About Adam…

I love this area, and no matter where in the city my job in film and television moved to, I am not willing to leave this neighbourhood and now I’m raising my son here.

Our spectacular parks, our blue flag beach, our numerous ravine trails, and of course, the small town vibe while living in the middle of the big city are just a few of the great aspects of living here. Our ward is one of the few areas in the city where you can smile and nod at a stranger, and have it returned.

For the record, I come with no strings attached, I am staunchly non-partisan. I’ve never been a member of any political party, so my allegiance is strictly to residents.

I do not qualify myself or my platform with any particular ideology, I prefer to let evidence and history guide my vision for a better life that raises living standards for all while being 100% sustainable.

I have been deeply involved in community issues for many years now, having already worked with city staff on numerous initiatives—I didn’t just step up when I ran for election.

Below is a comprehensive account of all the various local initiatives I’ve been a part of:

Beach Community Edible Garden

The Edible Garden branched from Friends of the Beach Parks, for whom I lit many a fire in the winter down in front of the Kew rink.

I was one of the architects of the Beach Community Edible Garden and am now its sole administrator, growing food for the Glen Rhodes Food Bank (now called Nourish East End).

Anyone walking through Ashbridges Bay Park may have seen me doing my Sunday watering there.

I’ve been with the Edible Garden since it was built in 2016. I’ve even made a video of the construction, which doubles as a how-to video on building “wicking beds”.

Fire in front of Kew Rink
Sunday Watering

Watch the video – Building a Wicking Bed for the Edible Garden

Meals on Wheels

My favourite volunteer activity since 2015 has been delivering Meals on Wheels every Sunday and Christmas morning in the north end of East York (True Davidson).

There is nothing more fulfilling than seeing the smiles of our clients as I bring them a hot meal. Other than personal service workers, I may be the only person they see that day. I witness the harsh reality of seniors living in poverty every week, and we can definitely do better.

There have been occasions where I have befriended clients and come back to their place to help with maintenance or other issues. One woman was new to her walker, and found she couldn’t carry anything to her living room, so I affixed a basket to the front of her walker so she could carry her dishes back and forth.

Another woman had previously fallen and needed the fire department to break down her back door to reach her. The frame had broken and the door no longer closed, so I bought the necessary materials and fixed her door frame.

With the so-called “grey wave” of the Boomers all coming into old age at the same time we must do better to support them before even more slip through the cracks.

Meals on Wheels

Development Battles

I’ve been fighting the imposition of overdevelopment for 14 years in this ward. As a board member of the Greater Beach Neighbourhood Association, an umbrella group of local residents associations, I fought for responsible development.

testified at the flawed OMB hearing for the Shell Station site that now blocks the view our historical fire hall, violating the Urban Design Guidelines.

Watch the video – Fire Hall View Blocked

I also make renderings of new developments to show how they will look in the harsh light of day, as opposed to the developer renderings that always show the buildings out of context. The Beach Metro has published my renderings of overdevelopment, like the article I wrote on the proposed tower at Woodbine and Danforth that went from a 15-storey condo to a 35-storey rental tower, or the proposal for 4 Newbold Ave, that proposes a 10-storey building on a tiny side street.

More recently I deputed at Toronto and East York Community Council about the overdevelopment at 6 Dawes Rd, 1631 Queen St/1080 Eastern Ave, the Murphy’s Law development, 143-147 Main St, and Woodbine and Kingston Rd.

The Beach Metro

We are extremely lucky in this corner of the city to have an independent local newspaper, and one that is free no less.

The Beach Metro has published a few of my articles, used some of my renders of developments, and frequently quotes me in their articles:

Growing food, growing community

Problems with Woodbine bike lanes will not be solved by unsafe changes approved by councillors

Affordability, parking among key concerns at community meeting on proposal for 35-storey rental building at Woodbine and Danforth

Private profits, rental housing and the ‘monolithic’ proposal for Woodbine and Danforth

The case for the Woodbine bike lanes in wake of provincial government’s decision on other Toronto streets

Affordability, crowding at Main Street Subway Station among community concerns raised at meeting on proposed 56-storey building on Dawes Road

Community meeting on plan for 12-storey building on Woodbine south of Kingston Road to take place tonight.

Lack of ‘truly affordable housing’ and impact of 18-storey building among concerns at meeting on proposal for Queen and Coxwell site

Height, parking and site conditions among concerns raised at community meeting on Murphy’s Law proposal

Community Council adopts proposal for 39-storey residential building at 6 Dawes Rd.

Housing committee approves plan for 18-storey and seven-storey residential buildings in Queen/Coxwell/Eastern area

Provincial ban on city mandating affordable housing percentages near transit hub developments has East Toronto politicians frustrated

Community members’ concerns over proposed 11-storey building north of Main Street Library include size of building, lack of parking

East Toronto residents say community concerns are being ignored by city and province in rush to approve new developments

The Beach Village BIA

I spent 6 years (2010-2016) on the board of the Beach BIA, where I worked hard to counter the struggles of our ailing Queen St. businesses.

