Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Alex Bozikovic
Publication Date: July 18, 2025 - 05:00
After 18 years of work, Toronto’s Port Lands opens to the public
July 18, 2025
On a sunny July afternoon, the Don River flowed into Toronto Harbour. Its banks were lined with lake sedge, switchgrass and Canada anemone. Paths and bridges laced through the landscape, which looked as if they had always been there.In fact, this stretch of river and its surrounding lands − now known as Biidaasige Park − are entirely manufactured. They are not a work of nature but a feat of civic imagination. They are the product of a $1.5-billion effort known as the Port Lands Flood Protection Project, which has redrawn the mouth of the Don and conjured vast new public spaces from what had long been a civic afterthought.
What happened to those “short-term” price increases from the pandemic?
From 2021 to 2023, Canadians were told that prices jumped largely because of supply-chain bottlenecks, government spending on income supports and other pandemic-related issues.
If so, shouldn’t those temporary increases disappeared once the pandemic subsided and those glitches were repaired?
While inflation may have since been tamed, Statistics Canada’s monthly inflation figures show that the pandemic-era price hikes survived.
Are consumers getting ripped off by not seeing prices slide back again?...
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