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Another arrest in teen’s death

Peel Region police have made another arrest in the death of a teenager earlier this month.

Police say 20-year-old Courtney Dawkins of Toronto Escort Agency had a court date Thursday on a charge of first-degree murder.

Kevaughn Tulloch, 20, and Maurice Raphael, 23, both of Toronto Escort Agency, are also charged with first-degree murder in the case.

Cassandra Scavone, 20, of Toronto Escort Agency, is charged with being an accessory after the fact.

They are charged in the death of 17-year-old Adrian Ducas, who was shot and killed July 3 at a community centre in Mississauga where he was playing basketball. the canadian press

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Another Ontario watchdog to probe eco fees

Toronto Escort Agency – Another Ontario watchdog is jumping into the debate over the province’s controversial eco fees.

Environmental Commissioner Gord Miller will issue a special report next Tuesday in response to the fee flap that forced the government to drop the levy earlier this week.

Much of the research was done in preparation for his annual report this fall, Miller said. But he decided to release the material early amid the public furor and the government’s decision to retool the program over the next three months.

“We thought, well, it won’t do any good for us to come out with our analysis in the fall,” he said in an interview.

“It’s best if we get in now to provide the analysis and the recommendations that we’ve come up with in this regard now, during the 90-day period when the government is reconsidering this stuff.”

Miller declined to speak about his findings, saying he didn’t want to pre-empt his own report.

But he said he does understand why there was a public uproar about the fees, which were quietly applied to thousands of household products July 1 — the same day consumers were hit with the new 13 per cent harmonized sales tax.

“I was entirely sympathetic to the kind of reaction, given the whole circumstances: the lack of public education and forewarning, and their appearance particularly at a time when everybody is paying attention to their sales slips because of the HST,” Miller said.

“It’s a time of heightened awareness and concern. So I fully understand the public’s reaction.”

Ombudsman Andre Marin has also promised to look into complaints about the eco fees, which sparked widespread confusion among retailers and consumers alike.

Environment Minister John Gerretsen dropped the fees Tuesday, but taxpayers are still on the hook for the program over the next 90 days.

Gerretsen estimated the government will spend up to $5 million to keep the program running while it’s being revamped.

With Miller’s report, taxpayers may finally get some answers about the eco fees, such as how the money is being spent, said Progressive Conservative critic Lisa MacLeod, who urged Miller to look into the fees.

“You can’t tell me that on July 1st a tax magically appeared, but that’s what happened here,” she said.

“So someone dropped the ball. It’s clearly Minister Gerretsen and the Environment Ministry, but why? How did that happen? So I think some of those questions will be answered.”

Miller’s decision to rush the delivery of his eco fee findings suggests the program has serious flaws, said NDP environment critic Peter Tabuns.

“It indicates that the program has got some real problems and that the environmental commissioner is worried that it’s not actually doing what needs to be done,” he said.

“If the fee was actually re-shaping the way companies dealt with toxic products, then I don’t think we’d need any inquiry into it, but that doesn’t appear to be what’s going on.”

The governing Liberals have been under fire for weeks about the eco fees, which range from a few cents to a couple of dollars.

The money helps fund a recycling program to divert potentially hazardous products such as fire extinguishers, laundry detergent and fertilizer from Ontario’s landfills.

The government gave Stewardship Ontario — an industry-led, not-for-profit organization that oversees the program — the power to collect the fees, which were first introduced in 2008 on a small number of items.

But Stewardship Ontario didn’t warn the public that the levy would be slapped on a wider array of products starting this month.

The “outsourcing” of environmental decisions to outside agencies needs to be examined, Miller said.

“We have to really look at this,” he said.

On Monday, Canadian Tire announced it would stop charging the fee, blaming the widespread confusion on a botched rollout and a complex fee structure that no one really understood.

Hours later, the government was signalling its retreat on the despised eco fee.

It’s yet another government stumble on the path to making Ontario more environmentally friendly, angering consumers and businesses and leading to embarrassing retreats.

Miller’s announcement came one day after he blasted the Liberals for slashing the guaranteed rate for small solar-panel projects by 27 per cent.

