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Friday, October 10, 2025

LEVY: Drug enablers and activists hijack community meeting on safety of injection sites

The standing-room-only crowd packed a community centre in Toronto’s Riverdale neighbourhood Wednesday night to discuss safety issues in the wake of a tragic shooting of a mom outside an injection site two weeks ago.

But the meeting was quickly hijacked by the drug enablers and assorted activists, evolving into a nearly two-hour lecture on the benefits of harm reduction and the human rights of addicts.

The legitimate concerns of parents about the prevalence of open illegal drug use and shady characters who hang out outside and in the laneways around the South Riverdale Community Health Centre (SRCHC) – located in close proximity to a school – were glossed over as the drug activists and politicians pushed their drug enabling agenda.

The Town Hall was organized following the tragic July 7 shooting of a 44-year-old mother of two, Karolina Huebner-Makurat, while she walked along Queen St. E. in front of the SRCHC.

A 32-year-old man with a criminal record has been arrested and charged with second degree murder in the slaying. But police are still hunting for two other men.  

The trio were likely involved in a turf battle over a drug deal gone wrong.

Jason Altenburg, CEO of the SRCHC, said all of his staff are “trying to make sense of the horrible loss” and that they’re trying to create “safer spaces” outside the centre by hiring One Community Solutions security, the contractor of choice for the poverty industry. This outfit is the same inept bunch that worked outside the Novotel shelter on Toronto’s Esplanade and did little to protect the surrounding community.

But Altenberg also played the harm reduction guilt card by claiming that the drug supply has become increasingly toxic and poisonous.

“We have to get the illegal drug supply completely removed,” he said to great applause.

Altenberg and the rest of the cast of enablers on the panel refused to concede, or at least mention, the drug dealers who prey on the addicts outside the site and are likely peddling this toxic supply.

Another drug enabler, Angela Robertson, executive director of an injection site in Parkdale, had the audacity to suggest that people have to be mindful not to “vilify”  outsiders who come into their community (namely drug dealers) and look like her (she’s black.)

“It results in increased scrutiny of people like me,” she said.

It is astounding to think that a woman like this thinks drug dealers should be handled with kid gloves based on the colour of their skin.

No wonder the city is in such a mess.

One woman, who introduced herself as a public health researcher, insisted the injection sites save people’s lives.

Before the sites, addicts numbering in the 300s were dying each year in Canada, she claimed. Now, she said, there are 3,000 people dying per year or about six people every day.

Of course, the activists would contend that proves there are more sites needed.

But this only showed to many in the room Wednesday night that the sites are merely enabling more drug use.

Probably the most egregious comments came from the Ford government’s deputy minister of health, Dr. Catherine Zahn, who appeared to completely ignore the shooting and what is occurring around the centre every day, indicating repeatedly people with “mental disorders and drug addiction have a right to care.”

“Let’s lift up the conversation (and focus on) how we can best serve people with substance abuse,” said Zahn, who made $650,000 as executive director of Centre for Addiction and Mental Health before coming to the health ministry in 2022.

She earned $477,360 last year as deputy minister of health.

“People should educate themselves as to what it will take to make the community safe and accessible.”

She was equally dismissive when two moms went up to her after the town hall and spoke of open drug use in front of their children and their very real fears of crime.

Zahn responded: “Where else are they supposed to go?”

Perhaps to her neighbourhood but I would bet she lives nowhere near any injection site.

When the Town Hall wrapped up – after a mere 20 minutes of questions from the public (many of those people activists) – the community was no further ahead.

Their security concerns had not been addressed in the slightest and the panelists did their darndest to disassociate the injection site and the drug dealers who hang out there from the tragic shooting.

Councillor Paula Fletcher, who said very little of value throughout the meeting, promised to hold another session soon to follow up on concerns.

Yet it’s an exercise in futility.

It was abundantly clear that the community’s genuine concerns were and are being drowned out by the activists, who have a vested interest in keeping the drug industry thriving.

The death of Huebner-Makurat is not the only tragedy here.

