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The South Etobicoke News

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

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NTB is shutting down with a party after 12-years of pool playin’ and music

August 27, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Some local music you may want to check out as the nice weather continues.

Mom and son team Dallas and Romaine, of NTB New Toronto Billiards, is packing it in after 12-years of mixing drinks and rackin’ the balls at 2878 Lake Shore Blvd. W.

“It’s been 12 wonderful years since we opened our doors,” they wrote on social media. “We have made great memories along the way but for us, it’s time to move on.”

They say their last days of business are August 28 and 29 and then it’s the end of an era.

They would like some of their customers to check them out and promise to have some loud bands, or tunes, to mark the event.

Also look out for the James Clark Institute to take part in the Virtual Music Series on August 28 at 7:30 p.m.

The Institute has graced the stage at Mimico Square in the past and has received good reviews.

The event is helping to raise some much-needed funds for the Jean Augustine Centre for Young Women’s Empowerment. They are trying to raise $1,000.

You can donate at https://jeanaugustinecentre.ca/donate/

You can take a listen to the James Clark Institute at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtXJztJNH_4

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

Cherished ‘welcome teams’ hockey banner gone missing

August 24, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Enough is enough.

Not only are the Toronto Maple Leafs out of the Stanley Cup playoffs, but now it seems a hockey-crazed fan may have skated off with a ‘welcome teams’ cherished banner.

A large customized white hockey banner being used to welcome NHL players to Toronto for the playoffs has gone missing and the owners want it back.

The two large plastic banners were installed earlier this month in New Toronto to welcome arriving NHL players, who are here as part of an anti-virus hockey playoffs bubble. There is another bubble in Edmonton.

The banners contain images of U.S. and Canadian flags and welcomed the NHL Eastern Conference contenders.

Organizers said the teams will practice at the Ford Centre of Excellence, at 400 Kipling Ave.

Chris Korwyn-Kuczynski, of the Lake Shore Village Business Improvement Area, says one of the banners, worth more than $200 each, was locked on a fence at a club at Lake Shore Blvd. W. and Sixth St., when it went missing.

“We knew this might happen and we locked it in,” he says. “The banner I think is in somebody’s bedroom now.”

The items were used by the BIA for promotions to drum up area businesses while some of the hockey playoffs were taking place here.

Anyone who has the hockey banner is asked to leave it in the patio of Maple Leaf House Grill and Lounge, at 2749 Lake Shore Blvd. W.

Filed Under: Baseball, Basketball, Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports, Technology

Artist selected for memorial sculpture to honour escaped slave Glover

August 14, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Award-winning artist and educator Quentin VerCetty has been selected to design a memorial sculpture of escaped U.S. slave Joshua Glover, who fell in love and was adopted by Etobicoke residents.

VerCetty, who is from Rexdale, was introduced by Mayor John Tory following a selection process at Montgomery’s Inn on August 13.

“His (Glover’s) story, both here and in the United States, helped to propel the abolitionist movement,” Tory said.

Glover escaped slavery in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1852, and eventually ended up in Racine, Wisconsin. In 1854, he was recaptured and taken to a Milwaukee jail. Thousands of residents protested at the jail, releasing Glover.

Through the Underground Railroad, he made his way to a boat that brought him to Ontario. He eventually settled in the Lambton Mills area of Etobicoke working for Thomas Montgomery, the owner of Montgomery’s Inn.

VerCetty said he is pleased to be selected for the meaningful and high-profile project.

“I was once told that a successful art piece is an art piece that contains a bit of the artist’s soul in it,” he said.

“People thought I made that story up and it was interesting because they always asked me, ‘Where’s the proof? Where are these stories in our history books?”

His bust shows the top half of Glover’s body with a cyborg-like right arm with shackles and on Glover’s left side he can be seen wearing a suit and holding books close to his chest.

VerCetty is a multidisciplinary visual storyteller and arts educator who is currently working on his Masters degree in Art Education at Concordia University with a focus on teaching Afrofuturism in underserved communities.

His art has been featured in numerous media outlets and publications in Japan, Haiti, Peru, Ghana, Australia, United Arab Emirate and France.

