Power and wireless service has been erratic in central Leaside and in neighbourhoods to the west Wednesday. A thread on Facebook recounts different experiences. Lights flickered and wireless was out for a time in Moore Park and there were scattered reports of flickering west of Bayview.
Residents of Broadway-Roehampton say they fear homeless
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The two buildings on Broadway Avenue are expected to close on Sept. 7 as the condo project for the site moves forward, which means the 149 residents will need to be moved again. The city has a two year lease with the Roahampton Hotel, 808 Mt. Pleasant Road, which concerns many residents who say they’re worried about what it will mean for the area.
Community members have planned an impromptu meeting to discuss the shelters this evening (Wednesday) at 6:30pm at June Rowlands Park. Follow this link for Facebook Event page.
City of Toronto information about the shelters can be found at this link. There is a virtual Community Engagement Session scheduled for August 19, 2020 between 6-8 pm. The link to the online session and the call-in number will be available on this page one hour before the session is set to begin. The session will be recorded and available after. Residents are encouraged to send in questions in advance of the session by contacting Swerhun Inc. – the designated Community Engagement Facilitator. Meeting link will be available on August 19.
53 Division Update on Homelessness Services in the community
Politicians and residents in midtown Toronto are voicing concern after the lease for a temporary shelter to house vulnerable people amid the COVID-19 pandemic was extended for two years. https://t.co/oSCUzLJrCI
— CTV Toronto (@CTVToronto) August 4, 2020
Two school board trustees said they have received daily reports of loitering, public urination and “leftover drug paraphernalia” on school property.
Politicians, residents concerned after lease for temporary shelter in Toronto is extended https://t.co/OmPUko5kSA
— Katherine DeClerq (@KateDeClerq) August 4, 2020
Huge explosion in Beirut where explosives said to be stored
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A Hiroshima-like secondary explosion during a fire has occurred in Beirut Tuesday in an industrial part of the City known for the storage of explosives. So the carnage may be the result of an accident. But the tense middle east being what it is, many other stories are circulating. More than 70 are dead.
Just Horrible thank prayers for people of #Beirut #Lebanon #لبنان #BeirutBlast
— IMRAN محمدعمران رشید (@imran4196) August 4, 2020
#Beirut #بيروت pic.twitter.com/DpeejrEfGv
— Ahmed Bigriz Andromeda 🇲🇦 (@MedAndromeda) August 4, 2020
Travellers, bikes survive as wheel flies off Spark on Hwy 400
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The OPP Highway Safety Division has tweeted these pictures of a damaged Toyota SUV which was struck by a flying wheel Monday as it headed north of Highway 400. The Chevy Spark was headed south when the wheel came off. Ugh. Three people in the Toyota went to the hospital but are recovering. Looks like the bicycles survived too.
Fewer than 100 new virus cases a day over long weekend
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For each of the past two days, Ontario’s public health units are reporting fewer than 100 cases of #COVID19, with 88 cases on Monday and 91 today. Combined over the same two days, there are a 242 more resolved with over 42,000 tests processed.
— Christine Elliott (@celliottability) August 4, 2020
22 new cases of COVID-19 in Toronto yesterday, and 91 in Ontario. #toronto #covid19 #coronavirus
— Toronto COVID-19 Tracker (@toronto_covid19) August 4, 2020
Ontario's COVID-19 report shows fewer than 100 cases for the last 2 days. Authorities say today's report shows 91 new cases, and that Monday's report (delayed due to civic holiday) shows 88 cases. The national total is now 117,210 cases with 8,986 deaths. https://t.co/22XcdlRiS2
— CBC News Alerts (@CBCAlerts) August 4, 2020
Salmonella traced to red onions causes recall of all varieties
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Hail to the Chief, Aussie curfew, Tatiana taken and Tik Tok
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Mark Saunders, 57, has been given a dignified farewell to the Toronto Police Service as he retired as chief. Then, with 671 new cases in a single day, the southern Australian State of Victoria (population merely six million) has declared an 8 p.m. curfew in a desperate battle against COVID-19. Below that, the rather astonishing case of a Peel Region father who lost custody of his daughter Tatiana but was given permission to take her to France. Go figure. You can guess what happened. Finally, time may be ticking away for Tik Tok, the China-based app that is now a pawn in US-Beijing rivalry.
