Oakville Beaver, 25 Aug 2022, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THURSDAY AUGUST 25, 2022 www.carstaroakville.com 916 Winston Churchill Blvd. 905-845-7579 2212 Wyecroft Rd. 905-847-2595 2202 - 5991 th Insurance A better insurance experience starts here. Rich Demille, CIP, Agent 2379 Trafalgar Rd, Oakville 905-257-0111 rich.demille@desjardins.com www.richarddemille.com 380 Nautical Blvd 2254 Yates Court New PriceFeature Listing The following is Part 2 of a four-part series, 2021 Canadian Census -- What the data means for Halton. Reporter Bambang Sadewo analyses the results as they are released throughout the year. Part 2 focuses on what the data tells us about the changing face of the average Halton house- hold. Getting a bigger house to ac- commodate his parents was al- ways in the back of Umer Shabra- ti's mind. It's a step he ultimately took a decade ago by moving from Mississauga to a three-bedroom home in Halton. Despite the added responsibil- ities of caring for elderly parents, now both in their 80s, Shabrati never sees it as a burden. "It's a blessing on us," he said, noting that it never crossed his MULTI-GENERATIONAL LIVING ON THE RISE IN HALTON See MANY, page 14 BAMBANG SADEWO bsadewo@metroland.com Originally from Nigeria, Tunde Aluko now calls Halton home in a household with his wife Funmi David-Aluko, children Dara (left) and Pamilerin, and his mother Mary Aluko. Graham Paine/Metroland HOSTING AN EVENT? POST IT. PROMOTE IT. INSIDEHALTON.COM /EVENTS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy