The Bulldog

Police union depicts mayor and chief laughing at 911 delays

The Toronto Police Association has published an ad that depicts Mayor Tory and Chief Saunders, as well as police board chair Andrew Pringle, laughing at delays which have apparently occurred in dealing with 911 calls. Behind the three public figures is the emergency number scrawled in blood. By any measure, the ad seems to take the union’s campaign against efforts to control the cost of policing to a new low. The ad was published by the Toronto Star Tuesday. It carries the wording: “These guys are putting your safety on hold.”  Speaking with reporters about the ad, Tory conceded that there have been some issues with callers to 911 being put on hold but he said that efforts are underway to address them.

“BEYOND COMPREHENSION” SAYS MAYOR

“The notion to me that the way you deal with this is to put an ad in the newspaper showing people laughing while blood is splattered behind them is beyond comprehension,” he said. “It is a throwback to the old days of the way police union bosses acted and I just don’t want to be part of it. I have my job to do and I will continue to do it the way that I do which I hope is responsibly and respectfully.” The specifics of any delays are not contained in reportage. Head of the TPA, Mike McCormick, says some people have been put on hold for minutes not seconds but the circumstances are not stated. 911 operators deal with many calls that do not require immediate responses.

For good or ill, Canada plunges into free trade with TPP

Canada and the ten remaining members of the Trans-Pacific Partnership have vowed to sign on to a trade agreement without the US. The deal leaves Canadian unionists, farmers and businessmen widely divided on the meaning of such trade. The heads of unions and auto manufacturing condemned the idea and predicted Canadian-made cars would soon be full of foreign-made parts. Dairy farmers were equally upset. But Canadian Cattlemen and the Chamber of Commerce applauded the prospect. The TPP is made up of Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Maylasia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam .

WYNNE EXPRESSES CONCERN

Ontario’s premier says the revised Trans-Pacific Partnership must not come at the expense of key Ontario sectors, including the auto industry. Kathleen Wynne says while freer trade and diversification is a good thing, she has heard concerns from many in the automotive sector over the course of TPP negotiations. Wynne says she will continue to stand up for those Ontario jobs and for all of the province’s workers and businesses.

Archbishop Colin Johnson to visit St. Cuthbert’s on Sunday

Archbishop Colin Johnson will visit St. Cuthbert’s Anglican Church Sunday for worship and a reception after the 10 a.m. service. Archbishop Johnson retires from long and distinguished service in December. To the right, Charlene Kalia has announced that Laughing Out Loud in Leaside (9) will take place Friday March 2 in the Lea Room at Leaside Arena. The beneficiary of this long-standing local event this year will be Moorelands Community Services on Merton St.  Lower left, the North Toronto Collegiate Institute’s Parents Council will screen the informative film Screenagers on Wednesday night (January 24) at 7.30 at 17 Broadway Ave.  Screenagers addresses the most pervasive parenting issue of our time head on — the social media capture of young minds with distractions that can hardly be imagined. The film empowers kids to best navigate the digital world and provides practical resources to help them do it. To the right two notices of the annual pancake dinners locally and a reminder again from Davisville Junior Public School about the chance to help kids skate by dropping off unused gear at the school office. Please do.

Boxer dog put down by family after child, 6, badly wounded

A boxer-mix pet dog has been put down in Windsor after it attacked a child who tried to get between it and another canine as they fought. The six-year-old, Karma Jarrett, told her story to the Windsor Star. Police were alerted to the incident on Jan. 11 and an investigation determined that a family dog attacked a member of the extended family in the owner’s home. They say the family chose to euthanize the pet, meaning there’s no danger to the public. Boxers are not a banned breed. The terrible wounds that mark the girl’s cheek are cautionary evidence to parents with pets, especially multiple pets.

Police on scene of stabbing at Holly St. and Eglinton Ave.

