At this point, it’s not even a surprise: TTC driver caught operating a vehicle dangerously and/or in violation of the Ontario Highway Traffic Act. Again, not terribly surprising: TTC driver caught and filmed by a passenger with a cellphone. And still yet unsurprising: it makes the front page of the Toronto Sun. The only thing that is actually surprising at this point is that TTC operators don’t realize they’re likely under constant sousveillance. The results of being caught on camera breaking the law is—unsurprisingly—dismissal.
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Three TTC employees fired for texting while driving public transit vehicles
Smaller government be damned: Ford’s first budget grows ranks of city staff
One of the biggest ways that Rob Ford said he would be able to reduce city spending was to hire only half as many people as left the city’s payrolls every year. The city lost six per cent of its staff through retirements and firings every year, and Ford would hire only three per cent back. It turns out there were a lot of things wrong in those assumptions—including Ford’s numbers on attrition—and there’s enough inertia in Miller-era hiring decisions that Ford’s first budget will actually grow the ranks of city workers by 447.
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Dwight Duncan: the HST is saving Ontario’s economy—no, really!
The Harmonized Sales Tax may be one of the Liberal government’s biggest weaknesses in the coming election, so they’ve opted to turn taxed lemons into taxed lemonade by convincing Ontarians that the tax is really in their best interest. (It helps, too, that Tim Hudak and the Tories are basically incoherent on this file.) So we aren’t surprised that Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan is claiming that the HST is helping Ontario’s economy move out of the recession.
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GTA slowly becoming election battleground: Julian Fantino makes it to cabinet, Peter Kent gets a promotion
With the news breaking last night that there was going to be a cabinet shuffle this afternoon, all eyes turned to Ottawa, where reporters waited outside Rideau Hall and watched to see who came in to have their new jobs bestowed upon them by Stephen Harper. The mini-shuffle saw a little game of hopscotch: Thornhill MP and former newscaster Peter Kent was promoted to minister of environment, and his old spot was filled by Albertan Diane Ablonczy. Her old spot was filled by none other than Julian Fantino, who, instead of being made Minister of Something Law and Order-y, will now be minister of state for seniors.
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The Secret Life of a Bay Street Hooker
The X-rated trade secrets of a Bay Street call girl. She’s sophisticated, smart and open minded. She meets her clients at Le Germain or the Hazelton and gives them what they want.

On an unseasonably warm evening in October, Chloë Marcelle decided to walk to work. Her slim figure encased in a silk blouse, silver-speckled Chanel leather skirt, net stockings and black silk Manolos, she left her apartment and strolled through the downtown core to her favourite boutique hotel, Le Germain on Mercer Street.
Urban Diplomat: Do I have to booze it up to get a job at a Bay Street law firm?
Dear Urban Diplomat, Read the rest of this entry »
I’m articling at one of the big Bay Street law firms. The other students and associates go out and drink a few nights a week. I don’t drink, but even if I did, I couldn’t keep up with all those late nights and early mornings. I’m worried that when it comes time to hiring, the students who party will have a leg up. Do I have to drink to get a job?
—Boozeless on Bay Street,
KING WEST CONDOVILLE
Q&A with Doug Saunders, City Slicker
Why Doug Saunders, a foreign correspondent for the Globe and Mail, could have called his new book The Torontoification of the World

(Image: Jonathan Worth)
The title of your new book, Arrival City, refers to the urban neighbourhoods that poor villagers settle in when they immigrate. You’ve said that the book might’ve been called The Torontoification of the World. Why is that? Anyone who lives in Little Italy, Kensington Market or at Broadview and Gerrard knows that most immigrants are from villages, not big cities, and they’re not living as villagers here, but they’re not living as core Torontonians, either. They’re creating a culture that keeps one hand in the village and one hand in the city, while trying to raise the standards of their kids. This has been happening in Toronto for some time; now it’s happening all over the world.
That dual way of life can result in culture clashes, like the riots that occurred in the Paris suburbs back in 2005, but Toronto hasn’t experienced that kind of violence. What are we doing right? We’re giving people on the fringes physical access to the city via public transit, it’s relatively easy for newcomers to borrow money and start businesses, they have access to real and de facto citizenship, and, for the most part, they’re not treated like alien outsiders on the job market. That said, we need to do better on all those counts. Until now, we’ve been lucky. Flemingdon Park could become Clichy-Sous-Bois if Toronto doesn’t put some money and effort into it.
Ask the expert: master electrician Rosarii Lannon on knob and tube, electrician superstition and how it feels to get zapped
Master electrician Rosarii Lannon goes by the moniker Electro Dame. Her powers are, well, powerful, and she’s been bravely confronting the dangerous under-layer of buildings for 30 years. We talked to Lannon about knob and tube, electrician superstition and how it feels to get zapped.

