The Bulldog

Yoga instructor wants Hydro to clean up street boxes

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East York yoga instructor Cheryl Vanderburg (inset) is on her Twitter account these days trying to get Toronto Hydro to clean up the graffiti-marred street box outside the little strip mall at Millwood Rd and Sutherland Drive. Her suggestion is to “wrap” or by whatever method clean up the box that seems to sit directly in front of Fix It Again Sam. That would give it the nice leafy finish like the one seen at the right. Cheryl’s handle is @LeasideLitter, a tip-off to her interest in cleaner streets.

Local flooding possible as showers and storms pass through

The rain has begun  and South Bayview is experiencing a dark late afternoon for this normally bright time of the year. Environment Canada has weather statement in effect as a cold front moving through Southern Ontario. It said showers and thunderstorms could dump between 30 to 40 millimetres of rain on the city and that normally means standing water on lower Bayview Ave and elsewhere. .Ahead of the weather system, Toronto’s Flood Management Service said some roadways may be flooded and warned drivers to be careful.

 

Fraser Institute study on possible Toronto de-amalgamation

This is a news release from the Fraser Institute on studies it has done with respect to de-amalgamation. This subject has a considerable interest in Toronto. Former East York Mayor and Member of Parliament Alan Redway is campaigning for a review by the provincial government of a the amalgamation created in 1998.  

(Marketwired) — 07/07/15 — Municipalities forced to amalgamate by their provincial governments can reverse the process, given the right set of circumstances, finds a new study released today by the Fraser Institute, an independent, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank.

“Nearly every province in Canada has gone through some form of municipal restructuring over the past three decades,” said Lydia Miljan, Fraser Institute senior fellow and co-author of De-Amalgamation in Canada: Breaking Up is Hard to Do.

“In Ontario, it happened in the late 1990s in

ntreal, Quebec – to evaluate the fiscal and governance implications of reversing a municipal consolidation.

Headingley, a rural community in southern Manitoba, was forcibly amalgamated with the City of Winnipeg in 1972. For decades, community residents demanded that they be allowed to secede, arguing that they didn’t have much in common with the larger, more urban sections of the city. Finally, in 1993 the provincial government relented and legislated Headingley’s secession.

Despite some difficult separation negotiations, Headingley has now become a financially healthy community.

Headingley’s relatively smooth transition, the study notes, was aided by two key

factors: Its population base was able to absorb the cost of services transferred to it and its de-amalgamation didn’t necessitate the creation of new and complex governing structures.

Conversely, the de-amalgamation experience in Montreal may persuade some Torontonians – those who want to revert to the old governance model – to take pause.

In 2004, a new provincial government in Quebec facilitated referenda offering municipalities the opportunity to reverse the amalgamation forced upon them in 2002. In Montreal, many municipalities opted to stay but some did leave forcing the creation of yet another level of local government to coordinate local services (ie: property assessments, social housing, transit and public safety) for all communities (amalgamated and de-amalgamated) on the Island of Montreal.

“The key lesson from Montreal’s experience with de-amalgamation is that allowing certain areas to de-amalgamate and others to stay can create a costly, cumbersome and fragmented patchwork of government across the region thus complicating service delivery,” Miljan said.

“If de-amalgamation were to be pursued in Toronto, then policy makers would be best advised to avoid the Montreal model.”

Stanley Cup, World Series rings worth $500,000 stolen

Toronto Police seeking are thieves who stole a 1977 Montreal Canadiens Stanley Cup ring and a 1993 Toronto Blue Jays World Series ring from a home in the Kingsway. The value of jewellery stolen is set at near $500,000.

Thorncliffe Tennis throws Wimbledon Men’s Final party

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Thorncliffe Park Tennis Club at 15 Leaside Park Drive will hold its Wimbledon tennis breakfast this Sunday (July 12, 2015) at 9 a.m.featuring traditional strawberries and cream. Oh yes, everyone will also watch the Men’s Final on television. There is, as Social Director Julie Campbell says in mail to tennis devotees, a full agenda for the day.:

  • 9 a.m.:  Men’s final on TV
  • 11 a.m.: Round Robin with Tennis Pro Brad Lingeman
  • 12:30 p.m.: Silent Auction Ends

As well, the day will see the Ontario Tennis Association (OTA) Smash Cage so players can practice their serve. Sporting Life will also be on site to do racquet demonstrations. There will be a be Silent Auction with “really great items” such as a Rogers Cup Tennis Package, Toronto Maple Leafs Memorabilia Package and Blue Jay Tickets. Also contributing  Sporting Life, Starbucks, Amsterdam Brewery and others  Funds raised will go towards the club’s court resurfacing that is taking place in August. Everyone must wear WHITE (or as close as you can manage) to show your Wimbledon spirit. As well as strawberries and cream there will be fruit, muffins, coffee and juice.  The event is free for members; $10 for non-members.  RSVP please to info@tptc.ca.

Amaya to close its Indian dining room on Bayview Ave.

Amaya at 1701 Bayview Ave. will close for good at the end of July following the restaurant promotional event known as Summerlicious. Although the name will be gone, owner Hemant Bhagwani, in announcing the closure at the north-block location, said it will be re-made into something else. We shall see. The Amaya takeout shop next to Alex Cheese will remain for the time being it seems.

Bennington Rolph Soccer: A shout out to get the kids ready

Bennington Rolph Road Soccer Association is shouting out a reminder that this lazy summer still calls for planning. September is coming and with it the fun-filled six-week season of the BRRSA  soccer for kids 5 to 13. Registration is open and players, boys and girls, are needed. Get your gang organized for this wonderful autumn fun which is run entirely by volunteer parents. Lead time is needed to get adequate uniforms, rent sufficient field space and lots of other loose ends. It is a great place for those whose kids want to play soccer but are not in town in the summer, or for those who play summer soccer and want to keep their soccer going. Bennington Rolph runs for six weeks in the fall, starting the first week of school. A tournament is held for all but the youngest age group at the end of the regular season. Don’t miss out. Enroll your kids by going to the league’s website

What? No plans to sell skinny Oreo cookies in Canada?

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According to the maker, Mondelez International Inc., there are no plans to sell that new confection sensation Oreo Thins in the Great Icing-White Canadian North. Phooey. The new cookie is thin, of course, and most galling is said to be “sophisticated”. Yeah, sure. Mondelez International Inc. says it will add Oreo Thins to its permanent lineup in the U.S. starting next week. The cookies look like regular Oreos and have a similar cookie-to-filling ratio, except that they’re slimmer. That means four of the cookies contain 140 calories, compared with 160 calories for three regular Oreos. And since they’re for adults, Oreo says they weren’t designed to be twisted open or dunked. That’s even though about half of customers pull apart regular Oreos before eating them, according to the company. Just not in Canada.

Tory will lasso “Wild West” taxis and Uber taxis too

Mayor Tory is promising to create a bylaw that will apply to “the entire ground transportation industry” — a definition he says would include Uber. The mayor spoke at City Hall Monday following a meeting with representatives from the taxi industry and Uber. “What we need is one bylaw that applies without question to everybody,” Tory said. “We cannot have companies in this city doing business outside of the law and we cannot have the Wild West but we also cannot have a city that in some way ignores the march of technology and time,” his worship told CP24.