Good booming Sunday morning with the power on and off
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Good booming Sunday. It was a lively hour or so just after 9 a.m. Reports indicate that there is a difficult outage still ongoing at noon near Don Mills and York Mills Rds. Moore Park and possibly related areas had a brief blackout about 9.20 a.m. Very brief. Paul Landolt started a lively thread at Leaside Facebook by declaring: “Now THAT was a cool-sounding slab of thunder!” Some comments noted frightened pups.
A flood warning was issued by the Toronto and Region Conservatory Agency on Sunday afternoon after significant rainfall fell in the area and more is in the forecast.https://t.co/xWmgFuEpFj
— CTV Toronto (@CTVToronto) August 2, 2020
https://twitter.com/jmollins/status/1289935384692928515
HAZARD:
Gardiner XWY W + Park lawn Rd
*11:27 am*
– high water levels
– Parklawn Rd on ramp to w/b Gardiner XWY
– please avoid low-lying roadways#GO1439141 pic.twitter.com/BdoFnEFHcU— Toronto Police Operations (@TPSOperations) August 2, 2020
This is quite the rain, Toronto. Not that we didn't know it was coming, but I got literally woken up by thunder. pic.twitter.com/9h2tkC99q2
— Daniel Rostas (@DanielRostas) August 2, 2020
Toronto sees only nine cases in Sunday COVID-19 report
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Toronto recorded just nine new cases of COVID-19 in the 24-hour period ending at midnight. Overall, the province saw 116 new cases, a figure in line with the generally declining (but still present) threat of the infection. Ottawa reported 16 new cases, Peel Region reported 14, York Region 20 and Windsor-Essex 13.
Today, Ontario is reporting 116 cases of #COVID19, a 0.3% increase as the province once again processed over 30,000 tests. Locally, 27 of 34 public health units are reporting five or fewer cases, with 16 of them reporting no new cases. There are 122 more resolved.
— Christine Elliott (@celliottability) August 2, 2020
Yes this!! We still need to keep #PhysicalDistancing for #Covid_19!!! It's crowded on #Toronto sidewalks but we can still move over for each other♥️ https://t.co/7tu1Uyz4CF
— Nan Gai, MD FRCPC (@nanesthetist) August 2, 2020
$70 million Lotto Max jackpot won by a ticket in Thornhill
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This will certainly be a long weekend to remember for at least one Lotto Max player in Thornhill, OntarioThe lone winning ticket for Friday night’s whopping $70 million jackpot was sold in the community just north of Toronto. The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation says this is the third time the maximum jackpot has been won in Ontario. The draw also offered 18 Maxmillions prizes of $1 million each, and six of them were won, including one which will be split by two ticket holders. The winning tickets for those prizes were sold in Ontario, Quebec, the Prairies and British Columbia. The jackpot for the next Lotto Max draw on Aug. 4 will be approximately $26 million — Canadian Press
Programming error creates 299 incorrect speed cam tickets
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The City says that it’s 50 Automated Speed Enforcement (ASE) cameras issued a total of 7,645 tickets between July 6 and 20, 2020, the first two weeks following the start of issuing tickets. Some 890 of these were sent to drivers unfortunate to fly down the four-lane speedway known as Renforth Drive in Etobicoke. The camera there is at Lafferty St. between Michael Power High School and Hollycrest Middle School.
Wrongly programmed cameras sent fines for driving under limit
The City release also says that the company programming the ASE cameras made a mistake with two of them. It set the limit at 30 km/hr in a 40 km/hr zone. Funny, but not so funny if you got one of these tickets. Some 299 tickets were withdrawn. The full news release may be seen here.
A giant bulb grows in curb at Glen Rd and Summerhill Ave
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The City is building a large bulb in the curb at the southwest corner of Glen Rd. and Summerhill Ave. It’s apparently part of the Vision Zero scheme to make things safer for pedestrians. But the new alignment takes the curb well out into what was the southbound lane. Vehicles will now apparently creep by each other at crawl speed when entering or leaving Glen. In March, The Bulldog published pictures of road narrowing at intersections to the south. It seems Glen Rd. is being re-made in North Rosedale possibly through ratepayer petition, but that is speculation. This work also raises questions about the much wider intersection a block away at Douglas Drive and Summerhill, a frequent short cut for drivers heading to Glen Road south.
