220 lose jobs as Toronto Star shuts Vaughan printing plant

The Toronto Star has confirmed that it will  close its 25-year-old printing plant in Vaughn and outsource the printing of the daily paper. The company continues to lose money as advertising shifts away from paper products to digital. In a release on Friday the parent firm Torstar said its plan is to sell its Toronto-area printing plant and outsource the work to Transcontinental, Canada’s largest commercial printing company. The closure will affect 220 full-time and 65 part-time people employed at the plant. The switch to Transcontinental is expected to begin in July and produce about $10 million of annual savings for Torstar, one of Canada’s biggest newspaper companies.

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LCBO: Customer finds Vodka purchase just water

See later report.

LRT station names are official but no Cowbell (boo hoo)

cowbell 2

A chance missed

Here are the names of the 25 stations to be built along the Eglinton Crosstown LRT as released by Metrolinx today after sometimes rancorous discussion about whether they really fit the nature of the locations. A notable issue was the need to prevent confusing duplication between LRT names and those already in use on the Bloor-Danforth line. The station at Yonge Street will take the name Eglinton because that’s what it is upstairs for the  Yonge (#1) subway line and a great opportunity has been missed not to install the name Cowbell downstairs where the LRT will pass. Cowbell would remember the farm people who trod the laneway nearby and evoke Toronto’s pre-transit mental state.

  • Mount Dennis
  • Keelesdale
  • Caledonia
  • Fairbank (Dufferin)
  • Oakwood
  • Cedarvale
  • Forest Hill (Bathurst)
  • Chaplin
  • Avenue
  • Eglinton
  • Mount Pleasant
  • Leaside (Bayview)
  • Laird
  • Sunnybrook Park (Leslie)
  • Science Centre
  • Aga Khan Park and Museum
  • Wynford
  • Sloane
  • O’Connor
  • Pharmacy
  • Hakimi Lebovic
  • Golden Mile (Warden)
  • Birchmount
  • Ionview
  • Kennedy

 

 

Singer Celine Dion’s husband dies of cancer at age of 73

Celine Dion’s husband René Angélil has died. Mr.Angélil had undergone cancer treatment several times over the past 20 years. He was 73. He is credited with transforming Céline Dion from a little-known teen francophone chanteuse to international pop superstar.

Flying Scotsman back under steam thrills British rail fans

The Flying Scotsman, Britain’s legendary 100 mph London-to-Eginburgh locomotive, is rebuilt and back under steam after a  ten-year, £4.2 million restoration. Telegraph newspaper

Marriott gets rid of desks so millenials can “hang out”

marriott

Marriott Hotels is removing the desks from rooms at all its hotels. It is doing this worldwide. The hotel chain says that as far it is concerned young people don’t use desks because they work on their phones. The decision, as reported by the CBC, has caused a firestorm of reaction from travellers who think “working on your phone” is like riding a pogo stick from Toronto to Vancouver. The move seems reminiscent of the early Internet days when offices were about to vanish.  Dan Wetzel a sports columnist for Yahoo has written that he was told by staff at a Marriott that the absence of desks was caused by the habits of millennials (born 1980 to 2000 more or less) “who don’t use desks’ but rather prefer to “hang out”. Don’t we all.

 

JUDGE: Cops must make narrow request for phone data

A judge of the Ontario Superior court has said that police must make the narrowest requests for information from cell phone operators in the pursuit of criminals. The decision is made in the wake of a recent request from Peel Region Police which asked for thousands of names and  numbers as they pursued a probe into a series of local jewellery store robberies. As expected, the judge, Justice John Sproat, found such “dumps” of information to be a violation of the Charter of Rights. Instead, he set out guidelines so that police may only obtain a narrower amount of information about cellphone users directly relevant to the investigation. Police will probably say that this is asking them to read the minds of criminals. What’s relevant? But Sgt. Dan Richardson of the Peel Police said that overall the decision “still allows police the opportunity to work toward solving crime.”

Charming profile of Leaside Flames’ Reid Humphrey

Reid Humphrey named Leaside Athlete of the Year

BLUE “S”: Send snow shovellers please or similar meaning

Sooner or later all news is local and so it is that 12.36, the curiously-named daily email bulletin of St. Joseph Communications (Toronto Life and others) has noted local interest in the “Blue S” signs posted on the doors of businesses on Eglinton between Laird Drive and Sutherland Drive. The photocopied sheets mean “send the snow shovelers please” or something like that and are posted by Metrolinx. It’s all good. Most importantly, local scribbling about this coded message has again given big-city journalists something to write about. “Leaside, a place where the locals notice the smallest change to anything.” 12.36 tweeted today. But unlike other lazy places we must write it so that others may write. Just essential, this trivial local news.

York U. incorrectly tells 500 applicants they are accepted

York University has had to tell 500 applicants that it made a mistake when it sent them mail saying they had been accepted to the University. They were supposed to be told merely that the school had recieved their applcations. The embarrassing mistake came about as the result of a “processing error” which is a new one as excuses go. But mistakes will happen. The university worked as fast as it could to inform the students when it learned of the error.

Powerball mania sees strange, slightly demented conduct

At least three winning tickets were sold in a record $1.6 billion US Powerball drawing, including one in Florida, one in Tennessee and one in suburban Los Angeles, a California lottery official said. The winning numbers were 4-8-19-27-34 and Powerball 10. One winning ticket was sold at a 7-Eleven in Chino Hills, California where people went quite mad.

CUPE outside workers issue “strong mandate” for strike

Toronto’s outside workers are talking tough about a strike if necessary to get the agreement they want from the city in forthcoming negotiations. A news release from CUPE 416 says large numbers of members over the last two days want to deliver a very strong mandate in favour of the action. This follows a similar decision by CUPE 79, the union representing the city’s inside workers. For the most part much of this may be considered posturing, but it is worth noting that if the mayor had followed through on his promise to privatize garbage workers a large portion of  Local 416 might now be getting ready to work for someone else.