“Most of my work is done off research. Either my life or something I was exposed to and wanted to learn more about,” said Vercetty.  “It’s not about making money; it’s about making connections through this opportunity.”

Glover’s was selected for recognition by the Etobicoke Historical Society. His bust will be displayed in park named after him in the Dundas St. W., and Royal York Rd. area.

 

 

 

 

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

City to honour former slave Joshua Glover who fell in love with Etobicoke

August 11, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Escaped U.S. slave Joshua Glover loved Etobicoke and 166-years-later the City of Toronto is moving closer to honouring him.

Mayor John Tory will be hosting a press conference at Montgomery’s Inn on August 13 at 10:30 a.m. to announce the winner of a public art competition.

​The City of Toronto’s Arts and Culture Services, working with the Etobicoke Historical Society, had invited proposals for the creation of a public heritage memorial to be dedicated to Glover. The process was slowed down due to the COVID-19.

Glover escaped slavery in 1852, and made his way from St. Louis, Missouri into Canada assisted by the Underground Railroad. In 1854 he found work and shelter in the community of Etobicoke. His story was important to the abolitionist movement, and in general to Canada as well.

Fittingly, the project is to be located in the new Joshua Glover Park in Etobicoke in the Lambton Mills area where Glover settled after arriving in Canada.

Naming the small park after Glover was decided by participants of a 2015 survey organized by the City’s Parks, Forestry and Recreation Division in consultation with the local Councillor out of three possible names that were shortlisted.

For much of his life Glover lived in a small house in Lambton Mills, owned by Thomas Montgomery the proprietor of Montgomery’s Inn where Glover found employment.

He married twice, both times to Irish women, which marked two of the earliest inter-racial marriages in Etobicoke. Glover died in a seniors’ home in Newmarket at the age of 74, after having been embraced by the community of Etobicoke during his life here.

Glover’s story resonates with the citizens of Racine and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In Milwaukee at the intersection of Glover Ave. and Booth St., there is a large plaque that recounts the dramatic “Rescue of Joshua Glover.”

After escaping St. Louis, Glover was recaptured and incarcerated in a jail in Milwaukee. Led by local newspaper owner and anti-slavery activist Sherman Booth, some 5,000 people stormed the jail, set Glover free and facilitated his journey through safe houses along the Underground Railroad to freedom in Canada.

The public outcry surrounding the Glover case and the legal prosecution of Booth after the rescue advanced the cause of the abolition of slavery in the U.S.

Glover’s story has been kept alive in newspaper articles, books, a play, an opera and a one man show which had its debut at the Montgomery’s Inn.

 

Filed Under: Baseball, Basketball, Business, Campaigns, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports

Mimico activist says Bike Share rack placed on section of busy sidewalk

August 11, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

South Etobicoke activist Dan Irwin may have a point this time.

Irwin, of Judson St., says he is 100% supportive of the City of Toronto’s Bike Share program, but not when it is placed on a busy sidewalk.

He warns that a new installation at the northwest corner of Royal York Rd., and Judson St., in Mimico, has been placed over a section of a busy sidewalk.

“It is unbelievably located so that the rear wheels of racked bikes protrude onto the narrow sidewalk,” Irwin writes. “There are two seniors’ residences in the vicinity so a proliferation of motorized scooters’ walkers and wheelchairs that require the use of the sidewalk and the whole sidewalk.”

He says there are about 150 Metrolinx employees who use that section of sidewalk daily to travel from the Willowbrook Crew Centre to the Mimico GO Station and back. They often walk in small groups which are impeded by bicycles on that portion of sidewalk, Irwin writes.

“Who would locate the bike racks so that they intrude on a heavily used sidewalk?” Irwin asks “There is space closer to the curb which would more sensibly accommodate the Bike Share rack.”

He and other Judson St. residents have been fighting the City for the relocation of a ML Ready Mix Concrete batching plant on their street that they claim have been generating noise, dust and debris in the neighbourhood. The City has promised to resettle the plant in the Portlands area.

City officials couldn’t be reached for a comment.

