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FOOD – Le Gourmand Bakery to open its fourth store in the community thanks to Milton

August 17, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

 

LeGOURMAND GM Claire Lane shows some of her delicious baked goods. Photos by Tom Godfrey.

It has been a long journey for Mimico’s Teo Nunes, whose Le Gourmand Bakery is opening its fourth store and restaurant in New Toronto.

Nunes was born in Angola and moved to Mimico with his family from Portugal in 1988.

He got into baking when his son Milton passed away of cancer, at the age of 47, after starting the first successful Le Gourmand Bakery in 2002 at 152 Spadina Ave.

Le GOURMAND BAKERY’s Claire with owner Teo Nunes in front of busy store.

Milton had studied in France and was a qualified and well-regarded pastry chef.

“It was a successful business and I expanded it to South Etobicoke,” Nunes admits. “We live in the area and all the staff is from the area.”

Nunes added a busy customer-friendly location at 2897 Lake Shore Blvd. W., and another brand new eat- in location to open soon at 2910 Lake Shore Blvd. W. just two doors away in New Toronto.

The new location is bright, new and has room for about 15 tables. It contains a huge kitchen.

In addition, a Humber location, directly across from Humber College, was added at 3180 Lake Shore  Blvd. W., in the Lake Shore Blvd. W., and Kipling Ave. area.

“We love the area and were well-received in the neighbourhood,” Nunes says. “Residents will love our new sit-down restaurant.”

Le GOURMAND’s famed baked goods.

 

He is motivated by helping his late son Milton expand his booming business and eventually he hopes to franchise the operation.

Every March 3 all the proceeds of the bakery go to help the Hospital for Sick Children, a cause that was dear to Milton’s heart.

The family also gifted 15 per cent of the company to a pastry chef who started out with Milton and helped grow the bakery after he lost his battle with cancer.

“We proudly serve hand-made artisanal baked goods and world famous cookies in the Lake Shore Village neighborhood of Toronto,” Nunes says. “We are a family bakery dedicated to producing the highest quality fresh pastries paired with friendly service and great coffee.”

For Nunes and his wife, the business is a labour of love to Milton.

He knows the names of most of his 60 employees and they operate as a family.

Claire Lane, general manager of a New Toronto location, said residents love their freshly baked home-made cookies, cakes, tarts, brownies and ice creams, which are delicious.

“All our items are baked here fresh daily,” Lane insists. “We use the best ingredients and people love it.”

She says the staff “couldn’t ask for a better boss” in Nunes.

Le Gourmand Bakery can be reached at 416-252-2127 or visit legourmandbakery.com

Filed Under: Uncategorized

City reviewing plan to build 33 storey tower bordering Mimico’s Amos Waites Park

August 17, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

 

VIEW of proposed 33 storey and 10 storey building planned for Mimico at Amos Waites Park.

The low-rise face of Mimico may soon be changing if developers have their way.

A massive proposal has been submitted to amend the City’s Official Plan and Zoning By-laws to permit the construction of a mixed use 10 storey building and a 33 storey tower on a four-block area at 2405 Lake Shore Blvd. W.

The building will feature 449 ‘first class’ condo units, including stores and access to Lake Ontario.

The plan is under review by City Council and no date has been set for when it will be voted on.

ANOTHER VIEW of the bottom floors of the 33 storey tower planned for where a popular coffee shop now operates. Courtesy photos.

The half-hectare site is located on the southeast side of Lake Shore Blvd. W., mid-block between Superior and Primrose Avenues, 750-metres east of the Mimico GO Station and 600-metres southwest of the Humber Bay Shores area, according to information filed.

The development will include an east west roadway that builders hope will “kickstart investment in the Mimico Secondary Plan Area of Etobicoke.”

“If approved, it would set a precedent for future development on the lake side of Lake Shore Boulevard in Mimico from a land use, urban design and city-building perspective,” according to the proposal.

AN EAST-WEST roadway is planned for behind the tower. Mimico will look different and prices will increase.

The building will be built on four parcels of land, which spans 53-metres of frontage on Lake Shore, in addition to the Mimico Water Front Trail and Amos Waites Park, which also front Lake Ontario.

