Getting Away with It - Drivers who block intersections in gridlocked core rarely ticketed by police.
Toronto Star|September 04, 2024
Drivers who block intersections in gridlocked core rarely ticketed by police. As of mid-August, Toronto police had issued just 113 tickets under the city's box-blocking bylaw in 2024.
By Mahdis Habibinia
Getting Away with It - Drivers who block intersections in gridlocked core rarely ticketed by police.

Blocking the box might be downtown Toronto’s most ubiquitous traffic offence, as drivers force their way into busy intersections knowing they’ll still be blocking traffic when the light turns red, resulting in paralyzing gridlock.

The problem is so bad that city council recently asked the province for permission to significantly hike the fine for the offence to $450. But behind the city’s request to the Ministry of the Attorney General, there is an elephant in the room: Toronto’s habitual box-blockers are rarely ticketed.

In 10 minutes at one downtown intersection last month, the Star counted 26 box-blockers over just six red light cycles, with no enforcement from Toronto police or the city’s traffic wardens. No surprise — according to data obtained by the Star, Toronto police have laid less than one ticket a day for box-blocking for each of the last five years.

As of mid-August, police had issued just 113 tickets under the city’s box-blocking bylaw in 2024. That’s less than half the rate of ticketing from before the COVID-19 pandemic, and an even further cry from how the charge has been enforced in years past, when enforcement blitzes would result in hundreds of tickets in a single week.

By way of comparison, the city’s speed and red light cameras together handed out more than 540,000 tickets last year — nearly 1,500 a day. In a vacuum, raising the fine for blocking the box may be the right thing to do, but the lack of a followup crackdown risks teaching drivers they have a free pass to cause gridlock, said Matthew Wood, a former Toronto police officer who’s now a consultant on police reform.

“What’s the point if we’re not enforcing these rules?” he asked. “We’re giving implicit permission for these behavioural norms to become entrenched.”

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Toronto Star

Disgraceful behaviour on Parliament Hill

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How to Fix our Congestion Crisis - Toronto has some of the worst congestion on the continent, Coun. Brad Bradford writes. Fixing it requires common sense and better planning and prioritization at the top.
Toronto Star

How to Fix our Congestion Crisis - Toronto has some of the worst congestion on the continent, Coun. Brad Bradford writes. Fixing it requires common sense and better planning and prioritization at the top.

Toronto has one of the world’s best film festivals but as stars like Will Ferrell pointed out, we also have some of the world’s worst traffic. He joins a long list of international celebrities, professional athletes and musicians that have echoed the concerns of thousands of residents forced to do battle with Toronto’s gridlock everyday.

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3 mins  |
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Rogers' Power Play- Company will have near-lock on city's pro sports with buyout of Bell's stake in MLSE
Toronto Star

Rogers' Power Play- Company will have near-lock on city's pro sports with buyout of Bell's stake in MLSE

One man is now poised to control every major men’s pro sports team in Toronto. Edward Rogers will have achieved his long-desired goal of total power over Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (MLSE), if a $4.7-billion deal to snap up Bell Canada’s 37.5 per cent stake is completed, making Rogers Communications the majority owner of the Maple Leafs, Raptors, Argonauts and Toronto FC.For a decade, MLSE’s board had been split between Rogers, Bell and MLSE chair Larry Tanenbaum’s Kilmer Sports.

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5 mins  |
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'It Was a Recipe for this Incident' - GO riders blame construction for crowded platform where woman hit
Toronto Star

'It Was a Recipe for this Incident' - GO riders blame construction for crowded platform where woman hit

The GO Transit platform where a woman was struck by an express train on Tuesday has been partially closed for several months due to construction at the station, causing crowding during rush hour.Toronto police said the 46-year-old woman was walking near the edge of the platform at Long Branch GO Station when she was hit by an express train bypassing the station at around 8:15 a.m. She was rushed to hospital in life-threatening condition. No update on her condition was available Wednesday.

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2 mins  |
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Weakened Liberal Party Saved by BQ - Who would have thought Canada might be saved from an election by the only political party that seeks to break up the country?
Toronto Star

Weakened Liberal Party Saved by BQ - Who would have thought Canada might be saved from an election by the only political party that seeks to break up the country?

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has a chance to keep his Liberals in power thanks to Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet. On Tuesday, without engaging any of the parties in substantive negotiations, the Liberals decided to lay the future of the government on the tracks of the oncoming Conservative train. They tempted the fate not just of their own political lifespan, but also that of all the policies they say they want to accomplish: a more compassionate and responsive immigration system; action to curb greenhouse gasses; a school food program; a pharmacare program that provides free contraception and diabetes medication; better (though inadequate) disability payments; and the entrenchment of a dental care program that has seen a huge uptick of subscribers.

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4 mins  |
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At Least We'll All Know Who to Blame - Edward Rogers has become Toronto sports fans' one-stop target for owner-bashing
Toronto Star

At Least We'll All Know Who to Blame - Edward Rogers has become Toronto sports fans' one-stop target for owner-bashing

Sports needs characters we can root for, and characters we can blame, writes Edward Keenan. Rogers buying Bell's MLSE stake will supply more of the latter, starting with chairman Edward Rogers.For a sports fan, there’s something satisfying about that. For years with the Leafs in particular, the owner was a pension plan, and it was hard to tell if its controlling executives (never mind the teachers whose money they were spending) cared about hockey one way or the other. And whether they did or not, how could you figure out who was responsible for what they did as a result?

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3 mins  |
September 19, 2024
Lebanon is Rocked Again by Deadly Exploding Devices - Israel acknowledges 'new phase in war'; civilians among dead
Toronto Star

Lebanon is Rocked Again by Deadly Exploding Devices - Israel acknowledges 'new phase in war'; civilians among dead

Walkie-talkies and solar equipment exploded in Beirut and other parts of Lebanon on Wednesday in an apparent second wave of attacks targeting devices a day after pagers used by Hezbollah blew up, state media and officials for the militant group said. At least 20 people were killed and more than 450 wounded in the second wave, the Health Ministry said.

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2 mins  |
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Feds Impose New Limits on International Students - Immigration Minister Marc Miller has announced new limits on international students Wednesday, saying Canada is facing an untenable number of people wishing to come here.
Toronto Star

Feds Impose New Limits on International Students - Immigration Minister Marc Miller has announced new limits on international students Wednesday, saying Canada is facing an untenable number of people wishing to come here.

Enrolment cuts, work permit restrictions will further slow population growth. Immigration Minister Marc Miller has announced new limits on international students Wednesday, saying Canada is facing an untenable number of people wishing to come here.Canada will reduce the annual cap on study permits by another 10 per cent in 2025 and restrict eligibility for international graduates' work permits to better meet labour market needs, amid continuing public pressure to tame runaway population growth.

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4 mins  |
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Bloc Will Vote to Prop up Liberals - Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet, said he does not have confidence in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's minority government, but believes he can use the situation to push for his party's priorities.
Toronto Star

Bloc Will Vote to Prop up Liberals - Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet, said he does not have confidence in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's minority government, but believes he can use the situation to push for his party's priorities.

Leader says he will oppose Tory motion to bring down Trudeau government. Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet, said he does not have confidence in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's minority government, but believes he can use the situation to push for his party's priorities.

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5 mins  |
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Dutcher wins second Polaris award
Toronto Star

Dutcher wins second Polaris award

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3 mins  |
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