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Hamilton wants in on ice storm gift card program

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Desember 2013 | 22.46

The province is teaming up with grocery stores to hand out gift cards to low-income Toronto residents who lost food during the ice storm, and Hamilton city hall wants the same.

The mayor's office has contacted Premier Kathleen Wynne's office to see how the city can participate in the gift card program, said Peggy Chapman, chief of staff to Mayor Bob Bratina.

"We are actively trying to find out how Hamilton can participate," Chapman said.

'The status quo can't prevail. The power goes off far too often now.'- Coun. Sam Merulla

About 35,000 Hamilton homes lost power last weekend when an ice storm pummelled the area. Some customers, such as those in parts of Glanbrook and Ancaster, were without power for days.

In the hardest hit areas of north Flamborough, some spent Christmas in the dark.

In Toronto, as many as 300,000 customers were without power at the peak of the outage. Some still don't have it back.

The province will match corporate donations to a maximum of $100,000, Wynne said in a media conference Monday. Shoppers Drug Mart, Metro and Sobeys also donated $25,000.

The Daily Bread Food Bank will distribute the gift cards at Toronto Ontario Works offices. Eligible families will get a $100 gift card and individuals a $50 gift card.

Toronto stepped forward asking for the program, Wynne said. But the province is willing to work with other cities too.

Hamilton is interested, and city staff has contacted Wynne, Chapman said. Staff aren't sure how many Hamilton residents might need such a program.

Meanwhile, Coun. Sam Merulla will introduce a motion at a Jan. 15 general issues committee to ask for disaster relief money for the city. He also wants the city to investigate how to reduce power outages.

In some European jurisdictions, he said, law dictates that power cannot be out for more than six hours without a penalty to utility companies.

The power goes out too often, the Ward 4 councillor said.

"The status quo can't prevail," he said. "The power goes off far too often now. It's becoming far more prevalent."


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City calculating how much ice storm cleanup will cost

The city expects post-ice storm cleanup to last for the next month, but the cost is still unknown.

Forestry crews are out on Monday clearing and chopping up branches in the areas hardest hit by last week's wicked weather, said Mike Kirkopolous, the city's manager of communications.

There have been 2,244 requests for cleanup since rain and snow turned to ice last Saturday night.

"Most efforts are being paid where most of the damage is," he said.

Crews are focusing on the central and east Mountain and Flamborough — which Coun. Judi Partridge of Ward 14 was pleased to hear.

'I've never seen anything like it.'- Coun. Judi Partridge.

"It's a mess," she said of her ward, particularly Carlisle, Millgrove and Freelton. "The damage is so overwhelming."

Looking out into her own backyard in Carlisle, Partridge described huge fallen branches piled along her property line. Out the front window, a six-metre line of branches piled more than a metre high waits for pick-up crews.

"Still today, the buzz saws are going," she said. "This isn't something we're able to pick up in a few hours."

Despite Kirkopolous's clean-up projection of about a month, Partridge believes it's going to take longer than that.

"I've never seen anything like it," she said.

Some of Partridge's constituents just had their power restored Sunday, leaving them in the dark for a full week. But her residents are in good spirits.

"People are banding together and cleaning up," Partridge said.

They have also found creative ways to slow-cook a pot roast on the barbecue. They ate by candlelight.

"It's humbling," she said.

Kirkopolous said the city isn't sure how much clean up will ultimately cost. Toronto projects that each day of cleanup is costing the city about $1 million.

"We're in the process of pulling that together," he said. "We're still in preliminary stages."

Horizon Utilities, who had employees working around the clock and hired extra contractors to remove tree branches, also won't ballpark a cost to date, said spokesperson Larry Roberts.

Kirkopolous said the city will look into how much, if any, funding Hamilton can get from the province.

Coun. Sam Merulla also gave notice of motion Monday to ask city staff to determine if Hamilton is eligible for funding under the Ontario Disaster and Relief Assistance Program.

City crews will pick up collected branches placed curb side that are 1.2 metres (four feet) or shorter and seven centimetres in diameter or smaller. Pick up for storm debris will continue for as long as needed, Partridge said.

If branches are larger than the specifications, Kirkopolous said residents can call 546-CITY and request a pick-up from forestry crews.

Waste collection won't happen on New Year's Day (Wednesday), but any garbage or tree debris will be picked up the day after your scheduled day this week.


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How to spend New Year's Eve in Hamilton

It's not too late to make plans for ringing in the new year. There's a smorgasbord of celebration in store for Hamilton on Tuesday night. Here's a sample of ideas for revellers of various tastes.

For party animals

Visit your trusty local on Tuesday, or celebrate at one of the bars and clubs the city has to offer. Cover charge generally ranges from $5 to $20. But wherever you go, it's best to call in advance.

Scores of downtown hotspots will throb with music and dancing. The Casbah (306 King St. W.) will spin funky grooves from the '70s and '80s. Guests will be treated to midnight cocktails and hors d'oeuvres. $20

New Year's Eve at the Baltimore House (43 King William St.) boasts the latest of edition in the venue's synth-soaked Night Drive DJ series. $5

And for the high rollers in the city, Club 77 (77 King William St.) is hosting Countdown to Vegas, featuring real casino games and $5,000 in prizes. Packages start at $21 

For live-music lovers

Several bars have house bands or DJs providing background music for the year-end revelry. But at other venues, the sounds take centre stage.

Purveyors of mean, roots-infused riffs, Hamilton rock outfit Huron will play a rare headlining gig at This Ain't Hollywood. Folk-pop provocateur B. A. Johnston and rapper-poet Lee Reed are also on the bill. $10

The Pearl Company (16 Steven St.) will host Hot Jazzy New Year's, featuring the Spanjazz Ensemble, a DJ set from former MuchMusic VJ Michael Williams and an eclectic, evening-long buffet. $50

For romantics and foodies

New Year's Eve in Hamilton has options for couples and fancy-feasters with a penchant for indulgence.  

Tuesday night's gala at Liuna Station (360 James St. N.) boasts a decadent five-course meal with Italian flair, a moonlight buffet and midnight champagne toast. $120

A five-course meal is also on the menu for Carmen's Banquet Hall's swanky soiree. The night features an eight-hour bar and a dance with a soundtrack curated by Tony Perri, a veteran wedding DJ. $110

For families with kids

Wabush skating show

Two public Hamilton arenas are holding free family skate times on Tuesday afternoon. (CBC)

Not many kid-friendly events are on tap for Tuesday night, but the daytime is a different story.

Dec. 31 is the final day of the Royal Botanical Gardens' inaugural Winterfest. Running from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the RBG's Nature Interpretive Centre (16 Old Guelph Rd.), the event includes outdoor winter games, crafts and an afternoon campfire.

Admission is included in the price of a day pass to the RBG, which costs $12.50 for adults, $10.50 for students/youth and $7.50 for children age 4 to 12. Kids under four get in free.

Tim Hortons is sponsoring a selection of free public skate times at Hamilton arenas throughout the holidays. On Tuesday, there will be zero-fee family skating at Valley Park Arena (970 Paramount Dr., Stoney Creek) from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and Inch Park Arena (400 Queensdale Ave., Hamilton) from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

For couch potatoes

Prefer to party in the comfort of your home? Watching the tube, for some, is a Dec. 31 tradition. Tune into CBC TV at 8 p.m. ET for the Royal Canadian Air Farce's annual New Year's Eve extravaganza, followed at 9 p.m. by Mr. D star Gerry Dee's year-end comedy special. 

Getting around

gi-ridestop-300

Police warn drivers to expect RIDE checks across the city on Tuesday night. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

As always, Hamilton police stress the following:

If you're planning to drink on New Year's Eve, do not drive. Motorists can expect RIDE checks to be operating throughout the city.

HSR buses will operate on a regular weekday schedule, but rides after 6 p.m. will be free.

Taxi companies in the city include Hamilton Cab (905-777-7777) and Blue Line Taxi (905-525-2583).

For partiers travelling in and out of Hamilton, GO Transit will have extra service along many of its lines, including the Lakeshore West corridor. After 8 p.m., riders across the system get on for free (that is, until the Jan. 1 schedule begins). 

For more information, including a list of train and bus times, go to GO Transit's New Year's Eve page.  


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Hamilton Daystarter: Everything you need to know Tuesday

It's the last day of 2013. It's going to be snowy and cold, but don't let that stop you from enjoying it.

Commute

The QEW is bare, says the Ministry of Transportation. Highway 6 is partly snow covered, as is the 401 from Milton west.

As for 9:50 a.m., Go Transit is running on time.

Weather

The temperature is currently -9 C. It'll hover around -8 C for the rest of the day.

Boots are preferable footwear today. There is light snow ending late this morning. Then it will be cloudy skies with 30 per cent chance of flurries. Otherwise, there will be sun and cloud this afternoon. We'll get about 2 centimetres of snow today.

It'll be a frosty New Year's Eve — partly cloudy with the temperature steady around -11 C.

Tomorrow, there will be a 60 per cent chance of flurries with a high of -9 C.

City news

If you're still looking for things to do tonight, reporter Cory Ruf has rounded up a guide to New Year's Eve in Hamilton.

Local transit is running on its usual schedule, but will be free after 6 p.m. 

For partiers travelling in and out of Hamilton, GO Transit will have extra service along many of its lines, including the Lakeshore West corridor. After 8 p.m., riders across the system get on for free (that is, until the Jan. 1 schedule begins). 

Taxi companies in the city include Hamilton Cab (905-777-7777) and Blue Line Taxi (905-525-2583).

Happy New Year!


