My Town Crier ceases publication immediately
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It is with great sadness that I have to announce the passing of Toronto Today. For the last 34 years Toronto Today and the Town Criers have proudly served our communities providing you with the local news, information and features that you couldn’t find anywhere else. Unfortunately, due to financial problems, including the non-payment of a multi-million dollar grant from the Government of Italy to support our now defunct Italian language daily Corriere Canadese, our parent company Multimedia Nova has been placed into receivership and publication of the Town Criers, Toronto Today and Vaughan Today have been suspended indefinitely. This is a difficult time, both for those of us who have worked over the years to make Toronto Today and the Town Crier the award-winning must-reads they are, and for the readers who have relied on us not only to find out what’s going on in their neighbourhoods, but also to see themselves and their lives reflected back to them in a way that no other news source does. While it is perhaps a little selfish, I would like to think that you will miss us as much as we’ll miss you. Our communities are filled with wonderful people and amazing stories and we sincerely hope that they continue to be told, even if we’re no longer the ones who have the privilege of doing it. Gordon Cameron, Managing Editor, Town Crier Newspapers and Toronto Today
Can Stephen Harper win Canada by killing off the Senate?
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It is a tantalizing question for Conservatives especially today when it appears the Liberal Leader, Justin Trudeau, is expressing fondness for the unelected Senate because it is a bulwark of support for Quebec versus Canada. Mr. Trudeau is quoted in Montreal over the weekend as saying, “We have 24 senators from Quebec and there are just six from Alberta and six from British Columbia. That’s to our advantage.” The remark has Albertans raging and many Tories in Ottawa expressing similar anger. But perhaps they are chuckling behind their hands. The appointed Senate has traditionally been a target of popular dislike in Canada. That does not seem to have changed. Some people note that if the Senate were abolished, Canada would be one of the few countries in the democratic world with a so-called unicameral (or one-house) legislature. But there are some notable ones and they are eminent democracies too. New Zealand dumped its upper house in the 1950s because like Canada’s senate, it was unelected. Sweden also ditched it’s upper house. Interestingly, the Swedes had an elected upper house which was constantly warring with the more popular lower house. Sounds like the U.S. Finally enough was enough and Sweden has gotten along just fine for more than 50 years with a unicameral legislature. If the so-called Red Chamber were renovated it would make a very nice meeting room.
Crack video rumours: The word is Extortion
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Gypsy Moth Chopper thunders over Moore Park
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No 58 Bessborough was worth waiting for
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Bayview tenants facing eviction to meet Thursday
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Ford aides quit, he is sorry for “maggots” remark
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Toronto Bike Month underway until June 30
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Metrolinx taxes everyone for a plan no one wants
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Dear Premier Wynne: A 14% HST is an insanity
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A more recent curse of our democratic system has been the preoccupation of politicians with their legacy. We see this in the common theme among politicians at all levels for an underground transit system that will whisk people from one side of the GTA to the other in minutes. No doubt that would be nice. But at what cost and what real payback? Whether you like the St. Clair Street right-of-way or not, it has sliced merely two minutes off of a trolley ride from Yonge Street to Weston Rd. And as the bureaucrats at Metrolinx, the Ontario agency that plans and organizes transit, lay out ideas for raising $2 billion annually to support transit, are they too, like the politicians, dreaming of a transit system that will be a monument to their time in office? You get the feeling that the generals at Metrolinx are ready to fight the last war. Canada is on the cusp of electric and natural gas technology that will revolutionize bus travel. It seems possible to create buses that are cheap, clean and highly flexible in traffic and routing. No doubt the great transit thinkers will poo-poo such ideas. It’s the same in the area of waste. Politicians cling to the disastrous notions of burying garbage rather than burning it for energy and heat. Ontario is carrying crushing debt. The idea of adding a percentage point to the provincial portion of the HST is insanity, as is an increase on gasoline taxes. The message to the Ontario government should be to slow down and re-think transit based on what’s really needed.


