[URBAN NOTE] Nine Toronto links
- Metrolinx using paid influencers to promote the Ontario Line is certainly a choice. The Toronto Star reports.
- Union Station retiring an old mechanical system 90 years old used to control TTC vehicles is a landmark event. The Metrolinx blog reports.
- Jamie Bradburn looks at the birth of the Gardiner Expressway, here.
- Alok Mukherjee at Spacing questions why police in Toronto have stopped enforcing traffic regulations.
- Protesters charged with blocking the Bloor Viaduct during the Extinction Rebellion have had the charges dropped. Global News reports.
- Sean Marshall shared his account of his address to the Toronto Police Services board, here.
- Jamie Bradburn looks at the history behind the mid-20th century expansion of Church Street.
- NOW Toronto notes that workers at the Broadview Hotel have become unionized.
- Samantha Lui writes at NOW Toronto against the false negative stereotypes applied by so many–even briefly by Google–to Scarborough.
- CBC notes that a lawsuit surrounding benefits fraud by TTC employees has been settled, expensively.
Written by Randy McDonald
November 25, 2019 at 9:30 pm
Posted in Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Toronto, Urban Note
Tagged with church street, crime, gardiner expressway, history, mass transit, metrolinx, neighbourhoods, police, prince edward viaduct, rail, scarborough, subway, technology, three torontos, toronto, ttc, Urban Note