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 The manager of Torontos popular Lakeview Restaurant says restaurants and bars  just need a spark,  as COVID-19 restrictions lift Monday to allow indoor dining with capacity limits. Hopefully that first week is that outlet that we need, just to shake ourselves out of January,  said Peter Avenins.Gyms, movie theatres and museums in Ontario will also be able to reopen Monday, after having been shut down for the last several weeks.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Perhaps more than anything, business own stanley water bottle ers are hoping stanley cup  this is the last time theyre forced to close, after having gone through waves of lock stanley mugs downs and reopenings, then back into lockdown, since the COVID-19 pandemic began in March 2020.Theyre also left to wonder: Will the customers come back         ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                  This one kind of feels like we got a bit of a different kind of burnout than last time 鈥?We felt a bit more defeated with this one,  Avenins said of the recent closure.  Were hopeful that its the last one, the last time were going to have to close, so we have a lot of energy to get back into it. Avenins said the Lakeview, at Dundas Street West and Ossington Avenue, has been doing takeout these last few weeks, but it hasnt been as busy. The restaurant is aiming to get back to being open 24 hours a day hopefully soon, he said, and this weekend they plan to stay open until 4 a.m.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW              Nwxp The Latest: US defence secretary condemns Istanbul attack
 TORONTO 鈥?The Toronto District School Board is suing the city, the province and local police over a fire that destroyed a high school two years ago, alleging negligence allowed a small blaze to erupt into a much larger one that gutted the historic building.Legal documents filed on Wednesday show the board is seeking $90 million in damages in connection with the fire at York Memorial stanley cup  Collegiate Institute.In an unproven statement of claim, the board alleges firefi stanley cup ghters failed to completely extinguish a small fire in the school   auditorium on May 6, 2019, allowing flames to erupt again the next day and eventually destroy the building.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        The fire struck the building only weeks before a celebration to mark the schools 90th anniversary, reads the statement of claim, which notes no one was hurt in the blaze. The consequences of the fire have been devastating for the TDSB, as well as its staff and its students.The school board alleges that because Toronto police and firefighters suspected that the initial fire may have been arson, the school   auditorium was sealed off as a potential crime scene.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 The suit notes that the evacuated building was in full custody of police, firefighters, and the Ontario Fire Marshal after the first small fire and alleges th stanley cup e defendants failed to control and supervise the scene,