Ontario Community Newspapers

Weston Times (1966), 6 Apr 1967, p. 17

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The Board noted at that time hat serviced land and construction nsts were a deterrent to home and other types of real estate owner- ship and that subdivision and site planning would, in many places. he imprpved by the grouping of homes in maisonette, town housing and apartment blocks with common ittardens and open spaces. 1 In simple language Stratified {Title means the joint or common Fownership by two or more persons It is expected that enabling leg- slation will be enacted by the Pro- inciaI Government in Ontario in his Session of the Legislature for tratificntion of Land Titles. The Toronto Real Estate Board as been pressing for Stratified itle, another description of Con, ominium, legislation for four ears. In Mar, 1963, TREE Buts itted Resollutions 'asking the overnment of Canndn Ind its mvinces to promote by unpro- riate legislation and financial na- istance under the National Hous- ine Art, the provision of home and ther types of real estate owner- hip by means of Condominium or Stratified Title. BUYING A CAR OB TRUCK? " Knowlnnd Dr., Islington Bus.: 247-716]: Rem: 244-8571 NEW and USED CARS and TRUCKS MI Insurance and terms arranged. Debt. consolidation & counseling. Individuals and Companies. Also Leasing. Pol-(inc, Buick. Tempest. Audi". VInthIL GMC Truck: GRANT G. BROWN. CALL E. Ray Reynolds the two 75-year-old pots isiLenw Basin- of Chinguacousy Country Club. Bund KEEPING THE FIRES GOING under 'trat'itied Title Will Halt Trend _ 'ront Home Dwenership Says TREB ...UPINWOODBRIDG£AT A. R. March Pontiac Buick Ltd. NO. , HIGHWAY. NST WEBY or “MOTOR AVE. .CderepW.tuttMtmartdttqta1rs .mm 'cts-Carl-trr-t MOTORS LTD. 1575 WESTON ROAD AUTO PAINTING PHONE TO-DAY! 851-1111 EXPERTLY DONE COMPLETE OVEN BAKED PAINT SPECIAL I "We must and can make it pos- sible for the $5,000 to $6,000 a year earner to provide, through his own resources and without subsidy, I Idecent home for his family. Hous- ling legislation should be enacted (i, allow a man earning $100 to $120 per week to purchue s 820,000 home or row housing unit [with a $1,000 down payment tmd ‘a $19,000 mortgage financed for forty years with principal and in- {mm laments or $115 to $120 I nor month (depending on the NBA interest rate). of parts of the same proeprty. Stratified Title permits each of these seven] persons to hnve the full and exclusive ownership for instance of a part of a house; of pert of an apartment building or of an individual unit in such u building; of part of I shopping centre, end at the same time the joint or co-ownership with other owners of the rest of the building such as the lend it occupies, the garages. the “airways, and certain areas or structure] putts of the building which must be used in common. There results from this form of ownership the right to in- dividual mortgagintr, buying and selling, insuring, taxing of the are: each individual owner occu- pies and consequently individual responsibility for the resulting lia- bilities. E. W. Dempster. TREE Presi- dent says Stratified Title will halt the trend away from home owner- ship. Properly planned. inexpensive 1nd attractive row housing units can be built under Stratified Title leislation which would nllow in- dividual ownership if loraLGov- "when: could be relieved of the educational burden. Only 23.1 per- rent of Metro's families have "family" income: of over $8,000, which is the minimum annual in- come needed to afford I $25,000 home. 55 psreent of Metro‘s tami- The Toronto Real Estate Board has prepared a 39-pmre report on "House Price Trends and Con- struction Costa in Metropolitan Toronto, Can-d1 and tho United States." "The publication iI designed to provide infatuation which will 'e House Price Trends Published To Aid Mover ONLY sl I o. ”.mg dreds of Hutherdnle brownies and girl guides attended the f2lubiseventh an- nual angering off. 7 -- - _ "A (uni!) may "ulna out-ob; town home for 816,000 only to find that a home with similar features m-y cut $M,000 in the Tarmac um. mum. m up ht Momma. mm amt un- ploygn e wall uAmglovyga h1 com." in. In“, an. lien um between $4,000 and $7,999. If proper legislation were en- noted, it wouldka it mime for a builder to construct a row of 8. 10 or 12 houses on one are of land. Land costs per unit would be reduced to somewhere around $2,000. This saving would be pass- ed on to the buyer of the individual unit in the struetare," Mr. Demp- sber said. Most of the apartment suites! now under construction in Metro) are in the luxury class, with rent: tags averaging between 8150 and. $175 per month. l "In the suburbs the trend Is ul row housing, often referred to by f surh other gI-morous homes "u'!."] Garden Court, Maimronette, Ter- 1 race or Town Housing. The trend ) toward row housing has been phe- ' nomenal. In the Toronto area, for; example, only 79 such units were constructed in IMO. This volume increased to IM units in 1961; 843 in 1962: 1,350 in 1963; 1,704 in 1964; 2,289 in 1965 and 1,646 last year. A run/2y shows these three And four bedroom row houses on renting for on average of $190 per month. This would imiieate no luck _ in the ability of tenants to afford l monthly carrying charges on homes. The lack of I down pay- ment would seem to