Cauliflower crisis: Prices rising, supplies dwindling

This appears to be part of climate-related growing problems but one can never be sure. Canadian Press 

Monday’s driving lesson is to keep wheels on the road

A young man clipped a parked car on Lansdowne Ave. in such a way that his front wheel got high enough to roll his SUV. He is okay but there is the matter of his sobriety or lack of it to be dealt with later. This happened near Dupont St.

Saturday’s power outage perimeters a total guessing game

The by-guess-and-by-God nature of power outage perimeters is seen again as reports dribble in about Saturday’s blackout. It was a trying time that lasted between one and two hours for those effected. But the guessing about just where lights went out was well off the mark. Twitter reports repeated some media as saying all of Leaside as far as Laird Drive was out. Nothing like this was true. And even Toronto Hydro must have had its fingers crossed when it said the blackout went as far east as Bayview. In fact, the power failure seems to have come no further east than Mt. Pleasant. Reader Angela Rickett reports her home on Redpath Ave. was without electricity for a good two hours. Helen Godfrey told us yesterday that the lights were out only on the west side of Mt. Pleasant, as far as she could see. And here’s a surprise, the northern boundary of the outage was given by Hydro as Eglinton. But shops like Degrees Kitchen along Yonge as far north as Albertus were closing because of the blackout.

Leaside’s Emma Pye scores as team plays 3 girls to 5

emma

Emma Pye

Leaside Wildcat forward Emma Pye scored a seldom-seen hockey curiosity Sunday as her team fought off a two-penalty burden against the Bluewater Hawks. With only three girls on the ice against five Hawks in the second period, Pye slipped away from the opposing team and scored Leaside’s third goal unassisted. It was a cake walk all afternoon at Leaside Gardens as the Wildcats strolled to a 5-1 victory over the ladies from the Lake Huron shore.

LEASIDE VAULTS TO FOURTH

Sunday’s play vaulted the Wildcats two rankings into fourth place in the Provincial Women’s Hockey League. Other Leaside goals came from Siobhan Birch in  the first, Samantha Jones in the second and Mariah Hinds in both the second and third. Assists came from Alex Woods, Olivia Reid, Megan Pardy and Kristin Della Rovere. Bluewater scored on the efforts of Jessica Forcey with assists from Madison Davey and Madison Melo.

PENALTIES

On the minor side, Leaside was collecting penalties again. There were eight infractions resulting in 16 minutes of penalty time. Bluewater was unable to take advantage of eight power play chances. This team visits from the most rural of the 20 teams in the PWHL. Their home ice is West Middlesex Memorial Arena in the town of Strathroy (population 22,000).

Overlea Goodwill store to close as part of mass shutdown

goodwil overlea

Goodwill Industries will close stores across Toronto as the non-profit business deals with a  shortage of cash that has become a crisis, according to a statement by the firm. In all, 16 stores, 10 donation centres and 2 offices,  including the store at the corner of Overlea Blvd and Thorncliffe Park Drive, will shut immediately. Goodwill offered little explanation of what had caused the cash crisis referring only to “factors in the retail environment.”  The statement came from CEO Keiko Nakamura.  As many as 450 employees will be out of work. Many of them showed up for work Sunday morning and learned of the closure from a sign on the door. Locations in Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Newmarket, Barrie, Orillia and Brockville are closed until management can meet with representatives of the Canadian Airport Workers Union, which represents the employees.  Described by Wikipedia as an American nonprofit organization, Goodwill provides job training, employment placement services, and other community-based programs for people with disabilities. This work is funded by a large network of retail thrift stores operating as nonprofits as well. It has a huge network across the U.S. in Canada and in Latin America.

