The Bulldog

Snow squalls ahead of warmer, lamb-like first days of March

Friday may hold yet more snow if the forecast for afternoon squalls applies. As much as 4 cm may accumulate. It will be a cold weekend but temperatures are forecast to rise with the first week of March. There will be some rain. In like a damp lamb.

Odd “technical halt” as TSX index plummets on virus fears

Joy in west end as chilly tuxedo feline “Hydro Cat” rescued

As the world worried about coronavirus, human love of cats organized the rescue of a black and white (tuxedo) feline from the top of a hydro pole at Bloor and Dufferin Sts. Thursday. The fire service responded and in the end, it wasn’t too hard to persuade newly-named “Hydro Cat” to accept the warming embrace of its two-legged friends.

Floka Salon moving to upstairs-downstairs shop on Bayview

It’s official. Floka Salon will move to the interesting new upstairs-downstairs commercial premises under renovation at 1643 Bayview Ave. Floka is a long-time tenant at Sunnybrook Plaza but it now appears to be making a permanent new home just north of Fleming Crescent. Sources at the shop said Friday that the firm hopes to move to the new shop sometime in April. Work at the site features a striking wood frame incorporating the first and second floors of the building. A building permit allowing the conversion of the place from mixed-use (i.e. residence and commercial) to single-use commercial was issued earlier in February.

Market panic as virus pops up in Brazil, Greece and Norway

Stock markets plunged Thursday as sheer panic stalked many parts of the world in the face of a spreading COVID-19 epidemic. The Toronto TSE sank more than 500, the Dow Jones more than 800 in mid-morning trading. Within the past 24 hours, seven countries — Brazil, Georgia, Greece, Macedonia, Norway, Pakistan and Romania — have reported cases for the first time, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters at a daily briefing. For the past two days, Tedros said, the number of new cases reported in the rest of the world has exceeded the number of new cases reported in China.

TDSB will stagger school hours to use buses more efficiently

The Toronto District School Board will stagger the hours of some schools next fall in order to permit school buses to service more than one school. The scheme is estimated to save the TDSB $2.5 million. Some 131 of the board’s 473 elementary schools will be involved.

Online bully will never extort a penny says Patrick Rocca

A nasty Internet bully who has targeted realtor Patrick Rocca in the past is again demanding an enormous sum of money to stop a campaign of online harassment. It was two years ago that the same person demanded cash from Rocca and another Leaside man. He failed and went away for a while but now says he wants the equivalent of $500,000 in Canadian money paid in bitcoin. The “pay or die” campaign has a deadline of February 29. Previous deadlines were ignored so new ones were set. The desperate demands seem ridiculous because Rocca has no intention of paying anything. “I’ll never pay this individual a penny and I’m more driven than ever to identify the individual responsible. I won’t let things go away as I did two years ago,” said the real estate agent.

Consultant working with police to find extortionist

The harassment has taken the form of abusive email and fictionalized Instagram pages containing wild libels against Rocca and his son. The baseless posts have been quickly deleted by Instagram’s owner, Facebook. Police and a digital consultant who are helping Rocca think that the perpetrator may not realize the kind of trouble he will face when he’s arrested. He’s playing a dangerous game. “Ultimately, every move that someone makes on the internet leaves a trail of digital bread crumbs that we’ll be able to follow back to the person responsible,” says the consultant. “There have already been a few reckless missteps which have us pointed in a promising direction. We’re committed to working closely with law enforcement to do whatever we can to assist them in their investigation and do our part to identify the harasser.”

Nygard forced out, secret passage and cutting board dream

Peter Nygard has resigned from the head of his fashion firm in the face of accusations of rape. The FBI is after him. Then, a Toronto company is marketing a kit which will retrofit any newer vehicle so that it can drive itself. Below that, an ancient secret tunnel in the Mother of Parliaments. They say it dates from the 17th Century. Lastly, a grieving family appears on the Shark Tank to promote their late father’s invention — a cutting board with a container that catches the food.






City, CUPE push collection strike deadline over to Saturday

The City of Toronto and its outside workers who collect garbage have agreed to push the deadline for a strike back to 12.01 a.m. Saturday. The previous deadline with 12.01 a,m. Thursday. The City requested a no-board report from the Ministry of Labour earlier this month effectively setting the scene for a strike. The union, CUPE 416, has accused the municipality of plotting to privatize collection on the east side of Yonge St. si8mnilar to the status west of Yonge. Strike deadline Thursday as City stays firm on jobs-for-life

18-wheeler on wrong side of road tips YRP to drunk driver

Beatons in Bahamas, State of the Art and new to Parkview

This local gallery begins with the Beatons of Lawrence Park on the beach in Exuma. That’s John with wife Kate Wheeler, daughters Alex and Sophie and friend Connor Harrigan. Those Iguana are frightening. What She Said.

This compelling work by Stephen Gillbury is currently gracing the window at State of the Art Gallery, 1541 Bayview Ave. It’s always fun talking art with owner Micheal Leonard

Be on the lookout for and please say hello to Alex, Winston, Dave and/or Chris on the streets of the Parkview-O’Connor neighborhood in 55 Division. The new Neighourhood Community Officers were recently appointed and their story is told by Ron Fanfair at the TPS website.

Lastly, the fences are down on the north side of Millwood Rd. east of Bayview Ave. as work has been completed on the large tree boxes in front of Millwood Shoe Repair and Pat’s Barber Shop. O Happy Day.

Paula Davies, Ray White will share Agnes Macphail Award

Judges of the Agnes Macphail Award for 2020 have been unable to decide between two eminent candidates and so will honour both persons with the community prize. They are Paula Davies, co-founder of the Todmorden Mills Wildflower Preserve and Ray White, president of the East York Foundation. They will receive their awards at this year’s presentation ceremony at East York Civic Centre at 850 Coxwell Ave. on Sunday, March 29. The rare practice of honoring more than one candidate occurred in 1998 when husband and wife Elisabeth and Robert Lister received the prize.