By the end of my tenure, I was chair of the streetscaping committee, and was personally responsible for bringing back our hanging baskets of flowers.

I also started the tree planter painting initiative (however they reached the end of their lifespan and had to be painted over), and with help created the “What Do You Love About The Beach?” mural on the construction fence while the new ReMax building was being constructed.

Tree planter painting initiative
“What do you love about the Beach?” mural

I have also spearheaded many surveys of the public, and have worked almost all of our events.

I’ve even been Beach Buddy in both the Easter and Christmas parades.

My time with the BIA was both fulfilling and frustrating.

The former because I really enjoyed working in the community in a way that allowed me to to see the positive impacts. The latter because many of the forces negatively impacting the area are well beyond the BIA’s control.

Dressed as “Beach Buddy” during parade

Ward 19 Transportation Committee

For 11 years, I chaired the Ward 19 Transportation Committee, successfully lobbying the city for changes like new signage and ground markings to improve safety and awareness on the Martin Goodman Trail, doing multiple transit and traffic studies and reports around the ward, and written reports submitted to the city and council.  I speak more in depth about my experience with transportation issues here >.

Woodbine bike lanes traffic study – Burgess at Golfview
Traffic study

32 Spokes

I am a longtime member of 32 Spokes, our local cycling advocacy group and ally of Cycle TO

We have been pushing for improvements to the poorly designed Woodbine cycle track, many have seen my report about it.  

I have manned the 32 Spokes table at many farmer’s markets as our other skilled members do free tune-ups and light repairs to any bicycle that needs it.  

A particularly fulfilling event was doing repairs of children’s bikes at the 100 in 1 Day event in Main Square.

Ward 32 Spokes – East Lynn Farmers Market
Ward 32 Spokes – 100 in 1 Day at Main Square

Rain Gardens United

From 2018-2020 I was Treasurer on the board of Rain Gardens United, an initiative to trying to get rain gardens included in the city’s wastewater management strategy. Sadly they are now defunct, but apart from learning a lot about rain gardens and stormwater management, I learned what it takes to start a non-profit from scratch.

I’ve led a few rain garden crawls (that’s the back of my head in the photo), and have worked with the advisory board to get our non-profit incorporated. I also edited and animated the banner video on their website.

Rain Gardens United crawl

Friends of the Glen Stewart Ravine

Glen Stewart Ravine in winter

Having lived at Beech and Kingston for years, I love the Glen Stewart Ravine at any time of the year.

As part of Friends of Glen Stewart Ravine, I help primarily with cleaning trash and fighting against dreaded invasive species.

I also gave out free trees to homeowners through the Tree for Me foundation (now defunct unfortunately), and made bee “hotel” kits for residents to put in their yards.

Recently I was part of their battle against yet another overdevelopment that encroaches on the ravine, and did renderings of what that will look like.

Removing invasive Burdock
Tree for Me event

TTCRiders

I lobby for better transit as a former board member and volunteer with TTCriders, a very active and well-known transit lobby group.

I took part in many rallies and public information campaigns, and even did a series of videos for them.

TTCRiders Rally at Queens Park
From video – So Efficient it Hurts

Electoral Reform

I have volunteered with Fair Vote Canada to promote proportional representation for our federal and provincial elections, and support RaBIT and ranked ballots for our municipal elections.

After much studying, I discovered what I feel to be the ideal system for our federal and provincial elections and made a video to explain it.

Watch the video – Near Winner Proportional

Committee on Monetary and Economic Reform (COMER)

 From 2014 to 2018 I was involved with the Committee on Monetary and Economic Reform, eventually becoming the secretary of their board.

COMER is an independent Canadian think tank, who started their work in earnest in the late 80s, and are still fighting for an equitable economic and monetary system.  They are known for taking the Bank of Canada to court, an action I realize now was always a losing proposition, but none the less raised important questions the public needs to be asking about federal finance.  I have a deep interest in banking and the monetary system, as money is central to the economy and to our lives.

Understanding Canada

Since 2015 I have run a non-partisan blog called Understanding Canada, critiquing the actions and policies of the federal government and its neoliberal ideology, with a focus on economics and the monetary system. 

One of my biggest research articles was on our last inflationary period in the 70s and the actions the Bank of Canada and the government took then to combat inflation.  I also have a recent piece detailing how the Bank of Canada created money to get Canada through the pandemic.  I’ve done a few videos, like the video I did for the 2015 election, “Hardeau VS Truper” and “Libs VS Cons 2025“, detailing the similarities in policies and votes of the Liberals and Conservatives.