Middle-class communities disappearing
Big increase in poor neighbourhoods in Toronto and more rich districts, according to U of T studyFeb 08, 2009 04:30 AM
Daniel Dale
STAFF REPORTER
"PRIMO PIZZA," the sign reads. "SINCE 1965." Like the store's walls, it is green and white and red, the colours of the Italian flag, and, on the left, there is a cartoonishly mustachioed man carrying a pepperoni pie above his head. This could be any Italian-owned pizza joint in the city.
It was indeed Italian-owned until last year. Then a man named Rocky sold it to a man named Abdul.
Abdul Malik, a 43-year-old Indian immigrant, kept its name and its oven and its sauce and its dough. He made just one addition to the top right corner of the sign, easy to miss if you're darting in from the cold, above the shop's phone number.
"Halal 100%."
"Some people, when they see the sign `halal,' they don't come," said Malik, who also drives a taxi. "We're losing some customers. But we're gaining other types of customers."
The neighbourhood known to Statistics Canada as Census Tract 354 is changing. A community of 1950s red-brick bungalows, sturdy front-lawn maple trees and long, narrow driveways, it seems the very embodiment of white middle-class suburban Canadiana. But like the rest of Scarborough, it is decreasingly white.
And by University of Toronto Professor David Hulchanski's definition, it is no longer middle-class. ........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/584203