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The South Etobicoke News

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Remembering popular Elwy Yost and his Saturday Night at the Movies

January 24, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Fans loved Elwy Yost (with John Candy right) and his Saturday Night at the Movies.

 

 

 

 

 

By DAVE KOSONIC

“Good evening ladies and gentlemen and welcome once again to Saturday Night at the Movies. My name is Elwy Yost.”

That is the welcoming way Canadian television personality Yost began his weekly movie program for 25 years from 1974 to 1999 just after multi-colored stars glistened on viewers TV screens.

Yost had a long connection with Etobicoke and few people knew that he was  a full-time English teacher at Burnhamthorpe Collegiate Institute.

“Well it is that time ladies and gentlemen to turn your lights down very low and put your feet up.” Yost added while introducing a show about alcoholism as presented in the cinema.

“It is harrowing but it is magnificently made and I am very proud of this film,” were words he used while reviewing the Academy Award winning movie The Lost Weekend produced by Billy Wilder and starring Ray Milland with screenplay by Charles Brack.

Yost always appeared very relaxed while he sat back in a comfy chair and turned on his retro film projector and then said with a smile: “If you are ready I am now so let’s roll our projector.”

Yost was well-known for hosting CBC television’s weekday Passport to Adventure series from 1965 to 1967, TVOntario’s weekday Magic Shadows from 1974 to the mid-1980s and Saturday Night at the Movies.

He also authored four books about movies.

The broadcaster  was born in Weston in 1925 and passed away in West Vancouver 2011 of natural causes at the age of 86.  He was married to Lila Ragnild for 60 years and has two sons, Christopher and Graham, who is a producer and screenwriter in Los Angeles. Yost was also a film maker and he produced two movies titled Ida Makes a Movie and Moulin Rouge.

Yost joined the Canadian Infantry in 1944 and was honorably discharged in 1945. Other brief employment included construction work at the CNE, working in circulation department at the Toronto Star and a job in the aircraft industry in Malton. Yost earned a degree in sociology from the University of Toronto in 1948. He worked on and off as a panelist on television shows until the late 1960s when he became the permanent host of the CBC radio show It’s Debatable and his career then blossomed.

After Yost’s death in 2011 an editorial in the Toronto Star entertainment section reflected back upon his life. ‘The bald man with the moustache, wire-rim glasses and odd name was an unlikely candidate for stardom…at the peak 250,000 viewers appreciated his appetite for gorging on movies and taking trips to Hollywood to talk with the people who made them.’

Adrian Morrow in the Globe and Mail added, “His father would give him a dime every week to see a film and then have him recount the plot.’

On a personal note I was a student at Burnhamthorpe Collegiate when Yost taught there. I was not in his classes but he always voiced a friendly hello when he passed any student in the hallways.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Movies, Music, Social, Television

Residents miss San Remo Bakery now closed for two weeks due to virus

January 22, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

BOZZO overseas his team to bring customers the best Italian sandwiches, cakes and coffee. Bozzo Family photos.

BREAD piping hot just off the baker’s rack and ready for customers.

The owners of the long-established San Remo Bakery in Mimico are temporarily shutting the popular sandwich and coffee spot until February 6 due to COVID-19.

The Bozzo family, who own San Remo, on Royal York Rd., in a post on social media wrote “some of our employees in the baking staff have tested positive for COVID-19.”

“Our father also tested positive,” staff of the family-owned bakery said in a candid note. “We need time to ensure it does not spread further.”

They are in the process of deep-cleaning the bakery and “focus on the health of our family and employees.”

The Bozzos’ said they are working with public health officials and “following their suggestions and protocols.”

“This is not an easy time for us,” the post warns. “It is tough operating during a pandemic and we are heartbroken right now.”

They thank area residents for all the support and well-wishes that they, and their dad, have received.

“Our customers are incredible and we think it is important to be transparent with our community,” they said.

Residents said they miss the fresh, local bakery but it is better to be safe.

“The transparency is brave and refreshing,” Christina Fox responded on social media. “This is one more reason why San Remo Bakery is on the top of the list and many loyal customers will return when you are ready.”

Long-time customer Gina Guidareilli is alerting staff to stay healthy.

“Take care of yourselves and your dad, it is the most important thing at the moment,” Guidareilli wrote. “Thank you for caring about our community.”

