Author of the article: Joe Warmington
Publishing date: May 18, 2021 • 4 hours ago • 3 minute read • Two children, Anaya, 10, and her brother Jax, 4, were on the driveway at their Athabasca Dr. home on Sunday when they were struck by a fast-moving black Mercedes that went off the road, hitting the children and a neighbour who was helping to fix a bike. Photo by FACEBOOK /TORONTO SUN
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VAUGHAN In a bid to make sense of a deadly nightmare, people in tears put teddy bears on the very tire tracks made by an out-of-control car that killed two children.
However, no matter how many flowers mourners pile at this horrific death scene, it will not soften the pain felt by those living on this suburban street.
The 15 remaining cats have been relocated to foster homes
Author of the article: Jenny Yuen
Publishing date: Feb 27, 2021 • February 27, 2021 • 3 minute read • North Toronto Cat Rescue founder Donna Cox said the charity needs to find a new home after March 1 due to redevelopment, but also claim the City of Vaughan won t approve the permits required to operate a cat rescue. Photo by HANDOUT /NORTH TORONTO CAT RESCUE
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The cats have been saved, but the battle is far from over.
North Toronto Cat Rescue said it was able find foster homes for 15 of its remaining stray cats before the deadline of March 1 when Vaughan Animal Services required them to be out of the home the charity is renting, which is slated for redevelopment. The group said it was concerned of animals being seized given the city’s shelter doesn’t have a no-kill policy.
This story is Part 2 of a series about the Ford government s use of ministerial zoning orders. Read Part 1 here.
In Pickering, Ont., a cluster of marshes and swamps south of Highway 401 has become an unexpected battleground, pitting job creation against environmental preservation.
The wetland of willow trees, silver maples and cattails, once protected from development by provincial rules, is now slated to become a warehouse attached to a nearby casino development.
Since 2018, Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservative government has used unappealable special orders to allow a host of powerful developers to build in a number of ecologically sensitive areas, bypassing the usual approval process.
York Region mayors say they tried to convince province to remain in red zone cbc.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbc.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.