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Hamilton police making a record number of RIDE stops

Hamilton police officers pulled over more than 6,000 more vehicles this year in RIDE programs than they did in 2012, making 2013 a record year.

Officers stopped 235,000 vehicles in RIDE lanes this year. That's a 6,685 over last year, when officers stopped 228,315 vehicles. The number marks a steady upward trend since 2006.

The number of RIDE stops is up to officers on duty, said Const. Claus Wagner from Hamilton Police Service.

If there's a "little bit of a lull" in calls for service, "they go out and do RIDE lanes," Wagner said.

Number of RIDE stops conducted by Hamilton police officers

2013: 235,000

2012: 228,315

2011: 167,766

2010: 150,256

2009: 152,833

2008: 132,508

2007: 89,536

2006: 95,989

There is a threshold on the number of RIDE stops the service can do with its number of officers. Wagner suspects Hamilton police are nearing their limit.

"We can't keep going up every year," he said. "Eventually there will be a ceiling."

There was a slight decrease in the number of alcohol-related charges laid this year. As of Monday, police made 484 alcohol-related arrests in 2013. That's compared to 538 in 2012.

With New Year's Eve on Tuesday night, the final number could increase, Wagner said. RIDE lanes will start Tuesday afternoon.

RIDE stops function as a deterrent as much as they do an enforcement tool, he said.

"It's the presence of us out there, because there are still people that for some reason make the decision that they're OK to drive."

Alcohol-related arrests

2013: 484

2012: 538

Police ramp up RIDE lanes during the holiday season. From Dec. 24 to 26, police laid 13 alcohol-related driving charges and 208 speeding tickets, Wagner said.

Hamilton police get an annual grant of about $44,000 for RIDE stops from the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services. That money is spread throughout the year, Wagner said.

Police have partnered with the Hamilton Bulldogs this season. Officers have been issuing vouchers for a free Bulldogs ticket to drivers who successfully go through a RIDE stop.

Police also rely on Operation Look Out, a program that encourages residents to call 911 if they see what they suspect is an impaired driver. So far this year, police have arrested 167 people through the program.

Police checked 167,766 vehicles in RIDE stops in 2011.

In a statement from police on Monday, Staff Sgt. Robert Hersics says he has a simple message.

"Impaired driving leads to the tragic loss of lives and is 100 per cent preventable," he said.

CBC Hamilton's 2013 impaired driving series:


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Hamilton Daystarter: Everything you need to know Monday

Written By Unknown on Senin, 30 Desember 2013 | 22.46

We're sooooo close to 2014, Hamilton. What are your resolutions?

Share your thoughts on the new year with us! Tweet your resolutions to @CBCHamilton.

We hope you enjoyed your Christmas

It'll be a light commute no matter where you're headed this morning.

No issues on GO Transit, if you're heading out of the city for work. Highways are smooth as well.

In town, smooth-sailing again. There is a little bit of traffic on the lower-city access routes, but nothing that will make you late for where you need to go.

Here's a map of ongoing construction projects you might run into today.


View Hamilton commute in a larger map

Weather is going to be the big story for the next couple pf days. If you haven't ventured outside yet, you may not have noticed the temperature has dropped significantly from yesterday. It's -9 C out right now, but feels more like -16 C.

The high today is -9 C with a 30-per-cent chance of flurries later on. A low of - 11 C overnight.

Bust out the parka again for New Year's Eve – it's going to be cold. A high of -8 C during the day, with the temperature dropping again for the evening.

Hamilton police officer Ian Matthews was laid to rest yesterday.

The 25-year veteran of the Hamilton Police Service, the former homicide investigator was not killed in the line of duty. On Dec. 17, he died at age 47 after shooting himself in a locker room at police headquarters. The message from family to other officers is to ask for help. Reporter Cory Ruf was at the funeral.

How about a pre-party to prep for NYE? It's the second annual Shake, Rattle and Rave at the Casbah. $20. Doors at 9 p.m.


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New details on Tivoli redevelopment coming soon

Hamilton residents can expect a preview in January of the next act for the storied Tivoli Theatre and the stack of condos that's slated to spring up beside it, says a developer who's spearheading the project.

Berardo Diamante, of Diamante Investments, which owns the Tivoli, said the firm is meeting with city staff in the middle of the month to pore over architects' plans for the site. Armed with the city's feedback, developers will put together an official announcement before the beginning of February, he said. 

"January is going to tell us a lot and then we can start sharing a lot of other details," said Diamante, son of company president Domenic Diamante. "I would like to have a rough mock-up of what the building will look like."

The project, Diamante said, will restore the theatre, as well as build a condo tower beside it, and ground-level storefronts installed on the west side of the complex facing James Street North. Diamante hopes construction will be complete by mid-2015.

'We wanted to make sure we have all our I's dotted and T's crossed before we come forward.'—Berardo Diamante, Diamante Investments

Diamante wouldn't say how many storeys are planned for the condo or how much the project is expected to cost.

"What we're thinking of doing could completely change [based on the city's input]," he said. "We wanted to make sure we have all our I's dotted and T's crossed before we come forward."

But Diamante stressed the revitalization of the Tivoli is central to the plan, and that the revival is at the heart of his father's vision for the location.

"This is the signature last project that he's doing," Diamante said. "He wants to build something that he can look at and enjoy."

Councillor Jason Farr, whose ward includes the downtown core, said he's looking forward to learning more about what the developers are planning. 

"I hope for the best. It's intensification. It's something we need. It's a great proximity to a lot of things, including [the new James Street North GO station that's scheduled to open in 2015]," he said. "I'm very encouraged that they're sitting down with staff."

Family effort

In recent years, Diamante's family has taken an active, sometimes mysterious role in rescuing the 89-year-old auditorium, which was last used as a functioning public theatre in 2004.

In the mid-2000s, Belma Gurdil-Diamante, Berardo's mother, purchased the crumbling relic for the Canadian Ballet Youth Ensemble (CBYE), for which she serves as CEO. Toronto's Sniderman family, of Sam the Record Man fame, sold it for $2.

But this act of mercy was only meant to be a temporary solution. The dance company could not keep up with the repairs necessary to maintain the Tivoli, and CBYE had to apply for tens of thousands of dollars to keep the theatre from falling apart.

As a result, in February 2013, her husband's company bought the Tivoli from the CBYE for $900,000, and the family hinted at plans for a major redevelopment.

It wasn't until September when banners advertising the "Tivoli Condos" appeared on the street-art-spangled exterior of the building.

"We are looking at marketing boutique-style condominiums at the site of the Tivoli," Monica O'Reilly said at the time. She's a brand strategist for Toolbox Strategies, which is overseeing marketing for the project.

Community partnership

The CBYE, which still uses the space, will play a major role in the redevelopment and the future operations of the theatre, Diamante said.

Jason Farr

Jason Farr, councillor for Ward 2, says he expects the local community will make good use out of a restored Tivoli Theatre. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

"We are planning to work with them to restore it and ultimately donate it back to the ballet," he said.

Diamante noted he isn't certain on the shape the partnership will take, but suggested the theatre might be treated as if it were another condo unit, whose owners would pay maintenance fees to the building's management.

"We don't know what it's going to look like, "said Gary Santucci, a CBYE board member, "but we know that it's going to be favourable." 

A group of local community members is coalescing around the dance company to contribute to the redevelopment plans, added Santucci, who is a co-owner of the Landsdale theatre and art space The Pearl Company.

"We have the beginnings of something called the Tivoli Performing Arts Association. It's still early days, but it's moving forward."

Farr said he's pleased the local arts community will have a significant role in reviving the Tivoli. 

"I think there's a lot of people that are going to appreciate hearing that," he said. "I'm certain that we, as a community and beyond, will get good use of that historic building." 

'Former glory'

The general consensus around the restoration of the theatre, which has received heritage designation under Ontario law, "is about returning it to what it was," Santucci said.

'The plan is to keep it simple and get [the Tivoli] back to its former glory."—Gary Santucci, board member, Canadian Ballet Youth Ensemble

"It's not going to be a full-blown modern ​theatre…I would say that the plan is to keep it simple and get it back to its former glory."

The new Tivoli will serve as a venue for "concerts, films and other events," he added.

Diamante envisions the refurbished theatre as a kind of showpiece that will woo prospective condo-buyers to move into the adjoining residential building.

He said the condos will "ideally" be ready for occupants by mid-2015, but noted the development team must prepare for delays — government red tape or community opposition, for example — that might be in store.

"Whatever it takes to get this damn thing going, we're going to do it," Diamante said.  


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Power returns to Hamilton homes after Saturday setbacks

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Ontario residents cope with blackouts 2:35

Ontario residents cope with blackouts 2:35

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What 7 days without power is like 3:58

What 7 days without power is like 3:58

After nearly eight days of nagging power outages, the effort to restore electricity to Hamilton-area homes in the wake of last weekend's ice storm is virtually complete.

Hydro One said all but a few rural Hamilton residences without power on Sunday morning.

"Crew have been dispatched to attend to those," said company spokeswoman Nancy Shaddick.

The remaining customers might be people awaiting inspection from the Electrical Safety Authority, she noted. 

Hydro One had said earlier that full service would be restored to Hamilton by Saturday night, but overnight hiccups thwarted workers from achieving that goal. 

Around 11:30 p.m. ET, a transformer fire at Hydro One's Dundas station resulted in a power outages that left thousands of Dundas, Ancaster and Flamborough residents in the dark.

Service returned around three hours later, after power was rerouted from other areas in the system, Shaddick said.

The fire "self-extinguished," she said, adding crews will work to repair the damaged equipment in the coming year.

