Highway 400 was cluttered with damaged vehicles and subject to whiteout conditions Thursday after a series of collisions. OPP Sergeant Kerry Schmidt said blowing snow created dangerous driving conditions for motorists along a stretch of the highway. Northbound Highway 400 was shut down between Highway 88 and Innisfil Beach Road. By 3 p.m. however, all vehicles in the collisions had been removed from the highway and conditions had improved Schmidt told CP24. Vehicles were being towed to the Georgian Downs race track on the 5th sideroad of Innisfil Township.
Van Dette heartened by possible Charest bid for leadership
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East York Conservative Justin Van Dette has issued a release applauding the prospect however unconfirmed that former Quebec Premier Jean Charest, 61, might run for head of the CPC to replace Andrew Scheer. Charest has a long history of public acceptance and at an early age was the leader of the federal Progressive Conservative Party. “Like so many other Canadians across the country, I too was very encouraged to hear several media reports note that former Quebec Premier Jean Charest was seriously considering a run for the leadership of the Conservative Party of Canada.
“No Conservative Party in Quebec”
“To hear some Conservatives describe him as a Liberal is shocking considering that history notes that in the Province of Quebec there is no Conservative Party. For many decades, Quebecers chose between a federalist and a separatist,” said Mr. Van Dette. Montreal Gazette
Unpleasant meeting inspires much response on Leaside FB
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An unpleasant confrontation at the Tim Hortons in Leaside Village on Laird Drive is the subject of a long thread at Leaside Community Thursday. (Warning: language, anger)
Scam call blocks may offer only chancy hope of full relief
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Bell and Rogers are required by government directive to begin call-blocking methods Thursday against the many wild numbers used to contact potential victims of money frauds. But opinion seems to be mixed on just how effective it will be. Those who still possess residential landlines have found that the once essential devices are now a source of non-stop harassment from criminals and peddlers. CBC
Impeachment along party lines unlikely to remove Trump
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Scam stopper, stickup 2020, Amazon vs Fedex and TFS year
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Wednesday’s Video Wheel is gobsmacked by the lead-off City News vid about a guy who intercepts those scam calls from India and then breaks in to alert the victim. We love it, but why can’t the Mounties do this? Then, the LifeLab ransomware payoff. Welcome to the third decade of the Internet age where the criminals are completely in control of your world. Lastly, an interesting take by Citytv scribe Mark McAllister about a busy 2019 for the TFS.
On road to disaster at Red Maple and Bantry in York Region
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York Region Police have released a dashcam video on Twitter showing an SUV veering into a utility pole and house at Red Maple Road and Bantry Ave. in Richmond Hill on December 8. They say a woman in her 70s apparently had her foot on the gas, not the brake. She was shaken up but otherwise okay. Note the van at left that just drives off as if nothing had happened. See it here.
Proposal for 276 Merton St. reduced in height, redesigned
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A proposed development at 276 Merton St. by the Rockport Group has been resubmitted to the City showing fewer floors and a more sculpted design. Designed by Wallman Architects, the building has been reduced from 16 to 13 storeys in height. As reported by Urban Toronto, the original slab tower form stretching the depth of the 25 metre wide site is now revised into a series of shifted step backs in a somewhat pyramidal shape. Zig-zag motifs are used in different elements of the design including the precast framing, balcony placement and specific cladding pieces.
Woman seen taking package off porch in classic Amazon fail
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— SBayview (@SBayview) December 17, 2019
This scene was captured by Nest Cam somewhere in Toronto it appears.
Rowe Farms post mortem: rent, business model, Cumbrae’s
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A Facebook discussion Tuesday deals with the five-year Bayview Ave. stay of Rowe Farms. The store closed in September 2019 with signs that stated the company was doing renovations. Few seasoned retailers believed that. Now a thread on Leaside Community has been started with a post that asks “what happened?” The very first reply says “Cumbre’s happened to them.” That’s surely true, but some may think it was more like the final blow. The evidence suggests Rowe Farms struggled from almost the very beginning with both high rent and a business model which, while morally elevated, wasn’t sufficiently compelling in a field so competitive.
Cumbrae’s is nothing if not an unabashed butcher
The big Cumbrae’s opened in 2017, three years after Rowe Farms. But as early as 2015 the ethical seafood market Hooked quickly shut down a “partnership” with Rowe Farms at the Bayview location. After the fact, they called it a pop up. The closure caused speculation that Rowe Farms marketing strategy of sustainability and respectable, friendly sourcing, while laudable, was not as compelling as that of other meat and grocery stores. Cumbrae’s is nothing if not an unabashed butcher. Loblaws staff say off-the-record that organic products, for example, are shunned by many people who simply don’t see value in them.
Leafs visit to HSC brightens Christmas prelude for sick kids
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Parcel plight, brides will kiss, Big Boris and Beethoven 250
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The eclectic Bulldog Video Wheel begins the week with the challenge of keeping track of all those Amazon boxes being plopped down on doorsteps this season. Then, Hallmark has had trouble making up its mind about two same-sex brides kissing in a commercial. Below that, the size of Boris Johnson’s UK election victory is just beginning to hit home. Finally, December 16 begins Beethoven 250. The great German composer and defender of personal freedom was born this day in 1770. Long after Beethoven’s death, the British delighted in poking Hitler in the eye each evening by introducing their daily news to occupied Europe with the rousing Fifth Symphony.
