 2019 ...................................................................................................................................................... 7 President, Association of Canadian Archivists ............................................................................................................. 7 Mayor John Tory ........................................................................................................................................................... 8 Program Team ........................................................................................................................................................... 10 ACA 2019 Host Team Chair ........................................................................................................................................ -
Our Contributors
360 Our Contributors Michael Afolabi is senior lecturer in the Department of Library Science, Ahmadu Bello University, Nigeria, and is currently on sabbatical in the Faculty of Information Sciences of Moi University, Eldoret, Kenya. He has for the past eight years been teaching archives and supervising archives projects and theses at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. He obtained his BLS and MLS in Library Science from Ahrnadu Bello University, Nigeria, and MA and Ph.D. in Education and Library and Information Science, respectively, from Indiana University, Bloomington. Mary E. Baruth is Curator at the Backus Historical Complex operated by the Long Point Region Conservation Authority. She has held curatorial and interpretive positions at a number of museums and historic sites in southwestern Ontario, including the North American Black Historical Museum in Arnherstburg and Fanshawe Pioneer Village in London. Her current project is a history of the Windsor Police Service, in collaboration with Marty Gervais and Mark Walsh. Michael Cook is University Archivist, and director of the Archival Description Project, University of Liverpool, England. Among other adventures, he was once Director of the National Archives of Tanzania (1964-66) and of the archival training course for English-speaking Africa at the University of Ghana (1975-77). A strong interest in inter- national affairs continued when he served as Chair of the ICA's Education and Training Committee (1984-88); he is a corresponding member of the ICA's Automation Com- mittee, and was several times a consultant for Unesco in archival development. Since setting up the Archival Description Project in 1981, he has concentrated on establishing standards for description and data exchange, which has brought him into close contact with many Canadian colleagues.