Ask any older Ontarian who has felt the sting of a scam call, the ache of grief, or the quiet of an empty apartment in January, and they will tel...
When a city learns that about 55 per cent of its residents will be 50 or older by 2051, that is not just a demographic tidbit. It is a blunt mess...
It is hard to call it progress when Ontario seniors are living longer, yet spending more of those added years feeling foggy, unsteady and afraid ...
Picture an Ontario senior gripping the stair rail, not just because their knees ache, but because the thought of losing their home scares them ev...
The most dangerous political season for seniors is not when cameras crowd Queen's Park. It is the summer afternoon when a closed clinic, a rent i...
Picture an older neighbour gripping a cane, heart pounding at the curb, knowing that one cracked sidewalk or icy curb cut could send them to an e...
The fear is simple: needing help to bathe, eat, or stand up, and finding out the support was quietly sold off to the lowest bidder.
Climate change is not an abstract headline for Ontario seniors, it is the smoke in their lungs, the flooded basement, the rising food bill that s...
Public money can build hope or erode trust, and nowhere does that feel more personal for Toronto seniors than when billions in training dollars a...