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Mayor John Tory's Toronto

Economic news in general- basically the economy is hot, and lots of people move here. However, not all of them land jobs right away as there are skill mismatches.

Toronto’s economy is hot. So why is its unemployment so high?
By Josh Rubin Thu., June 20, 2019

Yes, at 6.3 per cent as of May, Toronto’s unemployment rate is higher than the rate in Oshawa (5.3), Windsor (5.7) and Hamilton (4.3). It’s also higher than the rate in Montreal (5.6), Winnipeg (5.2), Saskatoon (6.0), Vancouver (4.3), the national average for Canada (5.4) and the provincial average for Ontario (5.2).
The reasons are many, and, ironically, many are tied to the city’s success.

Because the city is seen as the place to go when you’re looking for work, it attracts a lot of unemployed young people and recent immigrants to Canada.

The problem is, once they arrive, finding work isn’t always as easy as they expected.


“Toronto has always been higher than the national average,” said Ryerson economist Amy Peng. “There are more young people and immigrants in Toronto than many other cities, and those are groups which have higher unemployment.”
Toronto’s high unemployment rate can seem puzzling, because, in many sectors there’s a shortage of labour. That, says Peng, means there’s likely a mismatch between the skills job-seekers have and the positions employers are looking to fill.

“If a city like Toronto has a historical problem of high unemployment, combined with a labour shortage problem reported by firms, it means that the skill mismatch gap (is) high as well,” said Peng, who pointed to several Bank of Canada surveys of businesses citing a shortage of potential employees.

Better training for young people, as well as more readily recognizing newcomers’ credentials and on-the-job experience in their home countries would help reduce the unemployment rate, Peng argued.
Still, despite a higher rate than the national average, unemployment in Toronto is far from disastrous, said Kavcic.

“This is a strong labour market here in Toronto,” said Kavcic. It’s just that some of that strength might not be showing up in the official numbers.

With the cost of living so much higher in Toronto than in surrounding areas, a lot of people working in the city actually live in nearby cities.
And those people’s employment status shows up in the data for the city where they live, not the city where they work.

“What we’ve seen over the last few years is a lot of the employment strength in Toronto actually showing up in places like Hamilton, Barrie or Kitchener,” said Kavcic.

 
The suburban Councillors have too much influence on the city, being against public transit, bicycles, and pedestrians.

Please don't let us be like the Netherlands and wait until hundreds of children are being killed on the streets before we decide people are more important than cars. :/

I've been primarily pedestrian for almost 15 years now, but in the last two years suburban drivers in the core seem to have become increasingly more aggressive. There are a few corners near me — Jarvis/Ted Rogers Way (AKA, the Rosedale Parkway) & Charles as well as Church & Bloor—that are particularly bad for blatant ignorance of traffic signals. Great places to see how the selfishness of drivers is treated as acceptable.

For employees at Rogers South Building on Jarvis to (legally) cross to the pizza, coffee or convenience stores literally right on the other side of the street, four crosswalks in a question-mark shaped configuration have to be traversed, each with their own crossing signals. The last crosswalk (across Charles) gives you a mere 7 seconds to cross before the orange hand goes up, and that immediately follows an advance green that drivers love to over run. I've nearly been hit a dozen times by asshats who think that when the advance green arrow turns orange, that means bury the gas pedal. All of that on a street that's already 5/6 lanes of traffic, an obstructed view of oncoming traffic and where 70kph seems to be the agreed commuter speed. The several minutes it takes to cross Jarvis legally also means that plenty of Rogers employees take their lives into their hands and jaywalk. There are four schools and thousands of people (and more on the way) living within a handful of blocks, yet we've done nothing but keep Jarvis an easy route for the colostomy nozzles in their Beemers to get to the financial district 5 minutes faster.
 
Please don't let us be like the Netherlands and wait until hundreds of children are being killed on the streets before we decide people are more important than cars. :/
Well, when this is the response to children being killed, I am afraid we still have a long way to go. :mad:
AE8588BC-F69E-4B24-895A-FB86BC1B03B3_1_201_a.jpeg
 
Please don't let us be like the Netherlands and wait until hundreds of children are being killed on the streets before we decide people are more important than cars. :/

I've been primarily pedestrian for almost 15 years now, but in the last two years suburban drivers in the core seem to have become increasingly more aggressive. There are a few corners near me — Jarvis/Ted Rogers Way (AKA, the Rosedale Parkway) & Charles as well as Church & Bloor—that are particularly bad for blatant ignorance of traffic signals. Great places to see how the selfishness of drivers is treated as acceptable.

