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The South Etobicoke News

Serving Humber * Mimico * Lakeshore Village * Long Branch * Alderwood

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Mimico’s open double deck streetcars once ruled the lines

May 17, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Toronto residents travelling to South Etobicoke more than 120-years ago had to bundle up for the trek west on open-air double decker streetcars operated by the Toronto and Mimico Electric Railway and Light Company.

The ‘open truck double deck car’ was introduced in 1891 to ferry holidaying passengers to Humber River. Two single truck open cars were brought into service in 1896 to serve the popular Sunnyside area, according to City of Toronto records.

The cars carried about 96 passengers each and were busy shuttling visitors to holiday resorts at Sunnyside and Humber River. The electrified line operated on a single track with only open cars, two which were double-deck.

This run proved popular with visitors to the beaches along Humber Bay, but with the line not extended to Mimico and New Toronto, revenues dried up in the fall and winter months as passengers did not want to travel in open streetcars without heat.

The service was bailed out by William MacKenzie’s Toronto Railway Company in 1893. He extended service to Mimico Creek in July and then to Kipling Ave. by October. Ridership increased as the line pushed further west into Long Branch, with service to Etobicoke Creek in 1895.

The line, which ran on the north side of Lake Shore Blvd, provided regular summer service to Long Branch Park, which had evolved into a popular amusement park.

The service was soon turning a profit as the villages along the route profited from the increased benefits of development and commerce.

Well-dressed city residents could now board the open cars and for 18-cents enjoy the more than two-hour ride from Yonge St. to Long Branch. Service was later extended to Port Credit and a plan to serve Hamilton failed.

The streetcars became so popular that Sunday service was introduced by 1897 as people travelled here for holiday excursions and day trips. However, a lack of travel during the wintertime killed the business.

In 1904, the railway was acquired by the Toronto and York Radial Railway (T&YRR) and became the T&YRR Mimico Division. In 1922, the City of Toronto acquired the T&YRR and contracted Ontario Hydro to manage the four T&YRR lines including the Mimico line.

In 1927, the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) took over the operation of the Mimico line, which was double-tracked from Humber to Long Branch and made up a section of the Lake Shore streetcar line.

 

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

Businesses pitching in to feed frontline workers

May 17, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Long Branch cake guru Monja Chiara was searching for ways to help in these trying times when she came across an initiative called Sustain the Line, which helps feed frontline workers battling COVID-19.

The owner of Cake Star, at 3431 Lake Shore Blvd. W., is one of a number of Etobicoke businesses which have volunteered for the program that fed more than 1,200 meals to hard-working medical and emergency workers in their first two weeks.

“This is a great program,” Chiara says. “We have fed many frontline workers and they truly appreciate the meals.”

A fixture on a number of TV baking shows, she says many restaurants want to help feed healthcare workers, but don’t have the support they need to do so.

The entire purpose, according to their website, is to connect local food businesses able and willing to deliver meals to frontline healthcare workers to supporters willing to fund these meals.

Anyone who wants to donate funds or deliver meals can get in touch using a Sustain the Line website. The donor pays the food provider a lump sum to make the meals, and then the provider gets in touch with local healthcare workers.

The concept started with Toronto’s Mission Watch Company and Old Road BBQ in Nova Scotia committing to feed frontline workers for a month in Nova Scotia. NextLevel (New Jersey), Conduit Law (Toronto) and Aron Brand (Montreal) joined them within days to expand the idea to North America.

The non-profit organization aims to connect more small food businesses to those who want to fund meals for frontline healthcare workers.

To donate or volunteer visit www.sustaintheline.com/

 

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

Indian community donate meals to police to fight COVID

May 16, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Chief Mark Saunders and other police brass receive 950 meals from members of the Canada India Foundation to help the hungry.

The chief says he was pleased to attend the event and receive the meals which will help the less fortunate in the community.

Ontario Solicitor General Sylvia Jones was also present and said “we appreciate the community support.”

The donation also helps to celebrate National Police Week that runs from May 10 -16.

Police say they’ve been coming across more hungry people due to COVID-19, which has led to major job losses and plant closures.

