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TORONTO 鈥?The president of Toronto real estate board warned leaders of the Ontario Real Estate Association, headed
stanley mug by a former Progressive Conservative leader, to 8220 tay in their lane in an emphatic letter that relays his concerns that the provincial group is stoking fears about the h
stanley cup ousing market and becoming too political.In a letter obtained by The Canadian Press, Tim Sy
stanley cup rianos tells the president of the Ontario Real Estate Association 鈥?whose chief executive is long-time Tory Tim Hudak 鈥?that the organization should turn its focus away from political contests and affordability in the Greater Toronto Area, and stick to its mandate to promote the province housing market as a whole.It is misguided and ill-advised to attempt to supplant TREB and overtake our expertise and well-respected voice in our marketplace simply for media headlines and political gain, Syrianos wrote in the letter to OREA president David Reid. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Syrianos expressed concern about the Ontario Realtor Party, an OREA campaign that, according to the provincial organization, supports all political parties and politicians that support the Canadian dream of home ownership.He also expressed his discontent with OREA plan to use the campaign to endorse specific politicians on billboard advertisements 鈥?something he sees as a direct violation of his board mand Fniw Jury being selected in white ex-officer s murder trial
OTTAWA 鈥?Residents of a First Nation in northern Ontario threatened by spring flooding are facing more complex and some fear-inducing options for es
vaso stanley cape this year, thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic.The almost 2,000 residents of Kashechewan First Nation have had to flee their community every year since 2012 due to flooding, removed to larger centres such as T
stanley bottles immins and Thunder Bay.But this year, many residents are worried about catching the novel coronavirus or bringing it back into their community. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW That why about 1,200 people have instead decided to wait out the flood season on the land, with some setting up camps in their traditional territories and others planning to camp in an area known as Site 5, about 30 kilometres from the First Nation, where the community is eventually supposed to be moved.The remaining 800-odd residents are staying put, hoping the waters don ;t rise too high th
stanley termohrnek is year and force them to leave. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says the flood plan for Kashechewan this year is more complex due to the additional risk the pandemic places on the First Nation residents.COVID-19 in any community has complexified any sort of movement and with a community like Kashechewan that has had this preventative relocation and evacuation for the last few years, COVID-19 has intensely complexified som