For employees at Rogers South Building on Jarvis to (legally) cross to the pizza, coffee or convenience stores literally right on the other side of the street, four crosswalks in a question-mark shaped configuration have to be traversed, each with their own crossing signals. The last crosswalk (across Charles) gives you a mere 7 seconds to cross before the orange hand goes up, and that immediately follows an advance green that drivers love to over run. I've nearly been hit a dozen times by asshats who think that when the advance green arrow turns orange, that means bury the gas pedal. All of that on a street that's already 5/6 lanes of traffic, an obstructed view of oncoming traffic and where 70kph seems to be the agreed commuter speed. The several minutes it takes to cross Jarvis legally also means that plenty of Rogers employees take their lives into their hands and jaywalk. There are four schools and thousands of people (and more on the way) living within a handful of blocks, yet we've done nothing but keep Jarvis an easy route for the colostomy nozzles in their Beemers to get to the financial district 5 minutes faster.

That's a horrible intersection. I always cross at Isabella instead when I'm there, just because the current setup is so incredibly hostile to pedestrians.
 
Well, when this is the response to children being killed, I am afraid we still have a long way to go. :mad:
I don't know how anyone could knowingly—due to their own distraction—have ended the lives of any number of children and felt they needed a lesser sentence.

And in the case of the Netherlands, it was on the order of several hundred children killed every year. *several hundred*
 
Please don't let us be like the Netherlands and wait until hundreds of children are being killed on the streets before we decide people are more important than cars. :/

I've been primarily pedestrian for almost 15 years now, but in the last two years suburban drivers in the core seem to have become increasingly more aggressive. There are a few corners near me — Jarvis/Ted Rogers Way (AKA, the Rosedale Parkway) & Charles as well as Church & Bloor—that are particularly bad for blatant ignorance of traffic signals. Great places to see how the selfishness of drivers is treated as acceptable.

For employees at Rogers South Building on Jarvis to (legally) cross to the pizza, coffee or convenience stores literally right on the other side of the street, four crosswalks in a question-mark shaped configuration have to be traversed, each with their own crossing signals. The last crosswalk (across Charles) gives you a mere 7 seconds to cross before the orange hand goes up, and that immediately follows an advance green that drivers love to over run. I've nearly been hit a dozen times by asshats who think that when the advance green arrow turns orange, that means bury the gas pedal. All of that on a street that's already 5/6 lanes of traffic, an obstructed view of oncoming traffic and where 70kph seems to be the agreed commuter speed. The several minutes it takes to cross Jarvis legally also means that plenty of Rogers employees take their lives into their hands and jaywalk. There are four schools and thousands of people (and more on the way) living within a handful of blocks, yet we've done nothing but keep Jarvis an easy route for the colostomy nozzles in their Beemers to get to the financial district 5 minutes faster.

Multiple changes are needed here.

But the first is comparatively easy, eliminate the south-to-north right hand turn channel from Mt. Pleasant to Ted Rogers Way.

This would reduce 2 crossings by 1 leg each.

The right hand turn would either be made illegal, or would be more conventionally shaped, forcing a car to come to a stop and then turn.

The second thing here is to regularize the intersection as a whole, as much as is practical and add an E-W crosswalk across the south side of the intersection.

Next, Ted Rogers Way should be narrowed by eliminated one of the southbound lanes, a small portion of the NB lane immediately north of Mt. Pleasant.

This would afford a shorter crossing distance and could do so without affecting traffic all that much.

Then we get into the stuff that will get some motorists back-up, but is still the right thing to do.

Narrow Jarvis, as a whole by eliminating the 5th lane all the way down. Option one, put the cycle tracks back; failing that, enhance the public realm by creating a median and/or much wider sidewalks.

Either way, the extra lane causes more confusion and trouble for motorists and pedestrians who have to be aware which direction on-coming traffic is coming from than whatever meager benefit in travel time is used to justify its existence.

I'm not sure how much, if anything the City still has set aside for Jarvis beautification, but there was something like $900,000 earmarked at one point. It got sidetracked by the whole bike lanes thing.

That money actually came, in large part from the last expansion round on the Rogers campus.