The Canada India Foundation (CIF) is a not-for-profit, non-governmental organization established to foster bilateral relations between Canada and India, create opportunities for qualified Indo-Canadian and create a better understanding of the new India among Canadians.

The foundation is involved in a number of charitable issues including providing hot meals to support frontline workers during this tough times.

Members of the Tibetan Canadian Cultural Centre have also been donating food items to frontline COVID workers.

 

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

Gilbey’s distilled world-class booze in New Toronto

May 15, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Raising a glass for Gilbey’s.

New Toronto was at one time Canada’s top producer of some of the world’s best-selling gins, whiskies and other fine brands of liquor and spirits.

The aroma of fomenting whiskey, exotic rums and liquors filled the air over the area some 86-years ago originating from what was the sprawling plant of W.A. Gilbey (Canada) Ltd., which for almost 50-years stood where the Ford Performance Centre is today.

The three-acre site where the arena stands at Kipling Ave. and New Toronto St., back in 1933 was famous for producing the wildly popular Gilbey’s London Dry Gin and Gilbey’s Spey Royal Scotch.

The alcoholic spirits from the British-based Gilbey’s was first sold in Canada in 1905 and the plant was opened in 1933. At the time it employed about 50 area residents, records show.

Within three years an addition was built to the building to cater to rising booze sales. The plant at the time was very busy with trucks arriving with raw products and then taking the finished spirits to market.

The company would produce and market more than 50 brands for the Canadian market, including best-seller Smirnoff Vodka, which outsold their other products; including Harvey’s fine line of imported Spanish Sherry.

Gilbey’s Black Velvet was the most famous of five Canadian whiskies made at the New Toronto plant. The others produced here included: Very Best, Golden Velvet, Old Gold, Special Old and Governor General Rums.

“Gilbey products vary from Italian Vermouth to excellent French table wines and champagnes.” according to the firm’s promotional materials. “The Gilbey line of domestic liqueur gins are unequalled in sales anywhere.”

The company started in England in 1857 and is still managed by descendants of the original partners.

The initials “W & A” in the Gilbey Company name stand for the brothers Walter and Alfred Gilbey, who upon returning from the Crimean War in 1856, decided to open a retail wine business.

Gilbey’s later became part of International Distillers & Vintners, a beer, wine and spirits distribution company. In 1998 IDV merged with United Distillers to create United Distillers & Vintners, the spirits division of Diageo.

The plant was shut in the early 1980s and sold to the Board of Education and later became the Ford Performance Centre.

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

Toronto Rent Bank program helps those facing eviction

May 15, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

If you are being evicted from your home due to rent arrears from COVID-19 or other reasons. Then help is now available.

The Toronto Rent Bank provides limited, interest free, repayable loans to seniors, individuals and low income families facing imminent eviction.

The bank provides a maximum loan of two months’ rent. They also provide rental deposit loans to those who require first or last month rent to move to more affordable housing.

“Our Rent Bank program has been designed to help end the cycle of increasing poverty,” says Gladys Wong, executive director of Neighbourhood Information Post (NIP) a community group that started the Rent Bank last year. “We see clients in desperate situations and the idea is to prevent homelessness and keep families in housing.”

Wong says Toronto residents ‘need to know that help is available if they are experiencing difficulties in making rent payments.’

Rent Bank officials say applicants should demonstrate that they have exhausted all other means of financial assistance available to them before applying for a loan. All loans are to be paid back in monthly installments to a Rent Bank fund to help others.

The goal of the bank is to help residents preserve stable housing, which is free from rental arrears or risk of eviction and to improve their skills and confidence in managing their own finances.

The Rent Bank program is funded by the City of Toronto and is a collaboration between NIP and partner agencies citywide.

Also available is an Emergency Rental Deposit Loan, which provides an interest-free repayable loan for first and last months’ rent deposit to households where changes in economic situation necessitate a move to more affordable or stable housing.

Residents are eligible for the Rent Bank program if they live in Toronto, have legal status in Canada, a steady source of income, receive income through social assistance and can provide the necessary documentation.