It is also tragic how injection sites like the one at South Riverdale Community Health Centre are holding the neighbourhood ransom.

TDSB trustee calls on board to cut ties with diversity consultancy following principal’s suicide

Toronto District School Board (TDSB) trustee Weidong Pei is calling on the school board to suspend all dealings with the controversial “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” (DEI) consultancy KOJO Institute following the suicide of a principal who is alleged to have been bullied at one of their sessions.

The Ward 12 Trustee’s demand comes after Ontario Education Minister Stephen Lecce ordered a review of the circumstances surrounding the recent suicide of 60-year-old Richard Bilkszto, who committed suicide after his family claimed that he dealt with plaguing stress stemming from a confrontation at the training.

Lecce, who called the situation “serious” and “disturbing,” also ordered his staff to review school training for teachers and to provide “options to reform professional training and strengthen accountability on school boards so this never happens again.” 

The TDSB announced Thursday that it has launched its own investigation into the circumstances surrounding Bilkszto’s death. Toronto’s largest school board says it stands by holding regular DEI training sessions for staff – claiming they’re “important.”

In an email to TDSB director Colleen Russell-Rawlins, Pei said he is expecting her to “report that the Board has suspended all dealings with the KOJO Institute and its officers and employees, pending the results of the investigation into Richard’s death.”

Pei also said he expects Russell-Rawlins’ Leadership Statemate at the upcoming Aug. 30 board meeting to “include a fitting remembrance of the life and contributions to the TDSB of Richard Bilkszto, an acknowledgement of the emotional harm that he suffered as a result of attending a professional development event sponsored by the TDSB, and a commitment to fully cooperate with the Ministry of Education’s inquiry into the broader circumstances of Richard’s death.”

As previously reported by True North’s Sue-Ann Levy, Bilkszto had filed a $750,000 lawsuit against the TDSB alleging breach of contract, defamation of character and reprisal by the board’s senior administrators after he was allegedly repeatedly labelled a “white supremacist,” shamed and humiliated. The lawsuit has however yet to be served to the board.

According to the statement of claim, Bilkszto, who previously taught in the United States, politely challenged KOJO Institute founder and principal consultant Kike Ojo-Thompson after she claimed Canada was more racist than America and a bastion of white supremacy.

The lawsuit claims Ojo-Thompson responded to Bilkszto’s objection by telling him, “we are here to talk about anti-black racism but you in your whiteness think that you can tell me what’s really going on for black people?”

Ojo-Thompson then allegedly continued to harass Bilkszto, repeatedly calling his response “resistance in support of white supremacy.” She subsequently suggested that the TDSB take action against Bilkszto for allegedly choosing not to “unlearn” his white supremacism.

Bilkszto ended up taking stress leave. He then sought a ruling from the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) – which ruled in his favour. The KOJO Institute said it had no involvement in the WSIB hearing.

The lawsuit claims that despite the ruling, the TDSB reneged on the contract to hire Bilkszto at Burnhamthorpe Collegiate when he returned from sick leave. He had other contracts revoked and failed to get other internal positions as well.

When pressed for comment on Pei’s demand, TDSB spokesperson Shari Schwartz-Maltz directed True North to the board’s statement announcing it had retained the King International Advisory Group to conduct its own investigation.

“Toronto District School Board has launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the tragic passing of Richard Bilkszto, retaining King International Advisory Group, an experienced and well-respected investigative firm with multi-disciplinary expertise in conducting thorough investigations,” reads the statement. 

“Our intention is for this investigation to be conducted in a professional, sensitive and respectful manner.”

The board also said that “regular equity training sessions for all staff support student achievement and well-being and are an important aspect of the Board’s approved multi-year strategic priorities. Effective learning takes place in a supportive environment that fosters honest dialogue and is based on respect and learning.”

“We express our continued condolences to Richard’s family, friends and colleagues. Our Employee and Family Assistance Program remains available at any time for staff in need.”

True North also reached out to the KOJO Institute for comment, but they did not respond in time for publication.