(Image: Carmen Cheung)
How did you pick Electro Dame as the name of your company?
My son came up with it when he was about nine. I thought, That’s really cute. Plus, it pretty much sums up who I am.
Have you felt like a pioneer in this mostly male field? Read the rest of this entry »
When I first started, in the mid-’70s, many of the tradesmen I worked with thought it would be bad luck to have a woman on-site. They were very superstitious, and they wondered why a woman wanted to do a man’s work. I went everywhere looking for jobs. The first contractor who hired me had four daughters, and he said he hoped that one day someone would give one of his girls a break.
The job report: explaining Canada’s post-recession bounce
We keep hearing about the amazing Canadian economic rebound—some 300,000 new jobs in the past year. Is Bay Street paving the way for a new economic world order?

(Image: Lindsay Page)
America’s financial sector makes a tasty carcass, and Bay Street is tucking into the feast, gobbling up staff and tearing off divisions from hobbled U.S. counterparts. CIBC recently purchased Citigroup’s Canadian MasterCard division. RBC has been hiring big guns away from New York’s investment banks. And those two banks aren’t even taking the biggest bites.
TD, the second largest bank in Canada, is on a mission to crack the American market. Earlier this year, it swallowed up three troubled Florida banks, then purchased South Carolina’s South Financial Group, adding 176 branches to its network for the bargain price of $191.6 million—just over $1 million per branch. All told, TD, which has introduced a jolly-eyeballed green foam‑rubber mascot specifically for its American operations, now has 1,300 branches in the States, 200 more than it has in Canada.
The country’s entire economy appears to be working its way up the global food chain. Our GDP grew by 6.1 per cent in the first three months of 2010. Among the 31 market-oriented democracies that make up the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, only South Korea’s economy grew faster. The United States economy, according to OECD numbers, grew only three per cent, while the median growth within the group stood at approximately two per cent. Canada’s economy has also created 215,000 jobs since the start of the year, 109,000 of them in April alone. Read the rest of this entry »
Toronto: mobile app centre of the universe
Toronto is on its way to becoming the continent’s mecca of mobile phone apps, the Wall Street Journal reports. There are around 200 up-and-coming app companies in the GTA—a number that keeps increasing. Toronto’s app stature can be credited to many things, according to the article, but primary among them are generous government grant schemes, world-class computer science and design programs, and a proliferation of RIM jobs employment positions at Research in Motion.
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Huffington Post notes Canada’s existence, job numbers
In a post voiced somewhere between a zoo plaque for children and a swindling travel brochure, U.S. news site HuffPo tells its readership that Canada may be an excellent place to direct unemployed Americans:
Stubbornly high unemployment rates got you down? Not sold on the economic recovery? Look no further than America’s polite neighbor to the north, where jobs numbers are surging and home prices have been rising steadily for nearly a year.
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Reaction roundup: leaders respond to the ballooning G8/G20 security budget

Billion-dollar babies: security costs for the G8 and G20 continue to grow (Image: Subterranean Tourist Board)
Just days after the Harper government announced that it’s preparing to spend up to $930 million on security for the G8 and G20 summits, the cost has ballooned to $1.1 billion, with further increases likely (read: inevitable). The mind-boggling amount has politicians and officials scrambling to either defend it or denounce it. In the process, they are taking the opportunity to champion their favourite causes. Here, some highlights from the weekend coverage.
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Catholicism surges in popularity among unemployed teachers
Some unemployed educators are finding new ways of selling out in order to find a job in Ontario’s over-saturated teaching market, including feigning piety to sneak into the Catholic school board. “I just really want to be in a career. I just want it so badly,” a non-Catholic Toronto woman told the Canadian Press. She wants it so badly that she’s been going to confession, speaking with a priest and lying to him about premarital sex.
In 2009, there were about 12,200 new qualified teachers in the province, but only around 5,000 jobs. The Toronto Catholic District School Board requires that its teachers be Catholic, hence the new-found interest in religion.
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Transit City gets cut so bad even Miller thinks his baby’s ugly
The ongoing drama surrounding David Miller, Transit City, Metrolinx and some purse strings held by Dalton McGuinty got even more absurd yesterday. Instead of the deep cuts envisioned by Metrolinx, Miller wants the original plan (once approved by both the city and Metrolinx) to go ahead, with the city taking on more debt to do so. He said so in a letter to McGuinty, which arrived just two days into negotiations about how to save the plan. With less than six months left in his career as mayor, Miller has to be as desperate as anyone to see something salvaged from Transit City. But it’s hard to see what’s going to be taken from this:
A chart comparing the two plans, provided by Mr. Miller’s office, shows the revised transit plan cuts Transit City lines by 22.5 km and 25 stops from what was originally proposed.
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