Month: March 2018

Long-suffering residents want completion of 240 Rose Park

When the charming original brick home at 240 Rose Park Dr. in Moore Park was sold more than three years ago it’s doubtful anyone realized what a difficult and drawn-out saga awaited the neighborhood. Work has been sporadic and today the replacement for 240 Rose Park sits silently at the corner of Welland Ave. The day when long-suffering residents might see it finished and the site cleaned up and inhabited seems as unknown as ever. The property is in the hands of Metro Developers Group of Richmond Hill. This original home sold in six days for slightly under the listing price of $1,135,000 in late 2012, somewhat under the asking price of $1,149,000.

Perspectives on March for Our Lives following historic day

The March for Our Lives events in Washington and elsewhere will be examined and the impact followed in coming days. Is it a Vietnam War moment where a generation facing the peril of bloody death in a meaningless struggle create real change? Many would like to think so. However the fight this time is not about a foreign war but the home-grown culture of gun possession.






Boy’s team, friends mourn deaths at Thorncliffe Park service

The funerals of Krassimira Pejcinovski, 39, and her two children, Roy, 15, and Venallia, 13, were held at St. Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church on Thorncliffe Park Drive Saturday. Fatima Sayed, Toronto Star Father, ex-husband expresses “deepest gratitude” to public  Friend and employer tells fearful story of Krissy’s last days

March For Our Lives hopes to signal generational change

The March for Our Lives event in Washington Saturday is intended to bring greater gun control to the US. It is said to be a generational signal that will be determinative on public opinion. But that is not entirely clear. Beliefs about gun ownership for self-defense are deeply ingrained. A great irony is that continued gun violence reinforces this view among many. City News has a report on Toronto marchers and there will be live coverage seen at the Washington times link.




Meeting Sunday at Corks to discuss project at 16 Kenrae

There will be a meeting at 3 p.m. Sunday in Corks lounge overlooking Longos on Laird Drive to discuss plans to redevelop the property at 16 Kenrae Rd. That’s  just around the corner. Geoff Kettel reports that the owner of 16 Kenrae is looking to redevelop this property which currently has a small bungalow on it. It is next to a three-storey apartment and backs onto properties that on are the west side of Laird. They are contemplating the development of a semi-detached dwelling or a possible residential building that would contain four rental units built in a single detached housing form. Prior to submitting an application to the City, they would like to discuss the potential development with the Leaside Property Owners Association (LPOA) and nearby neighbours.

Faces of 2 women and a girl facing adversity. fighting back

At left, two-day old Ingrid in the arms of her adoring mother Rebecca with father nearby at a Florida hospital. Parental bliss until police from the Miccosukee Tribe arrived and took the child away. Rebecca is a Miccosukee, her husband white, and Rebecca’s mother is alleged to have trumped up a story because she did not want a white man for a son-in-law. They say that this obscene matter is being sorted out and the infant will be returned to its parents. Centre is a forlorn Samantha Estey, 22, of New Brunswick, deeply regretting a naked picture she took and sent to someone in a private message when she was 17. Five years later it has appeared with similar pictures of other women on a website on a server in Russia. There is no lesson more difficult it would seem. Finally at right, Vanessa Biron, 10, of the Montreal suburb of Longueuil, was mauled by a pit bull-type dog in 2015 and left with permanent facial and cranial damage. Friday, a court sentenced the dog’s owner, Karim Jean-Gilles, to four years in prison for the attack. The judge concluded that Jean-Gilles knew his dogs were  dangerous and did nothing to control them. His honour added a year to  the Crown’s proposed sentence of three years.