Northlea United evening April 30 to aid refugee families

Northlea United Church will hold an evening of lively music and a silent auction on Saturday, April 30 to aid the settlement of Syrian refugee families which are sponsored by the church. The evening will begin with viewing of the auction offerings at 6.30 p.m. with performances beginnings at 7.30 p.m. The program includes Theresa Tova, David Warrack, Cara Matthew and Friends and The Leaside Singers.  The host for the evening will be David Sparrow. Tickets are $25 and may be purchased here  Northlea United Church is at 125 Brentcliffe Rd (416) 425-5252.

north complete

Some of the Northlea friends who will be present April 30 are (top l to r) Theresa Tova, David Warrack, Cara Matthew and (bottom l to r) Roula Said, David Buchbinder and David Sparrow

Police part of Motorycle Safety Day at Humber College

Toronto Police will participate in Motorcycle and Safety Awareness Media Day at Humber College on Humber College Blvd in north Etobicoke Thursday. Statistics about motorcycle deaths show that only men appear in this fatality roll of the accidents occurring between 1995 and 2016. Stats also show that out of 63 deaths, the age group of men from 25 toi 39 sustained 37 fatalities while the group under 25 numbered 15. Police Service news release 

Sewer repairs will disrupt parking on Bayview this week

Sewer work on the east side of Bayview will disrupt parking for the rest of this week according to officials who plunked down some temporary “no parking” signs at the south end on Wednesday. The information is that for Thursday, Friday and (ugh) Saturday, April 14 to 16, 2016,  there will be no parking from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the east side of Bayview. The repairs have to do with the connection of sewers to the stores. The first phase of this is Millwood to Belsize.

Close of skating season for little ones at Leaside Gardens

Parents filled the stands as the very young skated on the Bert F. Grant rink at Leaside Gardens Wednesday evening. This entertaining variation of pitching a tent looked like fun. The red and white “big top” sheet is frequently employed apparently and carries the names of sponsors like Canadian Tire. Watch for the kid who scoots back outside as all the others duck under the sheet. Parents said it was the final day of such skating this season.

Dowdy CIBC branch puts some new colour on the street

cibc bayview new w inset There are very nice people inside but the little concrete coloured CIBC branch at 1529 Bayview Ave. has been a little dowdy looking. This week it got a new face and as the small scissor lift was still parked outside Wednesday night it seems there may be a few more touches to come.

Aerial mapping aircraft catches attention of polar bear

An Aurora aircraft of Canada’s National Aerial Surveillance Program proved to be of interest to this polar bear as it flew over the vast reaches of Nunavut in recent hours. The bear was of interest to the crew and to us as well. Here we see the big fellow lumbering along even as he (or she) keeps an eye on the sky.

William and Kate feed baby elephants, rhinos in India park

The Duke and Duchess and Cambridge have enjoyed an early morning safari in India’s Kaziranga National Park, on the fourth day of their official tour of India and Bhutan. William has been campaigning for a number of years to protect endangered animals and his visit to the park comes as ITV News footage shows the plight of rhino in India. Both are seen feeding the animals with large containers of liquid food.

Garden supplies available until April 17 from 132nd Scouts

132 scouts copyThere are just five days to order garden supplies from the 132nd Toronto Scouts of Leaside. As usual, the 132nd is offering Soil, Mulch, Manure, Leaf Bags —  and new this year — Vegetable & Flower seeds. All orders placed by Sunday  April 17, 2016 will be delivered free to your home in Leaside. Residents can place their orders by calling (416) 425-6881 or online at www.132nd.com/gardenproducts. Remember, the deadline of April 17.

Black widow discovered back on the Internet in library

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Melissa Sheppard

The woman known as the Internet Black Widow was spotted by chance in a Halifax library on the Internet yesterday, something she was strictly forbidden from doing by the terms of her recent parole. Now she is accused of breaching the conditions of her peace and has been told to stay out of libraries. When she was released less than a month ago officials said she was at high risk to re-offend. That would suggest the finding of an unsuspecting elderly man and doing who knows what to him. The 80-year-old Melissa Ann Shepard was released under 22 court-imposed conditions. Keep your fingers crossed. Canadian Press 

School board a laughable dupe in teacher day-off plan

When the government agreed to let Catholic elementary teachers get a “bonus” day if they were absent at least one day less than the board average it thought it was a nice thing to do. The maximum was 16 days after all. Who would take that much? Ha ha. It turns out that teachers in the Toronto Catholic School Board took an average of 16 days off meaning that anyone with at least 15 days off gets the extra “bonus” day. Toronto Star.

Failed upstairs-downstairs shops to be razed on Yonge

Worthwhile little story about the junky little upstairs-downstairs strip on Yonge St at Helendale Ave just south of Postal Station K, now under redevelopment. The plaza will be demolished and learned voices are quoted saying the architectural trick of pretending that the basement was the first floor (see Yorkville) is a failed concept. Correct again professor and there’s one on South Bayview as well at the corner of Belsize.  What a blessing to see that perpetually vacant lower level disappear.  By the way, CBC calls Station K by the wrong name. It’s K.  CBC

downstairs

Summerhill Market wins approval to expand parking

Summerhill Market at 446 Summerhill Ave has received approval to demolish two buildings to the west of the store and create more parking as well as an outdoor market and decorative gazebo. Barring an unexpected objection, the plan could go forward this year. It will increase the number of parking spaces for the busy food store from 24 to 38. The City’s concern about too much flat land prompted the store to propose a seasonal market and add touches like the gazebo. The plan also calls for a renovation of the store itself. The buildings to be razed are the former Royal Bank branch (now closed) and  a run-down storefront which most recently housed an ice cream vending venture by Summerhill known as Scoops.