“Your health and the health of your family and employees is of utmost importance,” said Paul Wilson.

“Best of luck for a speedy recovery to you, your family, and your staff,” noted LeAnne Armano. “As well, thank you for such a full disclosure to the community that loves you.”

The widely-acclaimed and award winning bakery was founded in 1969 by Natale Bozzo, who arrived here from Italy when he was 15-years-old. The 52-year-old company has been passed on to his three sons.

Questions or comments are directed to julia@sanremobakery.com

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Honouring Lincoln Alexander a champion of equality and first Black member of Parliament

January 22, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

PAYING TRIBUTE to Lt.-Gov. Lincoln Alexander on namesake day celebrated on January 21 yearly. Courtesy photo.

TORONTO Police Service horse named ‘Lincoln.’ TPS photo.

Former Lieutenant Governor of Ontario Lincoln Alexander is being remembered for his lengthy tenure of public service and human rights.

January 21 was Lincoln Alexander Day, which is a national day of recognition marked yearly to honour the first Black member of Parliament in the House of Commons, federal cabinet minister as Minister of Labour, military veteran and champion of equality.

He was born in Toronto in 1922. He died in 2012 at the age of 90.

Alexander’s mom, Mae Rose, was from Jamaica and dad, Lincoln Sr., was a porter on the Canadian Pacific Railway, who arrived here from St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

Linc, as he was affectionately called, faced a fair bit of discrimination growing up in early Toronto. He first distinguished himself in service to Canada in 1942 as a corporal and wireless operator in the Royal Canadian Air Force during the Second World War.

While stationed in Vancouver, he was refused service at a bar because of his race. He reported the incident to a superior officer who refused to take action. Alexander quit the Air Force in 1945 and was granted an honourable discharge. Of that incident, he said: “[A]t that time they didn’t know how to deal with race relations of this sort of thing; they just turned a blind eye to it.”

He married first wife Yvonne Harrison in 1948. A year later he applied for a sales job at Stelco, a steel plant in Hamilton. Although he had references, the support of McMaster University and the mayor of Hamilton, Stelco was unwilling to have a Black man on its sales force.

By 1955, Alexander partnered with Dave Duncan, forming a law firm that he claimed was the first inter-racial law partnership in Canada.

Alexander bought his own home in Hamilton in 1958 and lived there for nearly four decades.

He ran in the 1965 federal election as the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada candidate in Hamilton West but was defeated. He ran again in the 1968 federal election and won the seat, becoming Canada’s first black Member of Parliament.

Alexander was an observer to the United Nations in 1976 and 1978 and served briefly as Minister of Labour in the Progressive Conservative Party‘s minority government headed by Joe Clark from 1979 to 1980.

He held the seat until resigning in 1980, when he was asked to serve as chair of the province’s Workers Compensation Board.

In 1985 he was appointed Lieutenant Governor of Ontario and became the first Black to serve in a vice-regal position in Canada.

As viceroy he visited 672 communities, held 675 receptions, received roughly 75,000 guests, attended 4,000 engagements, and visited 230 schools.

Alexander was appointed to the Order of Ontario in 1992 and became a Companion of the Order of Canada. From 1991 to 2007, he served as Chancellor of the University of Guelph.

He was accorded a state funeral and the Ontario government proclaimed January 21 “Lincoln Alexander Day.” He is commemorated on a Black History Month stamp and has had schools and a highway in his beloved Hamilton named after him, including a Toronto Police Service horse named, Lincoln.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Toronto Fire Chief Pegg awarded the 2020 Fire Chief of the Year Award

January 21, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

 

CHIEF Matthew Pegg was named 2020 Fire Chief of the Year. Courtesy photo.

Toronto Fire Chief Matthew Pegg has a new award to put on his filled shelf.

Pegg, who is also the General Manager of Emergency Management, has been awarded the prestigious 2020 Fire Chief of the Year Award presented by the Ontario Fire Chiefs.

“I am blessed,” Pegg wrote on Twitter. “Wow. Not often do I feel speechless, but I do today. Thank you so much for this. I accept this honour on behalf of each and every member of the Canadian fire service who is giving their all each day. Thanks to my amazing team.”

Pegg is also leading Toronto’s preparedness and response to Covid-19 as the Incident Commander.

