Lockdown’s Toll: Tory warns of ‘massive’ tax hike, service cuts if province, Ottawa don’t bail out Toronto

Mayor John Tory, re-elected last month promising to keep a lid on taxes, is now warning of big tax hikes and deep service cuts unless Queen’s Park and Ottawa rescue Toronto’s pandemic-ravaged finances.

Tory on Thursday released a letter to Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland saying, after months of discussions, he needs commitments for hundreds of millions of dollars in bailout funds by Nov. 30.

Share

WARMINGTON: New approach enables cops to track people on bail for gun charges

With 1,100 people before the courts on firearm charges currently free on bail instead of sitting in jail, few are surprised when they end up involved in a shooting.

You read it right — 1,100 people on gun charges are currently free from custody on bail until their case makes it way to trial or is resolved.


Toronto – aspiring to become Canada’s version of a shithole Democrat Run City.

Wanna bet we’ll never see a demographic breakdown of the “1100?”

Only 29% per cent bothered to vote in the last election that saw John Tory swept to victory in a sort of reverse landslide of the couldn’t be bothered.

What explains this level of absenteeism?

Are people happy with the status quo?

Are rising taxes and deteriorating services simply accepted as normal?

“Putting in time until I can afford to get out” has become a common discussion.

What’s behind it? Are we so balkanized by diversity that a shared connection to the city is no longer possible?

Do you consider Toronto or some other GTA city home? Reading about recent events in Brampton brought to mind Chamberlain’s reference to the Czechoslovakia crisis as a “quarrel in a far away country, between people of whom we know nothing.” 

Maybe as Trudeau might suggest Toronto is Canada’s first Post-City City, nothing more than a mass of transients, a settler pit stop to be exploited until greener pastures come along.

The specter of Leicester looms over Toronto & the GTA, it too was portrayed as a beacon of diversity.

Share

Is Toronto better off under Tory?

Eight years after he won his first mayoral race, Toronto’s high-profile municipal leader says his experience in negotiating with other levels of government, guiding the city through the pandemic, and bringing calm and consensus to City Council make him the best choice in Monday’s election.


The Star endorsed Tory, even while publishing this…

In Toronto’s long, slow decline not everyone feels the pinch — but everyone shares the blame

One Toronto is a place to dream golden dreams where there are too many cranes in the sky to count, expensive cars roll through the streets, and there’s always money to be made. Lots and lots of money.

The other Toronto is visibly falling apart, services are shrinking, city-building projects on the books are either not funded or only partially funded, the streets are dangerous for pedestrians and cyclists, gun violence is a plague, and it’s becoming a more hostile place to live financially. This is a Toronto that is actively “planning to deteriorate” as the state of good repair budgets shrink. It’s not a metaphor, it’s in the current budget.

Share

GOLDSTEIN: Mayor opposes street checks, despite rising gun violence after they were scrapped

When John Tory was elected mayor in 2014 there were 177 shootings in Toronto, 76 people were wounded by gunfire and 27 people were fatally shot.

Last year, there were 409 shootings (a 131% increase), 163 people wounded by gunfire (a 114% increase) and 46 people fatally shot (a 70% increase).

Share

Guerrilla satirists skewer Toronto mayor by turning urban decay into public art

The AusterityTO project highlights ‘absurd’ level of disrepair in the run-up to the Canadian city’s municipal election in late October

Overflowing garbage bins. Crumbling roads and broken water fountains, scattered throughout Toronto. A chaotic downtown core, where cyclists battle with cars for use of the road.

For some, the disarray might signal urban decay and rudderless leadership. But to the pranksters behind the recently unveiled AusterityTO project it’s the work of a “bold, world-class artist” who is using Canada’s largest city as his canvas to create a sprawling public art project.

Share

No.

Toronto artists are being ‘run out of town’ by soaring rents. Should the city step in to help?

“We’re losing the spaces and places where artists, which make the city fantastic, do their business,” said Coun. Paula Fletcher (Ward 14 Toronto-Danforth). “Artists are the lowest-paid sector so it’s not like they can afford corporate rents.”