Toronto Police Association slams Mayor Chow for silence on violence against cops

The Toronto Police Association (TPA) has released a scathing statement slamming Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow for her continued silence on recent incidents of violence against police officers.

The TPA statement posted on Twitter criticizes Mayor Chow for failing to show support for a police officer who was recently hit with a stolen car and offering condolences for a police K-9 that was shot and killed in the line of duty.

“In the last 5 days, we have had a police officer struck and injured by a stolen car, officers shot at, and a police dog killed in the line of duty,” reads the statement.

“Will Mayor Chow offer any words of condolence or support for our members?”

TPA president Jon Reid chimed in, telling Chow that Toronto’s police officers deserve her support.

“Mayor Chow the men and women of the @TorontoPolice Service put their lives on the line everyday to keep you and the citizens of Toronto safe,” said Reid.

“They deserve your public support.”

Last week, a police officer on a bicycle was struck by a 15-year-old boy and a 17-year old girl driving a stolen car, sending the officer to the hospital for non-life-threatening injuries.

On Tuesday, police were searching for an armed suspect in the Kipling Ave and Dixon Rd area when the suspect shot and killed the police’s 2-year-old German Shepherd named Bingo. 

Chow’s office said in a statement to the Toronto Sun that the Mayor is grateful for the work of the police.

“The mayor is in frequent communication with the chief of police. She sincerely hopes that the recently injured officers recover quickly, and she is grateful for their service,” the statement said.

“The mayor recognizes and appreciates the danger police put themselves in each day on behalf of communities across the city. She also expresses her condolences to Sgt. Brandon Smith and to anyone else who knew and loved Bingo.”

Toronto’s citizens continue to face struggle with the growing threat of violent crime.

On Sunday, a man was shot and killed in Toronto’s Greektown area at Danforth Ave and Carlaw Ave, hours after members of the community gathered for a memorial to commemorate the victims of a Danforth Ave shooting five years ago.

On Tuesday, a man was shot and killed in his car in the Sherbourne and Shutter area in what police believe to be a targeted murder. Police are still looking for the suspect.

Despite waging a months-long campaign for the mayoralty, Chow had not released a platform to combat crime and had recently stated that she has not come up with a plan to address Toronto’s crime problems.

The closest thing Chow’s platform had as a plan to address violent crime was Chow’s plan to reduce 911 wait times and expand Toronto’s Community Crisis Service – teams of social workers meant to respond to “mental-health emergencies” at the 211 or 911 phone numbers.

Trudeau says Canada will be part of Europe’s energy mix but doesn’t offer timeline

Source: Wikipedia

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau claimed on Thursday that Canada will play a role in transitioning Europe off of its reliance on Russian gas and oil but did not elaborate on a specific timeline. 

Trudeau made the comments while at an event in Summerford, N.L. following a massive cabinet shuffle earlier this week. 

“Europe is not just choosing to get off of Russian oil and gas, they’re trying to accelerate the transition to alternative, lower carbon solutions,” said Trudeau.

“Canada can and will be a part of that.”

Despite the prime minister’s assurances, critics have blasted the Liberal government for failing to seize the opportunity when it comes to Europe’s energy needs. 

In March, Senior Fellow and Director of Natural Resources, Energy and Environment at the Macdonald Laurier Institute, Heather Exner-Pirot told True North that the clock was ticking and Canada has so far made no substantial commitments. 

“The political environment is a deterrent. There is no confidence from the investment community that projects in Canada could be approved, or if approved could be developed in a timely manner,” said Exner-Pirot. 

“Europe needs gas now, and Canada is demonstrably slow in developing these kinds of major projects, with regulatory hurdles and social acceptance being major hurdles. Also with high interest rates capital is very expensive right now, and long development times add a lot of cost. There is a window of opportunity and it is being closed.”

Last year, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz left Canada empty handed following an official state visit after Trudeau said that supplying the major European economy with natural gas lacked a “business case.” 

Conservative foreign affairs critic and Michael Chong blasted the prime minister for his comments, pointing to the fact that the US has been able to capitalize on Canada’s inactions. 