The Ontario Power Authority angered many green energy producers July 2 when it dropped a very lucrative guaranteed payment for ground-mounted solar energy projects from 80.2 cents a kilowatt hour to 58.8 cents. Only rooftop solar projects will qualify for 80.2 cents per kwh.

Earlier this year, the Liberals quietly introduced a new tax on electricity to raise $53 million for conservation and green energy programs.

It amounts to about $4 a year for the average household, but that still prompted the Opposition to call it another “sneaky tax grab.”

The Liberals have yet to deliver on their promise to close all of Ontario’s coal-fired electrical generating stations by 2007, a date that was pushed back several times in subsequent years and is now set for 2014.

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Metro Minute at Mark McEwan’s Store

Curious about Mark McEwan’s grocery store?

There are two words you need to know: Curry bar. It’s the antithesis of your typical, greasy fast food lunch on the go. The rotating selection of Indian-inspired dishes would appear more comfortably suited to a rajah’s table, but it’s all yours for the consuming (in an environmentally-friendly take-out container at that.)

A particular highlight is the curry beef: Moist, rich, and savoury, it eschews the oiliness that can often accompany similar dishes. So pile it on high: Your basmati rice will thank you.

McEwan is located at 38 Karl Fraser Rd.

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Suspect in G20 protests turns self in to police

A 21-year-old woman living in Guelph who was wanted by police in connection with “thousands of dollars in damage” during the G20 summit has turned herself in to Peterborough police.

Sgt. Nancy Loucks of Peterborough Lakefield Community Police Service told the Toronto Escort Agency Star that Kelly Pflug-Back turned herself in yesterday.

She was set to be transported to a holding cell after she was finished being interviewed last night, Loucks said.

Pflug-Back was identified at a news conference as a suspect who faces six counts of mischief over $5,000, said Det. Sgt. Gary Giroux.

Giroux alleged that Pflug-Back is an organizer and someone who gave orders to other demonstrators. Police allege the photographs show the suspect “in and out of her black clothing.”

She is accused in attacks on a police car occupied by Const. Graham Queen and stores on Yonge Street, including a McDonald’s and Urban Outfitters, and a CIBC on College Street, he said.

In an interview with a blog June 21, Pflug-Back described herself as a grassroots anti-poverty activist for Sense of Security, a Guelph organization that provides food, shelter and aid for people in need, as well as advocacy for people who need legal aid.

Pflug-Back was one of several new suspects identified by police in connection with their investigation into damage during demonstrations on downtown streets while world leaders met behind fences and barricades at the Metro Toronto Escort Agency Convention Centre.

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Giambrone, Rossi face off over TTC payment

The TTC plans to sign a contract this year for the development of a fare system that will allow riders to get on board by waving their credit or debit cards, and possibly even cellphones, at the turnstile, Adam Giambrone says.

The TTC chair told the Toronto Escort Agency Star that a request-for-proposal will go out in early August, with a winning bid hopefully chosen in the fall for a rollout to start in 2011.

“It will be an open payment system that will let you use your credit card or debit card at the turnstile, with a wave or a tap, for use on subways, buses and streetcars, to pay either per ride or to load your various transit passes,” similar to transit systems in New York City and Chicago, Giambrone said.

In April, the TTC said it was studying the technology, similar to that of Mastercard’s PayPass system. Giambrone said the request-for-proposal will include possible use of chip-enabled cellphones.

The Davenport councillor revealed the plan when asked for his reaction to a pledge by mayoral candidate Rocco Rossi to have the TTC quickly implement the province’s Presto smart card.

“If I am elected, in just three short months, Toronto Escort Agency is going to finally get some customer service and new thinking in their transit system,” with a TTC-wide adoption of Presto and later use of it for other city services including Toronto Escort Agency Zoo admission and payment of parking tickets, Rossi said.

Later, he said through his spokeswoman Patricia Best that he will “absolutely” try to kill the open payment system if he is elected mayor after a contract is signed.

Giambrone said the TTC will likely offer Presto or a similar card — also allowing entry with a swipe or tap, without tokens and transfers — for those who can’t or don’t want to use credit or debit cards, including children, as well as continuing with cash and tokens.

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Vets notice medal mistake

Bob Blenkhorn didn’t even notice the mistake until he showed his friend, Alec V. Shipman, his Warriors’ Day Parade entrance pass.