“The site at present is occupied by several low-rise buildings including a medical office, rental apartments, storefronts, and a semi-detached dwelling,” according to the proposal.

It suggests a portion of land from Amos Waites Park used for the new public road running from Lake Shore adjacent to the building and then curving northeast to parallel the lake.

“The road would provide additional public road frontage to Amos Waites Park, allowing the park to be publicly accessible on three sides,” according to plans. “The proponents suggest a land swap near the lake end of their property to append to Amos Waites Park in order to replace lands that would need to be removed from the park to realize their proposal for the new road.”

PROPOSED site of a 33 storey tower being planned for 2405 Lake Shore Blvd. W., now under review by City Council.

The plan, if approved, would provide a total floor area of about 32,792 square metres, including some 345.5 square metres of retail space on the ground floor.

Three levels of below-grade parking, accessed by ramps off the driveway and future public road, would provide 259 parking spaces.

A formal notice of any public meeting held by the City or developers will go to community members.

The proposal seeks to redevelop and revitalize this “underutilized and relatively derelict site” and to “re-urbanize and reanimate the site in a manner that is in keeping with both the emerging built form context and the envisioned urban structure for the area.”

The proposal aims to leverage the site’s location along and access to Lake Ontario as well as its proximity to existing transit, planned higher order transit at the planned Park Lawn TTC/GO Transit Hub, and potential future transit priority treatments along Lake Shore Boulevard West.

Winzen is a strong team of real estate professionals with over three decades of experience have built over 1000 homes under the cooperative selling system of Canada.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Hunt for two killers on the lam for office building murders

August 17, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

FUGITIVES Darriel Thompson (left) and Philip Grant are sought by police in connection with the murders of two men. Police photos.

Police have stepped up their hunt for two Peel Region men who are still on the run for the murders of two men at an office building on Thirtieth Street, in Long Branch.

The men were killed in a last January double shooting that took place at 150 Thirtieth Street at 8:45 p.m.

Both men were rushed to hospital, where one of them was pronounced dead. The second man succumbed to his injuries the following day.

Police have identified the victims as Minyali Wur, 24, and Chudier Reat, 20, both of Mississauga.

Officers arrived to find two men suffering from gunshot wounds and an injured woman nearby.

CALL POLICE if you see these men.

Back in January police identified Darriel Thompson, 21, of Mississauga, as a suspect in the case and said he was being sought for two counts of second-degree murder and one count of attempted murder.

They said they were also looking for Camarr Brown, 21, of Brampton, for accessory after the fact.

Brown has since been charged and is no longer sought.

Police also want to locate Philip Grant, 32, of Peel Region, who is wanted for second-degree murder in connection with the case and they are asking for the public’s help in locating him.

Both Thompson and Grant remain at large and are on the Toronto Police Most Wanted List online.

Police are asking anyone with information to reach out to investigators.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Racism made Pilot Officer Oliver Brooks a better man and Toronto’s first Black high school principal

August 10, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

A PROUD MR. BROOKS with some of his students and staff at school in which he was now a principal. Courtesy of The Toronto Star photographer Boris Spremo.

 

The late Wilson Oliver Brooks was a former Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) veteran who went on to become the first Black male Toronto school teacher and principal after he left the service.

Brooks was born in Windsor in 1924 to a railway porter dad, Oliver, and mom, Edith May Wilson, a fourth generation and proud Black Canadian.

He grew up in the busy Dundas and Spadina Aves. area, where racism was free and thick at the time.

 

BROOKS FOUGHT PREJUDICE to become Toronto’s first high school Black principal.

The young Books was refused a job at a market because a manager believed customers would be offended by his presence (meaning skin colour); and at the age of 16 was denied entry into a Count Basie concert because of the dark colour of his skin, according to reports.

Brooks enlisted in the RCAF in April 1943. His education and aptitude tests indicated that he would make a good member of an aircrew. As a result he trained to be an air bomber, to guide the aircraft in dropping bombs on a target.

