The Bulldog

Starbucks in U.S. launches unused food donation plan

A plan by Starbucks to donate unsold food to the needy is being implemented in the U.S,. and is being considered for Canada. It sounds a lot like the practice of some South Bayview and area businesses — like COBs — where unsold food is taken to the Flemingdon Community Food Bank by volunteers of the Anglican Church. Starbucks plan is called FoodShare. It promises to use refrigerated vans to pick up unsold food from its 7,600 U.S. company-operated stores and distribute it through food banks.

Once banned as deviant, Stones “Jack Flash” rocks Havana

(New Video) Pensioners and teens filled Havana’s downtown football field to hear the once forbidden music of  the rock group that is as old as Cuba’s government — and that’s old. Jumpin Jack Flash got it started and the story linked below recalls how such music would once have been cause for committal by the Castro authorities for “ideological deviation.” CBC

Leaside magazine cover story features Andy Elder family

The second issue of Neighbours of Leaside and Bennington Heights has been delivered to homes in the neighbourhood. It features an informative story by writer Ann Hall on the Elder family, Andy and Jan and their grown up children Sarah and Graeme. Andy Elder is the owner of Grilltime at 62 Laird Drive. As reported previously by the South Bayview Bulldog, the magazine is the work of Leaside resident Carol Eby in association with Best Version Media, a company specializing in such neighborhood publications. Cover photo by Storey Williams Photography.   

elder

CP24 TALK: Doug Ford recalls his younger brother Rob

This is a longer piece prepared by staff writer Chris Herhalt based on an interview done by Stephen LeDrew with Doug Ford, Rob Ford’s older brother. As reported earlier, the former mayor will lie in repose at City Hall Monday and Tuesday. Services for Mr. Ford will be at St.James Cathedral on Wednesday.  CP24

EASTER: South Bayview Ave. open for business Saturday

cornflower blue

At Cornflower Blue

The South Bayview business district will re-open Saturday after Good Friday closures. Cornflower Blue has loaded in its Spring merchandise and is showing a smart check ensemble in the window. That’s at 1606. Across the street at 1625 Bayview, the premises has been taken until Monday by the sign of the Skier for its annual clearance pop-up sale. Elsewhere on Bayview, merchants and residents continue to hang fire about the future tenant at 1591. The location is still as a mouse and the leasing agent has suggested it may be May before the public is told who is going in there. At COB’s there are Hot Cross Buns to be had. At 1632, Vital Bloom Acupuncture and Wellness has opened (see ad on this page). At 1661 Bayview plans go  forward for the opening of an optometry business.

Rosedale’s Caffe Doria to be a Food Dudes cafeteria

The former Caffe Doria at the northwest corner of Yonge St. and Roxborough St. West is to become a Food Dudes location with cafeteria style serving at a moderate price. The long-standing Rosedale coffee and lunch spot was sold about a year ago and habitues had hoped it would carry on. Owner Rosa Agostino had run the Doria for 15 years. But the new owners apparently didn’t like the concept as a business. As a location the little space has everything to appeal to neighborhood walk-ins but precious little parking for those who come further. The Food Dudes are proportionally adept restaurateurs and food truck operators. They have moved from their Carlaw Ave location to 8 Wellesley St. E.  Rosa Agostino sells Rosedale landmark Caffe Doria

WEEK AHEAD: Can this be Spring we see before us?

apriilTomorrow will be a nice day to do almost anything. Most of us will  say hello on Bayview or Laird. Others with little ones may whip over to Rowlands Park between 1 and 2.30 for the Easter Egg Hunt. Honestly, it would be too soon to rake the garden but that can’t be delayed for long. Is this Spring we see before us? You bet.

CBC scribe Crawley finds Premier mum on prorogation

This Canadian Press story notes that Mike Crawley, the CBC correspondent at the Legislature, could not get the Premier to answer a question on whether she would soon prorogue the house. That is the arbitrary, but legal, forced holiday on sittings and all the messy things that go with them, like Question Period. Such a nuisance that QP. CBC

CIBC: Millennials favor home ownership by 85% margin

A poll by CIBC finds that home ownership is just as important to millennials as it is to most Canadians. They agree with the concept by as much as 86%, very near the average for the population as a whole. It is interesting as a measure of this generation born variously on either side of Y2K, but not hugely surprising to many. For as long as records have been kept, home ownership has been the way to invest efficiently (you live in it while it appreciates) as well as a foundation for retirement. Before the MLS, people used to say things like “Safe as houses.”

Courage of Fanny Klein, young survivor of Brussels terror

20-year-old Fanny Klein describes the explosion that will scar her for an unknown time. She says with a small smile that she does not want to cry too much because it will dehydrate her.

Summerhill Market open today from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Unlike nearly all other supermarkets in South Bayview, Summerhill Market on Summerhill Ave. is open Friday from 8 a.m to 8 p.m. Most large business institutions like banks are closed. But the Eaton Centre is open as are the Art Gallery, Ontario Science Centre, Royal Ontario Museum and many other downtown tourist and family locations.

Reserve kids have scabies, impetigo, eczema say doctors

Doctors who were flown into the remote James Bay Kashechewa Cree community this week seem to agree the issue is one of neglected hygiene made worse by the brutal living conditions in a poor semi-arctic environment. They say that children showing frightening sores and scabby tissue are victims of a variety of known childhood conditions such as scabies, eczema and impetigo. One physician told CTV that there is a “social problem” related to the general knowledge of personal care and the capacity for such care in frequently difficult conditions.  Dr. Gordon Green, who is Chief of Staff at the Weeneebayko Area Health Authority is quoted by CTV as saying there is no medical emergency in the community. Dr. Green says eczema is common in the general population, with up to 20 per cent of Canadians experiencing it in their lifetimes. He said it can get especially bad in the Far North because heating causes skin to dry out and crack. This is apparently exacerbated by infrequent bathing needed to keep down the bacteria count.