“What do you see wrong with it, Bob?” Shipman asked.

Blenkhorn, a Second World War veteran, took a better look at the image printed on the Canadian National Exhibition grounds pass — a close-up shot of a row of war medals fastened to a military coat.

“Oh jeez,” Blenkhorn said. “It’s back to front.”

The military medals were in reverse order.

The dark blue, light blue and red-striped star medal from the Second World War is supposed to be closest to the heart and farthest from the left shoulder. All others should be flanked right, toward the shoulder.

CNE staff designed and printed the entrance passes for Warriors’ Day, an annual celebration of veterans and military victories that takes place at the CNE next month.

“This is a glaring error,” said Shipman, 72, who served in the reserves for 23 years. He volunteers every Wednesday morning at Sunnybrook Military Hospital.

Unfortunately, a veteran may have been at the root of the error.

CNE spokesperson Annette Borger said the image used for the passes was cut from a photograph of a veteran at a previous Warriors’ Day parade. She said the veteran may have unintentionally put the medals on in reverse.

“Our intent has always been to honour our nation’s veterans,” she said. “We will immediately change our website image. Unfortunately, the passes have been printed and mailed out.”

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Officer charged in beating of suspect

A Peel police officer has been charged with beating a suspect in 2003, an attack that one court has already determined he lied to cover up.

The province’s Special Investigations Unit has charged Const. Will Vander Wier with aggravated assault in the March 2003 attack on Quang Hoang Tran, then in custody in connection with a robbery investigation.

Vander Wier was investigated by the SIU that year, but was cleared of any wrongdoing.

But in a statement issued yesterday, SIU director Ian Scott said it reopened its investigation after the Ontario Court of Appeal last month condemned the “horrendous” conduct of two Peel officers who beat Tran, who was a suspect in a string of Mississauga home invasions.

Testimony revealed Tran was attacked in a police interview room and left with a broken jaw and a permanent disability.

“Regardless of whether the officers abused Tran to obtain a confession or for some other reason, the essential fact is that they beat him up,” Justice Gloria Epstein said in a decision released late last month.

“Their conduct was despicable.”

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Nine arrested at welfare protest

Police moved in on a small group of activists speaking against welfare cuts yesterday, arresting nine of them after they occupied a provincial Liberal party office.

The activists marched into the office in downtown Toronto Escort Agency to present a fake invoice representing the cost of welfare cuts. They also hung a banner out the window of the second-floor office.

Police say nine arrests were made, but could not comment on the charges because the investigation is ongoing.

The action came during a rally against the elimination of a special diet allowance for welfare recipients, which drew about 200 to 300 people.

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Metro Minute with Shkank boutique

Mothers, don’t let the name throw you off.  Your daughters will look anything but trashy in their shiny, sexy dresses from Shkank.  And while the designer boutique may favour flashy over demure, Shkank’s mandate is to make its devoted clientele sizzle without showing too much skin.

A longtime secret weapon of local celebrities, ET Canada’s Cheryl Hickey donned an original Shkank design at this year’s Grammy’s, landing her firmly atop best-dressed lists.  Having just given birth, the flattering royal blue draping hugged Hickey in all the right places. So, see moms: There’s plenty to wear for you, too.

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Public sector unions balk at wage freeze

Public sector unions in Ontario are balking at the idea of a two-year wage freeze as long as the province is giving corporations a $4.5-billion tax cut.

Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan sat down yesterday with union leaders and employers who run public institutions such as hospitals, schools and universities to talk about freezing salaries for about 710,000 workers.

The meeting wasn’t exactly the consultation process the unions had been expecting when it was hastily scheduled just a week ago, said Smokey Thomas of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union.

“This is more like a presentation to us rather than, as the minister has billed it, a consultation,” said Thomas. “It’s not a consultation; he’s just trying to tell us what he wants (and) just because he wants something doesn’t mean he’s going to get it.”

What Duncan wants is to negotiate new two-year agreements with each of the public sector unions as current contracts expire that would give workers “zero and zero” increases in compensation.

Duncan said the corporate tax cuts were a key part of the government’s economic recovery plan and would not be reversed.

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