I have lived in Bonfield longer than any other place, but there is part of my soul that is Torontonian -- the result of having been there as a grad student in my 20s. Those were truly formative years. The result of this connection is that I see T.O. as a microcosm, so full of human possibilities, so often falling short. Recently the emphasis has been on falling short, as the city seems to have been infected by the world-wide wave of mean, destructive small-mindedness.
Then I read this article on the movement to bring good street food to the city. A place known for its extraordinary variety of food ought to have a fleet of trucks serving any number of different styles of fast food, but small-mindedness has made it nearly impossible to run such a business.
Then comes Suresh Doss to remind longer-settled Torontonians of a simple truth: more variety is good for everybody. Specifically, good food trucks bring customers to the bricks-and-mortar restaurants they are parked outside. As Doss works to make possible legal food truck havens, support among established restauranters grows.
I get a small laugh from the fact that Doss is an immigrant and yeah, a computer engineer.
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