It's now been a over a week since the big ice storm turned off the lights, heat and, in some cases, water to hundreds of thousands of customers in Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada.

Officials in Toronto say they are nearing the return of heat and light to customers who have been without power for eight days, but New Brunswick's power utility is worried a winter storm bearing down on Atlantic region will cause new problems.

The latest tallies show power is still out for about 7,400 customers in Toronto, just under 7,000 in New Brunswick, and 7,300 in Quebec.

In Quebec, the outages have fluctuated as crews turn off power in some areas while working to safely return it to others.

A warming trend in Ontario has created extra hazards for hydro crews.

Falling ice caused at least one injury on Saturday when a Hamilton worker was struck in the head, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford said.

"This is Day 7 and there's light at the end of the tunnel," said Ford in an interview with CBC News midday Saturday. "What that day is, I cannot tell you… We're trying our best."


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‘Ask for help,’ police told at Ian Matthews funeral

Wearing clean, pressed navy blues, they came out — hundreds of them — to pay their respects to a fallen comrade.

With so many uniformed men and women in attendance at Ian Matthews's funeral on Sunday, it was easy to forget that his wasn't an official police memorial.

A 25-year veteran of the Hamilton Police Service, the former homicide investigator was not killed in the line of duty. On Dec. 17, he died at age 47 after shooting himself in a locker room at police headquarters.

But speeches during the afternoon service at Bay Gardens Funeral Home suggested that injuries Matthews sustained on the job — emotional ones, rather than those brought on by a stray bullet or out-of-control car — played a weighty role in his death.

'He could only handle so much'

"My father was heavily affected by the cases he could not solve, the answers he could not provide, the pain he could not ease in others," said Matthews's daughter Kierstyn, one of several family members to say a few words. 

"A man who devotes so much heart and soul into helping others, he could only handle so much."

In the short eulogy, Kierstyn praised police officers. She referred to them as "superheroes," who appear "invincible" in the eyes of others despite the personal anguish they suffer in secret.   

She urged officers in attendance to seek help if they find themselves in distress.

"I believe police workers need someone to talk to about the traumatic events they see," Kierstyn said.

Book of condolences

Mourners signed a book of condolences for Ian Matthews's family. Beside it stands a portrait of the late Hamilton police officer. (Cory Ruf/CBC)

"I hope others will learn from my daddy's death to ask for help when they need it, yet I can find peace of mind when I know the demons that haunted my father during his time aren't fighting him anymore."

Steve Stone, a retired Hamilton cop who first met Matthews while they worked on the force's vice and drug squad, also stressed how important it is for police to tend to their mental health. 

"All police officers are equipped with visible, external body armour. It is just as important for police officers to develop a kind of unseen, internal body armour to shield them from mental or emotional stresses," said Stone, who served in the force for four decades.

"It is an important aspect to maintain both sets of body armour…. The maintenance is critical to overall health and survival."

Tributes

Dignitaries including Hamilton police Chief Glenn De Caire, Mayor Bob Bratina and Councillor Terry Whitehead were in attendance on Sunday, as were firefighters and paramedics, and police officers from other regions. 

'Ian loved chasing bad guys and he was very, very good at it.'—Sam Matthews

The funeral had more than a few moments of levity. Friends often referred to Northern Ireland-born Matthews by his nickname, "Blarney," and reflected on his mischievous, competitive streak on the soccer pitch and the golf course.

"Ian was very quick to assure you that he deliberately missed the green," said older brother Sam of Matthews's antics on the links.

Inevitably, the ceremony was peppered with tributes to Matthews's work as an officer.

"Ian loved chasing bad guys and he was very, very good at it," said Sam.

"With Ian, I never felt danger and I never experienced fear," added Stone, who later recalled times when Matthews was tasked to go to jail undercover in order to extract prison-cell confessions from suspected killers.

"That just shows you the courage of this man."

'Even heroes need a place to go'

The end of the service saw members of the Hamilton Police Male Chorus sing a rendition of Amazing Grace and Presbyterian minister Scott McAllister lead prayers.

In his parting words, the reverend too called for "heroes" in need to seek support.

Ian Matthews motorcade

Officers saluted the hearse carrying Ian Matthews's casket as it left the funeral home's parking lot. (Cory Ruf/CBC)

"Even heroes need a place to go, to be human, to be held up for change," McAllister said. 

After the sermon, funeral-goers filed outdoors, with the uniformed men and women lining up along the north and south sides of Rymal Road.

They saluted as a hearse carrying Matthews's casket drove out of the Bay Gardens parking lot. "Dismissed!" Pat Desbiens, the honour guard sergeant major, barked, and officers broke formation.

Within seconds, a young, dark-haired policeman approached a colleague — a burly, mustachioed cop who had been directing traffic, tears in his eyes — and gave him a hug.

For a display of sympathy, the embrace was hardly out of the ordinary.

But more remarkably, perhaps, it served as a sign that the minister's pleas, and those of Matthews's daughter, hadn't fallen on deaf ears. 


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10 big Hamilton newsmakers of 2013

hi-bosma-wedding

Ancaster's Tim and Sharlene Bosma, in happier times.

1. Tim and Sharlene Bosma      

Few people captured the hearts, minds and prayers of people across the country this year like Ancaster's Tim and Sharlene Bosma.

Tim Bosma, 32, disappeared in May when he went on a test drive with two men in a truck he was looking to sell. He never came home.

His burned remains were found days later, sparking an outpouring of grief from the tight-knit community of Ancaster. Sharlene remained the face of the story, through press conferences, court appearances, and a heartfelt public memorial for Tim. She repeatedly told the media she was staying strong for their young daughter.

Two men, Dellen Millard and Mark Smich, stand accused in the killing.

2. Hamilton Police Chief Glenn De Caire     

Chief Glenn De Caire's protracted power struggle with city council over his department's budget was a defining moment of his reign as chief and one of the dominant stories of the year.

Shortly after it was resolved, De Caire announced he would not be seeking a renewal of his contract. Did he realize he had burned too many bridges, or was he tired of the politics in policing?

But De Caire as a newsmaker extended beyond the budget debate.

The conflicts and divisions among members of the police board that resulted in the suspension of city councillor Terry Whitehead from the board were largely about unflinching support for De Caire from provincial appointees and a more questioning approach from the members of council on the board.

De Caire was also on the hot seat over the shooting by his officers of Steve Mesic, especially around the victim's family's demands for an apology.                            

3. Steve Mesic 

hi-mesic-bike-852

Former steelworker Steve Mesic died in June after he was shot by police. His death sparked heated debate over police use of force. (Courtesy Mesic Family)

The shooting death of 45-year-old former steelworker Steve Mesic ignited debate about police use of force in Hamilton. Mesic, who dealt with anxiety issues, was shot after he checked himself out of a voluntary mental health care program at St. Joe's and was seen wandering in traffic on the Linc in June. The provincial Special Investigations Unit (SIU) cleared the two officers involved of any wrongdoing.

Since his death, Mesic's fiancée, Sharon Dorr, has given birth to the couple's son, Dominic. Dorr and her father, Norm, have been outspoken against the way police handled the situation, and are part of a group lobbying the province for widespread changes to the way the SIU handles police shootings.

Dorr and her father have also been at the centre of the Taser debate swirling around police and city council.

4. Hamilton Police Inspector Dave Doel   

Four years off the job. Over $500,000 in pay during a suspension for a Sunshine-List cop. A never-ending hearing. It all ended in retirement for former Hamilton Police inspector David Doel.

Doel faced 14 counts of misconduct under the Police Services Act, including having sex on the job, keeping pornography on his work computer and using video equipment and a national crime data base for his own use.

The case was delayed for years because of scheduling issues and media lawyers trying to make a case for public hearings. The week the hearing was set to go ahead, Doel dropped a bombshell. He planned to retire.

Chief Glenn De Caire said he had no choice but to accept Doel's retirement notice. Doel is retired as of Mar. 31.

The case prompted a discussion about officer pay during suspensions. On Dec. 13, city councillors voted unanimously to ask the province to amend the Police Services Act to allow police services to suspend officers without pay.          

5. Peter Wald  

Religious symbols on van

Peter Wald's van can be seen in this photo taken on Google Maps in 2011. The 51-year-old's body was discovered in his north Hamilton home in September. Neighbours say they believe it had been there for months. (Google)

Peter Wald was known for driving a blue Astro van adorned with religious symbols. He'd even placed tinfoil in the shape of crosses on the headlights so they shone in the shape of a crucifix.

In September, authorities discovered Wald was dead — and his wife and their children had been living with his body in their home for months.

His neighbours were understandably rattled. One couple next door told CBC Hamilton that hordes of flies could be seen around a second-floor window of the home, and birds were pecking at the screen.

Family members also started dancing and chanting while wearing black robes in the back yard, sometimes twice a day, neighbours said. Wald's family reportedly moved to the St. Catharines area after being evicted from the home.   

6.  Dominican wedding vacationers Nick and Stacey Miele   

li-miele2-620

Stacey Vernon and Nick Miele tried to move on this year after an incident on their wedding night led to Miele and his cousin being imprisoned for three weeks in what he describes as horrible conditions. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

A wedding in a Caribbean paradise turned hellish for a Stoney Creek couple, and made national headlines.

Nick Miele and Stacey Vernon were married May 27 at the Bahia Principe Esmeralda resort in Puna Cana, Dominican Republic. Around 2 a.m. on May 28 — when the post-wedding party was in full swing — 38-year-old Miele and his 18-year-old cousin Ben Constantini got involved in a spat at the buffet table.

