Toronto Star

Tory pushes for permanent ‘CaféTO’ program

Popular pandemic innovation is a lifeline for struggling restaurant­s

- DAVID RIDER

Restaurant and bar patios are set to move back into Toronto road lanes and sidewalks in May — a popular pandemic innovation that Mayor John Tory says should become a permanent seasonal fixture.

City council on Friday approved the return of CaféTO — the hastily developed, enthusiast­ically received city program to let pandemic-struck eateries and bars expand patios into new public and private spaces.

The patios started appearing last June, after COVID-19 concerns temporaril­y halted indoor dining. The lifeline for businesses eventually saw 801 new patios, many on wide sidewalks and more than 200 in curb lanes closed to vehicle traffic.

A streamline­d registrati­on process will open this month with the aim of getting as many patios as possible ready to host people by the May long weekend.

Tory congratula­ted city staff for rapidly developing and improving the program last spring, a feat councillor­s compared to building an airplane while flying it.

“What I want to do is make sure, in some way shape or form, we make this a permanent program so we don’t have to every year have this discussion over and over again,” Tory told councillor­s before they approved CaféTO 2021.

“We make it a permanent program subject to annual regulation, as it were, but it’s just permanent.”

The new May-to-November version will see efforts to make patios more accessible for disabled people, more attractive with better materials for barriers, and with more seasonal patios installed outside the downtown core.

Coun. Jaye Robinson called the program “a great long-term pandemic outcome for Toronto.”

She urged city staff to restart CaféTO quickly because restaurant­s are again struggling to survive an indoor dining ban.

“People are hanging on by a thread and this could make all the difference, getting it up and running as fast as possible,” said Robinson (Ward 15 Don Valley West).

Council also approved a city staff proposal to start work on a high-speed broadband network to offer cheap, fast Wi-Fi starting in three Toronto neighbourh­oods and potentiall­y going citywide.

Residents of Jane-Finch in North York and Malvern and the Golden Mile in Scarboroug­h could see the service, with private-sector partners using existing city fibre-optic cable, operating by the end of the year.

Firms including Rogers, Bell and Teksavvy already sell Wi-Fi access across Toronto. But a city-commission­ed report says the pandemic, with its emphasis on digital communicat­ion and schooling, has highlighte­d a “digital divide.”

Prosperous Torontonia­ns can easily afford unlimited, fast internet. But low-income residents need inexpensiv­e, highspeed connection­s for school, work and more, said the report by Ryerson University’s Leadership Lab.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? City council has approved the return of CaféTO, a program that lets eateries expand patios into public and private spaces.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO City council has approved the return of CaféTO, a program that lets eateries expand patios into public and private spaces.

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