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Canadian Urbanism Uncovered

Monday’s Headlines

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CITY COUNCIL
• Rob Ford hears from hundreds at levee [The Star]
• Battered but unbroken, Bussin has no regrets [The Star]
• Chris Selley: Time for honest debate starts now [National Post]
• City council lists its new year’s resolutions [The Sun]
• Ford’s got the pedal to the metal [The Sun]
• Rob Ford’s big fight: Levy [The Sun]
• ‘Majority’ want to dump bag tax [The Sun]
• Gentile says he would have been good for City Hall [The Sun]

TRANSPORTATION
• Ford asked to fix ‘silly’ TTC election rule [The Star]
• Toronto car tax hits the road [The Sun]
• 407 raising toll rates again [The Star]

YONGE & GOULD FIRE
• Ryerson closed as fire destroys historic Yonge St. building [The Star]
• Fire guts heritage building in downtown Toronto [Globe & Mail]
• Downtown building was ‘engulfed’ in flames [National Post]
• Photos of Yonge and Gould before and after the fire [BlogTO]

CRIME
• City records first homicide in early hours of New Year’s Day [The Star]
• Toronto Police ‘struggling’ to solve murders [The Star]
• Is Toronto’s homicide squad losing its lustre? [The Star]
• Police Chief Bill Blair asks city hall for budget boost [The Star]
• Fiorito: There is no harm in harm reduction [The Star]
• The bad guys are getting away with murder [The Sun]

LIBRARIES
• Toronto’s library system adapting to modern needs [The Star]
• Downtown library branch threatened with closure [The Star]
• Library could become cost-cutting victim [Globe & Mail]
• Downtown library branch may close in new year [National Post]
• Toronto Public Library Facing Significant Service Cuts in the New Year [Torontoist]

CONSTRUCTION
• The upside of losing all your marbles [Globe & Mail]
• Roncesvalles’ still-unfinished rebuilding strains neighbourhood [National Post]
• Construction of Aga Khan Museum finally in full swing [BlogTO]

YEAR IN REVIEW
• The best of our people to watch in past years [The Star]
• DiManno on New Year’s Eve: I’d rather be in Tonga [The Star]
• 2010 in review: Toronto’s underachievers and overachievers [National Post]
• 10 New Year’s resolutions on behalf of Toronto for 2011 [BlogTO]
• Toronto 2010 in review via photos [BlogTO]
• Heroes and Villains 2010: Superhero & Supervillain [Torontoist]

PEDESTRIANS & STREETSCAPE
• ‘Cross the street like your life depends on it’ [OpenFile]
• The 8-80 formula for safer streets [OpenFile]
• On College, a village waits to be born [OpenFile]
• Crossing the Dufferin divide [OpenFile]
• Praise for T.O. pay toilet [The Sun]

OTHER NEWS
• Bronfmans make new bid to save illegal fence in Forest Hill [The Star]
• A holiday letter to our sister city [Globe & Mail]
• Toronto’s food processing sector eclipses automotive [Globe & Mail]
• Historicist: The Hawk Nests in Toronto [Torontoist]

5 comments

  1. I apologize for the delay with today’s Headlines. Headlines will return to their regular publication schedule tomorrow morning.

  2. Anyone else find it ‘funny’ that the library cuts being talked about are downtown?

    Not very strategic if the library board is trying to stop Ford from going through with it.

  3. I see the moving of the goalposts has started already with Rob Ford.

    No one should forget his absolute vow during the election: “No cuts”.

    No cuts is pretty easy to understand.

    But closing the Urban Affairs library is, of course, a cut. It may not affect you if you live in Etobicoke and are not interested in urban issues, but if you live in a downtown condo it means that picking up a library book is now out of walking distance. That’s a cut. (As is, btw, having to wait 6 months for a popular book because of reduced title purchases instead of 3 months).

    But look at the mayor’s spokeswoman’s comment: “the mayor has been very clear – he doesn’t want to see any major service cuts”.

    Suddenly, an easy to understand “No Cuts” has become “no major service cuts”. What is or isn’t a cut is easy to understand. But what is a “major” cut is a debating point.

    And so it begins, as the reality of simple arithmetic hits home.

  4. Here’s an anecdote about the bag tax. I moved away from Toronto a decade ago. When I was visiting my brother in 2008, I waited for him with his dog outside a supermarket on Bayview south of Eglinton. As I stood there for ten minutes, I was stunned by the number of people that were carrying reusable bags, or often no bags at all, as they came out of the store. If you bought only a couple items, you just carried them to the car – I saw a family come out and each kid was carrying a box of crackers or carton of juice in their hands! Out of all the shoppers, I think I saw maybe two using store plastic bags – and this was a wealthy area. I’ve never seen 5 cents change behaviour so radically before.

    Back in New York, I routinely take a dozen reusable canvas bags with me to my local Target, not because they give me a 5 cent credit but because I can’t possibly use all of the plastic bags that I otherwise accumulate. Yes, I line trash cans with them, but I just can’t use them all. In New York everything is automatically double-bagged too (since the bags go on long trips on foot or subway), making it worse. But I am always the only one in the store with reusable bags, and this is in a very low income neighbourhood.

    So clearly there is a difference between making someone pay 5 cents vs giving them a 5 cent credit. It changes behaviour. Miller got that, and Toronto was a leading city in the fight against too many plastic bags cluttering the trees, streets and drains. Ford gets it too in that he can’t stand paying five cents, but he does not get the rationale. Whether the retailer keeps the five cents or gives it to charity or a green nonprofit — is irrelevant. He can only see what is in front of his nose — a five cent fee, or a license plate tax, or a slow streetcar. The man is incapable of understanding that everything in life is elastic and that behaviour change, and not fee collection, is the ultimate goal.

    Like streetcars, a bag tax is one of those good ideas that works and will eventually get adopted by all successful urbanized places. Ford can try to eliminate it for now, but it will be back. DC has a tax, NYC and Chicago will get around to it sooner or later, and LA has banned plastic bags completely:

    http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/02/02/taxing-plastic-bags-from-pennies-here-to-millions-there/

    http://www.businessinsider.com/los-angeles-county-just-banned-plastic-bags-levied-tax-on-paper-2010-11

  5. With these pointless budget cuts and dismantling of sound policies like the bag tax, I fear we may be on our way towards bleak provincialism.