Parents, children rally at school against condo development next door - Action News
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Toronto

Parents, children rally at school against condo development next door

About 200 people rallied outside an elementary school in midtown Toronto on Thursday to protest the planned development of a condo tower right next door.

'S.O.S., save our school,' students at John Fisher Junior Public School chanted

Parents and children protested in front of a midtown Toronto school on Thursday morning against the impending development of a condo tower next door. (Linda Ward/CBC)

About 200 peopleralliedoutside an elementary school in midtown Toronto on Thursdayto protestthe planneddevelopment of a condo tower right next door.

The protest included children who attend John Fisher Junior Public School, 40 Eskine Ave., near YongeStreet and Eglinton Avenue. A developer is poised to build a 35-storey condo next to the school.

"S.O.S., save our school," children chanted in front of the school as they held handmade signs.

Mayor John Tory and Coun. Jaye Robinson, Ward 25 Don Valley West,joined the early morning rally, which was organized by parents opposed to the development. Parents are concernedabout noise, dust and traffic that the construction would generate.
Mayor John Tory joined a rally against an impending condo development next to John Fisher Junior Public School in Toronto. Tory spoke to parents and children on Thursday morning. (Linda Ward/CBC)

Tory told reporters that it's unbelievable that the development wasproposed metresfrom school grounds and that itwas approved by the Ontario Municipal Board.

"It's preposterous. It's a distortion of priorities," Tory said."I just think we have to do something about that and that's why we're all here. We are all working together in both public settings and otherwise to see if we can find a solution."

Tory said the Toronto District School Board is assessing whether the students at the school should be moved during construction.

On the weekend, Tory issued a statement saying he will do whatever he can to protect the health and safety of students at the school during construction.

Tory saidthe city is opposed the development, but it was forced on the city by the OMB.

The developer, KG Group, initially wantedto use part of the school grounds as a staging area for construction but it has indicated it no longer wants to do so.

The school, which runs from kindergarten to grade six and which offers French immersion, is the oldest elementary school in the Toronto District School Board.

With files from CBC's Linda Ward