The two were arrested and spent three weeks in a Dominican jail. The pair describes the conditions as "traumatizing," saying there were upwards to 60 inmates sleeping in a cell the size of an average family kitchen. They paid for food and water they never received, Miele said.

During their incarceration, more than 3,000 individuals signed a petition asking for Canadian politicians to step in and arrange for Miele and Constantini's release. Minister of State Diane Ablonczy even mentioned the pair in the House of Commons.

The pair was released on June 17. Miele returned to his construction job shortly after.

7. Melissa Elliott, hockey mom

Melissa Elliott is the Hamilton hockey mom who got into a spat with a local hockey association. She encouraged her daughter to participate in an on-ice protest after her team's ice time was cut short. After that, Elliott's seven-year-old son, Sabastian, was banned from playing hockey for that association. The president of the Rosedale league said Elliott "stirred the pot" and "if parents act up, unfortunately the poor kid pays the price."                  

8. Fired city staff            

Twenty-two city public works staff raised public ire this year when the city fired them for "neglect of duties, time theft and/or breach of trust."  

The dismissals happened when concerns were raised over some workers doing asphalt repairs. Among the worries: that crews were taking extra long breaks and doing little work in general. "What we found was there was little work going on," city manager Chris Murray said. The investigation also included possible asphalt theft.            

9. Kent Austin    

Ticats Austin Year End Presser

In his first year as head coach of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Kent Austin led the team to an unexpected appearance in the 2013 Grey Cup. (John Rieti/CBC)

When the Ticats season started, the team had lost its star receiver, didn't have a home stadium, and was facing yet another rebuilding year. The team's long-suffering fans weren't quite ready to jump on board the "let's all go to Guelph" marketing campaign.

Into that scene came Kent Austin, a coach with a winning record as a player and as a coach. He was clear: Guelph and all the hassles associated with the nomadic year would not be an excuse. He was demanding and intense, but matched that with a positive culture, a faith in progress and learning and the team slowly grew and gelled under is unwavering leadership.

To everyone's surprise, the rebuilding year became a year with two playoff victories and a trip to the Grey Cup.

Austin always maintained that growth and progress never go in a straight line.                   

10. Harrison Kennedy

Harrison Kennedy Hamilton Music Awards

Blues singer-songwriter Harrison Kennedy received seven Hamilton Music Awards nominations and survived a cancer scare this year. (Sunnie Huang/CBC)

2013 was a big year for Hamilton bluesman Harrison Kennedy.

On top of winning big at this year's Hamilton music awards and riding high on his latest release Soulscape, he also hit an even more important milestone: he beat cancer. Kennedy was diagnosed with the disease in 2012, but was cancer free by the end of 2013.

"Makes me feel so good," Kennedy sang as he took the stage to accept one of the five Hamilton Music Awards he was awarded last month.


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Things to do in Hamilton this weekend

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Desember 2013 | 22.46

Winter can be a drag, as Hamiltonians found out after last weekend's ice storm.

But the season isn't all bad. Case in point: several fun-filled, snow-sprinkled festivities are in the forecast for Hamilton over the next few days. Here's a short list of things to do in the city this weekend, the final one of 2013. 

Ring in the New Year at Dundurn Castle

Starting on Friday, Dundurn Castle will be transformed by holiday decorations. For two nights, the lavish historic home of Sir Allan MacNab will be the site of extended tours, music and a chance to sample an assortment of traditional holiday foods. This evening event runs from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m on both Friday and Saturday. Tickets are $25 per person and are available online. 

For more information, go to the Dundurn National Historic Site's webpage. 

Winterfest 2013

The Royal Botanical Gardens is hosting its first-ever Winterfest from Friday until Tuesday. It will feature family-friendly winter games, crafts and afternoon campfires. The activities, taking place at the RBG's Nature Interpretive Centre (16 Old Guelph Rd.), runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day.

Admission is included in the price of a day pass to the RBG, which costs $12.50 for adults, $10.50 for students/youth and $7.50 for children age 4 to 12. Kids under four get in free.

For more information, go to Rbg.ca/events.

Fred Eaglesmith's Travelling Steam Show

Southern Ontario roots-rock troubadour Fred Eaglesmith and his Travelling Steam Show are rolling into the Dundas Legion (280 King St. W, Dundas) this weekend for a Saturday night hootenanny.

A Charity Pie Auction, now a fixture on the singer-songwriter's tours, will accompany the live music. Eaglesmith invites concert-goers to bake pies to be put on the auction block. The proceeds go toward Operation Smile, an organization that aids children with facial deformities.

Tickets are $25 each, available online and at Mickey McGuire's Cheese Shop (51 King West, Dundas). Doors open at 7 p.m. and the show starts at 8 p.m.

For more information, and to buy tickets, go to Fredeaglesmith.com. 

The Dirty Nil's Annual Holiday Bash

If blood, sweat and mean riffs are your thing, check out beer-drenched Dundas rockers The Dirty Nil's "annual holiday bash" on Saturday night at The Casbah. Hamilton experimental outfit Allegories and two Toronto rock 'n' roll bands, Greys and Teenage Kicks, are scheduled to open.

Tickets for the all-ages/licensed show are $10 at the doors, which open at 8 p.m. 

For more information, go to Casbahlounge.ca.

Science of Ice and Snow

In case you haven't had enough of the snow already, head to the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology to explore the science of ice and snow. Get your hands and feet wet on Saturday and Sunday with activities like slinging snowballs with a big trebuchet, sliding contests and ice shuffleboard. You can also make snow decorations and mini-snow-people to take home.

The museum is open from noon to 4 p.m. on both days. Admission is $6.75 for adults, $5.75 for students and seniors, and $4.75 for children ages 6 to 12. Children under 6 get in free. 

For more information, go to the museum's website. 


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Stream Hockey Night in Canada games on Saturday

Tired of shopping? Resting up for New Year's? Then stay inside and stream Hockey Night in Canada games online. 

CBC Hamilton has compiled a list of links for Saturday evening NHL match-ups. Enjoy. 

Boston Bruins at Ottawa Senators — 7 p.m. ET

The Boston Bruins found answers to their slow start after 20 minutes, while the Ottawa Senators were left questioning their lack of effort over the final 40.

The Bruins and Senators now head north to conclude a home-and-home set Saturday night in Ottawa.

On the heels of a 5-0 thumping of Pittsburgh on Monday, Ottawa (15-18-7) showed plenty of jump in the first period at Boston on Friday night, outshooting the reigning Eastern Conference champions 15-5 but failing to beat Tuukka Rask in a scoreless first period.

The Bruins (26-10-2) then responded as champions do — by taking over the game, eventually winning 5-0. 

Saturday's rematch starts at 6:30 p.m. and the puck drops at 7 p.m. Click here to watch the game.

Montreal Canadiens at Tampa Bay Lightning — 7 p.m. ET

The Tampa Bay Lightning return from the NHL's holiday break chasing their longest winning streak since the 2010-11 season — the last time they made the playoffs.

They'll try to get it done Saturday night at home against a Montreal Canadiens team out to catch them in the Atlantic Division.

The program kicks off at 6:30 a.m. and the game starts at 7 p.m. Click here to stream the game.

Philadelphia Flyers at Edmonton Oilers — 10 p.m ET

Beating the Edmonton Oilers at home last month sparked the Philadelphia Flyers' turnaround there.

They're looking to do the same on the road, but they may have to beat a familiar face.

The Flyers will try to capitalize on another meeting with the Oilers in the opener of this six-game road trip Saturday night. 

The first faceoff is set for 10 p.m. Click here to watch the game.


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Hamilton's top news stories of 2013

1. Bosma murder        

The murder of Ancaster's Tim Bosma was one of the biggest news stories nationwide in 2013. Hordes of readers and viewers watched with shock and horror as details of how the young father and husband died starting emerging in May.

Half a year later, the story endures — partially because of its tragic nature, but also because the circumstances hit home for so many people. Bosma died doing something many undertake without a second thought — buying and selling online and going for a test drive in his truck.

Two men, Dellen Millard and Mark Smich, stand accused in the killing. They have appeared in court several times over the last few months in pre-trial proceedings. The court case resumes in 2014.

2. Casino    

It's one of the most polarizing debates in the city of Hamilton: Casino or CasiNO!

About a year ago, the idea of another gaming facility, aside from Flamboro Downs, surfaced.

casino signs

Supporters and opponents of a downtown casino at a debate at city hall (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

There was a clear divide between the Yes and No camps. But, it brought citizens together as passionate crowds gathered at city hall public meetings to voice concerns and displeasure, or support. Crowds held signs screaming "NO!" in bold red letters. Other signs read "Yes to Investment" and "Yes to Jobs."

The CasiNO! group formed, looking to torpedo any plan for a casino in the downtown core. They actively protested with signs in shop windows and rallies around the city. Members spoke to media about the depression and mental health issues that downtown, accessible casinos might aggravate. Spending paychecks at the slots down the street from work would drive Hamilton's poverty levels into the ground, they argued.

On the flip-side, the OLG estimated an additional $7 million would be funneled into municipal coffers if council were to approve a casino that had at least 400 slots. P.J. Mercanti, of Carmen's fame, spearheaded RockHammer, announced a partnership with the Hard Rock chain to build eight-figure hotel-casino complex in the city's downtown core.

The OLG recently opened up the process for potential bidders to express interest in operating Flamboro Downs, as well as three other facilities in the gaming zone. A spokesperson said they're not looking for an operator for a new casino in Hamilton just yet.

3. Line 9

The proposed reversal of Enbridge Inc.'s Line 9 pipeline dominated environmental headlines this year.