“Germany’s newly constructed LNG terminal received its first full cargo from the U.S. today – not Canada,” tweeted Chong at the time. 

“That’s partly because Trudeau believes there’s ‘never been a strong business case’ for exporting East Coast LNG. What a missed opportunity.”

Soon after Canada’s refusal, Germany signed a long-term natural gas deal with Qatar for two million tonnes of LNG beginning in 2026. 

Statistics from the International Energy Agency show that imports of LNG into Europe have shot up by 63% in 2022, with the global market for LNG reaching a whopping $450 billion. 

Ratio’d | Canadian becomes first transgender AND non-binary player at World Cup

A Canadian soccer player who goes by just her last name as a mononym, Quinn, is stealing all the headlines at the Women’s World Cup. Quinn is the first transgender and non-binary player to play at the FIFA World Cup. Now if that sounds odd to you, you’re not alone. How exactly can someone be transgender and non-binary at the same time? Further, if she is transgender, shouldn’t Quinn be playing on the men’s team?

The reality, of course, is that Quinn can’t play on the men’s team because she wouldn’t be good enough. Ultimately, Quinn’s story perfectly illustrates the nonsense that exists in the transgender sports movement. The competitive advantage that biological men have is completely unfair.

Watch the latest episode of Ratio’d with Harrison Faulkner.

Venues bow to woke mob and cancel comedian Ben Bankas’ tour

Several venues have cancelled bookings by Canadian comedian Ben Bankas ahead of an anticipated cross-Canada tour after he posted a skit of Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow on social media. 

The controversial comedy skit mocking the mayor led to a coordinated social media mob intent on demanding venues who were willing to host Bankas to drop him from their line up. 

Bankas also ran for mayor in the latest mayoral election and used his candidacy to ridicule woke and progressive policies. 

In an interview with True North, Bankas explained that Aeolian Hall in London, Ontario and Alderney Landing in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia have cancelled scheduled performances. 

“People from TikTok went on my website to find the list of venues to cancel and sent them all emails,” explained Bankas. 

In one email, Aeolian Hall’s managers explained that “some backlash” led to their decision to cancel Bankas’ show on Oct. 5. 

“We’ve received some backlash, and it’s been pointed out that some of your humour is past the line in relation to our values as a venue and arts organization. This decision wasn’t made lightly,” Aeolian Hall told Bankas. 

True North reached out to Aeolian Hall to ask what particular aspects of Bankas’ comedy they took issue with but did not receive a response. 

According to Bankas, he confronted Aeolian Hall’s managers about the cancellation and they allegedly told him that they had only received one email complaint prior to cancelling the booking.

“I asked: How much backlash? What are you talking about when you say backlash? And so he said, they had one email. They had one email come in with a link to the TikTok of Olivia Chow and they just said we can’t do it,” said Bankas. 

“I told them that this is anti-free speech, like blatantly saying you don’t like this speech and can’t allow it here.” 

Since the video caught the attention of the woke mob, Bankas has received several threatening and antisemitic messages. 

Screenshots shared with True North include one user commenting: “If only I could rewind time to make sure your grandparents were in the (gas) chambers and not someone else’s.” 

“Wish u were born during ww2 tbh,” commented another user. 

Others called Bankas “racist” or threatened violence.

“This guy needs to be taken out to the back shed,” wrote one user on TikTok. 

On Wednesday, Bankas was informed by Alderney Landing’s management that they too would cancel a show scheduled for Sept. 16. 

“Due to an influx of negative feedback from the members of our community – we regret to inform you that we have to cancel your booking,” wrote the venue. 

“As a community cultural centre, we have a responsibility to be cognizant of public feedback. Due to the amount of negative feedback we have received in the past day, we have no choice but to cancel your booking.” 

In a response sent to Alderney Landing, Bankas accused the venue of censoring comedy.

“This is completely unacceptable. I was told you were not here to censor comedy. I have online haters emailing you from not even Canada begging you to cancel my show and take money out of my pocket and my child’s dinner plate and without contacting me you immediately bend the knee,” wrote Bankas. 