Those who require help are asked to call the Rent Bank Central Office at 416-924-2543 to leave their name and phone number or send them an email at torontorentbank@nipost.org or visit their website at www.nipost.org

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

Tibetan community take hot food to frontline workers

May 14, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Members of the Tibetan community have banded together to make masks, headwear and deliver hundreds of meals to frontline workers fighting COVID-19.

Volunteers of the Tibetan Canadian Cultural Centre (TCCC), on Jutland Rd., have been busy making meals, face masks and headwear for community members and frontline workers.

TCCC President Tsering Wangyal says the centre has delivered almost 400 hot meals, consisting of dumplings and fruit, to frontline workers at St. Joe’s Health Centre and a long list of seniors and long-term centres and other places of need.

“The workers love our hot meals,” Wangyal says. “They know we appreciate all their hard work and that we are there to serve them a nice meal.”

The volunteers a couple nights ago served 85 meals to workers at a long-term facility on Dunn Ave., and will be feeding others at an East Mall home where seniors have died due to the pandemic.

The meals are pre-packed by volunteers and taken to a care facility, where workers in gloves and masks them inside for the workers.

He says female volunteers have been making masks and hats by the dozens for members of the community who require them.

“Every couple days we take them cloth and pick up bundles of masks,” Wangyal explains. “The masks are gone very quick.”

The goal of the TCCC is to help Tibetan immigrants adjust to the culture, heritage and lifestyle in Canada and to promote and foster Tibetan culture and art in the community. There are more than 8,000 Tibetan-Canadians living in Toronto.

Donations to help with the meals can be made at www.tcccgc.org  Cloth is also needed so the women can make more masks for the community and emergency workers.

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

Alderwood author Babcock launches first novel

May 14, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

By TOM GODFREY

Author Heather Babcock grew up in Alderwood and got hooked on words at the local library where her mom once left her as a child during ‘story time’ as she ran an errand.

“When my mom came back to pick me up, the librarian told her that I had been ‘absolutely mesmerized’ by the story-telling,” Heather explains. “She can come back anytime,’ she told my mom.”

She spent all her spare time at the Alderwood Library studying novels by Lucy Maud Montgomery, Betty Smith, Toni Morrison and Hubert Selby Jr.

Now her debut novel Filthy Sugar is being launched by Inanna Publications in two “virtual Speakeasy” sessions in Toronto on June 4 and 18.

“I am very excited and proud of my debut novel Filthy Sugar,” says the author. ”It took a lot of hard work and I totally loved the writing process.”

Set in the mid-1930s, Filthy Sugar tells the story of Wanda Whittle, a 19-year-old dreamer who models fur coats in a department store, but lives in a rooming house with her family in the “slums” behind the city’s marketplace.

“Bored with the daily grind, Wanda finds inspiration in the celluloid fantasies of the Busby Berkeley musicals, Greta Garbo and Jean Harlow movies,” she says, adding the work was inspired by women of the Pre-Code era of Hollywood film.

“After a chance encounter with the mysterious Mr. Manchester, proprietor of the Apple Bottom burlesque theatre, Wanda is thrust into a world of glitter and grit, where the guys talk tough and the dames are tough.”

“On her journey from rags to riches and back again,” the story unfolds. “Wanda experiences an awakening and achieves personal independence as she discovers that a girl doesn’t need a lot of sugar to be sensational!”

The book has been getting good reviews and is described as “a time travelled, tantalizing and tumultuous tale,” by Valentino Assenza, the co-host-producer of HOWL and CIUT 89.5 FM.

Lisa de Nikolits, author of No Fury Like That and Rotten Peaches, says: “Wanda will take you to another time and place, but a place where love, lust, greed sex and power are just as heartbreaking and complex as they are today.”

Heather loves writing and has had her works published in Descant Magazine, Front & Centre Magazine, The Toronto Quarterly and in the collection GULCH: An assemblage of Poetry and Prose.

Copies of Filthy Sugar are available at Inanna Publications at www.inanna.ca and other book sellers.

The virtual speakeasy will take place on June 4 at 7:30 p.m. via Zoom. Those interested can RSVP at https://mailchi.mp/248144d4ab21/speakeasy. The book will officially launch via live-streaming on June 18 as part of Inanna Publication’s partnership with Toronto Lit Up.

