Toronto Star

PETER GUY SILVERMAN

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Peter Guy Silverman, died peacefully at Moira Place, Tweed, on October 7, 2021.

Born in 1931, he was too late for either World War, but still longed to serve. Rejected by the Royal Canadian Air Force for lacking 20/20 vision, Peter went through Army OЊcer's Training in Alberta before joining the Royal Horse Guards in London. He was then trained by the SAS and sent to Јght in Cyprus. He survived being wounded in battle, only to become a paratroope­r with the Royal Engineers Airborne. He couldn't Љy planes, so he jumped out of them.

Peter channeled his lifelong love for adventure and desire to contribute into an eclectic and wide-ranging series of careers. He worked as a foreman with the crew laying the railway line to Wabush Lake in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, and drove a bulldozer during constructi­on of the M1, Britain's Јrst four-lane highway. He was one of the workers extending the London Undergroun­d, where he lost a Јnger saving a crewman's life. Above the street, Peter earned a Masters in Military History from U.B.C., and his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto. He also worked in advertisin­g in both London and Toronto, and taught History at the U of T's Scarboroug­h Campus. This was where he met his wife, Frances Burton, Ph.D. They married a year later and had twin daughters: Alexis and Leah.

But in Ontario, Peter was best known as a news reporter at Global TV and then as consumer advocate at Citytv. At Global, among his most signiЈcant contributi­ons was his news series on the harm it would do to expand the Pickering Airport. The public reaction resulted in the appointmen­t of Arthur Maloney, the Јrst Ombudsman for Ontario. Peter also exposed Ontario puppy mills, which helped change legislatio­n to protect dogs from this kind of abuse.

Peter took on the Ministry of Health, who were denying medicine to Canadians suЇering from Fabry disease, since the disorder is rare and the treatment expensive. Because of Peter, Canadians with Fabry have access to a life-saving medicine and can live normal lives. Peter's investigat­ing also shut down phony charities which were exploiting children who were "selling chocolate" but receiving no compensati­on.

He kept investigat­ing on children's behalf even after leaving Global, writing two books on the challenges and failures of the Canadian Children's Aid Society. These became standard fare in sociology courses.

But soon enough, Peter found a new home at Citytv, where he was best known for his work as the Ombudsman for CityPulse News. The team of Silverman Helps Јelded about 20,000 calls a year from desperate consumers. Peter was their white knight on camera, Јghting against the government, corporatio­ns or fraud. Among the Silverman Helps news stories which meant the most to him were exposing John Jassem's fraud. Jassem had stolen money meant to be used to install an elevator for disabled children at the Driftwood School. Through Peter's advocacy, the elevator was installed free of charge, giving the students full access.

He then worked on bringing the Merkley triplets home from Mexico, where their mother had taken them without their father's consent.

Peter and his Silverman Helps team won the Radio Television Digital News Associatio­n's Edgar Murrow Award, and the Gold Award and World Medal from the prestigiou­s New York Festival, for producing the world's best news stories. Silverman Helps was also nominated for two Geminis, and Peter received recognitio­n for his work from the Toronto chapter of the Associatio­n of CertiЈed Fraud Examiners, as well as the Toronto Police. He was honoured with the RTNDA Lifetime Achievemen­t award in 2009.

For his life's work making Ontario a better place, Peter was appointed to the Order of Ontario in 2009. The honour was bestowed on him by his former student, Governor General David Onley. Years earlier they had worked together to get the Јrst residences built on UTSC's campus.

Peter Silverman helped long before Citytv made him famous for it, and his endeavours took his altruism around the world. In South Africa, he aided victims of Apartheid in Јnding employment, and helped build homes. He went to Ethiopia with The Adventist Developmen­t and Relief Agency (ADRA) and built a bridge and restored and repaired schools and hospitals in Rwanda after the genocide. In Nicaragua, he was part of the Bicycle Project, built schools, and wired a hydro project funded by the Canadian Government. In 1998, in Honduras, he initiated, organized and coordinate­d a major housing project for victims of Hurricane Mitch. At 78, he was still helping, and built homes in Haiti for Habitat for Humanity.

He was a board member of Save A Child's Heart, Habitat for Humanity Toronto, the Canadian Organizati­on for Tropical Education and Rainforest Conservati­on, and Chair of the Aphasia Centre for North York. In 2012, Peter received the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal for his volunteer work with NGOs. Peter never forgot about his roots with the military. While at Citytv, every year he honoured the sacriЈces of Canada's servicemen and women, telling their untold stories during Remembranc­e Week. He worked to keep Frederick George Topham's Victoria Cross in Canada. At the age of 75, he recertiЈed his jump wings by leaping from a C130 Hercules.

He was a decent, caring man, and will be sorely missed as a friend, husband, father and grandfathe­r.

The funeral and service will be held privately by the family. In lieu of Љowers, the family would appreciate donations to any of these organizati­ons: Covenant House, Habitat for Humanity, Yonge Street Mission, The Nature Conservanc­y or Wildlife Conservanc­y of Canada, The War Amps, The Heart & Stroke Foundation, Save A Child's Heart Toronto, ADRA Canada, and Hope for Dementia.

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