

A native of Montreal, Quebec and a liberal-arts graduate of Hampshire College (1980), Gomberg founded one of Canada's first curbside recycling programs in Montreal, and later moved to Edmonton, Alberta, where he created educational materials for Alberta's energy ministry and headed the EcoCity Society, an environmental agency. In 1992, he was elected to Edmonton's city council. He later ran for the position of Mayor, but was not elected.
In 1997 he was the New Democratic Party candidate for the Montreal riding of Outremont.
Gomberg then moved to Toronto, Ontario, where he ran for mayor in the 2000 municipal election. He received over 51,000 votes, but finished a distant second behind Mel Lastman who garnered over 80 per cent of the vote.
While in Toronto Gomberg also hosted Eco-Freako a webcast TV show. It ran for ten episodes.
Gomberg was often controversial as an environmental activist, having been arrested numerous times.
- In June of 2000, he was arrested at the World Petroleum Congress protests in Calgary. A protest march had taken him by the Suncor building, which was a violation of terms from an arrest at a Suncor protest in Northern Alberta. He was held for a couple hours, then released. His was one of only two arrests at the WPC protests - the other being a street youth with outstanding warrants.
- He locked himself in a safe in Alberta premier Ralph Klein's constituency office as a protest against the Province's stance on Kyoto.
- He was also arrested in The Netherlands after breaking into the Volkel NATO Air Force base with 9 other anti-nuclear activists working to expose the presence of nuclear weapons in that country.
On Thursday March 4, 2004, Gomberg was reported missing to police, who later stated that he appeared to have jumped off the middle of the Angus L. Macdonald Bridge, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in the early hours of the morning.
He had left his partner a suicide note stating that he had "lost his chutzpah" and his bicycle and helmet were found on the bridge. His body was never found. Services were held celebrating Tooker's life across Canada.
His wife Angela Bischoff suspects that his use of the antidepressant Remeron may have led to his decision to commit suicide. Gomberg had become increasingly agitated in his final weeks and his Remeron dosage had been increased to the maximum amount two days before his death. Three weeks later, U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued stronger warnings about a link between antidepressants and the risk of suicide, particularly in the weeks after a patient starts treatment or their dosage is increased. Health Canada later followed suit, and Remeron is now listed in Health Canada's adverse drug reaction database. 
Starting in 2006, and continuing in 2007, some activists in Toronto are advocating the establishment of a major East West Bike lane, to be called the "Tooker", on Bloor Street. This is to honour the life of Tooker Gomberg. This project is described at takethetooker.ca
External links
- Take The Tooker Bloor Street Memorial Bike lane in Toronto, Canada.
- Greenspiration Tooker Gomberg and Angela Bischoff's work together, and since his passing.
- Official biography for Tooker and Angela
- Healthy Mind Body Planet Tour 2006 '(honoring) the late Tooker Gomberg by concentrating on the role that mental illness and associated treatments played in his tragic death, ....'
- Tooker Gomberg Memorial discussion forum
- Story on Tooker Gomberg death (subscription)
- Take the Tooker Launch Video
- Tooker (Le Monde à bicyclette) song with lyrics by Mike Ford
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Last updated on Tuesday July 15, 2008 at 23:57:48 PDT (GMT -0700)
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