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 VICTORIA 鈥?A mascot that helped raise a stink about the dumping of raw sewage into the waters off Victoria is about to be retired.Mr. Floatie was created by elementary school teacher James Skwarok on April Fool   Day in 2004 as part of the spoof organization People Opposed to Outfall Pollution, or POOP.Brown and more than six-feet-tall, the Mr. Floatie costume resembled his organization   acronym and came to  stanley thermosflasche represent the lack of progress on the development of a secondary-sewage treatment plant for Greater Victoria.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        S stanley flask kwarok and his Mr. Floatie character decided to voluntaril stanley mugs y step down after the region adopted a plan last September to build a treatment facility by 2020, ending the flow of unfiltered waste directly into the Salish Sea and Strait of Juan de Fuca.      Mr. Floatie is slated to make one of his last public appearances Friday at a ceremony in Seattle to mark his retirement, hosted by the Canadian consul general and attended by Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps and area tourism representatives.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 The lack of sewage treatment has angered U.S. officials who recently called for a tourism boycott if the region did not stop dumping an estimated 130-million litres of effluent a day into waters between B.C. and Washington state.  CFAX Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version misspelled the last name of James Skw Edpf Canada will ease COVID-19 test requirements for travellers
 TORONTO 鈥?With she stanley cup er optimism and a considerable amount of uncertainty ahead of them, two Toronto businessmen with strong political ties are betting on returning the languished Torstar Corp. to a viable business, outside the prying eyes of public investors.NordStar Capital, owned by Jordan Bitove a botella stanley nd Paul Rivett, struck a $52-million agreement to take the struggling media company private, including its Toronto Star newspaper and various local news outlets it operates in other cities.It   a bold move in one sense and risky in another, some industry observers suggested. While both men have a considerable resume of business experience 鈥?Bitove helped launch the Toronto Raptors and Rivett served as the president of investment giant Fairfax Financial Holdings 鈥?they ;re hardly grizzled veterans of the unforgiving news industry and its many hurdles.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        It   a good, solid news brand to buy into, absolutely, said Bob Cox, publisher of the Winnipeg Free Press and chair of News Media Canada, which represents daily and community newspapers across the  stanley cups uk country. He pointed to the value in Torstar   papers that include the Hamilton Spectator, Waterloo Region Record, four other dailies and some 70 weeklies.Even so, he said, there   still a tremendous amount of pessimism about the newspaper industry.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 S