He had good scores and was made a Pilot Officer (or today a 2nd Lieutenant) and sent to England for updated training in June 1944. Brooks became part of a crew that would fly missions together. During this time he was promoted to Flying Officer.

The flyer had joined the war too late and never saw any combat service overseas. He was released from the army and went on to a distinguished career after the Second World War.

BROOKS LOVED HIS students and knew how to talk to them.

Using the money from his Veterans’ allowance, he attended the University of Toronto and graduated with a Bachelor Arts degree. Here he met his wife, Phyllis with whom he had three daughters and a son. Being interested in equality he wanted to teach.

In September 1952 Wilson became the first male Black school teacher in Toronto Board of Education system. He taught Grade 5. He would go on to teach at Williamson Road Public School in 1958. In 1961 he became vice principal in at Gledhill Avenue School. He would later serve on the same position at Queen Alexandra Middle School.

Brooks was always active in the community. He was a member of the Toronto Negro Business and Professional Men’s Association, and its president in the mid-1960s. He and Dr. Dan Hill founded the Ontario Black History Society (OBHS).

The OBHS petitioned the City of Toronto to declare February as Black History Month, which it did. He helped found the Toronto Choiristers and was on the selection committee of the Harry Gairey Scholarship, which helps young Black-Canadians attend university.

He even helped a 12 year old girl return to the ice when she was banned from playing on a boys hockey team.
Brooks In 197 was appointed Principal of Shaw Public School. As such he was the first Black principal in the Toronto School Board. In the mid-1970s he worked in the personnel department of the Toronto Board of Education accepting resumes of prospective elementary and special education teachers.

He returned to what he loved, working with students in 1980 when he was appointed principal of Glen Ames Public School, a post he held until he retired in June 1986.

More than 600 people attended his funeral in April 1994 at St. Olave’s Anglican Church. The Toronto Choiristers performed, as did Dan Hill, son of Ontario’s Human Rights Commissioner.

The former veteran and teacher left behind a legacy of working for equality, fairness and a great impression on all of his students.

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

First Black slave millionaire recognized by City for good deeds

August 10, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Toronto’s first Black millionaire slave James Mink is finally being recognized by City Council more than 150 years after his death.

Mink, a businessman, was born in 1792 and died in 1868. He was said to be one of the wealthiest people in Toronto during the 1830s until his death.

He and carpenter John Tinsley, who arrived here from the U.S. and became a successful business owner, and a woman named Peggy, are being recognized with honorary plaques for their good deeds generations ago.

U.S. star Louis Gossett Jr. played slave millionaire James Mink in Hollywood movie Captive Heart.

Mink was the son of Tobe and Eve Mink, who served as slaves to Johan Herkimer, before moving from the U.S. to Kingston after the Civil War.

He was born between 1792 and 1795 in Upper Canada. Very little is known about his childhood and when he obtained his freedom.

Movie poster for Captive Heart, based on the life of James Mink starring Louis Gossett Jr.

Mink had a strong business acumen and moved to Toronto in 1840s with his brother George remaining in Kingston.

The brothers received government contracts for their horse carriage business to deliver mail, passengers and even prisoners between Toronto and Kingston.

He ran the Mansion House Inn and Livery Stable at 21 Adelaide Street East.

“Through all his business endeavours, James Mink became extremely wealthy and he was an active member of the Black community in 19th-century Toronto,” according to one report. “His inn was used as a polling station in elections.”

He and his wife, Elizabeth, had a daughter, Mary Mink.

Unfortunately the Minks’s good name was allegedly tarnished by people who were not happy about his success and sought to bring him down.

It was incorrectly reported that Mink had published an advertisement in a newspaper seeking a white husband to marry Mary.

JAMES MINK and his brother transported most goods, including prisoners, in their horse wagons.

“The myth follows that a man replied, married Mary, and sold her into slavery in the United States requiring James to pay a large ransom to secure her freedom,” according to the myth.

In reality, Mary had married a Toronto man in 1852 and continued to live in the city. By then the damage had been done.

James Mink retired to Richmond Hill and died in 1868. He is buried in Toronto’s Necropolis.

