Connect with us

Jobs

Her pension wasn’t enough to cover Toronto rent. Then she found a lifeline in a different kind of housing

Published

on

Her pension wasn’t enough to cover Toronto rent. Then she found a lifeline in a different kind of housing

Beth Guthrie had grown comfortable in her “sort of crappy” but respectable one-bedroom apartment with a balcony overlooking the forests of Toronto’s High Park.

Like many older women, she spent her prime working years at home, raising children and running the household. Divorced at 40, Guthrie began working as a librarian, but the late start meant payments from her workplace and public pensions would never be enough.

A lifeline on St. Clair Ave W. 

Cheaper rent, lower utilities cost and her savings protected

Ontario builds more nursing homes, but is that the answer? 

Challenge issued to Premier Ford

Working out, playing bridge and socializing at the coffee shop

Growing calls to fix the pension gap

Continue Reading