“Thank you for everything you’ve done to keep Toronto and Ontario both Fire and COVID-19 safe,’ the Ontario Fire Chiefs said. “The trophy is in the mail.”

They said that Fire Chiefs are special people in that “we walk into chaos at emergency situations, and what do we do? We create order.”

Chief Pegg has been serving as the fourth and current Chief of Toronto Fire Services (TFS) since May 2016. He is the highest-ranking TFS member.

He was appointed General Manager of the City of Toronto’s Office of Emergency Management in 2018.

In March 2020, Pegg was appointed to lead the City of Toronto’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

As the Incident Commander for the COVID-19 pandemic, he led the development and operation of the most complex incident management system in Toronto’s history, including the longest-ever continuous deployment of the Emergency Operations Centre.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Man arrested for mistreating a racoon living in his basement

January 21, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

HALTON police arrest man for mistreating a wild racoon he had living in his basement. Above the animal being rescued. Police photo.

This is a completely true and totally bizarre occurrence.

A Burlington man face a number of criminal charges for mistreating a racoon that he had living in the basement of his home.

Halton Regional Police had to obtain a search warrant on January 20 to enter the Burlington home. They were assisted by the Burlington Fire Department, Animal Control and Emergency Services officers.

Police said they obtained information that a man was “mistreating” a wild racoon, which lived in his basement.

“Further information was obtained that there were multiple electrical and fire code violations inside the home,” according to a release by Halton police.

Officers said they located a racoon in a locked cage inside the residence.

“Unfortunate due to the health condition of the racoon, it was seized and euthanized by Animal Control,” police said.

A 55-year-old man, whose name was not released, is charged with causing damage or injury to an animal, breach release order, mischief over $5,000 and keep live game wildlife in captivity, which is contrary to the Fishing and Wildlife Conservation Act.

Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to contact Sgt. Scott Heyerman of the 3 District Street Crime Unit at 905-825-4777 ext. 2342.

Tips can also be submitted anonymously to Crime Stoppers. “See something? Hear something? Know something? Contact Crime Stoppers” at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) or through the web at www.haltoncrimestoppers.ca.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Small businesses urging Ford to ban big box stores from selling non-essential items

January 20, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

SMALL businesses are closing daily in our community due largely to COVID-19 and big box stores. File photo.

The local Lakeshore Village BIA has joined others in calling on the province to ban big box stores from selling non-essential items.

BIA officials have been warning that small businesses in Lakeshore Village and other areas as Long Branch, Mimico and Alderwood are suffering as there are long lineups for big box stores at Sherway Gardens Mall.

A letter was sent to Premier Doug Ford on January 18 by Councillor Brad Bradford and John Kiru, of the Toronto Association of Business Improvement Areas (TABIA), warning that the current public health measures are having a huge impact on small, locally-owned businesses.

They said the letter was on behalf of Toronto’s 84 Business Improvement Areas, which represents more than 70,000 businesses and property owners across the city.

“We are asking you to take urgent action by going one step further in the orders and mandating big box stores and other retailers selling essential goods to close off sections of their stores where non-essential items are displayed,” the businesses told the Premier.

It said that under the latest emergency order big box stores can sell non-essential items in-store and after-hours.

“This puts small businesses at a disadvantage and is a public health concern as it may encourage non-essential travel,” Ford was told.

The province is being asked to demand some changes from the big box stores.

“We are asking you to take urgent action by going one step further in the orders and mandating big box stores and other retailers selling essential goods to close off sections of their stores where non-essential items are displayed,” the letter urged.

It noted that the big box stores need to be kept open to provide essentials goods for folks, especially given the geography and access to online shopping across Ontario.

“But there is also an imperative to be fair with main street businesses who have made incredible sacrifices throughout the pandemic,’ the business owners said.

They are calling for the new public health measures to further curb non-essential travel and to be equitable to all business operators and continue delivering on the support promised to small business owners throughout the health crisis.

Ford for his part last week told residents to forget about the big box stores and support their local businesses.

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Popular journalist Gordon Sinclair travelled the world but never left Etobicoke

January 20, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

SINCLAIR (right) with fellow Front Page Challenge members Betty Kennedy, Pierre Berton (left) and Fred Davis

By DAVE KOSONIC

Legendary journalist and broadcaster Gordon Sinclair loved Etobicoke and is still considered a legend by many area residents.

