There will be meeting on Sunday November 30, 2014 to sign up Charter members to the Leaside 100 Lions Club. The club needs 20 charter members to form an official Lions Club with Lions Clubs International located in Oak Brook, Ill. The meeting be will in the Common Room at 1387 Bayview Avenue, at 2 p.m. This is the residences building on the southeast corner of Bayview and McRae Drive. For more information please contact Raija Rosenthal at 416-932-3470.
Suzanne Cote named to the Supreme Court
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Six apartments flooded on Lascelles Blvd
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Power failure at LHS cancels classes today
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Ryan Bird of TDSB Media Relations has tweeted this morning that all clases are cancelled at Leaside High School because of a “massive power failure.” Updates should be available at TDSB Media Relations on Twitter
9-storey “mixed use” bid for South Bayview Ave.
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A company known as the Brown Group has consolidated property on the west side of Bayview Ave. between Soudan Ave. and Hillsdale Ave and is proposing to build what it says would be a nine-storey mixed use structure there. A notice was circulated in the neighborhood in recent hours. It states that a meeting is scheduled to tell residents about “the rationale for the proposed design” of the building. It says the developer is looking for feedback. A building of nine storeys would require changes to the official plan and the residential nature of the block between the two side streets. The development would take out the properties between 1674 Bayview (the Hillsdale Apartments) and 1684 Bayview. As well, it would remove 720 Hillsdale and 701 to to 713 Soudan. The meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, December 3, 2015 at 7 p.m. in the Leaside Library on McRae Drive. A phone number and contact names are provided in the notice: Laura MacCormick or Sherman Brown at (416) 222-0344 extension 122.
Unassuming Leaside father honoured at LPOA
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Roger Cattell was honoured by the Leaside Property Owners Association for his leadership and tireless work in creating and executing the “Slow Down” lawn sign campaign. This initiative was wrought out of the painful death of Georgia Walsh in July. At its meeting Tuesday night (November 25, 2014) the LPOA made the unassuming Leaside father an honorary member. Mr. Cattell spoke briefly to the meeting and recalled the late afternoon on which Georgia died. He did not know what had happened but he heard the sirens and knew there was trouble. Nor did he know that a death had occurred at the intersection he expressed concern about to the councillor a few months previously. When his own children got home, he recalled his relief. After the accident there was an overwhelming sense of the need to do something. Mr. Cattell said the sign campaign, which he spearheaded and which has become a sort of city-wide movement, was intended to represent a pledge by each person who planted a sign on his property. “I was asked by a reporter why a sign? A sign changes nothing,” Mr Cattell recalled. “I told him that the sign changes me,” he replied. It was his hope that it changed all those who took a sign and by their example made things better. It was, he said, a promise to ourselves to do better.
Slavens finds tenant for double store on Bayview
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The large double store at 1685 Bayview Ave just north of Riz restaurant has apparently been leased. Paul Slavens is the agent. This interesting property seems to have set records over the years for long vacancy It was most recently leased in 2013 by an ill-fated fine furnture store and the Danbury liquidiation sale which followed the store’s demise. The building also houses the offices of Dr. Dennis Bader, Optometrist.
Pesticide control: Are the bees dying or not?
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The Ontario cabinet has decided to cut the use of a seed-coating pesticide that has been linked to the mass death of bees across Ontario and North America. In the first phase of the cutback, neonicotinoids will be phased back to 80 percent of the acreage by 2017. There are outcries from the farmers that this will cost them money and some who say it is a cynical political tactic by the Liberals. The issue must be whether, as is widely said, honey bees are vanishing from the countryside. CANOE
Burnside has candid remarks at LPOA meeting
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Ward 26 Councillor-elect Jon Burnside was the featured speaker at the Leaside Property Owners Association annual meeting Tuesday evening (November 25, 2014) in the William Lea Room. Mr. Burnside spoke candidly to perhaps 250 members telling them safer and less congested streets will require solutions that many people will not like. He said this was true whatever mechanism– “one-way streets or do-not-enter signs” — might finally be recommended in the forthcoming planned traffic study. He said the prospect of motorists behaving better was connected solely to the likelihood of their apprehension. He agreed with a questioner who asked if this meant things like red-light cameras. The former policeman said he strongly favoured “technology-based” methods of improving driving habits. Mr. Burnside made it clear that he is strongly in favor of the construction of the Redway Road extension. He talked of the need for him to form alliances with councillors from Wards 27 and 29 for this purpose. He said he had met with mayor-elect Tory and Redway Road “was top of mind in our meeting.” The new councillor, who will be sworn in next Tuesday, December 2, 2014, also made it clear he leans toward approval of a Costco store on Overlea Boulevard. He conceded that the project is “vexing” and acknowledged the traffic issue. Minutes earlier, he had heard members of the LPOA executive recount their concerns in this regard. Nonetheless, said Burnside, the poverty levels in Thorncliffe Park and the universal view — right or wrong — that Coscto would be good for the community could not be ignored. He said he had been asked by Thorncliffe Park residents what would happen if they opposed a project that Leasiders wanted. The rhetorical question was not lost on the meeting. Perhaps some even reflected on the affluence that abounds in Leaside — including multiple cars in the driveway — compared to apartment dwellers who have none. In the end, said Burnside, “Leaside is only one-quarter of the ward.” The new councillor faced questions from residents who were clearly aggrieved by events in which it seemed to them that developers and their money (plus city staff in some cases) conspired to defeat ratepayers. This matter arose from a commitment Burnside made to create working groups which included developers. Former Councillor Jane Pitfield rose to urge Burnside to avoid having developers present in the early going. Burnside seemed to politely demur, saying that in order to keep developers from going to the OMB it was necessary to negotiate as you go. In closing, Burnside made a point of recognizing former opposing candidate Dave Sparrow, who was present as a property owner with his wife Lisa. The LPOA business meeting recognized the remarkable work of Brian Cattel in spearheading the “Slow Down” lawn sign campaign. Mr. Cattel’s remarks will be the subject of a separate post in The South Bayview Bulldog in coming hours. Regular business saw reading of the minutes, the treasurer’s report and a review by Carol Burtin-Fripp of the association’s activities in the past year. She told The Bulldog that the $50,000 traffic study will be done by Michael Tedesco but that work has not yet begun in earnest.
Margaret Wilson to review broken down TDSB
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Ghomeshi suit against CBC ends and he pays costs
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The Jian Ghomeshi lawsuit claiming damages of $55 million has collapsed and been withdrawn. Ghomeshi will, according to tweeted information from CBC insiders, pay the corporation $18,000 in costs. It is an outcome many employment lawyers predicted because as a unionized staffer he had no access to such damages. CBC spokesman Chuck Thompson is quoted as saying the settlement was reached Friday but that it still needs to be “formalized through a court order.” Thompson told The Globe and Mail that Ghomeshi will continue to pursue his reinstatement through a grievance previously filed with his union, the Canadian Media Guild.
Burnside to address LPOA tonight at William Lea
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The Leaside Property Owners Association will meet this evening (Tuesday, November 5, 2014) at 7:30 p.m. in the William Lea Room at Leaside Memorial Arena The featured speaker is Councillor-elect Jon Burnside. There will be regular business done and the election of directors. The meeting sponsors are Richard Byford, Carol Wrigley, Charlene Kalia, Patrick Rocca and The Leaside Pub.