be the main problem in deterring home owner- ship." Mr. Dumpster reported. I "The 1981 census showed owner occupanvy in Metropolitan Toronto was 67.4 percent. By the end of 1966, owner occupancy in the Metro Toronto Brett had slipped to 57.4 percent. Now there Ire 320.000 owner ortnpied houses and 235,000 apartments in Metro's housing stock. If the present trend con- tinues. only 50 percent of the Metro ure- families will occupy their own homes by 1970," Mr. Dumpster concluded. _ "Many cmployer: no transfer- red from smaller citiu and town: in the U. B. Ind Canadn by their employer: to Metro. They have little idea of what to expert in than way of “nil-bl: arcnmnmda- tion and " what price or rental in their new environment." Mr. Kirkup "plairtrd. He pointed out that prices paid for building lots in Canada have tripled in the last ten years. "In addition to 200,000 immi- grants who will establish homes in Canada this yen. 700.000 fumilien will move from one put of I Province to “other part of the um. Premium. An additional 60,000 (name: will move from one Provinco to math: Province (inur-provincially).” Answer the thousand: of cnquirie: from people moving to Metro from all parts of the world," Ian D. B. Kirkup, TREE Renal-ch Di- rector. pila, ti sun Windrim Family Planning In Slum Areas Now Available The 'something' offered by Mrs. Jackson, a neighborhood hide in Cleveland, and hundreds of women like her in slums across the na- tion, is family planning. In the first half year rinse the home visit program begun in the poverty-stricken inner city of "We get barked " by dogs, laughed It by loudmouths. scolded by grandmothers," admitted Mrs. Dolores J-ckson with a patient smile. "but we don't give up. We knnw we've got something impor- tant for our neighbors so we krwp going back. After a while the greeting changes. We're welcome." Winters Gives Figures In Response To Program Mudflats uth mm method from but.“ Inb- Whom-Mum... ttt"Naaq cm Fri-ciph- at GoodCononb “View”. Thou Madrid m at has In I - I!!!“ I "at up to lud- of unknown“ nub-id- hriu. Mr. Vii-tau .1de that In Image put-mo of tho pro- lnmnu has bun to chit: tho an" of tho mmllitiu of farm-om comp-ab. to the Indian! community in which they our“. and to help doubt: a clear 'mturatandine the eatntritm.. tion and rol. ot than nub-idiniu within the Canadian economy. Of the 3,500 luhlidinry com- panies listad, clone to 1,900 re- plic- lnn now hen received repre- uming noun 2,800 commie: in all. More responm we expend. A; number of companion ttave indie-1- ad that they are preparing their Mr. Winters mud tint the let- (an provide much mm] inform- "ian on comm, programmes. policies and pnctices mt) that hf it both encounter! and reassured by the [gym-ally 'ro-operative and constructive tutu" of the re- sponse. In abutment follow-up letters the companies have beet, naked for their reaction to the principles and to indicate the extent to which they conform. . mum Winks 'oo""-."""'"'"----- SUGARING OFFSPELLS SPRING -e-- even if the mercury hovers aroirrid seven degrees above zero as it did on March 18 during Chinguacousy Country Club's Our and includes not" very old - old and nearly new furniture. Drop in Ind brown around! 0mm. OPEN nu. I Pat TUESDAY TO MAY Junction Trade-n-Post USED FURNITURE Cleveland, over 2,000 visit: luv. been made by neighborhood aides. Poor women by the hundreds have learned for the first time that family planning clinics In Ivnil- able to them in their own neigh- borhoods. They lave flocked to the clinics, proving once Ignin that the poor, even as the affluent, in motivated to use, family planning. Until recently, however, informa- tion about it. and services, were not readily avaiuble. Neighborhood aides are lumen- ful, a Planned Puenthood spokes- man told Women's Medical News Service, because they no part of the community they are trying to reach. Mgr-y grew up in the slums, Need the same problems of too Radio Club Seeks Funds For Equipmént The 8ilvertbms. Ana-bur India Club of Silvnrthon Cu1eeiate h- stitute it " pun-at. trying to nit- fundn with which to quip their radio station (ml). It in to this and that any It. lbw- ing the film “The Spy Who Cuba in from the Cold", on April , " 7:30 -p.m. The admission chum will be 750 for adult: and 50¢ tor students Ind children. To equip their nation the Club must “in over 8400 on this ftim. There will he . nulptun park at Expo 67 featuring th. works of prominent modern "tHts at Calder, Chadwick, Cuba, Hep- worth,.LipehiU, Moore, and Git eotnetti. _ mad-ammu- 1T2ugTgue"2ue.tt 'l'n'd2Pge.t'ay. Wuhan-tam in nvcilahloil. Micah. It. Winter-W annual sugaring offiparty. David Nei- man of Southway Drive stirs the pot as Bob Hoult of Clarkson adds fuel. Recruited with the help of lo- eil Agencies and minister: id the area, and from Among Women who had come to the Planned Fuent- hood centre: for help, their prime 1",G'i/,"il'iroe,', is that they be "warm people with the ability to icommunicam easily and with Enron: ronvirtion about family planning." 'srrordintt to Mrs. Per- lee, C. Burke, 1 professiomn on the Planned Pttrenthood Matt who directs the . neighborhood tide 'Gan. little education, too few skills, too tew jobs and too many children. tt 3; , a m- . ,'ist, ikr‘ br .~ ,, ”m 3': g,? 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