Sinclair, a member of the Etobicoke Hall of Fame, managed to cram an enormous number of accomplishments into his busy life before passing away at age 83 in May 1984.

Sinclair grew up in the Cabbagetown area but spent much of his life living in his family home tucked away just off Burnhamthorpe Road w., near the Islington Golf Course.

Growing up, he dropped out of high school during his first year and was terminated by his first two employers, the Bank of Nova Scotia and Eaton’s. He served part time with the 48th Highlanders of Canada

Things began happening for him in 1922 when he was hired as a cub reporter by the Toronto Star and began working his way up the newsroom ladder.

Before long, he rose to become one of the most prominent Toronto Star reporters and for a decade in the 1930s travelled around the world four times on assignment, which included interviews with Queen Elizabeth, Adolph Hitler and Teddy Roosevelt among others.

The Star wrote that Sinclair had travelled 340,000 miles in 73 countries for the newspaper. During that time he wrote eight books on his exploits.

Sinclair married co-worker Gladys Prewett in 1926 and they were parents of three sons and a daughter. His eldest, Gord (1928–2002), was also a successful and respected journalist in Montreal, as well as a majority radio station owner.

Sinclair joined Toronto radio station CFRB in 1943 and became part-owner of that station the next year. He continued with CFRB until his death.

He appeared on the popular weekly CBC’s Front Page Challenge for 27 years flanked by other television personalities including; Betty Kennedy, Pierre Berton and Fred Davis.

Sinclair was flamboyant and developed his own “distinctive” style of dress which included plaid blazers and loud bowties. He especially loved wearing a kilt to celebrate his Scottish heritage.

He gained considerable attention globally when he praised the U.S. from his Canadian perspective in 1973 and at later dates.

“This Canadian thinks it is time to stick up for the Americans…I am one Canadian sick and tired of them being kicked around,” Sinclair stated.

The  broadcaster loved cars and drove around in a Rolls Royce for many years.

He was inducted into the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame and made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1979.

Sinclair died from a heart attack and rests in Etobicoke’s Park Lawn Cemetery. His spirit lives on in the community.

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social

Arrest made by Peel police after man threatens Pearson Airport on social media

January 20, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

MAN arrested by police for making online threats to Pearson Airport. File photos.

This guy has been tracked down by police for making online threats to Pearson airport in light of all the events taking place these days.

A 49-year-old Thornhill man was charged on January 15 with three counts of uttering threats, Peel police say.

Members of the Peel Regional Police Airport Division say threats were made through social media against the Greater Toronto Airport Authority (GTAA), which is Canada’s busiest airport.

The sprawling facility is Canada’s largest airport, facilitating travel for over 47 million passengers and handling over 312,000 tons of air cargo a year before COVID-19 struck.

“The GTAA has received multiple threats through social media from November 2020 to January 2021,” police said in a release. “After a thorough investigation, investigators have arrested a man.”

The name of the man has not been released. He is slated to appear at the Ontario Court of Justice in Brampton at a later date.

It is not known where the threats were made from or what it included.

Investigators take all types of threats seriously. Anyone who may have information concerning this investigation can contact the Airport Division Criminal Investigation Bureau at (905) 453-2121 Ext 3133. Information may also be left anonymously by calling Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or by visiting www.peelcrimestoppers.ca

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Martin Luther King Jr. Day and words live on 53-years after the death of the civil rights leader

January 18, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

CIVIL rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. addressing the crowds assembled in Washington, D.C.

KING Jr. was slain by an assassin at the Lorraine Motel at the age of 39.

Today marks the 53rd anniversary of the death of slain U.S. civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and it is traditionally an uplifting time with many positive events to look forward to in the community.

The threat of COVID-19 and escalating military action in the U.S. have overshadowed the celebrations of King Jr.’s life in many areas of the U.S., where the day is a national holiday.

King’s birthday is January 15, but his namesake day is celebrated on January 18 in many countries, including Canada, where there would be speeches and lists of his accomplishments renacted and retold, including his winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964.

Back then it was a different time in the U.S., similar to that of the people who briefly overtook the Capitol Building on January 6.

Those folks can learn from a 1963 event when 250,000 demonstrators marched to the Lincoln Memorial, next to the mob overrun Capitol, where King gave his famous “I have a dream” speech. The following year, President Lyndon Johnson got a law passed prohibiting all racial discrimination.