Why should my taxes support the creation of toxic PC “art?”

Will I be eligible for subsidy for the photo-shops I do for the blog?

Why not?

Share

Toronto’s election is easily the dullest since the amalgamated city of Toronto was created

Voters who live in Toronto have endured two particularly awful election campaigns in the past year.

The federal vote called by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for last September was a pointless affair in which the leaders of the three major parties alternated between trashing one another and hurling promises at every interest group and voting bloc in sight. It cost $600-million and ended with the three holding almost the same number of seats as they had before it all started.


Boring like a slow motion train wreck. Tory will win, that’s a given. More tax dollars will be wasted on identity-politics driven issues as bit by bit we become indistinguishable from a Democrat run city in the US. Services will decline as taxes rise, crime will increase, businesses will leave and those residents that can will flee as the city becomes an unaffordable, perverse amalgam of the rich and social housing residents.

Share

‘Do not fight’: Toronto police announce carjacking arrests, warn residents of ‘troubling’ rise

Toronto police have made a series of arrests in connection with the “troubling” rise in carjackings, Insp. Richard Harris of the hold-up squad said Tuesday.

The arrests of several teenagers — including an 18-year-old woman — come as Toronto has 182 reported carjackings so far this year compared to 102 in all of 2021. Fifty-six of the vehicles stolen this year have been recovered.

Time to start shutting down basketball courts.

Share

Why Torontonians are facing a ‘staggering’ spike in auto thefts — and what police are doing about it

Patricia Li’s year began with the theft of a Lexus NX 300 from her Toronto home — but that was just the beginning of her troubles.

Five months later, thieves returned in the middle of the night for her other vehicle, a Lexus RX 450, but this time they weren’t as lucky.

After the first theft in February, Li installed a video camera that captured footage of three people attempting to break into the car.

I wonder if the Ferguson effect plays a role?

Share

WARMINGTON: The Esplanade ‘war zone’ has no clear ending in sight

For the past year, Bibhu Acharya has served behind enemy lines.

Not in Ukraine or Afghanistan but in The Esplanade in downtown Toronto.

“This is a war zone,” said one resident.

Guns, knives, fights, drugs and even dog fights have been the reality since the once four-star Novotel was converted into a homeless shelter to help deal with the COVID-19 pandemic crisis.

Share

Overflowing garbage, broken transit, decrepit ferries — Toronto, can’t we do better?

There’s a labyrinth installation in the little Trinity Square Park tucked behind the Eaton Centre — a winding path to “quiet the mind,” in the heart of Toronto’s hustle and bustle. If you visited it in late September, and wandered through its meandering route, you’d have ultimately come to the centre — the heart of your meditative journey, perhaps, the moment of enlightenment — only to be tripped up when you encountered a gaping jagged hole where bricks forming the path were missing, covered in caution tape.

Aha. If you were contemplating the state of Toronto on your journey, you’d have found a piece of the answer: stuff is falling apart.


Toronto has a lot working against it.  For starters it’s run by progressives for progressives.

Its schools are so progressive in fact that menstruating girls are segregated for being impure during in-school Islamic prayer rituals. Just like in Progressive Iran where women are murdered for removing their hijabs.  Contrary to the the city’s motto diversity is not a strength, it is a recipe for a low trust society.

Progressives know how to waste money on worthless endeavors. John Tory is great at proclaiming Left-Handed Vegan Transvestite Amputee Day but little else.

Toronto has 40,739 employees* most unionized. How they can’t fill potholes is beyond me. Maybe designating all pot holes as LGBTQ2S killers would result in better performance.

It won’t get better. Progressive cities only ever spiral into the dirt. Just check in with the residents of Portland or San Francisco.  Taxes go up, services slide, crime rises, businesses leave and white flight follows.

* From the City of Toronto web site – The information above does not capture employees working in the City’s Agencies, Boards or Commissions (TTC, Police, Library, Association of Community Centres, etc.), Accountability Offices, or elected officials.
Share