Toronto Star Profile picture
Feb 8 6 tweets 4 min read
From $15 to $68. HBC's #TeamCanada mittens were an Olympic icon. In fact, fans bought new pairs every year.

Now, under Lululemon, the mitts are too expensive, some fans say.

@_manuelavega has the story:
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
For Thunder Bay resident Katie Girard, the $15 HBC gloves are a yearly stocking stuffer she receives from her husband. This year, she didn't ask for them.

“When they’re $70, that’s not going to happen with a family of four," she said.
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
“I think the Lululemon clothing was cool, but it’s not something that you would see everybody wear outside in the regular world," Girard said. Living in Northern Ontario, the price increase plus delivery hits "two-fold" she adds.
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
A Lululemon company spokesperson told the Star that prices are "based on our commitment to the value of innovation, technology, premium materials, functionality, and detail," adding they use the highest quality for athletes and customers.
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
“I love buying the Canadian stuff. It’s just priced me completely out of it,” Markham resident Sarah Miranda said. She's been gifted Team Canada mitts since the Vancouver Olympics, when she was in Gr. 8. Now it's just too expensive.

thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
While HBC's Team Canada mitts were a way to support athletes, Lululemon's has shifted gears, with funds raised through their crossbody bag embossed with a maple leaf that goes for $38.
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…

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More from @TorontoStar

Feb 10
NEW: ‘Immediately’ end protest or face arrest, Ottawa police warn truckers.

The federal government made clear that it is not prepared to invoke emergency powers to take the reins of the crisis. thestar.com/politics/feder…
Ottawa police issued their sternest warning yet to protesters on Wednesday — broadcasting that they could be arrested without warning if they persist with the occupation of the city’s downtown core. thestar.com/politics/feder…
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Feb 9
“It was infuriating and painful. It reawakened a lot of hurt."

While Alberta Premier Jason Kenney has apologized on Twitter for his comments comparing attitudes toward the unvaccinated and that of AIDS patients, some Albertans say it's not enough.
thestar.com/news/canada/20…
"It reawakened a lot of hurt that I carry with me after growing up in a very anti-gay fundamentalist Christian community,” Kyle Shanebeck, a PhD candidate at University of Alberta said. “I take (his apology) one for what it is: political manoeuvering."
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Growing up in Alberta, Doug Kerr, executive director of Dignity Network Canada, came out in the 80s, a time where there was “so much hatred and fear."

“My friends who died of AIDS had no choice and it is just appalling for Kenney to make this comparison."
thestar.com/news/canada/20… Image
Read 6 tweets
Feb 9
Starting Wednesday, the province is offering free rapid test kits for Ontarians to use at home.

Here's where you can to get a free COVID-19 rapid antigen test in Ontario. torstar.co/c82E50HQZsc
More than 2,300 grocery stores and pharmacies are offering the free test kits.

Some of the individual retailers will only offer free kits to people who make online purchases.
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/… Image
Longo’s is making the free kits available only through its Grocery Gateway online delivery service.

Walmart is also making free kits available only through its grocery pickup service in-store or by placing an online order.
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
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Feb 9
These Syrian refugees won their court fight. But they’re still waiting for Canada to let them in

Story by @nkeung
thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Three years ago, Mohamad Basel Alnajjar's family and 21 others won a court appeal and Ottawa was ordered to reconsider their immigration applications — but a decision is yet to come, even as they run out of money and options.

thestar.com/news/canada/20… Image
In January 2019, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada refused all 22 private refugee-sponsorship applications, including Alnajjar’s, made by Mississauga-based immigration consulting company Fast to Canada.

thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Read 9 tweets
Feb 9
As the Omicron wave of COVID-19 subsides, non-emergency surgeries, including cancer and heart procedures, are resuming, says Health Minister Christine Elliott. torstar.co/9vjL50HQXgN
“We are currently tracking towards the best-case projections thanks to the sacrifices of Ontarians and unwavering efforts of our health-care workers,” Elliott said.
thestar.com/politics/provi… Image
Mindful that thousands of procedures were halted by government directive early last month in order to free up hospital beds for COVID patients, many of whom are unvaccinated, the minister said the prognosis is good.
thestar.com/politics/provi…
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Feb 9
At drop-ins across the city for those who are homeless or low income, personal hygiene products like pads, tampons and adult diapers have long been in short supply.

Advocates have pleaded with city council members to do more ahead of the 2022 budget. thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
“To give out things like hygiene supplies shouldn’t be a luxury — it’s something we should be readily able to do," said Chan McNally of the Toronto Drop-in Network. "But it’s almost impossible for us to purchase these things out of our own budgets.” thestar.com/news/gta/2022/… Image
Advocates have pleaded with council members to do more to provide personal hygiene products, even after an injection of nearly a quarter-million dollars for menstrual products in 2020 they say is not trickling down to the less-funded drop-ins.
thestar.com/news/gta/2022/…
Read 6 tweets

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