Toronto Star

Funding decision hits sour note

Scarboroug­h students speak in support of Sistema music program after provincial budget cut

- MIKE ADLER TORONTO.COM

Don’t feel bad for the 100 Scarboroug­h kids in Sistema Toronto’s music programs, now that Ontario’s new government has taken the charity’s $500,000 provincial support away.

Feel bad for 30 other Scarboroug­h children who would be in the program this fall, supporters say, if the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves hadn’t decided to rescind a grant the former Liberal regime said was approved.

The charity expected a steady source of funds for the first time; instead, Sistema executive director Christie Gray and Scarboroug­h-Guildwood MPP Mitzie Hunter were at St. Martin de Porres Catholic School assuring the assembled children the program will continue.

“More people are going to help us,” Gray told a group in the school library Monday. “We’re going to figure out a way to make it happen. We promise, OK?”

Hunter, a Liberal MPP, told them the funding problem would be fixed. “We want you to learn and have fun.” Privately, though, she said she feels the program is threatened.

Martin de Porres is blocks from the

site of the infamous Danzig St. mass shooting. Hunter said positive pathways must be built to address roots of violence in the community.

“There’s a demonstrat­ed need in Kingston-Galloway for programs like Sistema. More communitie­s need programs like this.”

She said she could see and prove the program’s benefits, yet the PC government said Sistema didn’t meet grant criteria — an impulsive decision it should revisit, Hunter said.

“If not, they know they’re hurting kids and limiting their potential. “That’s shameful.” Earlier, children getting 10 hours with Sistema over four days a week said they love their instrument­s and would be sad to see the program end.

“I’ve seen on the news the funding got cut and I still believe they deserve it. It’s like a promise,” said Joyce Teodoro, 10, who now plays the cello. “There should be Sistema in every single school.”

Her mother, Sherile Red, said two years in Sistema helped get the formally shy Joyce into gifted classes.

“It’s like a cocoon becoming a butterfly,” she said. “Instead of the kids just staying in the house watching TV, at least they’re improving themselves through music.” Michelle Khan said her daughter, Brooklyn, has become “more of a team player” since joining. Music lessons are expensive, Khan argued, and “we give so much to people who don’t need it,” but Sistema’s a program “for our future.”

Doris Abohndem, mother of two girls in the program. said they love music.

“Ever since they got into it, they’re focused.”

Believing that cutting off its grant wasn’t fair, Abohndem wrote to Premier Doug Ford. The premier wrote back on Aug. 27, saying Ontario Tourism, Culture and Sport Minister Sylvia Jones, or her staff, would respond to Abohndem. She said they haven’t.

Richard Clark, a spokespers­on for Jones, has told Metroland Media Sistema wasn’t eligible for funds, and suggested the Liberals were to blame for the disappoint­ment.

Sistema directors say ministry staff evaluated the program before the grant was announced in May and haven’t explained the new government’s decision. Clark couldn’t be reached to clarify why the grant was dropped.

Visiting with Hunter was John McKay, Scarboroug­hGuildwood’s MP, who acknowledg­ed the program wasn’t a fed- eral issue but he wanted to support it anyway, because the decision “struck me as exceedingl­y short-sighted.”

Founded in 2011, Sistema teaches 175 other students in North York and Parkdale. Until last fall, Military Trail Public School was the charity’s second Scarboroug­h learning centre, but funding was scarce, so Military Trail students learn at Martin de Porres.

Sistema wants to serve many Scarboroug­h schools, not two, because there’s a huge demand, said Gray, pausing near a bulletin board where children had posted personal goals: to be a doctor, a vet, an illustrato­r, and “to make it to Level 6 in my swimming class.”

That’s part of Sistema’s work too, she said.

“We’re using music as a tool for social advancemen­t, especially for kids in low-income areas.”

 ?? DAN PEARCE METROLAND ?? Sistema executive director Christie Gray checks in on a group of students at St. Martin de Porres Catholic School.
DAN PEARCE METROLAND Sistema executive director Christie Gray checks in on a group of students at St. Martin de Porres Catholic School.
 ?? DAN PEARCE METROLAND ?? A group of St. Martin de Porres Catholic School students ask MPP Mitzie Hunter about the provincial cuts to their music program. Sistema provides music programs for at-risk youth.
DAN PEARCE METROLAND A group of St. Martin de Porres Catholic School students ask MPP Mitzie Hunter about the provincial cuts to their music program. Sistema provides music programs for at-risk youth.

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