The main floor of Pete Hewett and Karen Hjort-Jensen’s house looks like a war room. Large bristol board mockups of traffic routes are positioned throughout the hallway of their East City home. A large table normally used for dining is covered with pads of paper, brochures and handouts.
Rob Steinman, a retired teacher and the leader of a growing protest to stop construction of a Parkway extension bridge through Jackson Park, is sitting on the couch wearing cords and a t-shirt. A bright red “NO Parkway” button pinned to the front of his blue ski vest.
Exhausted from weeks of campaigning to stop the development and protect the urban-wooded park located in the heart of Peterborough, Rob says the $67 million bridge through Jackson Park will only solve 10% of traffic problems in the north end.


