The Calgary-based company wants to reverse the flow in the pipeline that runs from Sarnia to Montreal — it crosses through rural Hamilton — and increase its capacity to move oil sands crude from the Alberta oil patch to eastern Canada.

The changes received the green light from the National Energy Board for the segment of Line 9 the pipeline that runs from Sarnia to North Westover, a hamlet in Flamborough, but they have not been approved for the rest of the pipeline.  

Environmental activists are convinced the full reversal could prove perilous for the delicate ecosystems surrounding the pipeline, considering Enbridge's past spill track record.

There were plenty of Line 9 protests in the Hamilton area this year, capped off by a group of protesters taking over and occupying the North Westover pumping station in Flamborough.           

4. U.S. Steel      

On the last day of 2013, U.S. Steel will put an end to their iron and steel-making operation in Hamilton, putting a 113-year-old tradition to bed.

"It means we're not going to make steel in Hamilton," said Rolf Gerstenberger, union head for United Steelworkers Local 1005. "We're just going to roll it."

Rolf Gerstenberger

It is the end of hope the blast furnaces would fire once more, said USW Local 1005 president Rolf Gerstenberger (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

U.S. Steel put the steel making operation on hiatus in 2007, but now that it will close for good, 47 non-unionized employees will be out of a job at the end of the year. The big question as this news hit was: Is the steel industry in Hamilton dead?

The answer is no – in fact, it could be a career choice for generations to come, if youth start seeking out the right education. Steel industry expert Peter Warrain suggests Canada will need 20,000 new workers in the industry in the next five to 10 years to replace retiring staff and fill new jobs.

In Hamilton, ArcelorMittal Dofasco is preparing to hire 1,500 employees in the next three to five years.     

5. Dialogue Partners    

It started innocuously enough. The city hired an Ottawa firm, Dialogue Partners, to get input from residents on which city services matter most to them.

The firm launched Our Voice, Our Hamilton, which boasted a website and a Twitter account. The campaign went off the rails when the firm tweeted "what is HSR?" in response to a tweet about the city's Hamilton Street Railway transit system. The Pinterest page also included a photo of the courthouse in Hamilton, Ohio.

Online critics piled onto the company for the blunder, charging that Dialogue Partners was a group of tone-deaf outsiders. Public outcry grew on social media, extending to city councillors, who wanted the firm gone. The city terminated the $376,000 contract, which included training city staff to engage the public. The city is using what remains of the contract money to do the consultation work itself.       

6. Heritage    

Heritage was a hot topic for good and bad reasons in 2013 as Hamilton continued its struggles balancing preservation on one hand, and development on the other. 

On the plus side, work began on the long dormant Royal Connaught Hotel.

Other bright spots included an announcement of the redevelopment of the old William Thomas Building, a part of the Lister complex, along with a 16-storey condo tower. Also on the preservation side: the designation of Delta High School, and the long awaited opening of condos at the Stinson Lofts.

The school board plans to knock down King George, and the city is thinking about preserving it.

James St. Baptist concept

Concept for partial preservation of James St. Baptist church ((McCallum Sather Architects))

Two downtown sites were perhaps the most controversial on the demolition side in 2013:

There remains heated debate about the future of historic buildings on the south leg of King Street in the Gore that developer Dave Blanchard wants to take down. Preservationists want to keep the streetscape and the historic facades, and city hall is prepared to kick in $1 million. When the developer said that's not enough, the city pulled the plug on his demolition permit. Stayed tuned.

James Street Baptist Church is slated to be demolished with the façade preserved. A determined effort there failed to overcome the developers' assertions that the building was in danger of falling down.

7. Cop Budget            

Tensions grew between city hall and the police when Chief Glenn De Caire proposed a budget for 2013 that was a 5.25-per cent increase over th

De Caire said Hamilton Police Service needed to hire 20 more officers and one new civilian staff member to keep up with the demand of policing the city. Councillors wanted a lower budget, and asked the chief's staff to trim it three times before they approved a 3.52-per cent increase.

There was collateral damage. Councillors talked of resistance and mistrust between the two sides. City council voted to ask the province for more control over the police service.

By the end of the year, Mayor Bob Bratina became chair of the police services board, only to step down later. De Caire also announced that he wouldn't seek a contract renewal beyond 2014. Coun. Terry Whitehead was suspended from the board and investigated by the Ontario Civilian Police Commission over comments made in part during the budget debates. Not all of these things had direct links to the budget, but they all contributed to an active year for the board.

Next year's budget discussions will likely be less controversial. The budget request for 2014 is a 2.98-per cent increase over 2013, the lowest in 14 years.

8. Ticats    

It was the season of Guelph, of star Chris Williams walking away, of head coach Kent Austin's slow and steady hand rebuilding the franchise into a credible team — a playoff contender. And then, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats made a wholly unexpected trip to the Grey Cup.

Burris

Henry Burris led the Ticats to a surprising Grey Cup appearance (Chris Young/CP)

The Tabbies turned the tiny and stormy confines of the University of Guelph into their home away from home, won over a good number of the locals and were followed there by a loyal band of fans.

New head coach and CFL icon Kent Austin put his stamp on the team, building its talent and character. By mid-September, Ticat nation was still hopeful the team could finish above .500. By November, a late-season surge, some improbable wins, followed by two playoff victories, and suddenly the team was on a plane for a trip to the national championship in chilly Regina. Okay, so that didn't go so well, but no one was counting on a Grey Cup win for the Ticats in 2013. Their team fresh from a thrilling championship drive and their new stadium just months from completion, Ticat fans have plenty of reasons to be optimistic for 2014.

9. School openings/closures

It was a year of significant upheaval for the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board, as 2013 was dominated by discussion over closing schools and rebuilding new ones. And it seems the board generated controversy with every decision.

The most contentious was the debate over the location of a new high school for the lower city to replace Delta, Sir John A. Macdonald and ParkviewAn attempt was made to partner with the city at the site of the closed Scott Park on a combined school and recreation centre.

That failed when the city backed out of the partnership, with some councillors citing a lack of trust with the board. That left the board squeezing the new school into the site of Parkview and King George Elementary and using the nearby Scott Park as a parking lot for the school.

The optics there were less than optimal as the board will have to buy back at an inflated price, perhaps as much as $2 million, a property it sold only nine years ago for $650,000.

Plans also proceeded to close Parkside in Dundas and rebuild Highland.

The King George decision also problems, since the city is looking at designating the school as a heritage site.

Construction also began on the new downtown McMaster health complex on the site of the former Education Centre as the board began its move to new HQ on the Mountain.

10. Weather woes

Hot weather or cold, it didn't matter — Mother Nature didn't play favourites in terms of when she chose to wallop Hamilton with wild weather in 2013. The year saw downed trees and widespread, days-long power outages in both the summer heat and the winter sleet.

hi-power-out-8col

Crews work to restore power to Hamilton's North Westdale neighbourhood on the afternoon of Sunday, July 21, 2013, almost 48 hours after a wild summer storm caused power outages across the city. (Cory Ruf/CBC)

Booming with thunder and beaming with lightning, a July 19 storm barreled through Hamilton, drenching the city in 53.6 mm of precipitation. High winds toppled hundreds, if not thousands, of once-soaring trees, tearing down power lines in the process.

The morning after, tens of thousands of Hamiltonians woke up without power. Crews scrambled to pluck tree trunks from the roadways and restore power to affected neighbourhoods. Electricity didn't return for some residents until after the weekend, and many charged that the city didn't do enough to inform residents about the cleanup effort that was underway.

The rage over the summer blackouts had become but a memory by Dec. 21, when a weather system creeping up from the U.S. doused southern Ontario in freezing rain. Branches shattered under the weight of the ice, bringing down power lines as they fell to the ground. The next morning, at the height of the power outages, 30,000 homes and businesses were in the dark.

Thousands remained without power into the week, as temperatures plunged into the negative double digits. For many in Hamilton, the situation rendered Christmas 2013 one they'll always remember but would prefer to forget. 


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Hydro One wraps blitz to restore power to Hamilton homes

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What 7 days without power is like 3:58

What 7 days without power is like 3:58

Fewer than 20 households in Hamilton remained without power on Saturday evening, as the push to restore electricity to customers who suffered outages during last weekend's ice storm comes to a close.

Hydro One, which serves some of the city's suburban and rural areas, says Hamilton customers who are still without power should see service restored before the end of Saturday.

However, homes and businesses that suffered damages to their electricity inputs won't come online until an Electrical Safety Authority inspector approves the repairs, said Nancy Shaddick, a Hydro One spokesperson.

Horizon Utilities said on Friday that it had restored power to all of its Hamilton customers who were affected by the outages. 

It's now been a week since the big ice storm turned off the lights, heat and, in some cases water, to hundreds of thousands of customers in Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada.

About 30,000 customers in Ontario and New Brunswick remain in the dark one week after the storm. And warming temperatures have caused new power outages in Toronto.

Toronto Hydro CEO Anthony Haines said early Saturday that melting ice falling from trees and other structures has led to fresh damage. At about 1 a.m. ET the number of customers without power had dropped below 20,000 for the first time, but by 8 a.m. it was back up to around 23,000. The number was hovering at 18,000 as of mid-afternoon Saturday.

The falling ice caused at least one injury when a Hamilton worker was struck in the head, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford said. Officials couldn't provide an update on the worker's condition. 

"This is Day 7 and there's light at the end of the tunnel," said Ford in an interview with CBC News midday Saturday. "What that day is, I can not tell you...We're trying our best."


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New details on Tivoli redevelopment coming soon

Hamilton residents can expect a preview in January of the next act for the storied Tivoli Theatre and the stack of condos that's slated to spring up beside it, says a developer who's spearheading the project.