Meeting sees start of work to save Regent (Belsize) Theatre

A gathering of more than 150 people met at Greenwood College School Monday night to discuss how the 91-year-old Regent Theatre may be saved as part of the cultural heritage of Midtown Toronto. The theatre, at 511 Mt. Pleasant Rd. started life in 1927 as the Belsize Theatre. There have been two name changes, Crest in 1954 and Regent in 1988,  It appears the original name was taken from the Belsize Park district of London. Monday’s meeting was convened by Ward 22 Councillor Josh Matlow who spoke of his affection for the Regent and of having escorted his mother there before her recent death. The building is for sale by the family that has owned it for many years at a proposed price of $9 million. The family is apparently prepared to hear from the community but remains free to sell the property at any time. The challenge to this salvation is in the enormous value of the theatre’s on-the-street real estate. Mr. Matlow joked that any angel donor in the crowd with this amount of cash was welcome to leave it behind. Donors are not unknown, as described by Lorie Martin, Senior Cultural Affairs Officer of the City of Toronto

ARTSCAPE AND REVUE CINEMA

She has overseen projects such as the west-end car barns, a project that was expanded into the Artscape Wychwood Barns through a $500,000 donation. The car barns however were, and are, publicly-owned. Another speaker was Mark Elwood, a director with the Revue Film Society. This is a group that ten years ago saved and developed the 106-year-old Revue Theatre on Roncesvalles Ave. into a functioning and modestly profitable film venue and community hub. The Revue is the oldest movie theatre in Canada.

Gymnast, 16, and 20 years since a smoothie’s hanky-panky

The City News Athlete of the Week is a happy kid from Newmarket who any parent would love to have as a daughter. This profile of Vanessa Yazhemsky is done by Stella Acquisto. Then, if you like your news on the Rusky side, the CBC says tune in to RT. It sits right there in the TV news bundle on Rogers or Bell. Wow, did they outright lies? Below that, it’s 20 years since the electrifying hanky-panky of that old smoothie Bill Clinton burst onto the world. And finally, the Pope says he didn’t mean it. The Pontiff got into a lot of Dutch defending an apparent clerical deviant during a visit to Chile last week.






Weekend snowmobile death was TFS Capt. Eric Strong

The victim of a snowmobile accident Saturday on Sturgeon Lake near Bobcaygen has ben identified as Toronto Fire Service Captain Earl Strong. Strong, 48, died when he was on an evening run with a fellow snowmobiler and both machines went through the ice.  A notice on the Toronto Professional Firefighters’ Association Sunday identified Strong as an acting captain at Station 211-B in Scarborough’s Armdale neighbourhood. Many friends and colleagues wrote on social media Monday to remember him as a man who brought happiness to others.

TPS to collaborate with Ryerson U. continuing education

The Toronto Police Service has announced a partnership with the Chang School of Continuing Education at Ryerson University. In a statement Monday the TPS said this arrangement will augment the work of the standalone Toronto Police College and “provide a suite of courses for Service members on topics ranging from diversity and bias avoidance through project management and programs to support the Service’s new competency model.” It will provide access for Service members to the information resources of Ryerson University, and result in research opportunities for the university and the Service. It will provide credit toward university certificates, diplomas and/or degrees for courses offered by either organization

South Bayview Bulldog shouts a hearty “Nice going Mac!”

It’s fun to win as seen in the jump-up feeling expressed by Mackenzie Lloyd (18) and Mackenzie MacDonald (87) during a 3-1 victory by the Leaside Jr. Wildcats over the Southwest Jr. Wildcats Sunday at Leaside arena. Then our newsy Bulldog gallery notes that Sobeys has partnered with the UK firm Ocado to build a website, mobile service as well as a bricks and mortar automated warehouse in Toronto. Centre right, don’t forget the community meeting Monday (tonight) to discuss the future of the Regent Theatre at 511 Mt. Pleasant Rd. (seen here in its original guise as the Belsize). The meeting is convened by Josh Matlow at Greenwood College School in Room 174 starting at 7 p.m. Lower right, those hankering for a home in Lawrence Park will want to reflect on the $4,497,000 paid for 35 Glengrove Ave. Listing price was $4,995,000. Finally at lower left is one of the egg throwers caught on camera (but not yet caught) as seen first on the Facebook page Leaside Community. Residents are using all sorts of language to describe this aberrant conduct.

Minor injuries as car launched onto Queen streetcar island

There were only minor injuries to the driver and by a stroke of very good luck no one standing on the TTC streetcar island at Bathurst and Queen Sts. around 2:30 a.m. Monday.

Toronto a venue as US, Canada, Mexico bid for 2026 FIFA

A plan for Toronto to serve as a venue for some of the 2026 FIFA World Cup games has been endorsed by Mayor Tory. The national soccer associations of Canada, the US and Mexico have organized a joint bid to host FIFA in cities across North America. The joint bid is branded United 2026, and if successful, it would mark the first time that three countries hosted the World Cup. It might see as many as five games played here. CBC