 

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

Police issue Public Safety Alert due to COVID scams

May 13, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

COVID-19 has become one of the top scams being used by thieves today to steal money from seniors and others.

Toronto Police have issued a Public Safety Alert to warn area residents of a rise in recent weeks involving online scams associated to the pandemic.

Detectives say conmen are sending text messages seeking banking information for non-existent ‘fines for leaving the house too many times in a day.’

Officers are warning of various telephone or door-to-door scams including offers to shop for, and deliver, groceries for senior and others as these often include a request for credit card information.

The crooks are also demanding by text banking information for the alleged processing of government payments for Canada Emergency Response Benefits or Canada Revenue Agency.

There are demands for immediate payment with a threat of cancelled services like Internet streaming sites.

Police say beware of e-mails with fraudulent links on topics “Delivery details” for those most likely to be using delivery services or “Special offers” for COVID-19-related products or services.

Fraud cops are warning of sites offering “sale of COVID-19-related products and services, such as testing kits, cleaning products or remedies.”

People should also beware of sites with ‘Notices of Information,’ or from ‘health officials,’ requesting information.

Police are reminding residents to take precautions to protect themselves while online.

They warn online users not to click on random links, never provide personal or banking information, do not install unknown applications, use two-factor authentication for online payments, strong passwords, back up your work regularly and work offline when possible and use software to protect yourself from malware or viruses.

Anyone who believes they may have been a victim of any fraud can contact police at 416-808-2222, Crime Stoppers anonymously at 416-222-TIPS (8477) or online at www.222tips.com.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Country, Hip Hop, Issues, Politics, Social

Volunteers deliver food free to COVID-bound seniors

May 13, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Some Etobicoke volunteers have stepped up to the plate to offer a free grocery delivery service for high-risk seniors who are unable to leave their homes due to COVID-19.

FreeGroceryDeliveries.com is a service for seniors and disabled, who are immunocompromised, or differently abled, and aren’t able to leave their homes to get groceries due to the pandemic.

The volunteers pick up additional grocery order requests while shopping online for their own groceries, according to their website.

“They then proceed to deliver the groceries without charging a delivery fee,” the group says. “The goal is to encourage our volunteers to help their neighbours who may be considered high-risk during the COVID-19 crisis.”

The non-profit group say they’re giving back to the community since the provincial and municipal governments have asked seniors to quarantine themselves at this time.

They say the orders are made and paid for online and picked up from the stores by the volunteers, who then delivers the food to the homes of the seniors, with the appropriate bills. The volunteers are then repaid by cash, e-transfers or cheque.

The volunteers wear mask, gloves and take other health precautions.

The service has been getting good reviews with area resident Gerri McLangley writing; “They were so generous to my mother-in-law. So grateful.”

“That (service) is well-needed,” says Heather Currie. ‘Hope all goes well.”

Orders can be placed by email to freegrocerydeliveries@gmail.com or by calling 647 946 6670. Please leave your name and other information and a volunteer will reply back with order details and timeslot availability.

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

Its Nursing Week and this is Year of the Nurse

May 12, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

They are our heroes.
Many people are celebrating May 12, which is International Nurse’s Day and also Florence Nightingale’s 200th birthday.
A lawn sign has popped up in the community to alert us that Nursing Week runs from May 11 to May 17 and the World Health Organization (WHO) has declared 2020 as the Year of the Nurse and Midwife.
“Once a nurse, always a nurse,” the sign says. “Today we celebrate all the nurses, the students, new grads, RPN’s, the RN’s, the practicing and non-practicing, the disable, retired and deceased.”
To the many patients “thank you for your patience and for letting us care for you and your families.”
“You all hold a special place in my heart,” the former nurse writes.
Dorota Gan urged people to live for today.
“One advice that keeps repeating in my 26-years of nursing is to live life now and not wait for the golden years,” Gan explains. “Treasure every day as if it was your last.”
National Nursing Week wraps up on May 17, with this year’s theme; Nurses: A Voice to Lead – Nursing the World to Health.

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