 

 

Filed Under: Baseball, Basketball, Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports, Technology

Officials warn about dangers of leaving pets locked in vehicles in the heat

August 9, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

It is a yearly warning that seems to go unheeded.

Toronto Police, vets and firefighters are warning residents not to leave their pets, or even children, in locked vehicles during this heatwave even if the windows are slightly opened.

The warnings are being repeated after an area woman locked her dog in an SUV in a parking lot, which took firefighters some time to rescue.

The firefighters spent a fair bit of time rescuing the animal when they could be doing other duties, an official noted.

“Under no circumstance should you take your pet in your car if you think you might have to leave it in there, even if only for five minutes, warns veterinarian Dr. Cliff Redford.

Shopping trips are one of the most common scenarios where this occurs, he says.

The best thing an owner can do on a hot day is to leave their pet at home, “in a cool spot with lots of water,” the vets advise.

Police say if you must take your pet with you in the car, make sure someone is always with them.

“One of the best ways to cool them off is to soak their fur, so you can take a bottle of water and literally soak (them) — especially their ears and their feet,” an officer said.

Exercising in warm weather can cause a pet to overheat so be aware of and watch for signs of heatstroke, says the Toronto Humane Society, adding the symptoms for dogs can be excessive panting, fatigue, glazed eyes or a dazed expression and vomiting.

“An immediate response to if your animal is overheating would include removing them from the heat and placing them in a cooler area,” the THS suggested.

They say when it comes to dogs, pay extra attention to younger, older and heavier pets, dog breeds who have short noses and any pets with health issues.

Ontario is the first jurisdiction in Canada to have a full animal welfare enforcement system. The Provincial Animal Welfare Services (PAWS) Act came into effect in January 2020 and allows police to enter motor vehicles to help pets in distress.

If you see an animal in a hot car and are concerned the animal’s life is in immediate danger, dial 911. Members of the public should not attempt to enter a vehicle in these situations.

 

 

Filed Under: Alternative, Basketball, Business, Cameras, Community, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports, Technology

Man taken to hospital in morning crash on Horner Ave.

August 7, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

A man was rushed to hospital this morning after a collision between a car and a motorcycle near Horner and Alderbrae Aves., in South Etobicoke.

Toronto Police Traffic officers say a man suffered a serious injuries in the crash involving a car and motorbike on August 7, around 7 a.m.

“Drivers and pedestrians please move over and allow emergency vehicles to pass,” police said on Twitter afterwards.

Police say the man is expected to survive. The motorist was unhurt.

Some roads were closed in the area as police conducted their investigation.

 

Filed Under: Baseball, Basketball, Business, Cameras, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Football, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports, Technology

Some top patios and meeting spots in our community

August 5, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Darlene Simpson is doing a lot better these days.
The owner of Dakota’s Sports Bar & Grill, at 2814 Lake Shore Blvd. W., is applauding Stage 3 and the return of inside dining.
But on this hot day customers want the sun and she is welcoming them to her large roadside patio she shares with Halibut House Fish and Chips, which is part of the City’s CafeTO program, which is credited with helping
many area companies stay afloat.
More people were ducking under the tents for a cold
drink to escape from today’s heat.
“It has been a long time since we have had this many
people in here,” Simpson says. “The outdoor patio has
made a tremendous difference for us.”
At hers, and all the outdoor patios along Lake Shore Blvd. W., people are ordering meals and glad to be outside again with their friends.
At The Big Guy’s Little Coffee Shop, at 2861 Lake Shore Blvd. W., the patio has helped the ‘Big Guy’ stay in business as the outdoor area always has customers.

Ruben Pires, of Delicia Bakery and Pastry, at 2864 Lake
Shore Blvd. W., is bustling as his side patio is always filled
with coffee and snack lovers.“We had seen about 33 bakeries and loved this area right away,” recalls Pires. “We loved the people and the sense of community that exists in the area.”
In Long Branch residents love T.J. O’Shea’s Irish Snug, at
3481 Lake Shore Blvd. W., which boasts a large back patio
and a loyal following due to the good food and vibes.
Also rocking is Southside Johnny’s Bar & Grill, at 3653
Lake Shore Blvd. W., which features a great side patio that is
popular with locals.
Just west at the Pulcinella Ristorante and Wine Bar, at
3687 Lake Shore Blvd. W. Staff say their business has
picked up in Stage 3 and with the opening of inside dining and their street patio that seems to be always packed.

