Polish parcel locker firm spreads its units across Toronto

polish guy

Rafal B rzoska

The InPost invasion comes courtesy of a Polish business tycoon named Rafał Brzoska. (inset with profile below). The evidence of his grand plan in Canada can be seen outside Loblaws on Moore Ave. So Loblaws knows all about this project. So does Shell Canada and no doubt many other big corporations. There’s a locker in the Shell station in Summerhill on Yonge St. All across Toronto, and apparently Canada, a huge program of locker placement is proceeding quickly and smoothly. InPost parcel lockers are now, by the firm’s release, the biggest international network of parcel lockers providing “a fast and convenient method of shipping and collecting parcels around the clock, seven days a week, with no queues and at a convenient location.”

CORPORATE OWNER IS INTEGER.PL

On its website, the Polish firm says InPost has already introduced its parcel lockers in the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Poland, Ireland, Iceland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Russia, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Colombia, Canada, Australia and Saudi Arabia. It says it plan was to have over 5,000 of parcel lockers across Europe, both Americas and the Middle East by the end of 2015. It is planning to deploy a further 4,000 such lockers. According to the release, development of the InPost parcel lockers network is being conducted by the easyPack company, in collaboration with the PineBridge Investments Fund. This is a subsidiary of Integer.pl Group headquartered in Krakow, Poland’s second largest city. On the Internet, the president and apparent genius behind InPost is Rafał Brzoska.

COMPETES WITH “MONOPOLIST” POSTAL SERVICE

The company describes Brzoska this way: “He created a nationwide network of door drops and addressed marketing materials distribution, turning Integer into the leader on the distribution market in Poland. InPost, which has been operating for just a few years, already competes successfully with the Polish postal services monopolist, Poczta Polska. has continued its dynamic expansion of the InPost parcel lockers network by increasing its reach in key European e-commerce markets including, amongst others, the UK and Italy. The company has also intensified its activity on other continents.”

Nepean beats Leaside 2-1 on power play goal in overtime

cat and cats

Play in the Nepean end at Leaside Arena

Nepean Wildcats moved up a ranking to second place in the Provincial Women’s Hockey League Saturday night  by beating Leaside Jr. Wildcats 2 to 1 in sudden death overtime. The winning goal was scored on a power play by Kristy Pidgeon with Mariah Hinds in the box for tripping. Leaside incurred an alarming 18 minutes of penalty time although Nepean was able to capitalize on only one of nine power play opportunities. The burden of penalties also left the Leaside offense rather dismantled for much of the game. Penalties aside, Leaside was competitive, playing perceptibly above its ranking at times. It proved again Saturday as it did against Durham West last month that it can score on powerhouse teams playing five on five. Amanda Hadwen faced 20 shots for Nepean and Kate Mowbray 21 in regular time. Danielle Toland saw the winning goal slip by in overtime. Boxscore

InPost parcel lockers begin to appear at Toronto locations

Parcel pickup

The news blog Yonge and Roxborough News has taken this picture of an InPost locker in the Shell station at Yonge and Rowanwood. It’s a service to receive and pick up online merchandise orders. One such locker has been installed beside the Loblaws at 301 Moore Ave. How it works 

Go figure a 100-car lineup at Tim Hortons drive-thru

 It must say something about the people of Truro, N.S. that they lined up 100 cars deep (at least) at a Tim Hortons drive-thru on Christmas morning to get coffee, hot chocolate and/or doughnuts. Someone observed “most of the town” was waiting in line. This was at the  place on Robie Street for those who know Truro.

More CES: Check inside your fridge while food shopping

Previous CES

WHEW! Expert confirms that Leslieville Hum is real

The intrepid Beach Mirror reporter Joanna Lavoie continues her work into the source of the Leslieville Hum. That’s the distant noise complained of by many residents of lower East York for periods of time ranging from a year to four years. Lavoie has enlisted Dr. Colin Novak of the University of Windsor’s Department of Mechanical, Automotive and Materials Engineering. It seems like a good choice as he and his graduate students were the detectives who found the infamous Zug Island Hum that bothered people in Windsor for years. Dr. Novak points logically enough to the Toronto Port Lands where he suspects there is a large underground transformer of some type. He has scientifically “measured” the hum and confirms that it is real. But where? Further telling of this story here.

Appetite for food, sex at Regina prison seems unsurprising

Appetite for food is endemic as is that other well-known hunger. So it is that a food protest by inmates at a Regina prison has seen not only a review of the edibles but the dismissal of a food worker for having sex with an inmate in a freezer. The food protest has ended with a tart remark from the Premier, Brad Wall, that the food looks okay to him and if one doesn’t like prison food the choice as to where one eats is only a matter of going straight. Mr. Wall did not comment on the freezer activity, although the food worker cannot come back to prison, probably not  even if  she is convicted of something, which she isn’t. Thank heavens it’s not illegal. There appears to be no protest about the quality of her overall work in the freezer.

ONTARIO PRISON WORKERS SETTLE

In other prison news, the union representing 6,000 Ontario correctional workers says it has reached a tentative agreement to settle all outstanding issues in contract talks with the province. The deal was reached around 5:30 a.m., Ontario Public Service Employees Union President Smokey Thomas told CP24 in a phone interview Saturday.

TTC notice in 13 languages on Bayview Ave. says nothing

stop 550A sign at a stop for the 28 Bayview bus at Bayview Ave and Merton St says nothing in 13 languages. It appears the sign, posted over the regular stop beside a construction site, is intended to give directions to a temporary stop. But it doesn’t. The English part says Board Bus Or Streetcar At and then nothing. What appears to be the same message in 12 other languages (or not) may be helpful for something but seem unlikely to give away the location of the temporary stop. The 28 Bayview runs from the Davisville station to the Brick Works on weekends but is promised by the TTC as a permanent weekday service sometime this year as soon as the necessary buses arrive from a manufacturer. Fingers crossed. (Further searching finds a stop by Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, but no thanks to the sign).

OPP cruiser stolen at accident site and later recovered

Erratic driving and then a wrong-way plunge down a ramp of Highway 410 caused a head-on collision Friday evening. When OPP officers leaped out of their cruisers to deal with the crash a man involved in the collision got into one of the cop cars and drove away.  The cruiser has been located using its GPS but the suspect is still on the loose. The Commissioner may have something to say. CBC

Business brisk as Sports Swap patrons asked to be patient

Many businesses would like the problem. The number of customers at Sports Swap at 1541 Bayview Ave. has caused the firm to post a notice on the front door asking people to be patient.  The “high volume” of business has a caused delays apparently and now Sports Swap asks patrons to give the names to the cashier so that “everyone is served in order”.

WILD: Cats meet Cats Saturday night at Leaside Arena

Leaside Wildcats will face off against the Nepean Wildcats Saturday night at Leaside Arena and the match could be wild. The home ice ladies will be meeting a formidable hockey franchise that holds third spot in the 20-team Provincial Women’s Hockey League (PWHL). Seventh-place Leaside will be hoping for a repeat performance of its December 19 win over another powerhouse, first-place Durham West Lightning. The puck drops at 7.40.

LADY SENS SUNDAY

On Sunday, January 10,  Leaside will host the Ottawa Lady Sens beginning at 3.40 p.m. The Lady Sens are ranked 15th in the PWHL.

Bayview closed by accident Friday south of Eglinton Ave.

Bayview Avenue was blocked to northbound traffic between Soudan Ave and  Eglinton Ave. Friday afternoon because of a collision. Bus traffic was diverted along Millwood and up Cleveland to Eglinton. The road reopened about 4 p.m.