Toronto Star

Canada Day party is back on at Nathan Phillips Square

- ALESSIA PASSAFIUME STAFF REPORTER WITH FILES FROM MAHDIS HABIBINIA AND BEN SPURR

Toronto says the party’s back on after initially cancelling plans for Canada Day celebratio­ns at Nathan Phillips Square due to funding challenges.

“There will be dozens of Canada Day celebratio­ns across the city on July 1 including in Nathan Phillips Square and Mel Lastman Square,” Deputy Mayor Jennifer McKelvie said in a statement.

“I want to thank the city manager for taking quick action to make sure we celebrate Canada Day and continue to encourage people to gather together and enjoy Toronto.”

It’s a quick change from the email sent to volunteers Tuesday, when the city informed them the event was cancelled because it didn’t have the cash to pay for it. Or, as one Redditor put it in response to the email, “tldr (too long; didn’t read) we broke.”

The city told volunteers Tuesday via email the funds secured for the event at Nathan Phillips Square weren’t enough to pay for the “standard of program” the event and its participan­ts deserve.

“While the federal funding for previous year’s has been sufficient to support the program activities, changes in location, communicat­ions priorities, escalating costs for necessary program supports, and constraint­s in the city’s budgets in a fiscally complex year, require a very conservati­ve approach to planning,” the email to volunteers reads.

In a statement to the Star, the city cited “resource constraint­s,” but added there would still be a fireworks display at Ashbridges Bay on Canada Day, and, leading up to the day, the Na-Me-Res Pow-Wow and Indigenous Arts Festival at Fort York from June 17 to 18.

Just one day later on Wednesday, the city says it plans to welcome back the volunteers they told were not needed “as soon as possible,” and city staff will work using existing budgets and “leverage community partnershi­ps,” along with continuing conversati­on with the federal government about funding for the celebratio­ns.

Details for the celebratio­n are to be released in the coming weeks, the city said.

The flip-flop came a day after the city launched a new campaign to demand Ottawa follow through on its promise of $235-million COVID-19 relief funding where it’s encouragin­g “residents and businesses to urge the government of Canada to honour its funding commitment to the people of Toronto.”

The campaign features a page on the city’s official website that allows residents to send their member of Parliament a form letter asking Ottawa to match the province’s $235million contributi­on to Toronto’s 2022 budget gap, which still stands at more than $450 million.

The city said

Wednesday that city staff will work using existing budgets and ‘leverage community partnershi­ps’ to fund the celebratio­ns

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