Jurors in Norristown, Pennsylvania have told the judge they are deadlocked in the case of Bill Cosby vs Andrea Constand. The judge told them to keep trying to reach a unanimous decision. Some jurors appeared angry, the judge sounded exasperated and Canadian accuser Ms. Constand’s mother broke down in tears Wednesday.
Hanging by teeth not quite as thrilling as tight rope walk
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It may be because there was no GoPro clamped to the thing onto which Erendira Wallenda attached her teeth as they lifted her over Niagara Falls. Producer, where was the face shot with teeth? Very gutsy no doubt and we believe that sensibly the government will not permit this type of stunting without a harness of some sort.
TTC strongly denies that it has gotten curve of tracks wrong
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Brad Ross of the TTC has responded with firm denials to a suggestion made on CP24 at noon this week that his employer might have somehow miscalculated the curvature of streetcar tracks. This was said by a guest from CP24’s sister service BNN during an interview with Stephen LeDrew. The speculation as offered by the guest has now been characterized in email by Stuart Green of the TTC as “nonsense” adding that it was inspired “because he (the guest) hears the noise they make on turns. Ridiculous. Sad.” Mr. Ross said that “the TTC has not gotten the curvature of the streetcar tracks wrong.” The speculation in question was referred to facetiously in The Bulldog not as true but as a “wise discussion” about whether this had happened. Video: Corktown residents voice concerns over ear piercing streetcar noise
Andy Elder advises food critic on Father’s Day burger staple
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Sherwood Park Residents AGM held Wednesday evening
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The Annual General Meeting of the Sherwood Park Residents Association was held Wednesday at The Sherwood, 2567 Yonge Street. It was lightly attended but heard from Josh Matlow (Ward 22) Jaye Robinson (Ward 25) and Claire McIntyre, a vice president in charge of media relations for Oxford Properties. Oxford is owned by the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System. It will re-develop the TTC-owned Canada Square lands on the southwest corner of Yonge and Eglinton Ave. This development is seen at City Hall and elsewhere as something of a call to greatness on behalf of Toronto. Nothing has been prepared and presented and such work will not begin until the LRT project is finished after the turn of the decade. It was heard Wednesday that Ben Daube, president of the SPRA, has served in that office for ten years.
Kelly Knight Craft set to become US ambasador to Canada
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Kelly Knight Craft is the nominee of US President Donald Trump as the next ambassador to Canada, according to a statement from the White House. The choice was well telegraphed by the Trump administration. Her profile reveals a wealthy Republican fundraiser and campaign supporter of US President Donald Trump who has a long record of support for Republican leaders. She was a member of the US delegation to the United Nations under George W. Bush. She is also known as one of the top Republican fundraisers in Kentucky. Craft has raised money for Bush, Mitt Romney and Trump, and hosted a $5,400-per-couple fundraiser for Trump in June. She later served as a finance vice-chair for his inaugural committee. Kelly Knight Craft is in 50s and is the wife of Joe Craft, the billionaire chief executive of Alliance Resource Partners, a large Kentucky coal producer.
Merchants win right to charge users of fancy credit cards
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A legal battle lasting more than five years has been won by merchants against credit card companies that forced them to accept all cards just as the issuer instructed. This included cards which purported to offer gifts and rewards for which the merchant had to pay the card company with higher fees per transaction. It began in the middle of the last decade when first Visa then MasterCard decided they wanted to be like American Express and hype the card experience with giveaways. Of course, nothing is free. Merchants complained through the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) and ultimately a class action lawsuit began its sway through the courts. The outcome permits merchants to charge a customer extra for a premium card. Whether the result will prove to be more than a moral victory is yet to be seen.
DENY WRONGDOING
Visa and MasterCard both released statements saying they do not admit to any wrongdoing, but entered into a settlement agreement in the case earlier this week. Both companies agreed to pay $19.5 million each and allow Canadian merchants to add surcharge fees on credit card payments. The revised rules will include a surcharge cap. Visa said in a statement that the new rules will come into effect 1.5 years after provincial courts in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec approve the settlement. The CFIB praised the decision saying it’s important for merchants to have the power to add a surcharge when customers pay with premium credit cards. The CFIB added it does not expect smaller merchants to widely use this new power although they may get tougher about accepting premium cards.
2014 cladding on Grenfell Tower blamed for spread of fire
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The Independent newspaper says cladding that might have led to the horrifying blaze at Grenfell Tower in London Wednesday was added in 2014 partly to improve the view from the luxury flats around it. In the aftermath of the blaze, it is said that experts “have repeatedly warned that the addition of cladding, which is regularly used to refresh old or unsightly buildings, can help spread fire.” It can work like a chimney, they have warned, bringing up air that allows it to spread across a building quickly. Chartered surveyor and fire expert Arnold Tarling, from Hindwoods, said the process can create a 25-30mm cavity between the cladding and the insulation. “It produces a wind tunnel and also traps any burning material between the rain cladding and the building,” he said. Previous
Big news! Road will remain open this weekend on Bayview
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There are so many road closures for BIA and other community events this weekend it’s news when you find one that is open. Such is the case for the Bayview-Leaside BIA’s Sidewalk Sensation on Saturday. South Bayview is open as usual. Yes. it will be crowded (wonderful) but no, you will not be waved off onto a side street by police. We love it. See you there. Road closings this weekend in Toronto by City release
2-alarm fire in commercial building on Rivalda in west end
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Fire has consumed the roof of a commercial-industrial building on Rivalda Road at Bradstock Rd. Wednesday afternoon. Two alarms were rung at the height of the blaze.The excellent photo was taken by the Twitter user with the handle Calm & Balanced Canine who says this scene was snapped about ten minutes after the fire became apparent.
Streetcar folly in sharp focus as mayor ponders failure rate
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Mayor Tory and TTC officials appeared to be doing their best to downplay the concern among staff engineers about the breakdown failure rate of the new Bombardier-built streetcars. They are complex machines, said the mayor, and probably some failures can expected. It remains statistically true however the new vehicles are failing after rolling merely 5,530 kilometres. That’s down from an average of 7,372 kilometres travelled before needing repairs in March and 16,431 kilometres in February. according to the TTC’s own numbers, that distance is well short of the 35,000 kilometre threshold for defect-free travel that the TTC’s contract with Bombardier says must be reached, beginning with the delivery of the 60th streetcar. There are just 35 cars in service now.
FOLLY
The news raises again however the bewilderment of many citizens about why the City continues to inflict the cost and complicated operation of streetcars on itself and on taxpayers. Today there were wise discussions about whether the TTC had built tracks correctly. It seems like insanity. Why is anyone discussing tracks at all?
Owners say apartment tower swept by fire met safety codes
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This man has lost everything in the London fire. He was on 7th floor & says he's lucky to be alive https://t.co/mcezh9S5b7 #GrenfellTower pic.twitter.com/wM2mZZckru
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) June 14, 2017