Berardo Diamante, of Diamante Investments, which owns the Tivoli, said the firm is meeting with city staff in the middle of the month to pore over architects' plans for the site. Armed with the city's feedback, developers will put together an official announcement before the beginning of February, he said. 

"January is going to tell us a lot and then we can start sharing a lot of other details," said Diamante, son of company president Domenic Diamante. "I would like to have a rough mock-up of what the building will look like."

The project, Diamante said, will restore the theatre, as well as build a condo tower beside it, and ground-level storefronts installed on the west side of the complex facing James Street North. Diamante hopes construction will be complete by mid-2015.

'We wanted to make sure we have all our I's dotted and T's crossed before we come forward.'—Berardo Diamante, Diamante Investments

Diamante wouldn't say how many storeys are planned for the condo or how much the project is expected to cost.

"What we're thinking of doing could completely change [based on the city's input]," he said. "We wanted to make sure we have all our I's dotted and T's crossed before we come forward."

But Diamante stressed the revitalization of the Tivoli is central to the plan, and that the revival is at the heart of his father's vision for the location.

"This is the signature last project that he's doing," Diamante said. "He wants to build something that he can look at and enjoy."

Councillor Jason Farr, whose ward includes the downtown core, said he's looking forward to learning more about what the developers are planning. 

"I hope for the best. It's intensification. It's something we need. It's a great proximity to a lot of things, including [the new James Street North GO station that's scheduled to open in 2015]," he said. "I'm very encouraged that they're sitting down with staff."

Family effort

In recent years, Diamante's family has taken an active, sometimes mysterious role in rescuing the 89-year-old auditorium, which was last used as a functioning public theatre in 2004.

In the mid-2000s, Belma Gurdil-Diamante, Berardo's mother, purchased the crumbling relic for the Canadian Ballet Youth Ensemble (CBYE), for which she serves as CEO. Toronto's Sniderman family, of Sam the Record Man, sold it to her for $2.

But this act of mercy was only meant to be a temporary solution. The dance company could not keep up with the repairs necessary to maintain the Tivoli, and CBYE had to apply for tens of thousands of dollars to keep the theatre from falling apart.

As a result, in February 2013, her husband's company bought the Tivoli from the CBYE for $1, and the family hinted at plans for a major redevelopment.

It wasn't until September when banners advertising the "Tivoli Condos" appeared on the street-art-spangled exterior of the building.

"We are looking at marketing boutique-style condominiums at the site of the Tivoli," Monica O'Reilly said at the time. She's a brand strategist for Toolbox Strategies, which is overseeing marketing for the project.

Community partnership

The CBYE, which still uses the space, will play a major role in the redevelopment and the future operations of the theatre, Diamante said.

Jason Farr

Jason Farr, councillor for Ward 2, says he expects the local community will make good use out of a restored Tivoli Theatre. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

"We are planning to work with them to restore it and ultimately donate it back to the ballet," he said.

Diamante noted he isn't certain on the shape the partnership will take, but suggested the theatre might be treated as if it were another condo unit, whose owners would pay maintenance fees to the building's management.

"We don't know what it's going to look like, "said Gary Santucci, a CBYE board member, "but we know that it's going to be favourable." 

A group of local community members is coalescing around the dance company to contribute to the redevelopment plans, added Santucci, who is a co-owner of the Landsdale theatre and art space The Pearl Company.

"We have the beginnings of something called the Tivoli Performing Arts Association. It's still early days, but it's moving forward."

Farr said he's pleased the local arts community will have a significant role in reviving the Tivoli. 

"I think there's a lot of people that are going to appreciate hearing that," he said. "I'm certain that we, as a community and beyond, will get good use of that historic building." 

'Former glory'

The general consensus around the restoration of the theatre, which has received heritage designation under Ontario law, "is about returning it to what it was," Santucci said.

'The plan is to keep it simple and get [the Tivoli] back to its former glory."—Gary Santucci, board member, Canadian Ballet Youth Ensemble

"It's not going to be a full-blown modern ​theatre…I would say that the plan is to keep it simple and get it back to its former glory."

The new Tivoli will serve as a venue for "concerts, films and other events," he added.

Diamante envisions the refurbished theatre as a kind of showpiece that will woo prospective condo-buyers to move into the adjoining residential building.

He said the condos will "ideally" be ready for occupants by mid-2015, but noted the development team must prepare for delays — government red tape or community opposition, for example — that might be in store.

"Whatever it takes to get this damn thing going, we're going to do it," Diamante said.  


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Hamilton's top news stories of 2013

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Desember 2013 | 22.46

1. Bosma murder        

The murder of Ancaster's Tim Bosma was one of the biggest news stories nationwide in 2013. Hordes of readers and viewers watched with shock and horror as details of how the young father and husband died starting emerging in May.

Half a year later, the story endures — partially because of its tragic nature, but also because the circumstances hit home for so many people. Bosma died doing something many undertake without a second thought — buying and selling online and going for a test drive in his truck.

Two men, Dellen Millard and Mark Smich, stand accused in the killing. They have appeared in court several times over the last few months in pre-trial proceedings. The court case resumes in 2014.

2. Casino    

It's one of the most polarizing debates in the city of Hamilton: Casino or CasiNO!

About a year ago, the idea of another gaming facility, aside from Flamboro Downs, surfaced.

casino signs

Supporters and opponents of a downtown casino at a debate at city hall (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

There was a clear divide between the Yes and No camps. But, it brought citizens together as passionate crowds gathered at city hall public meetings to voice concerns and displeasure, or support. Crowds held signs screaming "NO!" in bold red letters. Other signs read "Yes to Investment" and "Yes to Jobs."

The CasiNO! group formed, looking to torpedo any plan for a casino in the downtown core. They actively protested with signs in shop windows and rallies around the city. Members spoke to media about the depression and mental health issues that downtown, accessible casinos might aggravate. Spending paychecks at the slots down the street from work would drive Hamilton's poverty levels into the ground, they argued.

On the flip-side, the OLG estimated an additional $7 million would be funneled into municipal coffers if council were to approve a casino that had at least 400 slots. P.J. Mercanti, of Carmen's fame, spearheaded RockHammer, announced a partnership with the Hard Rock chain to build eight-figure hotel-casino complex in the city's downtown core.

The OLG recently opened up the process for potential bidders to express interest in operating Flamboro Downs, as well as three other facilities in the gaming zone. A spokesperson said they're not looking for an operator for a new casino in Hamilton just yet.

3. Line 9

The proposed reversal of Enbridge Inc.'s Line 9 pipeline dominated environmental headlines this year.

The Calgary-based company wants to reverse the flow in the pipeline that runs from Sarnia to Montreal — it crosses through rural Hamilton — and increase its capacity to move oil sands crude from the Alberta oil patch to eastern Canada.

The changes received the green light from the National Energy Board for the segment of Line 9 the pipeline that runs from Sarnia to North Westover, a hamlet in Flamborough, but they have not been approved for the rest of the pipeline.  

Environmental activists are convinced the full reversal could prove perilous for the delicate ecosystems surrounding the pipeline, considering Enbridge's past spill track record.

There were plenty of Line 9 protests in the Hamilton area this year, capped off by a group of protesters taking over and occupying the North Westover pumping station in Flamborough.           

4. U.S. Steel      

On the last day of 2013, U.S. Steel will put an end to their iron and steel-making operation in Hamilton, putting a 113-year-old tradition to bed.

"It means we're not going to make steel in Hamilton," said Rolf Gerstenberger, union head for United Steelworkers Local 1005. "We're just going to roll it."

Rolf Gerstenberger

It is the end of hope the blast furnaces would fire once more, said USW Local 1005 president Rolf Gerstenberger (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

U.S. Steel put the steel making operation on hiatus in 2007, but now that it will close for good, 47 non-unionized employees will be out of a job at the end of the year. The big question as this news hit was: Is the steel industry in Hamilton dead?

The answer is no – in fact, it could be a career choice for generations to come, if youth start seeking out the right education. Steel industry expert Peter Warrain suggests Canada will need 20,000 new workers in the industry in the next five to 10 years to replace retiring staff and fill new jobs.

In Hamilton, ArcelorMittal Dofasco is preparing to hire 1,500 employees in the next three to five years.     

5. Dialogue Partners    

It started innocuously enough. The city hired an Ottawa firm, Dialogue Partners, to get input from residents on which city services matter most to them.

The firm launched Our Voice, Our Hamilton, which boasted a website and a Twitter account. The campaign went off the rails when the firm tweeted "what is HSR?" in response to a tweet about the city's Hamilton Street Railway transit system. The Pinterest page also included a photo of the courthouse in Hamilton, Ohio.

Online critics piled onto the company for the blunder, charging that Dialogue Partners was a group of tone-deaf outsiders. Public outcry grew on social media, extending to city councillors, who wanted the firm gone. The city terminated the $376,000 contract, which included training city staff to engage the public. The city is using what remains of the contract money to do the consultation work itself.       

6. Heritage    

Heritage was a hot topic for good and bad reasons in 2013 as Hamilton continued its struggles balancing preservation on one hand, and development on the other. 

On the plus side, work began on the long dormant Royal Connaught Hotel.

Other bright spots included an announcement of the redevelopment of the old William Thomas Building, a part of the Lister complex, along with a 16-storey condo tower. Also on the preservation side: the designation of Delta High School, and the long awaited opening of condos at the Stinson Lofts.

The school board plans to knock down King George, and the city is thinking about preserving it.