Lastly, cycle tracks needs to be extended up Mt. Pleasant, with that road narrowed to one-lane each way for cars plus dedicated turning lanes as required.

These actions taken together would also improve safety at Isabella by reducing the crossing distance of Jarvis and/or creating a median refuge, plus reducing traffic volume and complexity of movement.
 
I don't know how anyone could knowingly—due to their own distraction—have ended the lives of any number of children and felt they needed a lesser sentence.
,,,

While I sympathize w/that position............

I would tend to suggest that jail terms or long jail terms simply tend to cause people to fight, harder and longer against punishment.

I'm not suggesting we not be tough on reckless and irresponsible driving; rather I would prefer to see a focus on removing the risk to others of repeated bad conduct.

ie. surrender the cars, minimum 10-year driving ban, agree to a ban on car ownership for 10 years; community service of some kind, a requirement (if driving is ever to be permitted again) that
the driver have to re-pass all licensing tests, take a top-tier driving course at their own expense.

*****

We need to focus most on prevention.

Driving Skill: Ontario does not require people to take any lessons before a road test. Road tests are notoriously watered down these days.

My preference, a requirement of 45-hours supervised instruction, plus classroom instruction, just to qualify to take a licensing exam.

Second, road test on a simulator. This allows for a controlled test that has a child running into the road, that features black ice or blinding sunlight. A pass should be 90% minimum and no major driving infractions.

***

From there we need to move to car design, that means mandating variable speed limiters in cars that prohibit speeds more than 20% above the regulatory speed limit.

It also means side-view and rear-view cameras (no more blindspot) and mandating truck and/or high vehicle side guards to minimize the risk of a cyclist or pedestrian ending up under a vehicle.

***

Finally, we need to invest in proper road and intersection design. No more channelized-turns, ever. No more highway acceleration ramps prior to the pedestrian crossing.

Cycle tracks and high-volume pedestrian intersections need protected corners.

No double-turn lanes.

No missing crosswalks, and all traffic-light based road crossings need zebra stripes.
 
Multiple changes are needed here.

But the first is comparatively easy, eliminate the south-to-north right hand turn channel from Mt. Pleasant to Ted Rogers Way.

This would reduce 2 crossings by 1 leg each.

The right hand turn would either be made illegal, or would be more conventionally shaped, forcing a car to come to a stop and then turn.

The second thing here is to regularize the intersection as a whole, as much as is practical and add an E-W crosswalk across the south side of the intersection.

Next, Ted Rogers Way should be narrowed by eliminated one of the southbound lanes, a small portion of the NB lane immediately north of Mt. Pleasant.

This would afford a shorter crossing distance and could do so without affecting traffic all that much.

Then we get into the stuff that will get some motorists back-up, but is still the right thing to do.

Narrow Jarvis, as a whole by eliminating the 5th lane all the way down. Option one, put the cycle tracks back; failing that, enhance the public realm by creating a median and/or much wider sidewalks.

Either way, the extra lane causes more confusion and trouble for motorists and pedestrians who have to be aware which direction on-coming traffic is coming from than whatever meager benefit in travel time is used to justify its existence.

I'm not sure how much, if anything the City still has set aside for Jarvis beautification, but there was something like $900,000 earmarked at one point. It got sidetracked by the whole bike lanes thing.

That money actually came, in large part from the last expansion round on the Rogers campus.

Lastly, cycle tracks needs to be extended up Mt. Pleasant, with that road narrowed to one-lane each way for cars plus dedicated turning lanes as required.

These actions taken together would also improve safety at Isabella by reducing the crossing distance of Jarvis and/or creating a median refuge, plus reducing traffic volume and complexity of movement.

It was under the co-Mayor Ford's (Rob & Doug) that killed the Jarvis Street bike lanes. Think it is time for the bicycle lanes to be reconsidered, either under Mayor Tory (unlikely) or a more environmental friendly mayor in the future.

See link.
 
Council is also expected to consider a staff report detailing a rise in security and paid duty officer costs for the nearly 200 community events and festivals that are being hosted by Business Improvement Areas (BIA’s) this year alone. The report points out that the cost of hiring a paid duty constable has increased to $73 per hour and that it is an “increasing challenge” for organizers of special events just to obtain the required number of paid duty officers due to limited availability.

