Ontario Science Centre abruptly closing due to structural issues

The Ford government says it will be permanently closing the Ontario Science Centre to the public “effective immediately” due to “serious structural issues” that were identified with the building in a recent engineering report.

The abrupt closure of the North York tourist attraction means that Torontonians will no longer be able to visit the museum after today, although private events scheduled to occur over the weekend will be permitted to proceed.

“The actions taken today will protect the health and safety of visitors and staff at the Ontario Science Centre while supporting its eventual reopening in a new, state-of-the-art facility,” Kinga Surma, the province’s minister of infrastructure, said in a news release.


Way back in the 1960’s an elementary school day trip was a certainty. I recall going at least twice.

It’s old and in a bad neighborhood, a new beginning may be just the ticket.

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CRISANTI: Proactive responses needed now to combat crime in Toronto

For years now, I have voiced my concerns surrounding the challenges that the Toronto Police Service (TPS) currently faces due to the plummeting number of officers as a direct result of the lack of political support.

From pivotal decisions such as removing School Resource Officers (SRO) in 2017, declining numbers of community officers from priority neighbourhoods, and the implementation of a hiring freeze within the TPS – we have created the perfect conditions for brazen criminal behaviour.

You can write off the Chow years, nothing positive will happen under her misgovernance.

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Lynn McDonald: Toronto’s costly push to trade Yonge-Dundas for a name more closely associated with slavery

There is a lot wrong both with the name that Toronto city council chose to replace Yonge-Dundas Square and the burden that the name change will place on taxpayers.

Originally budgeted at $335,000, the new estimate is $860,000 — and who is to say it won’t go higher? That would be a lot of money even for a desirable name, but the name the city chose, Sankofa Square, is problematic.

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Olivia Chow’s greatest vulnerability? Her friends

Imagine the confusion.

Toronto’s most labour friendly mayor in recent memory and still — a major strike that would have paralyzed this city. Or, as Mayor Chow put it, wrought “huge, huge economic damage.”

Sometimes in politics, success rides not on the platforms you pronounce or the policies you deliver, but on the bullets you dodge. And a TTC strike would be about as destructive a bullet for Mayor Chow to duck as can be conceived. Because while the political confusion and upheaval that would have followed is challenging to predict, the wrath of Torontonians would not be.

Chow had better be a one term mayor or Toronto is toast.

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Why can’t Toronto keep its best public spaces in good repair?

Two centuries ago, Toronto’s leaders set aside a parcel of land in its growing west end for the enjoyment of the public. It became Clarence Square, a classic Victorian park with handsome residences on its flanks.

They would be astonished to see it now. For one thing, the little patch of green is surrounded by an ever-rising forest of high-rise towers in glass and steel. For another, the square itself is an unsightly mess. A graveled dog park occupies one side, a homeless encampment another. The fountain at its heart is broken and encased in plywood hoardings. The lawn is full of weeds.

Because our ever rising taxes go to support bloated union wages and (insert deviant progressive cause of your choosing here).

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This isn’t just another byelection in Toronto — it might reveal the future for Justin Trudeau and Pierre Poilievre. Here’s what’s at stake

It’s a fascinating political petri dish under the microscope by parties, pollsters and pundits alike.

Candidates and campaign volunteers will tell you what really matters to voters in the Toronto-St. Paul’s federal byelection is: housing, the high cost of groceries and staples, or how to tackle acts of rising antisemitism in a midtown riding that has the fifth largest Jewish population in the country.

But ask voters on the street, and they’ll tell you what really matters is Justin Trudeau and Pierre Poilievre.


They’re trying to spin that a win for the Libs in next week’s byelection is simultaneously a national endorsement of the worst Prime Minister ever and a repudiation of Poilievre.

But it’s an ultra safe riding in the heart of Canada’s most progressively stupid city.

The only story will be a loss for Junior’s candidate.

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A careful détente kept the war in Gaza from fracturing Toronto council. A move to create ‘bubble zones’ threatened that peace

As last month’s Toronto city council meeting stretched late into the evening, a debate began that the mayor and some of her council allies had been trying to avoid.

For months, some city councils, Queen’s Park and Parliament have seen fierce clashes over how to respond to the Israel-Hamas war, and an escalating death toll in Gaza.

Councillors and city hall insiders tell the Star there has been a focus on private, sometimes difficult conversations and behind-the-scenes advocacy over how best to deal with local issues, from the safety concerns of the city’s Jewish community to the Charter rights of pro-Palestinian protesters, with the mayor trying to stick to the middle ground and avoid a blowout that would both be unhelpful to the business of city hall, and irresponsibly sow further division in an already tense city.

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Meet Olivia Chow’s Muslim Anti-Semite

Hmmm

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Who are these people? They supposedly worked for a Toronto police board member’s companies

Nadine Spencer – Police Services Board Member & Fantasist

Until recently, a black-and-white photo of a woman holding her face in her hands was used to depict Mary Ellen Steinam — also known as Ellen Steinam — across social media and on the website of a marketing company founded by Toronto Police Service Board member Nadine Spencer.

Steinam worked as chief operating officer of Spencer’s company BrandEQ for more than a decade, according to her LinkedIn page. Her profile said she was based in New York and had previously held other prominent marketing jobs at Nestle and Saatchi & Saatchi as far back as 1994.

On Facebook and X, she shared posts and photos of Spencer — cheering on her boss and BrandEQ.

This is what happens when DEI racism trumps common sense.

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Olivia “Doom Loop” Chow wants to bring Toronto’s downtown back to life

Olivia Chow is on a mission to keep Toronto’s financial district alive.

Since the fall, the mayor has been meeting with the CEOs of some of Canada’s largest banks — CIBC, TD, RBC and BMO — to discuss, among other issues, how to get Torontonians back in the office at least four days a week, if not five — and they’re calling on her to set the example.

“Well, it’s important to make sure our financial district is vibrant,” Chow told the Star in an interview. She said she is concerned about Toronto becoming “a ghost town” like other cities in the U.S. grappling with so-called “doom loops” that have seen an uptick in local crime and homelessness. “That’s not healthy.”

“Gardiner commute times have increased 250% sure boss I’ll head back to the office” said no one ever.

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Gardiner gridlock has become horror show, now we have data to prove it

… Trips now take up to 250% longer during morning rush hour than before the construction. Afternoon rush hour is taking 230% longer. Commercial drivers are spending 80% more time on the roads. And travel times are up 43% on the main parallel routes.

These numbers are staggering, but sadly not surprising.

I don’t go downtown anymore. City Hall wins.

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WARMINGTON: Parents outraged as woman smokes crack, injects drugs in front of school

WARNING: This column includes social media postings containing graphic images and offensive language

It isn’t as if no one saw this coming.

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Union prez not optimistic TTC strike can be averted by Friday … Homeless hardest hit

While the two sides in the TTC contract talks are still at the bargaining table, the president of ATU Local 113 is not optimistic a deal can be reached before the looming Friday strike deadline.

“We’re still bargaining but we have an impasse regarding job security and wages and benefits,” Marvin Alfred said Wednesday morning.

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