“This is a blatant attack on free speech by Alderney Landing.”

As True North reported exclusively, comedian Sophie Buddle also recently had an event cancelled in May by the Vancouver venue Little Mountain Gallery over a joke referencing residential schools from last year. 

Forty percent of Trudeau’s new cabinet are landlords or real estate investors, up from 30%

Of the new Liberal cabinet announced on Wednesday, 16 of 39 ministers are either real estate investors or landlords. 

41% of cabinet ministers hold real estate assets for profit-generating purposes, an increase from the previous cabinet’s 31% (12 of 39 ministers). Members of Parliament must disclose such assets with the federal conflict of interest commissioner.

Previous housing minister Ahmed Hussen came under fire for holding two rental properties in Ottawa while overseeing a country of exorbitant rental rates and out-of-reach housing prices. 

While it is legal to be an elected official and a real estate investor, critics argue that a large representation of landlords and investors in office could translate to out-of-touch attitudes and little will to solve Canada’s housing affordability crisis.

The optics of Hussen’s side gig as a landlord appeared to have bothered Trudeau, as Hussen was replaced by non-landlord Sean Fraser, while Hussen was shuffled to the international development file. 

Incoming Minister of Citizens’ Services Terry Beech owns a rental property in Burnaby, BC, where the average two-bedroom unit is $3,139 per month. This makes Burnaby the fourth-most expensive place to rent such a unit in the country. 

New Minister of Tourism Soraya Martinez Ferrada owns a rental property on rue Bennett in Montreal, while Gary Anandasangaree, Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations, rents out two properties on Talara Drive in Toronto. 

The average detached home in Toronto costs $1.27 million, while a condo unit is $630,000.

Finance minister Chrystia Freeland and industry minister François-Philippe Champagne, who have both stayed put amid the shuffle, hold overseas rental properties. Freeland and her spouse have two UK rental properties as well as one in New York, while Champagne rents out two London, UK properties. 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau himself discloses “Controlling interest of 7664699 Canada Incorporated located in Montréal, Québec that holds a vacant land” and “Significant interest of 9190-0563 Québec incorporated, a company based in Montreal, Quebec which produces and sells firewood and lumber and real estate development.”

While some economists contend that the Trudeau Liberals’ lofty immigration numbers are contributing to the housing crunch, new housing minister Sean Fraser has already stated he will not “close the door on newcomers.”

The Daily Brief | RCMP spends millions to study how its racist

In an attempt to revive decreasing popularity and embed the Liberal government with fresh faces ahead of a return to Parliament this fall, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his new picks for a cabinet on Wednesday.

Plus, the RCMP has set aside over $15 million in taxpayer funding to collect “race-based data” and study how the profession is systemically racist towards minorities.

And a Windsor Imam reacts to a local teacher’s tirade against Muslim students who did not participate in the school’s pride day, calling it a “huge shock” for the community.

Tune into The Daily Brief with Andrew Lawton and Lindsay Shepherd! 

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Trudeau government spending the cause of interest rate hikes: BMO

The Trudeau government’s unprecedented spending is driving the Bank of Canada’s (BoC) interest rate hikes, according to a report released by the Bank of Montreal’s (BMO) capital markets division.

A BMO Capital Markets’ memo claims that the federal government’s record spending in the form of temporary Covid-19 pandemic benefits and social programs is driving up price inflation. 

This has led to the BoC tightening its monetary policy approach by hiking interest rates to levels not seen in decades in an attempt to slow down consumer spending.

Recently, the BoC raised its overnight interest rate to 5.0% in an effort to combat persistent inflation in the services industry, despite the inflation rate dropping to 2.8%. 

According to the BMO report, the Trudeau government has increased the government’s spending as a share of GDP, pushing well past the long term average of 15% with a 19% average over the past three years.

Not only has the federal government been growing in size and outspending their means, but provincial governments have also increased their spending as a share of the economy.

BMO estimated that the long-term estimate for combined federal-provincial spending accounted for 37% of the pre-pandemic economy – though this figure has shot up, accounting for 43% of Canada’s GDP in the past three years.