“The ability for the city and its external stakeholders to successfully obtain paid duty services is an increasing challenge, placing the viability of events and other activities, such as film production, in Toronto at risk,” the report notes.

A motion to be considered by council today would direct staff to conduct a survey of BIA’s and any other relevant stakeholders “regarding issues associated with hosting and managing street festivals and major events.”

How the hell did we get to 200 community festivals hosted by BIAs each year which require off-duty police? Is this a matter of the requirement for the police presence being way too broad? I assumed the requirement was off-duty cops would be needed only if there were street impacts and lane closures. Surely there can't be 200 events put on by BIAs per year that cause those. If there really is that many, maybe they should instead look to consolodate some of these "festivals" most of which are pretty much all the same, and often happen only blocks away from each other one week apart with the exact same vendors. They mostly aren't local businesses anyways. It's like there's four travelling circuses in the summer that shut down a different street each weekend doing the exact same stuff they did three blocks away the previous weekend. These festivals themselves have become a cottage industry of people hawking crap they have lying around. It's like a physical Kijiji at times.
 
How the hell did we get to 200 community festivals hosted by BIAs each year which require off-duty police?

This week alone:
The Beaches International Jazz Festival (Beach Village BIA)
Summer Music in the Park (Bloor Yorkville BIA)
Movie Nights in the Park (Beach Village BIA)
Big on Bloor Festival (Bloordale BIA)
Movies Under the Stars (Regal Heights Village BIA)
Outdoor Community Film Night (Village of Islington BIA)
Weston Buskerfest (Weston Village BIA)
Yonge + St. Clair Summer Music (Yonge & St. Clair BIA)
The Danny Loves Music Series (Danforth Mosaic BIA)
Play in the Parks (Downtown Yonge BIA)
Movie in the Park (Emery BIA)
Films on Shortt (Fairbank Village BIA)
Movie Night in the Park (MarkeTo BIA)
Mimico by the Lake Summer Music Series (Mimico by the Lake BIA)

That's just the BIA events, and really only includes one big one (Beaches Jazzfest). The Bloor West Street Fest was this past weekend, Dundas West Fest last month, but there's still Ossfest, Cabbagetown Festival and other biggies. Granted, some may use private security and not use paid duty cops, but even half of them would start adding up over the course of a season, let alone all year round.
 
This week alone:
The Beaches International Jazz Festival (Beach Village BIA)
Summer Music in the Park (Bloor Yorkville BIA)
Movie Nights in the Park (Beach Village BIA)
Big on Bloor Festival (Bloordale BIA)
Movies Under the Stars (Regal Heights Village BIA)
Outdoor Community Film Night (Village of Islington BIA)
Weston Buskerfest (Weston Village BIA)
Yonge + St. Clair Summer Music (Yonge & St. Clair BIA)
The Danny Loves Music Series (Danforth Mosaic BIA)
Play in the Parks (Downtown Yonge BIA)
Movie in the Park (Emery BIA)
Films on Shortt (Fairbank Village BIA)
Movie Night in the Park (MarkeTo BIA)
Mimico by the Lake Summer Music Series (Mimico by the Lake BIA)

That's just the BIA events, and really only includes one big one (Beaches Jazzfest). The Bloor West Street Fest was this past weekend, Dundas West Fest last month, but there's still Ossfest, Cabbagetown Festival and other biggies. Granted, some may use private security and not use paid duty cops, but even half of them would start adding up over the course of a season, let alone all year round.

It's crazy how many of these there are now, and they're all basically the same. Same vendors, different streets. It's a big joke at this point.
 
It's crazy how many of these there are now, and they're all basically the same. Same vendors, different streets. It's a big joke at this point.

That's a bit much don't you think?

Sure, all the 'Ribfests' are the same folks, and food truck festivals have a great deal of overlap.............

But movie nights? Music/buskerfests? You're suggesting every movie or busker is the same?

The food fests/tastes-of do have some overlap; and shouldn't. They are typically supposed to be a showcase of the local restaurants in that 'hood and/or the dominant cuisine type. But they do bring in outside
vendors to some degree in many of these, and I tend to think that ought to be kiboshed as it doesn't add any value and in fact takes away business from local restos.
 
So long as they are popular and well-attended, they will continue. Keeping it local would help bring many of the events back to their roots, but it seems to be how these things go. I went to a butter tart festival that had just as many non-butter tart vendors as butter tart vendors which seemed silly.
 

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