Also being honoured is John Tinsley (1782-1892) was born a free Black man in Richmond, Virginia. He trained as a carpenter and millwright and came to Canada in 1842.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Free things to do during our lovely summer time

August 10, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

AUGUST 6 – 10th ANNUAL HUMBER BAY SHORES Waterfront Festival from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. at Humber Bay Park West parking lot. Free admissions. More than 30 market vendors. Performances by Fiddlestix Band, Tom Barlow Band, Chicago Project Band and Black Board Blues Band. Visit www.hbsca.ca

AUGUST 2 TO 12 Shakespeare Summer Camp Theatre for kids 10 to 14-years-old at Assembly Hall, 1 Colonel Samuel Smith Park Dr. Register for Romeo & Juliet at AssemblyCamp22.evenbrite.ca

STARTING AUGUST 10 RESET, RELAX, RENEW. Register to improve your health and well-being in a four-week online series on Wednesdays at 3 p.m. Led by Corin our extraordinary coach, participants learn to enhance resilience to stress, regulate difficult emotions and activate deep relaxation. To register, contact norkyit@lampchc.org or jasmind@lampchc.org. Or call 416 252 6471 ext. 308.

AUGUST 12 SUMMER DAY OF WELLNESS, rejuvenation and balance at LAMP CHC 185 5th Street

Join us for a day of professional mindfulness and wellness sessions, activation stations including art, plant knowledge, nutrition and more. Lunch and Certificate of Completion provided. Program runs from 10:00 AM-3:30 PM and registration is required. Please email: vanessakv@lampchc.org or phone: 416-252-6471 ext. 308

TAKE AWAY LUNCHES at LAMP on Tuesdays and Thursdays in the community room 10am  to noon. Saturdays at Street Level 10 am until noon.

UNTIL AUGUST 13 DANCE TOGETHER FESTIVAL every Saturday Nights at Amos Waites Park 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at 2441 Lake Shore Blvd. W. Open to all ages, abilities and levels for jazz, hip hop, Cuban salsa and West African beats. Visit for full schedule at dancetogetherfestival.com

COMMUNITY SUPPORT CENTRE operating from St. Margaret’s Church on Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Meals, snacks, washrooms, showers, and laundry available for folks who are unhoused.

EVERY THURSDAY The Good Food Market from 12 to 4 p.m. at Stonegate CHC at 10 Neighbourhood Lane for affordable produce, outdoor market and bring your own bags. COVID-19 protocols are in place. For more information call 416-231-7070 ext 307.

UNTIL SEPTEMBER 17 Long Branch Artist Pat Rice works of local trees and nature called This Old Tree is on display to the public until September 17 on the Third Floor Gallery at the Lakeshore Grounds Interpretive Centre, at 2 Colonel Samuel Smith Park Drive.

AUGUST 17 COMMUNITY BENEFITS Agreements South Etobicoke Report in partnership with TCBN (Toronto Community Benefits Network) have been mobilizing to secure equitable developments in affordable housing, secure jobs, environmental protections, food security, inclusive communities, transportation improvements etc. We have been hosting workshops, citizen surveys and are now moving into the next phase of ensuring equity for those that live, work, go to school and recreate in Ward 3. We are a citizen, academic and commmunity co-led organization that is hosting a meeting  to report back on our findings and recommendations. For more e-mail vanessakeallvejar@gmail.com, info@cbasouthetobicoke.ca or visit www.cbasouthetobicoke.ca

YOGA OUTREACH PROJECT runs all August from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. at Bell Manor Park, I Bayside Lane. Join Stephanie from Yoga Outreach Project and all ages welcome. Please bring your own mat, towel or water. To register call 416-231-7070 ext. 307 or e-mail health.promotion@stonegatechc.org

BASKETBALL FRIDAYS for youth 18 plus from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at Ken Cox Community Centre, 28 Colonel Samuel Smith Park Drive. Contact Waye at 416-990-6737 or email youth@lampchc.org

STREET LEVEL YOUTH SPACE Summer Program For Youth Living in South Etobicoke runs through August from Monday to Friday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Youth aged 10 – 14 are welcome to join the program. To register, please contact Linda at lindaf@lampchc.org or by phone at 416- 779 – 5248. There are volunteer opportunities for those aged 15 to 19.

