A recent column about old utility poles prompted a lot of complaints about others that have yet to be removed, writes Jack Lakey.
Bicycle locking rings are a boon to cyclists, but when they’re snapped off, the stubs left in the sidewalk are dangerous, writes Jack Lakey.
The decommissioned poles were left for upwards of two years, right next to their new replacements.
A local resident says the town seems uninterested in ensuring that builders take steps to protect trees at construction sites, writes Jack Lakey.
For weeks, water has been steadily bubbling out of a utility chamber, forcing traffic into a single lane, writes Jack Lakey.
With so many potholes this winter, a lot more people are asking for compensation for damage to their vehicles, writes Jack Lakey.
Don’t be surprised if your claim with the city is denied when you’re to trying recover money for damage to your vehicle caused by a pothole, writes Jack Lakey.
It’s so egregious that it looks like the developer has no idea why a city bylaw requires the tree to be fenced off.
Charges were laid after our columns about illegal dumping and construction sites allowing the road to be fouled with mud.
The city has so far filled more potholes this winter than in any of the previous four years.
Whoever is using Torbarrie Rd. as an illegal dumpsite has to be gloating over how easy it is to get away with it, writes Jack Lakey.
The huge number of bikes that are locked up and abandoned is an enduring urban mystery that nobody is able to explain.
But most of the shelters on a list provided to the city and the TTC that are not used to wait for a bus will remain in place.
If the movie looks, sounds and feels like the most frantic Steven Spielberg film ever, that’s because it is. But don’t let that stop you.