The Toronto Raptors defeated the Brooklyn Nets 150-122 Sunday night to advance to the NBA Eastern Conference semifinals against the Boston Celtics.
The Toronto Raptors defeated the Brooklyn Nets 150-122 Sunday night to advance to the NBA Eastern Conference semifinals against the Boston Celtics.
Toronto-area MP Erin O’Toole is the new leader of the Conservative Party of Canada. He is 47 and has been the member for Durham since 2012. O’Toole was Minister of Veteran Affairs in the former Harper government. Last night he defeated party founding father (2003) and former Minister of Defence Peter MacKay in the 2020 Conservative leadership election to succeed Andrew Scheer as CPC leader. It appears the ballotting was contentious, requiring three rounds of voting.
This is live CBC coverage Sunday night as the Conservative Party leadership goes on, globalNews is saying the delay was caused by voting machines that ripped ballots when envelope-opening went wrong.
Vitoria Mario is saying thank you to Taylor Swift after the singer made a £23,373 donation to the girl’s education fund right out of the blue. That’s nearly $40,400 Canadian. Then, that improbable championship winner we know as Nick Nurse. He’s the NBA Coach of the Year. Below that, a money-for-all-experiment in Germany. Can those who get it hang onto it? Finally, meet the lucky Lillingtons. Raymond and Gaye have won huge 649 jackpots twice in seven years. Yee-haw.
The Conservative Party of Canada has counted more than 175,000 votes from members as the leadership campaign comes to an end Sunday night. We will know the new leader before bedtime. At #CPCLeadership last-minute tweets are flying. One says East York lawyer Leslyn Lewis is trending. Retiring leader Andrew Scheer snipes at media for suggesting CPC is not diverse. Lots of fun. CBC
We've waited through the entire @CPC_HQ election cycle for all the virtue-signaling, self-righteous, and fake feminist MSM, who speak hypocritically of "glass houses", to recognize @LeslynLewis. A day before the votes are counted, she is finally trending.#cpcldr #CPCLeadership pic.twitter.com/BI7l4iDghb
— Mike Geraghty (@MikeGeraghty67) August 22, 2020
Putting the question right back on the media where it rightfully belongs 👏🏽#cdnpoli #CPCLeadership @CPC_HQ https://t.co/Pb6lZVSVRW
— Meaghan Martin (@MeaghanMartin_) August 23, 2020
Check those numbers. A ticket holder in Ontario has won the $6 million jackpot in Saturday night’s Lotto 649 draw. The draw’s $1 million guaranteed prize went to a lottery player in British Columbia. The jackpot for the next draw on Aug. 26 will be approximately $5 million.
A redesigned proposal for a five-story condominium building at 922 Millwood Rd (at Randolph Rd) contains ground-floor retail space. This is the site of the former Stanley Cleaners. The designers, are Makow Associates Architects for Hamr Millwood Investments. The revised plan calls for a building rising 22 metres, marking a slight increase from the 21.03 height proposed in 2019. The building is planned to contain 30 condominium units, reduced from the 35 proposed in 2019. These are now planned in a mix of 16 one-bedrooms, 6 two-bedrooms, and 8 three-bedroom units. A Facebook post raises this question:
The delay to approving this project was the community’s concern regarding underground parking for 30 condo units being a corner lot which backs onto Krawchuk Lane beside Randolph Road where will the entrance/exit be for these vehicles? Being a safety issue for it’s potential new residents this question is yet to be answered
Police are looking for a man of about 30 who is reported to have stripped naked on the sidewalk near Yonge and Merton Sts. Thursday at about 10 a.m. They’re calling it indecent exposure. The incident occurred in front of an office building. He is described as white, 6’3″, medium build, shaved head, wearing dark clothing, carrying a knapsack and with a bandana across his face. He is believed to frequent the area.
The first part of a long-awaited collaboration between Cumbrae’s butchers and the Terroni restaurant group is set to open Saturday at 8 a.m. at the former Postal Station K development at Yonge St. and Mongomery Ave. The site is now known as Montgomery Square. A first-floor grocery store including a pastry and bake area will welcome shoppers first thing in the morning. It’s recorded at the Stock TC Instagram account that a second-floor restaurant and bar will open in the fall. It will feature a third-floor patio. The origin of the chosen name for this venture — Stock TC — remains murky but it appears to be a play on the names Terroni, Cumbrae and Terroni’s restaurant division, Sud Forno. We’ll let you know.
Ottawa has announced what many will think are lavish new emergency benefits for those who may be impacted by C-19. Meanwhile, Parliament is prorogued until September 23. When it returns, Opposition parties will have to get on board to ensure passage of the new benefits. Below that, Premier Ford has announced that Queen’s Park will fund the hiring of 200 more OPP officers. That comes as a bit of a surprise too. Lastly, good old Vladimir Putin is once again saying “don’t look at me” as one of his foremost political opponents falls ill, apparently from poison. Sound familiar?
The Toronto and District School Board has approved a plan that it hopes will keep class sizes small enough to avoid COVID-19 outbreaks among younger children in high-risk neighborhoods when school resumes in September. Under the plan, kindergarten class sizes will be capped at 15 students in schools located in so-called COVID-19 “hotspots” in the City while it will be 26 students in what the board calls non-impacted schools. For Grades 1 to 3, class sizes will be capped at 20 across the city while for Grades 4 to 8, it will be capped at 20 students in hotspot areas and 27 everywhere else. City News
Ward Eight Councilor Mike Colle has told the CBC that residents of the Roehampton neighborhood near Mt. Pleasant Rd. and Eglinton Ave. are being “vilified” unfairly because of their stand on so-called homeless shelters in the area. In the same story, Mary-Anne Bedard, Toronto’s general manager of shelter, says she is confident feelings will “settle down” over time. CBC