To stop “Toronto LaGuardia Airport” #TOpoli
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Mountains of mulch from December ice storm
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Toronto is on a crusade to clean up the last of the branches and downed trees from December’s ice storm. The hidden centre of a lot of activity is in Wilket Creek Park at the end of the southerly roadway that terminates more or less under Eglinton Ave. E. There one can find mountains of branches and tree trunks, They are being progressively chewed up by an industrial-size chipping machine. These pictures are from the recent visits of Leaside naturalist Rudy Limeback. The mulch is carted to parks, cemeteries and anywhere else the City can think of to help it grow new vegetation. Below is an earlier post detailing instructions on how to clean up your property and get the material taken away. The City of Toronto is urging residents to clean up as much of the leftover brush and tree branches from December’s ice storm. Wood debris will be removed by the regular leaf and yard waste collection crews on the next pickup day. Get the stuff out there by 7a.m. The diameter of branches must not be larger than 7.5 centimetres (3 inches). For limbs, trunks and stumps that exceed this accepted size, residents must make arrangements with a private company specializing in handling this type of waste. For City collection, branches must be put out in small bundles no longer than 1.2 metres (4 feet) in length and 0.6 metres (2 feet) in width. The maximum height for yard waste containers is 95 centimetres (37 inches) and each container cannot weigh more than 20 kilograms (40 pounds). Kraft paper bags are acceptable containers. The City will not pick up yard waste set out in plastic bags or cardboard boxes. If residents see large fallen limbs from public trees located on public property, they may call 311 to report it, the City advises.Class action against Visa, MC, banks to go ahead
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Issue of “unpaid interns” hits Toronto Life
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Careful Earth Hour doesn’t become a Fire Call
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Earth Hour is tomorrow night. Many will wish to participate in this annual event. If candles are used, please follow these fire safety tips issued by the City of Toronto.
• Always stay in the room where candles are lit
• Extinguish all candles when leaving the room
• Avoid using candles in bedrooms
• Keep candles at least one metre away from anything that can burn
• Keep candles, matches and lighters hidden and out of the reach of children
• Use sturdy candle holders that won’t tip or burn
• Extinguish candles when they burn to within five centimetres
“Who’s paying for this place?” hits Big Law
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Girl, 10, accosted near Thorncliffe-Overlea
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Good turnout for Glenvale parking meeting
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#ONpoli Names named in laptop wiping probe
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Peter Wallace, Cabinet Secretary
Thom Stenson, Manager of the Information Technology Services for the cabinet office
David Nicholl, Chief Information Officer at Government of Ontario
David Livingston, Chief of Staff to Premier McGuinty
Wendy Wai, Executive Assistant to Mr. Livingston
Laura Miller, Deputy Chief of Staff of Communications and Strategy and the Chief of Staff to the Minister of Intergovernmental affairs.
Peter Faist, boyfriend and life partner of Ms Miller.
The first two, Wallace and Stenson, are top civil servants in the Cabinet Office. They were uncomfortable with urgent inquiries on the part of David Livingstone, the Premier’s top aide, to obtain permission for someone to have password authority on every machine in the office. Wallace and Stenson had never heard of such a thing but it appears that Mr. Livingstone got his way. The OPP say in their warrant that David Nicholl provided the password even though he reports to Mr. Wallace, who disagreed. Mr. Livingstone then gave this authority to his Executive Assistant, Wendy Wai, a woman who the OPP concluded knew very little about computers and who realistically, could never have erased the hard drives. She was, they decided, a kind of “trojan horse” or cover for the real expert. That person was found close by, police allege, but was not authorized to touch the computers. It was determined that Laura Miller (fifth on the list) had a boyfriend who was very capable in this area. His name was Peter Faist. Mr. Livingstone gave the job to him, the cops say
#ONpoli tweets demand Premier Wynne resign
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An OPP search warrant makes allegations about an apparent cover-up at Queen’s Park in the form of the erasure of hard-drives in the office of Premier McGuinty. It happened in the days during which Premier Kathleen Wynne took office. Mr. McGuinty resigned last year in the face of mounting anger over the cost of the cancellation of a power plant project in the middle of construction. The Legislature heard the stunning news this morning and Opposition members were seemingly outraged. OPP are alleging that Mr. McGuinty’s last chief of staff authorized a deputy to get what the Star’s Rob Ferguson calls an “IT-savvy boyfriend unrestricted access to 24 employees’ computers in the premier’s office before and after Kathleen Wynne took power.” The impact of this revelation is being weighed moment by moment on the Twitter search #ONpoli (Ontario politics) with reporters wondering if it means an imminent election. Many of the tweets demand that the premier resign. A tweet by Christopher Gardner says the Premier has been seen climbing down a rope ladder and sprinting across the south lawn of the Legislature Building. Not to be taken seriously. But below, is Lorrie Goldstein’s tweet on this story. It begins “Kaboom!” Toronto Star Ottawa Citizen #ONpoli
Smoke from west-end factory fire seen in Leaside
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Toronto Fire say they have controlled and isolated the huge 6 alarm fire in a mattress factory at 198 Fairbank Ave. near Castlefield Ave and Caledonia Rd. At its height, people on South Bayview Ave. could see the drifting smoke to the north. Fire Capt. Mike Strapko said 120 firefighters and 30 fire trucks were employed against the blaze. By early afternoon, with some walls having collapsed, fire officials made a decision to stay outside the factory. They said it may be necessary to use heavy equipment to get at any remaining fire. There are no reports of injuries. The area was evacuated and school children kept in class during the morning firefighting. This fire was reported around 8:30 a.m.


