Auteur Sujet: ajwr 5 things to know about the 2022 Halton Region budget process  (Lu 2 fois)

MethrenRaf

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Wyat Unable to do anything about making housing more affordable : Oakville Mayor Rob Burton on Ontario housing affordability report
 A painting recently discovered at an Ontario thrift store by renowned folk artist Maud Lewis sold in auction for almost three times its estimated price.The online auction ended Friday night and the painting, which was appraised at $16,000, went for $45,000.Rick Cober Bauman, stanley mug  the executive director of Mennonite Central Committee Ontario, said it   been quite the journey since Portrait of Eddie Barnes stanley cup  and Ed Murphy, Lobster Fishermen ; ; was found a little more than a year ago by vol stanley quencher unteers sorting through donations in the New Hamburg, Ont., thrift shop his organization runs.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        At one point, the auction had to be stopped and restarted because someone bid $125,000 in bad faith.There weren ;t any new bids in the last days, and we are fine with that, Cober Bauman said. This is still a remarkable outcome when we consider the original appraised value of around $16,000.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 Lewis, who lived in poverty for most of her life, sold her paintings from her home near Digby, N.S., for as little as $2 and $3. She died in 1970, but her paintings have since sold for more than $20,000. Two of her works were ordered by the White House during Richard Nixon   presidency after Lewis achieved widespread attention.The Canadian artist has also been the subject of a biopic starring Oscar-nominated actors Ethan  Sdgv 4 at 4 鈥?Halton news of the day for April 12, 2022
 TORONTO 鈥?A judge has denied a request by a group of homeless men and women to temporarily override a bylaw that bans them from living in Toronto parks during the pandemic.Justice Paul Schabas made clear, however, that his decision was based on evidence gathered during the summer - when COVID-19 case counts were low - and was not to be taken as a direction to dismantle the encampments that have cropped up in city parks.It is now October and the incidence of COVID-19 has risen in what is described as a  8216 econd wave ; ... the city will have to consider how and when to enforce its bylaw having regard to the continued availability of safe shelter spaces and the impact of the encampments on the parks and the public, Schabas wrote in the decision released Wednesday.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Hundreds of men and women have left shelters over fears of contracting COVID-19 and have been stanley cup  living in encampments that have sprouted up across the city.A city bylaw, however, bans living or camping in parks after midnight.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 Fourteen individuals living in Toronto parks and two activist organizations banded together to ask Schabas for an interim order to allow homeless people to stay in encampments u stanley cup ntil a constitutional challenge of the bylaw is heard.Schabas said the group did not meet the standard stanley cup  of establishing harm to the public interest that would just