James St. Baptist concept

Concept for partial preservation of James St. Baptist church ((McCallum Sather Architects))

Two downtown sites were perhaps the most controversial on the demolition side in 2013:

There remains heated debate about the future of historic buildings on the south leg of King Street in the Gore that developer Dave Blanchard wants to take down. Preservationists want to keep the streetscape and the historic facades, and city hall is prepared to kick in $1 million. When the developer said that's not enough, the city pulled the plug on his demolition permit. Stayed tuned.

James Street Baptist Church is slated to be demolished with the façade preserved. A determined effort there failed to overcome the developers' assertions that the building was in danger of falling down.

7. Cop Budget            

Tensions grew between city hall and the police when Chief Glenn De Caire proposed a budget for 2013 that was a 5.25-per cent increase over th

De Caire said Hamilton Police Service needed to hire 20 more officers and one new civilian staff member to keep up with the demand of policing the city. Councillors wanted a lower budget, and asked the chief's staff to trim it three times before they approved a 3.52-per cent increase.

There was collateral damage. Councillors talked of resistance and mistrust between the two sides. City council voted to ask the province for more control over the police service.

By the end of the year, Mayor Bob Bratina became chair of the police services board, only to step down later. De Caire also announced that he wouldn't seek a contract renewal beyond 2014. Coun. Terry Whitehead was suspended from the board and investigated by the Ontario Civilian Police Commission over comments made in part during the budget debates. Not all of these things had direct links to the budget, but they all contributed to an active year for the board.

Next year's budget discussions will likely be less controversial. The budget request for 2014 is a 2.98-per cent increase over 2013, the lowest in 14 years.

8. Ticats    

It was the season of Guelph, of star Chris Williams walking away, of head coach Kent Austin's slow and steady hand rebuilding the franchise into a credible team — a playoff contender. And then, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats made a wholly unexpected trip to the Grey Cup.

Burris

Henry Burris led the Ticats to a surprising Grey Cup appearance (Chris Young/CP)

The Tabbies turned the tiny and stormy confines of the University of Guelph into their home away from home, won over a good number of the locals and were followed there by a loyal band of fans.

New head coach and CFL icon Kent Austin put his stamp on the team, building its talent and character. By mid-September, Ticat nation was still hopeful the team could finish above .500. By November, a late-season surge, some improbable wins, followed by two playoff victories, and suddenly the team was on a plane for a trip to the national championship in chilly Regina. Okay, so that didn't go so well, but no one was counting on a Grey Cup win for the Ticats in 2013. Their team fresh from a thrilling championship drive and their new stadium just months from completion, Ticat fans have plenty of reasons to be optimistic for 2014.

9. School openings/closures

It was a year of significant upheaval for the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board, as 2013 was dominated by discussion over closing schools and rebuilding new ones. And it seems the board generated controversy with every decision.

The most contentious was the debate over the location of a new high school for the lower city to replace Delta, Sir John A. Macdonald and ParkviewAn attempt was made to partner with the city at the site of the closed Scott Park on a combined school and recreation centre.

That failed when the city backed out of the partnership, with some councillors citing a lack of trust with the board. That left the board squeezing the new school into the site of Parkview and King George Elementary and using the nearby Scott Park as a parking lot for the school.

The optics there were less than optimal as the board will have to buy back at an inflated price, perhaps as much as $2 million, a property it sold only nine years ago for $650,000.

Plans also proceeded to close Parkside in Dundas and rebuild Highland.

The King George decision also problems, since the city is looking at designating the school as a heritage site.

Construction also began on the new downtown McMaster health complex on the site of the former Education Centre as the board began its move to new HQ on the Mountain.

10. Weather woes

Hot weather or cold, it didn't matter — Mother Nature didn't play favourites in terms of when she chose to wallop Hamilton with wild weather in 2013. The year saw downed trees and widespread, days-long power outages in both the summer heat and the winter sleet.

hi-power-out-8col

Crews work to restore power to Hamilton's North Westdale neighbourhood on the afternoon of Sunday, July 21, 2013, almost 48 hours after a wild summer storm caused power outages across the city. (Cory Ruf/CBC)

Booming with thunder and beaming with lightning, a July 19 storm barreled through Hamilton, drenching the city in 53.6 mm of precipitation. High winds toppled hundreds, if not thousands, of once-soaring trees, tearing down power lines in the process.

The morning after, tens of thousands of Hamiltonians woke up without power. Crews scrambled to pluck tree trunks from the roadways and restore power to affected neighbourhoods. Electricity didn't return for some residents until after the weekend, and many charged that the city didn't do enough to inform residents about the cleanup effort that was underway.

The rage over the summer blackouts had become but a memory by Dec. 21, when a weather system creeping up from the U.S. doused southern Ontario in freezing rain. Branches shattered under the weight of the ice, bringing down power lines as they fell to the ground. The next morning, at the height of the power outages, 30,000 homes and businesses were in the dark.

Thousands remained without power into the week, as temperatures plunged into the negative double digits. For many in Hamilton, the situation rendered Christmas 2013 one they'll always remember but would prefer to forget. 


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Hamilton boy waits for return of teddy bear given by late grandmother

A 14-year-old boy from Hamilton is still waiting for his teddy bear, a gift from his late grandmother, to be returned five days after it went missing at an airport.

The boy, a student at Westdale Secondary School, was travelling with his family to Thunder Bay on Monday to spend the Christmas holiday with his mom's family when his backpack with a laptop and the teddy bear went missing. Nicknamed Teddy, the bear was given to him when he was two years old by his grandmother who died of brain cancer three years ago.

Roslyn Allen, the boy's mom, said Teddy has become her son's "good luck charm" and "a talisman" over the years.

"He was near tears that it had been taken," Allen told CBC Hamilton earlier this week.

The family is still waiting for good news from the airport authority and anyone with information. Meanwhile, Plan B is to buy an identical teddy bear from the same toy company.

Allen said the family is staying hopeful as she has received positive feedback on social media after she shared her story. Thunder Bay International Airport, where the backpack went missing, also sent out a call-out on Facebook after CBC Hamilton first reported the story.

"I was worried that it might be embarrassing for him, because he's 14 and doesn't want people to know that he still has a teddy bear," she told CBC Hamilton on Thursday. "But he's happy to see [the coverage]."

Allen added she hasn't filed a police report yet, because she doesn't have the serial number of the laptop. The family members are not concerned about the laptop, which can be replaced, Allen said. They just want Teddy back.

She says the person with the teddy bear can return it anonymously — no question asked.


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Ice storm: How to be better prepared for an emergency

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Ready for emergencies 2:08

Ready for emergencies 2:08

Last week's brutal ice storm caught many off guard as residents struggled to stay warm and hydro crews scrambled to turn the lights back on. Incidents related to carbon monoxide poisoning also jumped due to the improper use of generators and makeshift warming devices such as barbecues.

As power outages stretch into the sixth day for some Hamiltonians, it is a good opportunity for residents to revisit their emergency preparedness plans.

Here's a summary of the three-step emergency plan from the City of Hamilton

1. Know the risks

Severe weather and power outages were among the number of emergencies that the city says have occurred or may occur in Hamilton.

Top 10 risks, in order, for Hamilton:

1. Hazardous materials and explosions

2. Energy supply emergencies

3. Epidemics/pandemics

4. Terrorism

5. Flooding

6. Structure fire (major)

7. Tornadoes (windstorm and microburst)

8. Transportation accident - motor vehicle

9. Ice storms

10. Earthquake

Ice storm is ranked ninth in the top 10 emergencies the city plans for, behind other emergencies like hazardous materials and explosions, epidemics and terrorism. That ranking is based on a mathematical equation the city uses: Risk = (Probability + frequency) X  (sum of consequences).

Michael Kirkopoulos, the city's manager of communications, said it is still too early to tell if the city will reassess the risk of ice storms. Debriefings are planned to find out what the city has learned and what can be applied to future storm responses.

The city will also conduct another risk assessment of the emergencies next year using a new process developed by the province's emergency services branch, which may have some impact on the rankings, according to Kirkopoulos.

Kirkopoulos said, because of the colder temperatures, last weekend's ice storm is different from the summer storm in July that also caused extensive power outages.

The city opened four warming centres, something that wasn't typically done during an emergency, according to Kirkopoulos.

"The warming centres are a good example of how this storm requires us to do different things and make quick decisions," he told CBC Hamilton.

The timing of the ice storm also added to the inconvenience and complicated the emergency response effort, he said.

"The holidays made it more significant."

2. Make a plan

Each household should have an emergency plan, which covers the following:

  • Safe exits from the home and neighbourhood.
  • A meeting place near your home for your family.
  • A designated person to pick up children from school or daycare should you be unavailable.
  • Out of town contact person(s).
  • Special health needs.
  • Location of fire extinguisher, water valve, electric box, gas valve and floor drain.

The federal government also has a step-by-step online tool that guides you through the process.

3. Get a kit

After an emergency, it may take crews some time to reach you. Families should be prepared to be self sufficient for at least 72 hours.

The following items will help you build a 72-hour basic emergency kit. Store them in a backpack or duffel bag in an easy-to-reach location. The kit should be checked once a year and re-stocked as needed.

Black flashlight

(iStockphoto)

  • Nonperishable food.
  • Cash.
  • Manual can opener.
  • At least 2 litres of water per person per day.
  • Wind-up or battery-powered flashlight.
  • Wind-up or battery powered radio.
  • Extra batteries.
  • A copy of your emergency plan and contact information.

Additional items are recommended:

  • Basic tools.
  • Whistle.
  • Duct tape.
  • Toiletries, toilet paper, hand sanitizer.
  • Utensils.
  • Garbage bags.
  • Blankets and extra clothing.
  • Bleach or water purification tablets.
  • Candles and matches.
  • Two more litres of water per person per day for cooking and cleaning.
  • Small fuel-operated camp stove and fuel.

