Month: May 2015
Leaside Garden Society plant sale Saturday, May 9, 2015
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•The Leaside Garden Society Plant Sale is this Saturday, May 9, 2015. It is a nice way to get the morning going because it starts at 9 a.m. and ends at noon. As always, it is at the Trace Manes Community Centre, 10 Rumsey Road
Rogers cutting OMNI news and 100 jobs at TV operations
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•A stunning collapse in revenue in just a year or two at Rogers Media has put OMNI-TV in a financial crisis The foreign language-newscasts once watched so faithfully by diaspora populations in Toronto are being knocked out by the digital invasion of broadcasts from “back home.” About a 100 positions from conventional TV operations, many at CITY TV, will be cut. CITY has gone from being the darling of local news addicts to something of a forgotten man among Toronto television stations. The proud cry of Everywhere! has been silenced by the CTV takeover of an all-news license now known as CP24. Things are apparently no better in the west. The multilingual stations air news in Cantonese, Mandarin, Punjabi, and Italian. They have faced increasing pressure from newscasts originating abroad. The Rogers Media unit of Toronto-based Rogers Communications Inc. lost $85.8-million before interest and taxes in its conventional TV operations last year, according to documents filed with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. That was more than half of the $138-million in total losses suffered by Canada’s privately owned conventional TV stations last year, up sharply from $2-million in losses in 2013.
McDonald’s said to be testing kale despite the sneers
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•Britons vote in most unpredictable election in decades
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•Uber taxi: The problem is not the technology, it’s Uber
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•Ann Hui writes Thursday in the Globe and Mail that two former strategists for Mayor John Tory have been hired by Uber Taxi to advance its position in Toronto. They are Nick Kouvalis and John Duffy. It is not clear what should be made of this although it is worth knowing. Uber has now said it will apply for a taxi license in Toronto. If Uber got the idea from Kouvalis and Duffy good for them. It makes the point however that Uber couldn’t figure this out itself. Uber must also deal with legal action from the city requiring it to obey the law. And this is exactly the issue. Everywhere it goes around the world, Uber leaves a trail of disregard for the law and an apparently insatiable need to operate like some sort of privileged Ubermensch. Drivers who are not trained, cars not insured, fares that can leap into the stratosphere when it rains. Uber even tried to pretend that it wasn’t selling a taxi service. What bunk. Mayor Tory’s remarks seem to focus on the inevitable march of technology. But the problem is not technology. It is Uber. Technology is just technology. Uber has left an international trail of anger and resistance that makes trust almost impossible. It’s not the imagination of Councillor Jim Karygiannis and others that there is a problem.
Canada takes Sweden 6-4 and remains unbeaten at Prague
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•1491 Bayview Ave. is leased, expected to be hairdressers
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•The long-vacant storefront at 1491 Bayview Ave. has been leased, according to neighbors on the street. This is the smaller space that was occupied by Ron Sloan Raquet Specialist for many decades and which has stood empty since June of 2013. It is expected that the business will be a hairdressers.
Cherry blossoms in bloom draw crowds to High Park
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•Van plunges through wall at Green P lot on Merton
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•There was a bit of a misstep today when a van plunged through a wall at the Merton Street Green P garage. Somehow the vehicle slammed through the concrete blocks at a right angle even though it appears to have been 10 feet from the driveway. Oh well. Inset we see some people talking about what happened. No injuries apparently The lot is a popular one for shoppers at the Ethan Allen gallery and medical patients at 1867 Yonge Street.
OSSTF has the Government sitting in the dunce chair
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•The education minister’s performance in the Legislature today was sad. Liz Sandals had no answer for the OSSTF’s strategy of surprise drone strikes. Like the premier, she was confessing to the Opposition an utter lack of knowledge of why things are so out of control. She did not know why the unions were striking, she said. But they are and they are doing it with a finesse that puts the Government of Ontario in the dunce chair, and incidentally, delivers a whipping to parents and children. It is every individual’s right we suppose to behave like a stevedore on the picket line, hooting like a hooligan. It’s just that we find it hard to think about teachers that way. Each passing day of their services withheld is a day lost in the early learning of these young people. And the reasons given for this are things like dissatisfaction with the way teachers are evaluated. It is scandalous and unacceptable. The government must find the backbone to impose its authority in a way that restores order out of this chaos.
Board of Leaside Memorial Gardens Arena appointed
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•Nine people have been appointed to the board of the Leaside Memorial Gardens Arena at a recent meeting of the North York Community Council. The appointments are effective and dependent on the continuing pleasure of City Council through to the end of 2016. Well known names will be seen: Elaine Snider, Raymond White, Cheryl Bannier , Janice Ivory-Smith, Ann Brown, Julie Brown, Jeff Dover, Adam Gordon, John Masterson