Men with a story this Friday begins with police constable David Chen. He is fighting back against a devastating concussion suffered when he was hit by a car. At issue is the effectiveness of the so-called PoNS brain stimulator. At centre is Jason Momoa. He’s finally shaved off his Aquaman beard, a rather scruffy growth that hasn’t been touched much since 2012. At right is Robert Kraft, the NFL mogul caught in a brothel sweep. He’s objecting that video of him in the act was taken with cameras secreted in the Day Spa pleasure palace when police created a suspicious parcel scare that cleared the place. Then they sneaked in and installed cameras. Feeling watched?
Parking and rush-hour enforcement lifted for three holidays
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Toronto Police not be enforcing on-street parking bylaws on Good Friday, Easter Sunday and Easter Monday. They are:
• Pay-and-Display/Metered Areas
• Rush-Hour Routes
• Posted signs indicating Monday to Friday regulations
All other areas and parking offences will continue to be enforced. Ticketing will proceed as usual on Saturday, April 20.
Druggists to prescribe similar to those in 8 other provinces
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It seems Ontario has been languishing in some sort of backwater when it comes to using the skills of local pharmacists to prescribe for certain conditions and ailments. Eight other provinces already permit such assistance by druggists.
Pool-sized pothole fix, Starbucks high noon and Alice okay
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You’ve got to be quick to catch the City’s A-team fixing the really big potholes like this one at Davisville Ave and Mt. Pleasant Rd. It’s been blocking traffic at the northeast corner for weeks but now the water-filled hole (seen Wednesday) is drained and being paved. Hooray. Then, upper right reveals another classic school’s-out high noon at the Bayview and Belsize Starbucks. Welcome kidlets and all others. Below that is Alice, found safe and well after slipping out into darkest Leaside earlier this week. But at centre left, a raccoon-sized drama is facing a family seeking help at how to rescue this guy from between their window and the railing of a faux balcony. Centre right, an invitation to see Unstoppable Tracy Schmitt at Leaside High School April 23. At the bottom, check out the Easter offerings and events in South Bayview. Also check the Bulldog Bulletin Board
Funding for higher education, donation for injection sites
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Briefly, the government has announced that funding for post secondary institutions will shift to such criteria as the student graduation rate, experiential learning opportunities, graduate earnings, graduate employment and skills and competencies. Sounds okay so far. And in Toronto, the Overdose Prevention Society will donate $20,000 each to two supervised injection facilities that had their provincial funding cut off last month. They are St. Stephen’s Community House on Augusta Avenue and Street Health Community Nursing on Dundas Street East. In March, the provincial government announced that it would fund 15 supervised injection facilities, including six in Toronto but not six others.
Will property taxes really go up because of legalized pot (!)
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This report from the CBC National sets out a scenario whereby provinces cheat municipalities of their share of legal marijuana taxes forcing up property taxes to cover the cost of policing this new world.
Peanut-allergic kids gain immunity with cautious therapy
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Eating gradually increasing amounts of peanuts appears to be a safe and effective therapy for preschoolers with nut allergies, according to a new study from BC researchers. The process, known as oral immunotherapy, allows children to build up tolerance by eating peanuts every day. Researchers from the University of British Columbia and BC Children’s Hospital followed 270 Canadian children who received the therapy for 19 months, and their data was published this week in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice. “We found that it was very safe. Only 0.4 per cent of the preschoolers … experienced a severe reaction, and out of 40,000 or so doses of peanuts that were administered, only 12 required epinephrine,” senior researcher Dr. Edmond Chan said. CBC
New Davisville school to open in 2021 not 2020 as intended
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Ward Eight Trustee Shelley Laskin has informed parents of children attending (and those destined to attend) Davisville Public School that the new building on Millwood Rd. will take a year longer than expected to complete. This means that classes will begin at the newly-constructed DPS and Spectrum School in the 2021 school year rather than 2020. Several reasons are cited for this change including the slowness of permit approval at all levels and delayed approval from the Department of Education caused by the change of government last summer. These changes were the subject of a parents meeting held Tuesday at Hodgson EMS. In a letter to parents Ms Laskin said:
On April 4, 2019 staff received a letter from Percon (the contractor) confirming the construction schedule. I was deeply disappointed to understand, and now share with you, that Percon has advised they need 2 years to complete the project.