$40 million “for garbage trucks City might not use”

Toronto’s bid committee seems intent on buying new trucks. Will service east of Yonge be privatized? The decision is supposedly still to be made by City Council isn’t it?  Toronto Sun 

Watermain break closes Jarvis at Front for unknown time

watermain inset

The unwelcome appearance of water bubbling up in front of his business Saturday was snapped by a citizen. It led very quickly to the closure of lower Jarvis Street between Front and The Esplanade as City crews work to replace the main. It’s cold and difficult work that makes it impossible to say just when it will be finished. Photo Twitter

OLD SHOES: Crazy big-money world of “antique sneakers”

Leaside Wildcats beat Southwest 2-1 in penalty-free game

Leaside Jr. Wildcats defeated the Southwest Wildcats Saturday night at Leaside Gardens. The score was 2-1 and it has to be said that for a team that sits at the bottom of the Provincial Women’s Hockey League Southwest did a creditable job in keeping the score so low,. Much of the credit must go to  goaltender Emily O’Bright who kicked out 35 shots of 37 fired at her by Leaside. For her part, Katie Mowbray stopped 17 of 18. Another remarkable statistic was the zero minutes Leaside spent in the penalty box. In fact there were no penalties in this game. The Leaside scoring was done by Megan Pardy to win it at 17.45 of the third. Not a minute too soon. Leaside’s first goal was scored by Caitlin Heale at 10.44 of the first period. The Southwest goal was scored by Ellen Donaldson at 10:30 into the second period. The win moves Leaside into sixth spot in the 20-team PWHL.

Power outage? What power outage, ask many near Bayview

The power outage widely reported by media Saturday was no doubt real enough for those caught up in it but for many people who were said to be inside the boundaries of this failure, it just didn’t happen. Individual residents of Merton St., Davisville Ave. and Millwood Rd near Bayview say there was no outage. A man carrying a child through the lighted parking lot of McDowell’s Valumart said: “What outage?” Several businesses on well-lit Bayview Ave where activity was brisk at 5.15 p.m. said there had been no power interruption. The boundaries stated by the CBC from Toronto Hydro were Yonge, St Clair, Eglinton and Bayview. It  seems the actual power failure may have been more to the west. St.Clair Ave in Moore Park kept power as did Bennington Heights.

MT. PLEASANT

Bulldog reader Helen Godfrey was in the Second Cup at 642 Mt. Pleasant when the power went out. She notes that back outside, the Sobey’s was dark too but the Pharma Plus had power. It seemed to her that outages were confined to the west side but they were spotty at that. She observes that the Mt. Pleasant and Regent (known to some as the Belsize) had power which she said was a good thing considering the Saturday matinees. Thanks Helen and all others who contributed to this report. If you have a blackout or non-blackout story, please write to The South Bayview Bulldog at news@bayview-news.com

Hydro returned to South Bayview area after about an hour

Power has been restored to the areas east of Yonge Street over to Bayview Ave according to Hydro One. The utility asks that if you are still without power call (416) 542-8000 and press 1 to speak to one of their dispatchers. Earlier: Power was out Saturday afternoon in the St. Clair Ave. and Yonge Street area. Toronto Hydro said some 9,200 customers were in the dark. The area affected was bordered by Yonge Street to the west, Bayview Avenue to east, St Clair Avenue to the south and Eglinton Avenue in the north. Power remained on however in what appeared to be most of Moore Park. Hydro said on Twitter that crews were working to determine what may have caused the outage. Twitter 

Leslieville meeting sees little opposition to shelter

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The Salvation Army and other services held a homeless exhibit and one-on-one discussion at the Toronto Fire and EMS Training Academy on Knox Ave in Leslieville on Saturday. It offered residents a chance to learn about plans to open a 124-bed homeless shelter at 29 Leslie St. The location is a now vacant factory south of Queen Street. Several dozen people attended the meeting. The was no opportunity to speak publicly but concern took the form of one mother’s fear that her children might not be safe going to school, and anoher person who said seniors might be afraid to walk out at night. The shelter is needed says the Army because of the closure of its Hope Shelter on College Street at McCaul Street, which it was forced to close last April after the property’s owner sold the building. Andrew Burditt of the Salvation Army was present Saturday and said the Army has been working with the City to find a new location to replace the Hope Shelter.This vacant site in a commercial neighborhood seems to be a good fit.