AUGUST 18 ETOBICOKE HISTORICAL SOCIETY Summer History Series @ 7:30 p.m. on Etobicoke’s Historic Lakeshore. A free online Zoom Webinar presented by EHS Richard Jordan. For more visit www.etobicokehistorical.com/summer-history.html

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Knife wielding man tries to carjack ride share driver in New Toronto

August 10, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

POLICE scouring carjack scene for evidence. Photo by Tom Godfrey.

 

Toronto Police officers are still shaking their heads after a startled ride-sharing driver was held up in broad daylight by a man wielding a knife in an attempted carjacking.

Officers were called to the Tenth Street and Lake Shore Blvd. W. area on August 9 around 12:15 p.m. in what is described as a “first call of its kind” in the area.

Sgt. Kirby Reddin, of 22 Division, said police were aided by members of the community as they scoured the scene for evidence.

KNIFE WIELDING man tried to carjack a fast food driver, police said.

Police said the victim, a 30-year-old man, was working as a “ride-sharing driver” when he received an order to pick up a customer.

“He stopped his car and a man got into the back seat,” according to a police. “The man pulled out a knife and held it against the driver’s waist while demanding his car keys.”

Reddin said the victim surrendered his keys to the knife-wielding man and got out of the black Honda.

“The man got into the driver seat and tried to drive away,” he said. “He was unable to get the car in motion so he got out and fled the scene on foot.”

Aziah Herbert, 22, has been charged with robbery with an offensive weapon, disguise with intent, weapons dangerous and carry concealed weapon.

He was scheduled to appear in court for a bail hearing on August 9 at the Toronto West Court, at 2201 Finch Avenue W.

Anyone with information is asked to contact police at 416-808-7350, Crime Stoppers anonymously at 416-222-TIPS (8477), or at www.222tips.com.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Toronto historian Mike Filey will be missed by many

August 10, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Mike Filey wrote millions of words over the years on our City’s ever-changing history.
Filey was a favourite with Toronto Sun readers who enjoyed his weekly The Way We Were column on Sundays detailing our history and people loved it.
He was kind to his dedicated readers across the GTA, revealing bits of history about where they lived and what was there before. He wrote many articles on the history of Etobicoke, which residents loved.
His wife Yarmila said Mike passed before dawn on July 30, 2022 at the age of 80.
Mike through the years became known as the unofficial historian for Toronto and was the author of two dozen books, one detailing the history of the TTC streetcars.
“I have a couple of his books,” said former Toronto Sun colleague Ian Robertson. “He helped with information for a couple of my stamp columns a few years back, plus a travel piece about old TTC streetcars in San Francisco that I wrote around 2018.”
Mike was a fixture at the old Toronto Telegraph’s microfilm reader in the library for many years, recalled then Sun main librarian, Julie Kirsh.
“He always said that nothing changed over the years….the weather, taxes and diets were consistent news,” Kirsh said. “He was a nice man.”
“Mike Filey always had a pleasant joke or item to share with others, said Tom Godfrey, Publisher of The South Etobicoke News. “We worked side by side for many years and he knew more of the history of Toronto than most people.”
“He was one of the most likeable people ever,” said Postmedia Chair Paul Godfrey, who knew Filey since he was chair then Metro Council in the 1970s. “He loved the city just about more than anybody else.”
He was an encyclopedia or, in today’s terms, a human search engine.
“Mike Filey was a guardian of Toronto’s history who always helped put the present into perspective,” said Mayor John Tory. “His love for Toronto and its history made him a regular and very welcome caller to me as Mayor.
He, like me, was awarded the Jean Hibbert Memorial Award for his columns by the Etobicoke Historical Society.
Filey was a graduate of North Toronto Collegiate Institute and later, from the chemical technology program at then Ryerson Polytechnical Institute. He grew up near the Honest Ed’s discount store at Bathurst and Bloor Sts., and later worked at Ontario’s Ministry of Environment.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

SPORTS alert: Mimico Junior A lacrosse parents can now book their summer vacation

July 24, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

THE MIMICO Mountaineers are out for this year after a good run. Courtesy photo.

