The Bulldog

General Election will change how South Bayview votes

The arrival of the election campaign of 2015 announced Sunday (August 2 2015) also officially puts in place the altered electoral boundaries drawn in 2013. In South Bayview, changes to Toronto Centre, Don Valley West and St. Paul’s will be noticeable. The top half of Toronto Centre has been lopped off and joined in a riding known as University-Rosedale. It stretches across the centre of the City from Moore Park to Ossington Ave. It lumps in the University of Toronto, Queen’s Park and Chinatown. The western boundary of Don Valley West now sits to the west on Mt. Pleasant Rd. This brings to an end a historic boundary in Bayview Ave which is now submerged in Don Valley West. The change shifts the residents of a large part of Davisville Village from the former St. Paul’s to the  expanded Don Valley West. It leaves residents between Mt. Pleasant and Bayview represented not by Carolyn Bennett but by John Carmichael. Let the games begin. All Ontario electoral maps 

KILLING HEAT: Some parents just don’t seem to get it

Reporter Christine Sloan tells the story from New Jersey of a well-intentioned mother who it seems just didn’t get it about deadly heated cars. She left her two-year-old in a van in the parking of a Costco on the hottest of days. Employees, passersby and finally the police all see the problem and break a window to get the kid out. The mother returned, her cart full, having been away 30 minutes. She apologizes. Reporter Sloan climbs into another car that has been parked for 30 minutes and measures the temperature. It registered 149 degrees Fahrenheit on her pocket thermometer. That’s 59.44 Celsius. A killing heat.

680 News (Rogers) snarky story about TIFF (Bell) closures

Toronto’s 680 News has written a snarky story about how the TTC has caved in to political pressure from City Hall to close King Street and disrupt the 504 streetcar line from University Ave to Peter St for the five-day Toronto International Film Festival. No doubt residents will assess the story according to their own prejudices about TIFF and the mayoralty of John Tory. But the radio station tartly remarks on its website that his worship is all in favour of the street closure notwithstanding his election pledge to “keep this city moving”  For the TTC, it appears to mean the 504 route will be split in two — an east and west division, so to speak. There is an additional political element not mentioned by the Rogers-owned 680 News. It’s that Bell Canada is the Prime Sponsor of TIFF. Rogers and Bell are coiled business opponents. Here is part what 680 said:

The Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) board brushed aside its own staff report on Wednesday night, voting in favour of a plan to close King Street for four days during the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). The plan to close King Street from University Avenue to Peter Street between Sept. 10 and 13, has the backing of Mayor John Tory, despite his election vow to “get this city moving.” Shortly after taking office, Tory released a six-point plan to ease congestion, which included a crackdown on the seemingly endless series of event road closures that plague motorists, notably marathons. But when it comes to rolling out the red carpet for Hollywood heavyweights and film buffs, Tory’s hot to trot. The mayor, and councillor Joe Cressy, penned a letter to TTC board members, pressing for the closure.“We are pleased to write to the TTC board in support of (TIFF’s) request to close King Street … to create the pedestrian friendly hub known as “Festival Street,” the letter stated.

Cabinet poll shows 73% of residents oppose selling Hydro

An Ontario government survey done by Pollara Strategic Insights indicates that almost three-quarters of Ontarians don’t like its plan to sell a 60 per cent stake in Hydro One. The New Democrats obtained the results through freedom of information means. It is said to show 73 per cent of respondents believe the Crown electricity transmission utility should definitely or probably stay in public hands.

Breaking: Canadian vaccine stops Ebola says Lancet

Medical Journal The Lancet carries news today that a vaccine produced last year at Canada’s national laboratory in Winnipeg is an effective and fast immunization against Ebola.  It is the first time an experimental Ebola vaccine has been shown to protect people against the deadly disease. There had been high hopes that this vaccine, called rVSV-ZEBOV.  Now data from a field trial conducted in Guinea is said to show the vaccine “works pretty quickly, and it works well,” according to Dr. Marie-Paule Kieny of the World Health Organization