Are you stocking up on emergency supplies in preparation for the next big storm?

(Source: City of Hamilton emergency services)


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Hikers warned to use extreme caution on Hamilton trails

Hikers are being asked to exercise extreme caution on the trails in and around Hamilton in the wake of last weekend's ice storm.

The Iroquoia Bruce Trail Club, which monitors the section of the natural thoroughfare that runs between Grimsby and Milton, says anyone walking the route should be prepared to turn back because of possible closures and blockages.

"Obviously, the ice has brought down a number of branches and trees onto the trail," said Ken Lawday, the club's trail director. "We'd recommend, rather than bushwhack and go off the trail, that people turn back just for their own safety."

He said trail-goers on the Bruce should look for hazards such as tree limbs lying on the ground, broken branches hanging overhead and falling ice. He also recommended that people invest in Icers — treads with metal spikes that attach to the bottom of a person's boots — to prevent slipping on snow or ice.

Downed trees on the Bruce Trail

Downed trees and branches litter the Bruce Trail after last weekend's ice storm. (Iroquoia Bruce Trail Club/Facebook)

"People should make sure they have a warm drink and some food, and to be prepared to maybe be out for slightly longer than they think."

This weekend's ice storm felled tree branches and power lines across Hamilton, temporarily leaving thousands without electricity. Rural and suburban areas of Hamilton, including parts of Flamborough, Waterdown, Glanbrook, Mount Hope and Upper Stoney Creek, bore the brunt of the damage.

The conditions have spurred Conservation Halton to close the parks and trails it manages until January 2. The Hamilton Conservation Authority and the Royal Botanical Gardens (RBG) say their trails remain open, but warn hikers to take particular care.

However, the RBG has cancelled its Get Back to Nature walk on Sunday because the parking lot is currently closed at the Rock Chapel loop.

The guided hikes will resume on Jan. 5. 


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Things to do in Hamilton this weekend

Winter can be a drag, as Hamiltonians found out after last weekend's ice storm.

But the season isn't all bad. Case in point: several fun-filled, snow-sprinkled festivities are in the forecast for Hamilton over the next few days. Here's a short list of things to do in the city this weekend, the final one of 2013. 

Ring in the New Year at Dundurn Castle

Starting on Friday, Dundurn Castle will be transformed by holiday decorations. For two nights, the lavish historic home of Sir Allan MacNab will be the site of extended tours, music and a chance to sample an assortment of traditional holiday foods. This evening event runs from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m on both Friday and Saturday. Tickets are $25 per person and are available online. 

For more information, go to the Dundurn National Historic Site's webpage. 

Winterfest 2013

The Royal Botanical Gardens is hosting its first-ever Winterfest from Friday until Tuesday. It will feature family-friendly winter games, crafts and afternoon campfires. The activities, taking place at the RBG's Nature Interpretive Centre (16 Old Guelph Rd.), runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day.

Admission is included in the price of a day pass to the RBG, which costs $12.50 for adults, $10.50 for students/youth and $7.50 for children age 4 to 12. Kids under four get in free.

For more information, go to Rbg.ca/events.

Fred Eaglesmith's Travelling Steam Show

Southern Ontario roots-rock troubadour Fred Eaglesmith and his Travelling Steam Show are rolling into the Dundas Legion (280 King St. W, Dundas) this weekend for a Saturday night hootenanny.

A Charity Pie Auction, now a fixture on the singer-songwriter's tours, will accompany the live music. Eaglesmith invites concert-goers to bake pies to be put on the auction block. The proceeds go toward Operation Smile, an organization that aids children with facial deformities.

Tickets are $25 each, available online and at Mickey McGuire's Cheese Shop (51 King West, Dundas). Doors open at 7 p.m. and the show starts at 8 p.m.

For more information, and to buy tickets, go to Fredeaglesmith.com. 

The Dirty Nil's Annual Holiday Bash

If blood, sweat and mean riffs are your thing, check out beer-drenched Dundas rockers The Dirty Nil's "annual holiday bash" on Saturday night at The Casbah. Hamilton experimental outfit Allegories and two Toronto rock 'n' roll bands, Greys and Teenage Kicks, are scheduled to open.

Tickets for the all-ages/licensed show are $10 at the doors, which open at 8 p.m. 

For more information, go to Casbahlounge.ca.

Science of Ice and Snow

In case you haven't had enough of the snow already, head to the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology to explore the science of ice and snow. Get your hands and feet wet on Saturday and Sunday with activities like slinging snowballs with a big trebuchet, sliding contests and ice shuffleboard. You can also make snow decorations and mini-snow-people to take home.

The museum is open from noon to 4 p.m. on both days. Admission is $6.75 for adults, $5.75 for students and seniors, and $4.75 for children ages 6 to 12. Children under 6 get in free. 

For more information, go to the museum's website. 


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Boxing Day sales continue for Hamilton's 'smart shoppers'

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Desember 2013 | 22.46

Boxing Day is playing out differently on opposite ends of the city. While Hamilton's shopping malls celebrate the annual extravaganza with banners boasting blowout sales, many of the independent stores on Ottawa Street simply put on the "Sorry, we're closed" sign.

'People have their plans before they come to Lime Ridge. We have very smart shoppers.'- Nicole Young, marketing manager of Lime Ridge Mall

Lime Ridge Mall is open for 12 hours from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Thursday. H&M, for example, gave out scratch cards to the first 300 customers.

Although the statistics on traffic and sales won't be available until next month, Nicole Young, the mall's marketing manager, said this year's Boxing Day is comparable to Black Friday, thanks to shoppers who are eager to spend their Christmas money and use their gift cards.

"On the visual, it's just as busy as any other Boxing Day," she told CBC Hamilton.

While the mall has sent security guards to direct the extra flow of cars in the parking lots, Young said many savvy shoppers choose to be dropped off and then picked up.

"People have their plans before they come to Lime Ridge. We have very smart shoppers."

Hamilton Street Railway also added extra buses on two routes — 25 Upper Wentworth and 25 Upper Wellington — to accommodate the extra traffic.

At Jackson Square Mall, Nathan Irwin, co-owner of The Works, welcomes his first Boxing Day at the mall since his franchise restaurant opened in October.

He said the crowd has been steady all day, adding that Jackson Square doesn't get as much traffic as Lime Ridge Mall.

"We didn't expect a big crowd anyways."

Along Ottawa Street, however, the parking metres covered in ice sit idling Thursday afternoon, as the snow buildup on the sidewalks slowly turns into slush.

Boxing Day on Ottawa Street

Sean Queroub, president of Nova Sewing Centre, shows off his store's biggest draw on Boxing Day. (Sunnie Huang/CBC)

Patty Hayes, executive director of the Ottawa Street BIA, said many businesses are closed on Boxing Day and much of the week. Those that remain open often run shortened hours.

The BIA does not enforce hours or operation for the stores in the neighbourhood, Hayes said.

"So the beauty for them is that they can make the business decisions that are right for them and their families."

But for the few ones that choose to jump on the Boxing Day bandwagon, the sales are as attractive as their shopping mall counterparts.

Sean Queroub, president of Nova Sewing Centre, said his store has been offering Boxing Day discounts for over 10 years. From zippers to threads, the entire store is 20 to 40 per cent off. But the sewing machines are the biggest draw with a minimum discount of 40 per cent off.

"Today is mainly buyers instead of shoppers," he said, as he helps a customer box $2,700 sewing machine. It was on sale for $1,900.

"They know what they want. They are educated. They are waiting for it."

Boxing Day is commonly observed in Commonwealth countries and not in the United States, where the the biggest sale takes place on Black Friday in late November. Many stores south of the border, however, offer "day after Christmas" sales.


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Hamilton Daystarter: Everything you need to know Friday

Happy December 27! We've entered into the weird gap between Christmas and New Year's, when many offices, both private and public, are back open for business — if only for a day or two — while their employees and patrons are still grappling with holiday food hangovers and acute cases of credit card fatigue. (Hopefully, you're dealing well.) 

Temperatures are warming up after hitting a low of -10 C overnight. The expected high for Friday is -2 C, with a period of light snow ending in the morning followed by a mix of sun and cloud, Environment Canada says. 

Hamilton is set to experience a bit of a thaw over the weekend. Clouds and a high of 2 C are in the forecast for Saturday. And clouds with 30 per cent chance of rain or flurries and high of 2 C are expected for Sunday. 

After a couple of days of holiday operations, GO Transit has returned to a regular weekday schedule for Friday. The transit service says there are no major delays for buses and trains running in and out of Hamilton. 

The HSR and DARTS have also returned to their regular weekday schedules. 

Here's a map of ongoing roadwork projects around the city.


View Hamilton commute in a larger map

Are you in need of laughter in your life? Recent grads of Humber College's comedy writing program, the sketch team Cash Grab is performing at the Pearl Company (16 Steven St.) on Friday night. Fusing storytelling, improvisation and a slather of physical comedy, the troupe was selected to compete in the Fresh Meat tournament at Toronto's legendary Second City and has performed at other comedy festivals in the Ontario capital and beyond. The show starts at 8 p.m. Admission is $15 ($10 for seniors, students and arts workers.) 

After beating the Toronto Marlies in overtime on Thursday, the Hamilton Bulldogs are hosting their down-the-QEW rivals at Copps Coliseum on Friday night. The opening faceoff is set for 7:30 p.m. Tickets range from $24 to $34.80 and are available at Ticketmaster.ca.


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