Toronto is no longer a “city of neighbourhoods” but has become a “city of disparities”. That is a key finding of powerful new research from the University of Toronto’s Centre for Urban and Community Studies. The “City of Disparities” research bulletin, The Three Cities Within Toronto: Income Polarization among Toronto's Neighbourhoods, 1970 - 2000 [0], and media realease [0] set out the dramatic growth in income gaps over the past three decades – as the rich get richer, the poor grow more numerous and the middle-income shrink. Set together on one page, four maps [0] chart the grim progress towards a grossly inequitable city. This research confirms and builds on earlier research from TD Economics [1], which marks growing poverty in Toronto, and the United Way of Greater Toronto [2] which confirms this critical trend.