By REJEAN CANTLON

When the Mimico Mountaineers secured top spot in the 2022 regular season of the Ontario Junior Lacrosse League (OJLL), the team had their eyes clearly focused on moving deep into the playoffs. Having said that, getting there was no easy feat.

The boys closed out the last few games with three straight one-goal wins against some formidable opponents in Whitby, Orangeville and Oakville, all also playoff-bound.

THE competition is tough for a playoff spot.

Over the course of the season Mimico seemed destined to make a run for the Minto Cup with an impressive 16-4 record.

They had 2 of the Top 5 scorers with Finlay Thomson leading the league with 124 points (52 goals/72 assists) and Carson Moyer with 89 points (46 goals/43 assists) in 20 games.

In addition, the Mountaineers were stacked with 12 graduating 21-year-olds. Jr A lacrosse teams are comprised of players 17-21 years old.

In the first round of the playoffs, #1 Mimico was set to face-off against #8 Burlington Chiefs. During the regular season, of the 4 Mimico losses, two of them came from the sticks of the Chiefs who finished 10-10.

Our Mimico players certainly had their work cut out for them. Even with home floor advantage in game 1, Burlington shuttered the 1st place team 12-9 in the best of five series at the Drummond Street Bowl (Mimico Arena).

In game 2, Burlington continued their winning ways with a 14-11 victory. In game 3, back in Mimico, in front of a capacity crowd of 600-800 fans, the Mountaineers succumbed to a 11-10 defeat despite a valiant yet disappointing effort.

MIMICO will be back to win next season. Courtesy photo.

The last time an #8 seeded team beat a #1 was in 2018 when the Toronto Beaches eliminated Burlington 3-2 and the last time a #1 was swept in the 1st round was back in 1956 when Brampton smoked St. Catharines 3-0.

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Ukrainian refugees find comfort and beauty in painting Lake Ontario

July 24, 2022 by SouthEtobicokeNews

ARTISTIC Ukrainian newcomers enjoy the comfort and beauty of painting on the shores of Lake Ontario.  From left are Roman Zuzuk, Maria Antoniv, Halyna Kostiuk and Mustafa Cetin (sitting).

Special By HALYNA KOSTIUK

On a sunny hot July 16, a group of Ukrainian artists who are newcomers to Canada, gathered in Colonel Samuel Smith Park for a plain air, or lively outdoor art session.

Led by a well -known artist, Maria Antoniv, they choose the picturesque spots between the marina and Lake Ontario to paint landscapes.

They were surrounded by lush flowers, bushes, and grass, as they set up their easels determined to capture this gorgeous day in colours and shapes.

Roman Zuzuk, Mustafa Cetin, and artist-student Tetiana Lototska each have their own style and share a love for nature. The artists were joined by the amateurs who love the outdoors and enjoy painting. These art lovers are newcomers from Ukraine who escaped their country now ravaged by Russia in an all-out war to find a safe and welcoming reception in Canada.

THE CREATIVE group enjoy the safety and splendour of painting Lake Ontario.  From left are Tetiana Lototska, Roman Zuzuk and Maria Antoniv. Photo by Halyna Kostiuk. 

They are thankful to Canada and the kind people of South Etobicoke.

It is amazing how much the artists were able to glean from the popular landscapes and well-travelled pathways.

Antoniv is famous for her floral arrangements and can put a new perspective on familiar things.  Zuzuk prefers figurative compositions; his plain air paintings are bright and relaxed.

The artists lost themselves in the beauty of summer day and produced the exciting paintings of the lakefront. Their sense of colour reveals to the audience the new dimensions of the intimately known environment.

People stopped by and were captivated and fascinated by the scenery as it appeared on the canvases. The great power of art erases boundaries and brings people together.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Digital Versions

April 2026

New Toronto Drive-by Shooting and Police Chase. Homes and businesses are being sprayed with bullets in the middle of the night and for the most part the shooters are seldom caught.

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.

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