Many local residents love Sloppy Joe’s Bar & Grill, at 3527 Lake Shore Blvd. W., which has developed quite a loyal following who love the chicken wings and other pub eats. The
bar which has its popular outdoor patio in front of the building, has installed another that runs along its side on Thirty Third St.

Another area favourite is Timothy’s Pub, at 344 Brown’s Line, which is known for its live music and loyal Alderwood following, who love the food and atmosphere.

Filed Under: Baseball, Basketball, Business, Campaigns, Community, Country, Entertainment, Hip Hop, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social, Sports

Some 3,000 tickets laid by police in cycling blitz

July 21, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Area residents have been complaining about fast and reckless cycling on our pathways and roads.

Police have listened and more than 3,000 tickets have been issued to road users as part of a week of action and engagement.
Police say the tickets were issued from July 13 to July 19 as part of a 2020 Road Safety Campaign Geared to Cyclists.

Officers also took the time to educate cyclists on collision-causing behaviours, as well as taking enforcement action.
The campaign focused on “The Big 4” behaviours that are known to cause injuries to people using our roads and identified drivers who were speeding, driving aggressively, driving while distracted and driving while impaired.
Police say 1,950 tickets were issued for speeding; 927 for aggressive cycling, 92 for handheld and 38 for other offences.

Officers laid ten stunt driving-related infractions where the drivers received a suspension and their vehicles were impounded. A total of 19 impaired-related arrests were also made.
Sergeant Jason Kraft thanked all those who helped spread the traffic safety messages.
Police say the campaign was part of Toronto’s Vision Zero Road Safety Plan to curb collisions are preventable and unacceptable. Zero injuries and deaths on our roads is the number that we all should be working towards.
Anyone with information is asked to contact police at 416-808-1985.

 

 

Filed Under: Baseball, Basketball, Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports

Summer in the 6IX starts on Monday to help keep teens busy

July 18, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Here is some ideas for parents who are searching for interesting things to keep their children busy.

More than a dozen area facilities including Marie Curtis Park will be taking part in Summer in the 6IX, a new City program to keep youth busy.

The free program, which kicks off on July 20 and runs for the summer, is designed for Toronto teens and young adults from the age of 13 to 24, who will be offered opportunities to drop in, meet up with friends and take part in fun, themed activities.

”Summer in the 6IX will be available to all Toronto youth at a variety of parks,” according to promotional materials. “There will be three session times offered daily at multiple locations across the city, seven days a week.”

Some of the activities include dance, fitness, ecology, sports, leadership, employment, arts and the media.

The programs are taking place at Marie Curtis Park, Sir Adam Beck park, James S. Bell, Gus Ryder Pool, Ken Cox Community Centre, Rotary Peace Park outdoor pool, Prince of Wales park, Ourland park, Amos Waites Park, Mimico Memorial park and many others.

City officials say the program was developed with Toronto Public Health with a strong focus on health and safety and for participants to maintain physical distance from other individuals and groups.

The equipment will be sanitized between uses, or individual supplies will be provided. Staff will conduct a verbal health screening with each participant prior to the program start and collect caregiver or participant contact information, should tracing be required.

Children under the age of 12 are eligible for another program, called ParksPlayTO, which is also being run by the City, MLSE Foundation which brings sports programming.

ParksPlayTO will offer activities such as nature exploring, gardening, active games, arts and crafts, family fitness, story-telling and music circles for children and their caregivers. Any child age 12 and under accompanied by a caregiver age 18 or older can participate in ParksPlayTO.

Find out more at www.toronto.ca. Registration required.

Filed Under: Baseball, Basketball, Business, Campaigns, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Social, Sports

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Digital Versions

June 2025

Thousands sign petition to keep Cineplex open. More than 12,000 people have signed a petition calling on the City to halt a plan to demolish the beloved Cineplex Cinemas Queensway to build 10 huge condo towers.

May 2025

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April 2025

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March 2025

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