City Council has voted 36-3 in favour of establishing supervised injection sites at three Toronto health centres. The supervised injection sites have been approved for the Queen West-Central Toronto Community Health Centre, the South Riverdale Community Health Centre and the Toronto Public Health facility located at 277 Victoria St. All three centres have existing needle exchange programs. There is much public relations to the effect that this makes everything safer and that may be true. In the Netherlands, addicts get free heroin, although some addicts complain that this makes them feel dependent. Please do not snicker. Favorable media says that statistics show this largesse had led to a decline in the number of addicts (once said to number 20,000 in Holland) because they aren’t seen. Or maybe because drug peddlers can’t get traction. Let’s see what happens.
Krispy Kreme set to open 50 stores in Ontario, Quebec
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Krispy Kreme Doughnuts has had its ups and downs in Canada but it seems the company has not gone away. It has opened a store in Kensington Market and now Chris Lindsay, owner of the Canadian arm of Krispy Kreme, says he intends to build new stores in Ontario and Quebec in the next few years to a total of maybe 50.
One-stop wonder is a dumb plan but it’s Toronto’s plan
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It may be a dumb plan but it’s our plan. So it is that City Council voted 27-18 Wednesday to build the one-stop Scarborough subway extension rather than a more efficient, and cheaper, multi-stop system of LRT lines. The one-stop subway has been championed by Mayor Tory despite widespread belief that the plan is an expensive boondoggle. The one-stop extension from Kennedy to Scarborough Town Centre will leave 6 kilometres between stations. Josh Matlow (Ward 22) has been a proponent of a seven-stop LRT which would serve more people for less money. Toronto Star
Internet sensation as Boxer dog adopts baby bird
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Dr. Jim Gracie was awarded Distinguished Flying Cross
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A funeral service will held Thursday July 14, 2016 for Dr. Jim Gracie at Eglinton St. George’s United Church on Lytton Blvd. Dr. Gracie was a much admired general practitioner in North Toronto for 25 years. For ten years, he was the medical director of Union Carbide of Canada. Dr. Gracie was a winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross, awarded for heroic service as a bomber pilot during World War II. Dr. Gracie was 94 when he died peacefully with four generations of his family nearby. James Paton Gracie obit
Electric car re-charging stations at 250 locations by 2017
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The Ontario government says Wednesday that it will build 500 electric car charging stations in more than 250 locations across the province by 2017. The numbers are confusing because locations may have multiple stations that charge cars at different speeds. The most powerful stations are level three that top up a car to 80 per cent in something like 30 minutes.The list at this link shows the proposed Toronto stations and there are not too many very convenient to South Bayview.
DON MILLS AND EGLINTON
One is slated for the Foresters property near Eglinton Ave. E and Don Mills Road but the list does not name the level of recharging capacity. Drivers will be able to pay to charge their vehicles with their credit cards, similar to paying for gas at a regular gas station. But as the electric car world well knows, the time required to charge a vehicle (unless it is plugged in overnight at home) sometimes seems prohibitive.
Leaside fixture Lincoln Electric celebrates 100 years
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Lincoln Electric is 100 years old. The firm is a leading industrial welding service and is still on Wicksteed Ave, that location opened in the summer of 1940.
https://twitter.com/jon_burnside/status/753280019095486464
Former CEO of Canadian Tire makes surprise comeback
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May appoints Brexit voice Boris Johnson foreign minister
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David Cameron’s last question period just like Tonight Show
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Canadian Anglicans ponder split in same-sex sympathies
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Power restored after brief outage darkens downtown
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Tweets suggest that power has come back on downtown after a brief outage Below. City Council was in the dark and not for the first time.
And we're back. Council resumes transit talk after power outage #topoli pic.twitter.com/yg45YLjwTY
— Cynthia Mulligan (@CityCynthia) July 13, 2016
We've restored customers affected by the Bloor/King/University/Sherbourne outage. Outage caused by supply interruption from @HydroOne.
— Toronto Hydro (@TorontoHydro) July 13, 2016

