“Tent City Site to Become Mixed-Use Development instead of Waterfront Home Depot.” 2014. Toronto Life. Accessed July 1. http://www.torontolife.com/informer/toronto-real-estate/2010/11/03/tent-city-site-to-become-mixed-use-development-instead-of-waterfront-home-depot/.
The Toronto Star. 2007. “I Was the 13th Person to Move into Tent City. It Was the Canada Day Weekend in 1998. We Were Evicted in 2002, Four Years and Two Months Later.,” April 8. http://www.thestar.com/news/2007/04/08/a_home_of_their_own_in_tent_city.html.
Whyte, Murray. 2009. “Uzma Shakir Scanned the Crowd, Tapping Her Pen on the Table. It Was Her Turn. It Was Hot – Too Hot, an Early-Summer Evening Scorcher. All the Chairs Were Filled. Latecomers Spilled out the Back and on to the Gritty Sidewalks on Bloor St. W. near Lansdowne.” The Toronto Star, June 27. http://www.thestar.com/news/insight/2009/06/27/why_richard_floridas_honeymoon_is_over.html.
Williams, Lacey Mcrae. 2015. “Reclaiming Spaces/Places: Restoring Indigenous Street Names in Toronto.” Spacing National. Accessed June 9. http://spacing.ca/national/2014/11/04/reclaiming-spacingplaces-restoring-indiginous-street-names-toronto/.
Wong, Tony. 2010. “A Site That Was Supposed to House a Home Depot Store Has Been Sold to a Consortium of Developers.” The Toronto Star, November 3. http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2010/11/03/controversial_waterfront_site_sold_to_developers.html.
Wood, Tim. 2015. “Once a Tool for Colonialism, Place Names Can Now Be a Tool for Reconciliation.” The Toronto Star, June 8. http://www.thestar.com/opinion/commentary/2015/06/08/canada-should-replace-colonial-place-names-with-indigenous-ones.html.
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