Outside CUPE okays deal, inside workers still beefing

Outside workers of CUPE Local 416 have ratified a new contract with the City that gives them a five percent increase over four years. Seems okay. They number 5,400, and importantly, they do garbage removal.  Workers in Local 79 are still engaged in a so-called work-to–rule although this action seems to have as many forms as the Toronto Star has stories. It is not fully clear what is required but it is apparently not money. Tim Maguire, the president of the local, talks of  his members not being asked to do things that are not in  their job descriptions but there are no examples of that so far that would shock anyone. Some suspect it is an attempt to define jobs so narrowly that the City would have to add to the 23,000 (!) inside workers it already employs. As Mayor Tory has put it succinctly: “These are good jobs”.  CBC

STORES: Shoppers Drug sells $250 million of PC products

cookies

PC Decadent chocolate chip cookies, No Name products and other Loblaws foods are selling well at Shoppers Drug Mart. Shoppers sold more than a quarter of a billion dollars of house-branded food in its drugstores stores across Canada last year. And Galen Weston, executive chairman and president, has told analysts that Loblaws will speed up the click-and-collect program it first began testing in the GTA 14 months ago. The online purchase and pickup scheme has been working well at stores like Loblaws on Redway Road. It is now in place at 39 stores and will increase to an unspecified number. Finally, Sears will turn over eight stores across Canada including three stores in the GTA to its competitor Leons. Sears has not been making money in these premises. The stores are in Mississauga, Brampton and Etobicoke.

Ontario to offer tuition grants to low income families

Ontario is planning to introduce tuition fee grants for families earning less than $50,000 a year, according to budget proposals tabled in the Legislature Thursday. The Liberals project a budget deficit for one more year and then say they will balance the  budget by 2017-18.  By the numbers, Ontario proposes to run a deficit of C$5.7 billion ($4.21 billion) in fiscal 2015-16 and smaller-than-expected C$4.3 billion in 2016-2017. In 2017-18 Finance Minister Charles Sousa says, the government will balance the books. In this regard, the government has been helped by lower oil costs to perk up the province’s manufacturing base. As well, the lower dollar has increased exports. The smaller deficit and higher spending on education and infrastructure will be paid for by economic growth, the government said, and future spending will come from tax increases most of which are a function of so-called cap  and trade.carbon pricing. By any name, it is all increased taxes on gasoline and natural gas, the most widely used household heating fuel in Ontario. There will also be increases to the price of wine and cigarettes. It’s a budget for Ontario, just not Toronto.

Long-time Sunnybroook barber Leo Morra dead at 79

Long-time barber Leonardo Morra has died at the age of 79.  Mr. Morra is well-remembered from his years running LeMan’s Barber Shop in the Sunnybrook Plaza. His death occurred Wednesday, February 24, 2016 at the age of 79.  Mr. Morra’s obituary recalls that he is survived by his wife Guerina Morra and his only daughter Antonella Morra. He was grandfather of Aria Mozzone and A.J. Morra. He lost his 15-year battle with cancer and died peacefully at Village of Humber Heights. There will be two viewings at DeMarco Funeral Home at 3725 Keele St. on Friday, February 26, 2–4 p.m. and 7–9 p.m. The funeral will take place on Saturday, February. 27 at St. Charles Catholic Church at 811 Lawrence Ave. West (at Dufferin Road) at 10 a.m. with burial following at Highland Cemetery, 33 Memory Garden Lane, in Willowdale. For further information, email toni_to_tiger@hotmail.com.

 

Gasoline, natural gas up as expected in Ontario budget

CBC

Zuraidah Alman named anchor of CTV News at 11.30

Zuraidah

CTV Toronto says that Zuraidah Alman has been named anchor of CTV News at 11.30. She has been CTV team since 2008 as a reporter and fill-in anchor. Alman’s broadcast experience spans almost two decades. Prior to joining the CTV News Toronto team, Alman worked for Global TV, anchoring the morning and noon news, and reporting for the supper hour broadcast. She has also worked as a reporter for Citytv and anchor for CP24. Alman has covered Toronto headlines including The Toronto Blue Jays 2015 playoff run, Canada’s largest mass shooting on Danzig St. in downtown Toronto, and the massive Toronto ice storm and subsequent blackout of 2013.