BMO concludes that the extra stimulus both the federal and provincial governments have been providing has contributed to excess consumer demand and thus, price inflation. 

BMO economist Douglas Porter said that if the Trudeau government had committed itself to combating inflation to the same degree that the BoC had, then Canada wouldn’t have had to deal with record-high price inflation.

“It didn’t have to be this intense, if fiscal policy had not run so far the other way,” said Porter.

“Overall, while monetary policy has been rowing hard to contain inflation, fiscal policy has been busily paddling in the opposite direction.”

Since taking power in 2015, the Trudeau government has consistently increased the federal government’s spending and deficit, nearly doubling the budget to $605.5 billion in 2020. Since then, spending has decreased, but remain well above the $400 billion mark. 

In its latest budget, the Trudeau government ditched its projection to balance the budget within five years, predicting a $40.1 billion deficit. That deficit is expected to drop to $14 billion by 2028.

BONOKOSKI: Trudeau unclear about why former ministers got the boot

It was more a total remake than a simple shuffle.

In the re-branding of cabinet Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promoted seven rookie MPs to his front bench, gave the boot to seven ministers and then reassigned the majority of cabinet roles.

While the prime minister denied that such a sizeable shakeup was a signal that 2023 hasn’t been going well, the occasion, as CTV put it, was certainly the federal political event of the summer in so far as it will have ripple effects in the months to come.

That, of course, was the plan from the beginning—to have a cabinet team in place to take on a sudden election.

Trudeau said this shuffle came at a time when “there are storm clouds all around the world,” that are having real impacts on Canadians—from the war in Ukraine, to the rise in authoritarianism and foreign interference, to the cost of living.

“This is a positive step in a moment of consequential impact in the world, and in the country. We know times are challenging, but this is the team that is going to be able to continue the hard work rolling up their sleeves and delivering for Canadians… as we build a brighter and ambitious future for all Canadians,” Trudeau said.

“Making sure that we have the best possible team, aligned to respond to Canadians’ challenges with the supports necessary, but also show that optimism, that ambition for getting us through these consequential times… That’s what we’re focused on.”

That said, Trudeau did not answer when reporters asked why former public safety minister Marco Mendicino, former justice minister David Lametti and former president of the Treasury Board Mona Fortier were shown the door.

Instead, the prime minister said he was putting forward “the strongest possible team with fresh energy and a range of skills.”

“I want to thank everyone who has served this country and this cabinet so well over the past number of years,” he said.

Mendicino was finally bounced from cabinet, having failed too many times during his seemingly endless tenure. He botched the government’s gun control legislation, as well as leaving the foreign interference file in the air.

More recently, he was under intense pressure due to the controversy over the transfer of serial killer Paul Bernardo to a medium-security prison in the Quebec Laurentians.

During the swearing-in ceremony, eyes were on Anita Anand, who was handed one of the most high-profile reassignments. She was bumped from defence to become Treasury Board president.

Asked by reporters how she felt leaving defence with unfinished business, Anand said she was “extremely excited” to work as part of the enhanced economic policy team, while indicating former Toronto police chief Bill Blair is committed to pick up where she left off while handling the Ukraine file.

Also picking up key economic roles are Randy Boissonnault, who is now the minister of employment, workforce development, but also official languages minister, and Mary Ng, who has a similar portfolio to what she held the day before, now formally titled minister of export promotion, international trade and economic development.

Pascale St-Onge, who takes over the minister of Canadian heritage portfolio, and is the first out lesbian in Trudeau’s cabinet, leaves her overseeing online platform policies, including the ongoing debacle over implementing online news regulations following the passage of Bill C-18. Heritage, says CTV, is a file close to St-Onge, which she says she is interested in and fits as a next step following her time overseeing the sport portfolio.

Trudeau’s longtime friend, New Brunswick MP Dominic LeBlanc will now lead public safety, an often-challenging portfolio that includes the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the RCMP. He also takes on the democratic institutions file and will continue to serve as intergovernmental affairs minister.

This means he will be the glue between provinces and territories.

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