This one-bedroom, one bathroom, two-sunroom home is just over 700-square-feet. The unit also includes underground parking and is fully renovated with a new kitchen, bathroom, laminate floor and paint. thestar.com/business/perso…
According to a real estate agent, this property is not a bad price compared to similar-sized properties in downtown Toronto. thestar.com/business/perso…
But for anyone living or working downtown, travelling to work or school, the catch is the long commute from the bus to a subway stop.
Other GTA listings of similar sized condos in downtown neighbourhoods range from $569,000 to $999,000. thestar.com/business/perso…
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Activist and professor @cblackst sat next to the grave of Dr. Peter Henderson Bryce, a non-Indigenous doctor who, more than a century ago, sounded the alarm about children dying in Canada’s residential schools.
“I feel a kinship with him in many ways, even though we’re 100 years apart." Bryce warned the government in 1907 of tuberculosis spreading residential schools across Western Canada, and that children were dying at alarming rates. His report was ignored. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Bryce was sidelined for being a whistleblower and ultimately pushed out of public service. He died in 1932, when he was 80. His gravestone sits under a canopy of trees in Ottawa’s Beechwood Cemetery. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Last week, Cindy Blackstock stood beside the grave of Dr. Peter Henderson Bryce, a non-Indigenous medical doctor and civil servant, who sounded the alarm about children dying in Canada’s residential schools. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Bryce warned the federal government in 1907 that poor ventilation and overcrowding was fuelling the spread of tuberculosis in residential schools across Western Canada and children were dying at alarming rates. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
#StarExclusive: Despite ridership sinking after COVID-19 hit last spring, service disruptions caused by assaults against employees and customers jumped significantly, according to a Star analysis of publicly available TTC subway delay data. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…
The number of service interruptions attributed to other troubling behaviour, such as disorderly passengers and people walking on the tracks, also rose. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…
The union representing subway operators reports incidents that have become more frequent include physical violence, verbal assaults, riders throwing drinks at workers, knife threats and spitting on operators. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…
#StarExclusive: Emergency physicians at Humber River Hospital have written a letter to the hospital's administrators calling for the emergency department to be temporarily closed until IT systems are fully restored, citing concerns over patient safety. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…
The letter, sent late Thursday to administrators at Humber River, was co-authored by a group of emergency physicians. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…
The hospital’s information technology system has been shut down since Monday following an early-morning ransomware attack that triggered a Code Grey, or loss of essential services. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…
For the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, there are no COVID-19 patients in the medical surgical intensive care unit at the University Health Network’s Toronto General Hospital. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…
“No longer an operational need to have a unit dedicated solely for COVID care.”
With case counts dropping across Ontario and vaccine rollout picking up speed, COVID wards across the GTA are returning to their original service. thestar.com/news/gta/2021/…