"I hear Child's has great ribs"
Gail Asper got up in front of a group of Winnipeg businesspeople that if Winnipeg doesn't start looking like a living museum of tolerance and social equity, it's going to make her future Candian Museum of Human Rights at the Forks look foolish. "We have to be seen as a leader of human rights," she said.
City needs cleanup: Asper - WFP
Getting to things more tangible, Ms. Asper said that it's time to Do Something To Fix The Downtown. Citing the story of a couple of foreign bureaucrats who came to the city to donate to the CMHR recently, she said:
"'When they checked in (to their hotel), they asked where they could have dinner and they were told they could walk up and down Portage Avenue and they'd find something,' Asper said.
It was after 6 p.m. and they didn't find dinner. 'What they found was a decayed, scary and hollow downtown.'"
Not to take away from the reality of a pathetically severe lack of amenities of any kind (even in it's comparatively pleasant and vibrant pockets of downtown) open in the evening, but this example touches on what is a greater problem: downtown hotel staff who apparently don't know what they're talking about. What on earth is one doing suggesting Portage Avenue as a good place to get something to eat at 6:00pm (or any time of the day for that matter)?
I don't know where all these great restaurants open on Portage Avenue are, but I'd imagine the only way you'd be able to get to them is by driving a plutonium-powered DeLorean at 88 m.p.h. Did the hotel staff also suggest catching a streetcar up Main to catch a midnight show at the Bijou, or dancing at the Roseland?
City needs cleanup: Asper - WFP
Getting to things more tangible, Ms. Asper said that it's time to Do Something To Fix The Downtown. Citing the story of a couple of foreign bureaucrats who came to the city to donate to the CMHR recently, she said:
"'When they checked in (to their hotel), they asked where they could have dinner and they were told they could walk up and down Portage Avenue and they'd find something,' Asper said.
It was after 6 p.m. and they didn't find dinner. 'What they found was a decayed, scary and hollow downtown.'"
Not to take away from the reality of a pathetically severe lack of amenities of any kind (even in it's comparatively pleasant and vibrant pockets of downtown) open in the evening, but this example touches on what is a greater problem: downtown hotel staff who apparently don't know what they're talking about. What on earth is one doing suggesting Portage Avenue as a good place to get something to eat at 6:00pm (or any time of the day for that matter)?
I don't know where all these great restaurants open on Portage Avenue are, but I'd imagine the only way you'd be able to get to them is by driving a plutonium-powered DeLorean at 88 m.p.h. Did the hotel staff also suggest catching a streetcar up Main to catch a midnight show at the Bijou, or dancing at the Roseland?