During the racially turbulent times, from 1957 and 1968, King Jr. traveled over six million miles and spoke over 2,500 times, appearing wherever there was injustice, protest and police action. During that time he wrote five books and numerous articles.

The husband and father was arrested more than 20 times, assaulted at least four times, spat on and called many racist names.

He was also awarded five honorary degrees; named Man of the Year by Time magazine in 1963; and became not only the symbolic leader of American blacks but also a world figure.

The risk against his life was great. And, on the evening of April 4, 1968, while standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, he was assassinated while in town to lead a protest march in support of striking garbage workers. He was 39.

James Earl Ray was charged after a two-year manhunt with killing the civil rights leader. Ray at one time hid out in a Toronto rooming house, on Ossington Ave., while on the lam from U.S. police.

He was arrested in June 1968 at London Heathrow Airport trying to leave England for Brussels on a false Canadian passport.

Ray was brought back to the U.S., where he escaped from prison, was recaptured and died at the age of 70 in April 1998 in a Nashville hospital.

Generations later, the name of Martin Luther King Jr. still lives on across the world.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Violinist Raha Javanfar fronts for Toronto blues band Bad Luck Woman

January 18, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

CLASSICALLY trained violinist Raha Javanfar is the front woman for blues band Bad Luck Woman. Courtesy photo.

Classically-trained violinist Raha Javanfar like most area musicians has been hit hard by a loss of musical gigs due to a spread of COVID-19.

Javanfar, a bassist and front woman for the Maple Blues Award nominee blues band, Bad Luck Woman and Her Misfortunes, is now teaching students online how to play the violin, piano and music theory.

The busy pre-pandemic four-piece band was silenced as the virus spread across the world and public health officials ordered people to stay away from crowds.

“The pandemic so far has been a roller coaster for me. I spent the first several weeks feeling quite depressed and uninspired,” she recalls. “I felt a deep resistance to this thing which was quickly being dubbed ‘the new normal.”

She, with partner Fraser Melvin, are busy these days writing tunes and performing virtually.

The Iranian-born entertainer held virtual classes last month with students at a Lakeshore Arts event, which was a big success.

“Campers will build their own homemade percussion instrument, learn various rhythms, and experiment with different sounds to create their own grooves and melodies,” says a poster promoting the event.

Javanfar is thankful she is working in her field and attributes her career to a ‘rich fabric of numerous projects in various fields.’

She regularly plays fiddle in the Western swing band, The Double Cuts, and has performed with notable artists as Stars, Protest the Hero, Peter Katz, Tom Wilson and Daniel Romano.

The violinist is also known around town for other musical projects including; Voodoo Raha & Speedy Wax and Zuze, as well as frequent performance in the Concert Series at Soulpepper Theatre Company’s Riverboat, 27 Club, 88 Keys and Promised Land.

She is one of six co-creators of Now You See Her, a play by Quote Unquote Collective, produced by Nightwood Theatre, in which she performed the role of Daria. It was nominated for Best New Play at the 2019 Dora Mavor Moore Awards.

She has toured with Toronto Baroque orchestra, Tafelmusik, for over a decade as projections designer of concerts such as House of Dreams, Circle of Creation, and Tale of Two Cities, which has performed at Disney Hall in Los Angeles, the National Arts Centre in Ottawa and venues in Mexico, Australia, Japan and Malaysia.

She and Mellville are proud of their own brand of hot sauce, that is made to her recipe. Bottles of their home-made Bad Luck Woman sauce and her music are available for sale at www.rahajavanfar.com

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social

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Digital Versions

March 2026

Local Group Bid to Halt Mimico Condo Towers. A Mimico group is fighting a plan to build two 43-storey towers on a busy stretch of Royal York Road.

February 2026

Fears that the Ontario Food Terminal in Jeopardy. The Ontario Food Terminal (OFT) is in jeopardy of being forced to shut if a Queensway plaza is zoned for mixed uses by City Council.

January 2026

City has 10,256 Staff Paid $100Ks Plus Yearly. The cash-strapped City of Toronto has deep pockets when paying staff with more than 10,000 workers earning in excess of $100,000 yearly.

December 2025

More Police Officers to Patrol South Etobicoke. Four additional Neighbourhood Community Officers (NCOs) will be hitting the streets of South Etobicoke to help residents and crack down on crime.

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