I'll try to be brief. We all know that if you don't know where you came from, you don't know where you're going, so that's really clear.
I had the number one ward for graffiti. Everybody wanted to tag the waterfront. Kids were running rampant doing graffiti. That was prior to my being elected. We've now done a total of 14 different anti-graffiti projects with three different high schools. I also have a background in commercial art, so I go with the kids and I paint. We do garbage cans and park benches. We do murals. Everything we do has a heritage component to it.
We also had one of the largest munitions factories during the Second World War. It was 255,000 square feet, and 16,000 Canadian women worked there. I know 10 of those women, and they're great. We introduced them to the kids. Now my ward is no longer the number one graffiti ward in the city.