Love and Fitness (wink wink) at the together gymasium

A Canadian is a Canadian, even a naturalized terorrist

zakaria-amara-headline-image

Zakaria Amara

It seems there’s every chance that people like Zakaria Amara and his friends, naturalized Canadians who planned to blow up downtown Toronto, will be guaranteed their citizenship under revised legislation to be tabled in the House of Commons. The CBC link below recalls an exchange during the election campaign between then-prime minister Stephen Harper and Justin Trudeau. Harper asked Trudeau why those convicted of terrorism shouldn’t have their citizenship taken away. “A Canadian is a Canadian is a Canadian,” the now prime minister responded. CBC

HEY SILLY: “Skinny basic” is about catching “cord nevers”

Pay attention class. The cable and satellite companies have been ordered to bust up mandatory bundles. You can still bundle if you want, but maybe you don’t. If not, the new supposedly cheaper “skinny basic” service may delight or bore you. And it may actually cost you more than a bundle. But from the lofty offices of Bell and Rogers, skinny basic is a tool to get twenty babies to buy something and avoid an awful fate as a “cord never.” Is that clear class?

Bessborough “pre-emptive offer” chronicled in Globe

124

The Globe and Mail recounts the turn-of-the=year sale of 124 Bessborough Drive for $2.21 million, a bonus of more than $100,000 over listing. It was a move that the Globe writer, Sydnia.Yu, calls a pre-emptive bid. The home was on the market just five days and had 30 qualified buyers sniffing around. Previously it has sold in 2006 for $1,419,000 and in 1993, for $555,000. The article recalls again for those not familiar with Bessborough the distinguished nature of the street. As Leasiders know, those sprawling boulevards that grace Bessborough between Sutherland Dr. and Parkhurst Blvd. are a rare phenomenon. Globe and Mail

Premier says more gasoline taxes needed to save Earth

earth degrades

Premier Wynne has made it clear that motorists and homeowners will pay the price of Ontario government spending to be announced tomorrow.  Gasoline and natural gas will increase as a result of new taxes. Gasoline is set to jump 4.3 cents  a litre but that increase will require consumers to pay sales tax. Analysts suggest the increase will be more like five cents a litre out-of-pocket. Environment minister Glen Murray tried to blunt the news by saying the careful selection of your gas station can save you money. “In my constituency (Toronto Centre) the difference in gas prices between one station and another is greater than any change that’s going to occur as a result of cap-and-trade,” he said. The Premier said the budget will also see a new surcharge on natural gas.

ALL ABOUT GLOBAL WARMING

The Government continues to make the environment and fear of global warming the justification and rationale of its policies. Ms. Wynne painted a grim picture of costs that would far outpace the present burden on taxpayers if we do not battle global warming as set out by Ontario government policy for energy. Speaking at Ryerson, Ms Wynne spoke with a passion about the certainty as she sees it of higher energy costs, high repair costs and higher insurance if we do not, in her words, address the degradation of the environment. Others are staggered by the growing provincial debt, now closing in on $300 billion dollars. It costs taxpayers more than  $10 billion in interest to carry the debt each year. Where your is going 

 

Bus, car collide at Eglinton and Bayview, no injuries

Buses and cars continue to find it a difficult passage through the changing and narrowed roadway of Eglinton Ave E. at Bayview Ave. At about 1.30 p.m.Wednesday a bus and a car collided in the westbound lane just east of Bayview. Not surprising. Traffic funnels into one lane. It is less than a week since a TTC bus slammed into a utility pole at the same corner.