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Jayx1
Prime Minister of TOTA
Registered: Feb 2003
Location: The Socialist People's Republic Of Canada
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| quote: | A stroke and a couple of car accidents have left Tracey Buck walking with a cane.
So when the 40-year-old Toronto woman boards the Victoria Park bus, she needs to sit at the front, where the seats are reserved for the elderly, pregnant, and disabled.
Buck estimates that out of every 10 times she boards a crowded bus, only five times will somebody get up and allow her to sit down.
"It's getting bad," Buck said. "It's like New York City."
It's that kind of behaviour that the TTC is attempting to crack down on -- with higher fines for a host of offences found in a bylaw that sets out the transit system's code of conduct for passengers.
Fines are either $195 or $345, depending on the violation, said spokesman Danny Nicholson. But there's also the so-called victim surcharges of $35 for the lesser fine and $75 for the $345 penalty.
Offences range from refusing to get up from a seat reserved for the disabled and putting feet up on a seat to littering or using an expired transfer. Others include smoking on TTC property, vandalism, littering, and entering a station illegally. What's new is that the TTC now has the power to issue fines against those passengers.
Yesterday marked the first day of enforcement, with TTC special constables ending the grace period for the fine increases and new penalties -- which included handing out pamphlets and educating passengers -- and beginning to issue tickets.
Buck, at Victoria Park station yesterday, said politeness is a rare commodity on the TTC. "I find that a lot of people are rude and inconsiderate," Buck said.
Andrew Burnett, 22, also at Vic Park station, didn't see the point in levying fines against transit-goers who use profane language. "It still doesn't stop the main issue of robberies that go on in the stations, the fact that there's junkies sharing the same seat as your child and other people on the TTC," Burnett said. "They don't do nothing to stop that, but they want to stop swearing. Swearing is nothing, really."
Burnett said seats on buses and subways are uncomfortable, which is why people put their feet up on seats.
Kazi Islam, 29, said he doesn't find the majority of TTC users to be rude. He said the fines seem appropriate.
"They are fine," Islam said. "They are not that strict."
Last year, the special constables issued $600,000 worth of tickets. |
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Oct-15-2009 18:23
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Jayx1
Prime Minister of TOTA
Registered: Feb 2003
Location: The Socialist People's Republic Of Canada
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Here is an interesting juxtaposition in this news story...
So you get fined and charged for everything under the sun.. except stealing a billion dollars it seems.
| quote: |
Premier Dalton McGuinty has rejected a call for a public inquiry into the eHealth Ontario scandal.
While accepting criticism that his government was "lax" in overseeing the billion-dollar initiative to generate electronic health records, McGuinty said new accountability measures will prevent a repeat of the fiscal fiasco.
"We have the rules in place now, there's no more sole-sourced contracts for consultants, for example," McGuinty said yesterday during a visit to Mohawk College in Hamilton.
But PC Leader Tim Hudak said only a full public inquiry will answer serious questions raised by Auditor General Jim McCarter's special report on eHealth last week.
"A close read of the auditor general's report strongly suggests that there may have been deliberate price fixing and bid rigging at eHealth -- bid rigging is criminal behaviour," Hudak said. "If the law was broken, the people of Ontario deserve to know ... what's going to be done about it."
McCarter's auditors found that favoured firms were able to secure contracts easily, even if at times their bids were higher than the competition.
The auditor warned of the dangers in overusing the same consultants, but found no evidence party politics or personal benefit played any role in the awarding of contracts.
It was clear that Liberal-friendly firms had an inside track at eHealth and the health ministry, but the auditor's role and resources did not extend to examining those political links, Hudak said.
"I think one person's favouritism is another person's political ties," he said.
McGuinty suggested it was typical opposition politics that was driving Hudak's call for a public inquiry.
The independent expert -- the auditor general -- has made several recommendations in his eHealth report that the government intends to fully implement, the premier said.
Former health minister David Caplan resigned on the day McCarter delivered his report.
The eHealth issue goes well beyond Caplan, to former health minister George Smitherman and Premier Dalton McGuinty -- and both those men still have their jobs, Hudak said.
The auditor also identified difficulties and delays he encountered while wading through an apparently recalcitrant bureaucracy in his audit of electronic health records, and it's still unclear why that happened, Hudak noted.
"We know this government will not give up its dirty secrets willingly," he said. "Only a full public inquiry will provide the answers that the people of Ontario deserve to see."
McCarter's report concluded that Ontario's nine-year, $1-billion effort to digitize health records spent too much on consultants and produced too little for taxpayers. |
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Oct-15-2009 18:29
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DigiNut
You kids get off my lawn!

Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Toronto, Self-proclaimed Centre of the Universe
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| quote: | Originally posted by sugar_sparkles
for the old people in the park ---> isn't it just saying that you have to have a permit to run an organized group there? Like you need a permit to have a hot dog stand... so you need a permit to organize (a make profits from) a old person park walk... |
There's a subtle difference here, which is that a hot dog stand is actually transacting business right there on the public property, whereas I'm going to assume that this "walk in the park" is all pre-arranged. Even if it isn't, the "business" would all be happening within the span of seconds and certainly isn't bothering anyone else.
This is almost reminiscent of the recent case where they fined a truck driver for smoking in his truck, alone, because it was used for business and hence constitutes a "workplace" environment. All of these cash grabs are using a very, very loose definition of the word "business."
The original spirit of the law was really just to prevent every Tom, Dick and Harry from peddling on the street like it's some kind of bazaar. I'll admit that if the group's organizer is collecting money then the city does have the legal right to impose a fee, but to me this is just another case of a law/bylaw that's entirely too vague, being interpreted way beyond its actual intent by political opportunists more concerned with filling their coffers than maintaining public order.
In any event, these officers and spokespeople are likely going to find out that they picked the wrong group of citizens to harass. Seniors as a collective wield a great deal of political power and have an unofficial protected status, perhaps even more so than ethnic minorities.
___________________
My party schedule:
2009-02-21 - DJ Attention @ I'm So Popular
2009-06-18 - DJ Annoying @ People Need To Know Where I'll Be
2012-11-32 - DJ Insufferable ɸ Or At Least the Stalkers I Complain About
2048-06-66 - Spastic & Whocares ¶ Although I'm Actually Flattered
9999-45-81 - Tweaker Gimp ☼ I Probably Won't Even Go To This But I Have To Make Sure I Fill Up All The Available Space Here
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Oct-15-2009 21:38
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Jayx1
Prime Minister of TOTA
Registered: Feb 2003
Location: The Socialist People's Republic Of Canada
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of course some people agree with this..
thats why we have such a nanny state right??
And what about fining people for swearing? Id FUCKING love for them to fine me for that. It would be a supreme court case.
1) Define swearing. What exactly counts as a swear word? What about swearing in foreign languages?
2) Freedom of speech means you can say anything you want that is not slander or hate.
3) i love how in one story they said they would make exceptions for those who are new to the country or those who have a problem with english.. Riiiiight.... double standards live!!
The most the TTC should be allowed to do for swearing is ask you to leave the property, if in fact the TTC is deemed to be private property. If it is public property they dont have a leg to stand on.
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Oct-15-2009 23:29
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