John Butler Trio

Morning Brew: August 12th, 2008

Photo: "John Butler Trio live @ The Sound Academy" by ariehsinger, member of the blogTO Flickr pool.

Your Toronto morning news roundup for Tuesday August 12th, 2008:

Most residents have slowly made their way home after Sunday's horrifying explosion in North York, and now more details about the event are coming to light. It turns out that the site hadn't been inspected for about three years, prompting Mayor Miller to call for a review of the bylaw that allowed the plant to exist in the first place.

A body was found near the explosion site late last night, but police are still not releasing the identity of the victim. There is still one Sunrise Propane Industrial Gases employee that has yet to be accounted for, but officials are waiting for a post-mortem to be completed before releasing the name of the victim.

The blast caused damage to Mount Sinai Memorial Park, one of the city's oldest Jewish cemeteries. The cemetery, which opened in 1920, is now closed pending a survey of the damage.

--

With the school year just around the corner, parents may be a bit dismayed to find out that talks between the Ontario government and the Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario are at an impasse. If a teacher's holdout makes you nervous, then the news that contract negotiations between the Toronto police union and management have broken down won't really do much to calm your nerves. The two sides are expected to enter arbitration next month.

Ontario NDP justice critic Peter Kormos recently wrote a letter addressed to the Attorney-General calling for disciplinary action against the judge in the custody case of recently-murdered 7-year-old Katelynn Sampson. Is it too soon for this issue to become political?

After being swept by the Indians, the Jays' bats came alive in a 7-2 beatdown against the Tigers in Detroit last night. Time for another winning streak?


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

What's open and closed on Victoria Day 2024 in Toronto

The breathtaking Mast Trail in Toronto follows a 200-year-old logging route

Moore Park Ravine is an escape from the city in midtown Toronto

The history of what was once Toronto's grandest mansion

This is how Toronto celebrated Victoria Day over 100 years ago

You can take in breathtaking valley views along the Vista Rouge Trail in Toronto

Downsview Park in Toronto is a massive urban park around an artificial lake

Canada is seeing one of the worst standard-of-living declines in 40 years