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Fines issued to Toronto park users in early days of COVID-19 pandemic were generally unfair: ombudsman

Published Friday, July 9, 2021 11:42AM EDT Last Updated Friday, July 9, 2021 3:12PM EDT Toronto’s decision to issue hundreds of tickets to people found using closed park amenities in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic was “generally unfair” given the “fragmented” and “confusing” messaging around what was and wasn’t allowed, a new report from the city’s ombudsman has found. Ombudsman Susan Opler conducted an enquiry into Toronto’s enforcement of COVID-19 rules in city parks over a six-week period in the spring of 2020 after receiving 10 separate complaints from people who “felt they had been penalized not for flouting the COVID-19 rules on the use of city parks, but for simply being unaware of them, or not fully understanding them.”

Here s everything you need to know about Toronto s post-COVID recovery plan

Well-Run City & City Finances As a city we are experiencing one of the most challenging periods in our recent history. The economic, social and health impact of the COVID-19 pandemic cannot be overstated, reads the RecoveryTO page. The pandemic continues to have impacts on efforts to advance equity and Indigenous reconciliation throughout our society. While the City continues to respond to the immediate needs of our residents, communities and business, we also continue to lay the foundation and take action for the social and economic recovery of our City. And ICYMI (like I did), Toronto launched #RecoveryTO a snapshot of the City’s recovery and rebuild ‘6 for the 6ix’ themes of COVID-19 Recovery-related City decisions, reports, data, dashboards, and media announcements. https://t.co/ddTlar0jmLpic.twitter.com/thUcRSU3dM

Toronto is now only one vote away from renaming Dundas Street

Toronto is now only one vote away from renaming Dundas Street Stay in the loop Sign up for our free email newsletter. Unsubscribe anytime or contact us for details. Momentum continues to build for the push to rename Toronto s Dundas Street in honour of somebody who didn tsupport slavery, with only one final hurdle left to jump before the city bids farewell to a moniker that, at this point, is basically interchangeable with  Racist Guy Road. Mayor John Tory s Executive Committee voted unanimously this afternoon (6-0, as two councillors were absent) to move forward with the renaming process. This paves the way for the City of Toronto to change a major street name and all other civic assets paying homage to Henry Dundas,  a Scottish politician who actively campaigned to delay the abolition of slavery and has few, if any, ties to Toronto.

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