Pubdate: Sat, 14 Nov 2009
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Copyright: 2009 The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456
Author: Robyn Doolittle

DANFORTH'S DECLINE: DRUGS, PROSTITUTES NOW IN THE OPEN

Danforth and Ossington: Two neighbourhoods facing  similar problems for 
different reasons

A trip to the Danforth for many means niche boutique  shopping in
Greektown, a wine list at lunch and a  Starbucks for the ride home.
Three subway stops east,  at Coxwell, the streetscape has changed.

Trendy eateries are replaced with fast-food  restaurants. Parking lots
and sterile storefronts  hopscotch one another down the Danforth drag.
And the  further you go, the more it slides.

The kitsch of Greektown dries up at Jones Ave. Pass  Donlands. An auto
shop. A fried chicken joint. A  funeral parlour. Coxwell is the
dividing line.

By Main Street, bars on shop windows, payday loan  stores and dingy
pubs are the norm. Drifters who have  been turned away from the local
shelter sleep in long  alleyways. Dealers work out of side-street
crack  houses. Prostitutes walk the Victoria Park strip.

It's only getting worse. In the last three years, the  drugs and
street workers moved into the open. Deals  that used to go down in the
back of grimy Internet  cafes now happen in broad daylight.
Prostitutes moved  out of rub-and-tugs and onto street corners.

Now, the crime has seeped west.

Last week, a known gang member was fatally shot in the  face on a
residential street just west of Pape, in the  heart of gentrified
Greektown. Police are still trying  to determine what 27-year-old Theo
Tiku was doing in  the quiet family neighbourhood. It may have been a
blip, but it was enough to send shock waves through the  community.

Residents and police are pushing back.

"There has been a general decline in the (east end of  Danforth),"
said Det. Christopher Higgins of 54  division's major crime unit. "So
we're being very  proactive with our enforcement."

In the last year, Higgins and his team have been going  after drug
fronts, johns and rub-and-tug parlours. In  October, police rounded up
70 johns. In March they  netted 57. Last fall, 21.

"That doesn't necessarily mean there's more, just that  we're getting
better at catching them," said Higgins.

Police have partnered with Alcohol and Gaming  Commission of Ontario
to ensure local bars --  predominantly those that hawk $2.50 pints --
are  following the rules.

Faced with a graffiti explosion, the Danforth Business  Improvement
Area hired Scarborough-based Goodbye  Graffiti to remove sprayings as
they happen.

"We call it the cockroach effect. Graffiti attracts  more graffiti,"
said John Kalimeris, the company's  managing director. "If you're
victimized and you clean  it up, it may come back. But if you don't,
your  neighbour gets it and it will just continue to spread.

"There's an implied threat, when people see graffiti,  that there are
undesirables in the neighbourhood.  People will shop at the big box
stores instead. People  think: 'If you aren't cleaning your walls, are
you  cleaning your store. Are you cleaning the kitchen?'"

Abubakar Siddique runs a struggling, 10-year-old  clothing shop near
Victoria Park. He pines for quieter  days.

"Customers don't come into the store because the  homeless people are
standing out front. I don't blame  them. It's not their fault. But
they walk around  swearing or whatnot and people don't come in."

Two weeks ago, a woman scooped up a bunch of clothes,  headed to the
dressing room, then came out naked,  suggesting a trade. There are
break-ins in the area --  mainly junkies trying to support a habit.

Siddique isn't the only one hoping to resurrect the  Danforth of the
past. Three years ago, a group of  families and professionals formed
the Danforth East  Community Association. They've been knocking on
storefronts in need of TLC. Eight have been revamped so  far.

Concerned about drug dealers in East Lynn Park, the  group campaigned
to get families out and about. They  held movie nights and square
dances. Two years ago,  Alison McMurray spearheaded what has become a
popular  farmer's market in the reclaimed space.

"Even a little thing like revitalizing the park, when  you've got so
many mommies and daddies with strollers  everywhere, that isn't really
a comfortable place to do  your drug deals. I'm not saying we've got
ridden of it,  but we've pushed it out of the area," said McMurray.

In the 1950s, before the arrival of the subway, the  wide sidewalks of
the east end created a walking  neighbourhood. Once people went
underground, foot  traffic dried up and shops closed. With rents
declining, landlords were less picky with retailers.  The clientele
went next. And the cycle continued.

McMurray has hope. "I think there is slowly becoming a  return to that
age. Where you come to the Danforth to  walk and shop and eat and
spend time with friends.  That's what our group is trying to do." 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D