A federal judge in California will allow the bulk of a lawsuit accusing Starbucks of systematically under-filling lattes to move forward. Two California residents are suing the Seattle-based coffee chain, claiming that Starbucks lattes are only filled to about 75 per cent of the cup’s capacity. The lawsuit says Starbucks instituted a recipe in 2009 to create smaller lattes in order to save money on milk. The news reports do not state legal chapter and verse but it is hard for many lawyers to understand illegality associated with under-filling a cup. Manufacturers downsize all the time. Buyer beware. Anyway, Starbucks says the company believes the lawsuit is “without merit” and it will be prepared to defend itself in court. He says if a customer is unhappy with a beverage, Starbucks will gladly remake it.
7.45 at Bayview and Eglinton! What the heck is this?
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Drivers heading northbound on Bayview Tuesday night were met with rubber-traffic-cone chaos at Eglinton. It was re-paving of all things (see video) for reasons unknown but probably necessary. Later, large parts of the corner will be excavated to create the Leaside station which will sit on this corner. Wild and crazy for sure.
Police Clydesdale meets young son of the late Sgt. Russell
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It was an enormously touching day as Nolan Russell, 7, was introduced to a new police horse which bears the name of his late father, Sgt. Ryan Russell. Sgt Russell was killed as he tried to arrest Richard Kachkar as he drove a stolen snow plow through downtown streets in January of 2011. The parkette at Avenue Road and Dupont Street was later named after Sgt. Ryan. The introduction to his dad’s namesake, a handsome Clydesdale, was sheer delight for Nolan and his appreciative mother. “It’s such an incredible honour for my family to see such a beautiful and remarkable animal be put into service [and one] that’s going to work the streets just as my husband did,” Russell’s wife, Christine, told the CBC. This was Nolan’s first time riding a horse, she said. “I hope he’ll get to come back through the year and try again and form a special bond with Russell.”
Trudeau welcomes National Aboriginal Day with sunrise ceremony and canoe ride
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Prime Minister Trudeau and Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett joined Indigenous leaders at dawn Tuesday for a ceremony kicking off National Aboriginal Day. Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould stood alongside the prime minister for a smudging ceremony (seen in video) performed by Gina Wilson, the most senior Indigenous person in Canada’s public service. Wilson, who is Algonquin, is an associate deputy minister at Public Safety Canada. After greeting the Indigenous leaders and elders present, Trudeau joined 12 Métis, Inuit and First Nations youth for an early morning paddle in a voyageur canoe provided by the Métis Nation of Ontario.
Metrolinx to add 4 GO stations to supplement SmartTrack
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Four new GO Transit stations will be built in the city’s west end as part of the SmartTrack plan, a critical part of Mayor Tory’s election campaign. .The planned number of SmartTrack station has been slashed and added to over the months with these GO stops on the Barrie and Kitchener lines intended to support SmartTrack. An additional two new stations in the city’s east end will also be announced tomorrow, bringing the total number of new GO stations to six. The new stations on the Kitchener line will be located in Liberty Village and at St. Clair Avenue and Keele Street while the new stations on the Barrie line will be located at Bloor Street and Lansdowne Avenue, and Spadina Avenue and Front Street.
Ontario to scrap provincial pension plan after CPP deal
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The Ontario Liberal government will scrap its plan to create an Ontario Retirement Pension Plan (ORPP) the CBC has been told by Finance Minister Charles Sousa. As telegraphed by the premier many weeks ago, a deal to enrich the Canada Pension Plan would be the key to scrapping the ORPP. Agreement on the CPP deal was reached at a meeting of finance ministers over the weekend culminating with the announcement Monday evening. CPP increase by 8 provinces but is that enough?
First annual Yoga Day marks ancient Indian exercise
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International Yoga Day makes its appearance on the calendar for the first time ever with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi joining a crowd of 30,000 schoolchildren and other residents of the northern city of Chandigarh for a mass session. Before starting, Modi urged people to make yoga a part of their lives, saying the practice — which began in ancient India — doesn’t differentiate between the rich and poor, and is accessible to all.
Leaside traffic to be discussed Tuesday at Gardens
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There is a meeting sponsored by the Leaside Property Owners Association (LPOA) tonight at 7 p.m. in the William Lea Room to discuss traffic in Leaside. It is the first of several public meetings organized by the LPOA as it seeks long-term solutions and action.
BINGO: Seniors harmless pastime “illegal” in Ontario
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Mississauga faces possible closure of its harmless bingo games in quirky Ontario because they aren’t run by the government. A single complaint against the penny-ante entertainment at eleven community centres threatens to shut down the games. This is Ontario after all, where it’s perfectly fine for hooked roulette addicts to flush away their earnings every week but immoral for seniors to pay a buck or two for bingo. Uh-huh. CBC
CPP increase agreed by 8 provinces but is that enough?
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Eight of Canada’s finance ministers reached an agreement in principle Monday to increase the Canada Pension Plan but Quebec and Manitoba did not sign on to the deal. Approval requires the consent of seven provinces representing at least two-thirds of the population. It may be enough — just barely But the potential hard feeling in the holdouts is a factor as well. The scheme, if it goes ahead, would go into effect in 2019 and increase contributions for a typical worker earning about $55,00 by $7 a month and employers would match those contributions (the hated payroll tax). The plan would be phased in over seven years until 2025 and it means when people retire their maximum annual benefits would increase by about one-third to $17,478. Nothing is stated but the Ontario government has said that its gestating Ontario Pension Plan would remain unborn if agreement were reached on CPP changes. And then there is Phillip Cross in the Financial Post who says that for the feds all of the unsustainable gap between the pensions of public servants and most everyone else. In fact, says Cross, some critics maintain that the push to expand the CPP is driven by an unspoken need to prop up public-sector pension plans a little longer. However, doing so will only delay the inevitable overhaul of both the benefits and the funding of public-sector pensions.
Power restored after tree takes out power line in East York
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Toronto Hydro says power has now been restored to all but possibly a dozen customers in East York after a falling tree struck power lines in on Gamble Avenue near Pape Avenue. At the height of the outage, some 3,400 Toronto Hydro customers were without power in an area bound by O’Conner Drive and Danforth Avenue north-south and between Broadview and Greenwood avenues east-west.
She honks at man walking slowly so he punches her
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There was plenty of bad manners to go around in Vaughan this Spring when a man punched a woman driver in the face for honking at him because, apparently, he was taking too long to cross the street. York Regional police said a woman was driving on Cordoba Drive at about 1 p.m. on May 31, 2016 when she stopped at a red light on Bathurst Street. Police said an unidentified man between 60 and 70 years was crossing the intersection. When the light turned green and he was still walking, the woman honked at him Cops say the man then walked up to the driver’s side window and punched her in the face. She is said by police to have been uninjured. .