During last week staff had tried to see if the timeline could be accelerated and unfortunately it cannot. Again, the reason for the delay in occupancy date is because we are starting later than scheduled. Recall that if construction had started after tender closed last fall, we would have opened in September 2020 as scheduled; since we are now starting in April 2019, contract completion now shifts to Spring of 2021.
I wanted to get this out to you as soon as possible – I know many of you assumed the project would be delayed as you watched the months slip by with no word and no provincial approval – but that doesn’t negate the disappointment, anger and frustration and I understand that as frankly, I feel the same way and my children are not bussed to and from school every day
Plans and depictions for the school and adjoining sites reveal an airy and bright three storey school with modern amenities. The City (not the TDSB) will build an adjoining Aquatic Centre available to the students. Traffic patterning at the end of the school is designed to permit parents to safely pick up children. Among the attractive features is a roof top playground.
First year after Yonge truck killings to be marked Tuesday
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The City will mark the first anniversary of the Yonge Street truck massacre on April 23 at the Mel Lastman Square Amphitheatre. Police have issued information on road restrictions.
The southbound curb lane on Yonge Street in front of the North York Civic Centre will be closed to traffic from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
The southbound lanes of Yonge Street will be closed to through traffic from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. from Park Home Avenue to North York Boulevard
There will be an additional closure of Hillcrest Avenue from Yonge Street to Doris Avenue. Local traffic will be given access to Hillcrest Avenue via Doris Avenue between 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. or when no longer required.
There will be no on-street parking in the immediate area (northbound Yonge Street, Hillcrest Avenue, Park Home Avenue, Empress Avenue, Beecroft Road, North York Boulevard and Elmwood Avenue) and police will conduct friendly vehicle relocations from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. or no longer required
“Tight supply” reputed cause of sky-high gas in Vancouver
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The election of the Conservsative in Alberta isn’t the cause of spirling gasoline prices in the Vacouver area, accoding to Gasbuddy.com. Instead it’s a function of chronic short supply on the west coast. No doubt, and it’s what happens when demand outstrips supply. Happens every time.
Council query to Ford on devil-in-the-details of transit plan
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City Council has sent an inquiry to the Ontario government about who will pay for the subway and transit vision offered last week. Here is Council’s devil-in-the-details query:
City staff, in its report to Council on the province’s announcement, outlined 61 preliminary questions to its report that it needs the Province of Ontario to address before next steps can be recommended. City Council endorsed a recommendation from staff that the City and TTC work with the Province to:
• “undertake an assessment of the Province’s proposed changes to Toronto’s transit expansion program described in the 2019 Ontario Budget, and its alignment with the City of Toronto’s and Toronto Transit Commission’s strategic objectives and priorities, including an assessment of cost, schedule, operational and network impacts, and commercial and technical merits of the proposed changes;
• “negotiate principles with respect to cost-sharing, roles and responsibilities, governance, and funding for transit network expansion including but not limited to capital, operating, maintenance and lifecycle maintenance of the new expansion lines, funding requirements for the state of good repair of the existing network, and reimbursement for any sunk costs associated with a change in transit expansion plans; and
• “report back to City Council with an update as soon as practical on the proposed upload of subway extensions and new lines under Ontario’s new transit proposal outlined in the 2019 Ontario Budget.”Once these issues have been addressed and the City’s questions satisfactorily answered, staff will report back to City Council on whether federal funding should be reallocated under the Investing in Canada Infrastructure Program Public Transit Infrastructure Fund Phase 2 to the Line 2 East Extension and the new Ontario Line, a variation on the Relief Line South, two of the four priority projects outlined in the Province’s transit map. A Yonge subway north extension and Eglinton West LRT are the other Provincial transit priorities.
City Council also unanimously passed a motion requesting the Province reinstate a Provincial Gas Tax commitment made in 2017 that would double municipalities’ share from 2 cents per litre to 4 cents per litre. The gas tax is heavily relied upon by the TTC for state-of-good-repair expenses and represents funding of approximately $1.1 billion over 10 years.
Jeep SUV balances nicely on Dundas West utility pole cable
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From the folder marked “seldom seen” come these Instagram offerings from some folks at Uncle Smoke Cookhouse at 2285 Dundas St. West. It seems like everyone is okay after this remarkable chance balancing act on Tuesday by the driver of a Jeep SUV who got there with a swerve to avoid traffic or something.
