
Toronto charity that supplied hockey gear to kids in need says it's being stiffed by city
CBC
A Toronto charity that's provided skates, sticks and hockey helmets to hundreds of children in need says it's being stiffed by the city for the cost of the equipment.
Skate to Great says it was promised that a portion of its costs — at least $50,000 — would be covered by the city within two months when former city councillor Glenn De Baeremaeker contacted its volunteer chair Evan Kosiner and asked the organization to round up the equipment in March 2018.
But the money never materialized, Kosiner says.
"This has done a ton of damage to us," Kosiner said. "We're kind of handcuffed at this point without these funds to be able to continue doing what we've always done as a charity."
But De Baeremaeker, city staff and the current councillor, Paul Ainslie, have a very different take on the situation.
De Baeremaeker told CBC Toronto that although $50,000 was allocated to the group back in 2018, there were no guarantees issued about when it would be handed over. That requires a second motion to council — a motion that hasn't yet been drafted by Ainslie's office.
"I'm pretty sure I wouldn't tell any charity, 'You're getting 50,000 bucks next month,'" De Baeremaeker said Wednesday. "Maybe he misunderstood what I said."
Ainslie, who took over the ward from De Baeremaeker after the 2018 municipal election agrees.
"I can almost guarantee that (De Baeremaeker) didn't tell Skate to Great to go buy all this equipment because you're getting the money in eight weeks," he said. All that's in writing is the fact that that Skate to Great has been approved for funding — not when that funding would be doled out.
Kosiner says Skate to Great provided "two shipping containers filled to the brim" with about $120,000 worth of new or refurbished hockey equipment designated for kids in need at Scarborough schools, based on the city's request — a drive that, he estimates, helped 800-900 children suit up.
Skate to Great, which has since been folded into another charity called Philanthropolis, was approved to receive Section 37 funds in July 2018, according to city records.
That's money the city collects from developers in exchange for greater heights and densities on new building projects. The money is then used within individual wards to build amenities that benefit the community, like parks and playgrounds, at the councillor's suggestion.
But Ainslie points out that even after the funding is approved, no money is actually released until the developer has been issued a building permit — which often takes several years — and says Skate to Great's seven-year wait is not out of the ordinary.
"The city doesn't guarantee (a payment date) and Skate to Great would have known that," Ainslie said, adding he has a development property in his ward that has been sitting idle for 20 years.













