Tag: 上海2020龙凤1314

‘We tried to fill a gap’: Penetanguishene business prospers after developing own brand of face mask

Jumping into the face-mask businesses has proven to be extremely advantageous for David Gravelle.

In May, during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, Gravelle’s curling-apparel company WOW! Special Event Management Inc. launched its own line of face masks. His product, branded as , sold extremely well in the spring, benefiting both his business and the community.

“We tried to fill a gap,” said Gravelle. “We saw that people were sewing their own masks out of cloth and realized that a more hearty and safer product may be needed.”

Gravelle partnered up with Derek Robbins, the owner of ATAC Sportwear in Langley, B.C., to develop a MASQ. Robbins, who is originally from Collingwood, has been producing curling apparel items for Gravelle’s company PROCURLING Wear for the past seven years.

“As a small business operator, you are always looking for ways to be innovative and take advantage of opportunities that come your way,” said Gravelle. “This was just one of those opportunities.”

The pair responded almost immediately to a need created by the pandemic and developed a high-quality mask.

Although they did extremely well in the spring, the market caught up to them over the course of the summer and MASQ sales dropped.

Recently, they decided to change the design of their MASQ collection in order to meet the current need. They’ve developed a thinner, more contoured mask, a mask that’s integrated with a neck warmer, and added children’s sizes.

“Our first set of masks were built on the surgical mask layout. The rectangular mask with the double fold or trifold,” said Gravelle. “We found that our market really wanted more contoured, fashionable masks. They wanted form and function, so that is where we have gone.”

They’ve also added more options and created both two-layer and three-layer masks, which offer different levels of protection.

Gravelle also serves as the physician-recruitment consultant for Georgian Bay General Hospital. Because of his connection to the local health-care community, Gravelle has decided to donate a portion of the sales from every MASQ to Georgian Bay General Hospital and the Huronia Community Foundation.

$1-million fundraising effort is for the birds — and humans: Orillia area’s Couchiching Conservancy

A $1-million investment in a globally-important habitat will pay 10 times that in annual benefits to Mother Earth, according to an area conservation group partnering in the effort to purchase the property.

“We are working very hard with our partners to create wildlife corridors throughout the Lake Couchiching region to build natural resiliency in the face of a changing climate,” said Mark Bisset, executive director of the Couchiching Conservancy. “This property is an essential piece of that puzzle.”

The non-profit land trust is working with the Nature Conservancy of Canada to purchase the Cedarhurst Alvar property, a 551-hectare site located 35 kilometres northeast of Orillia.

It is home to some of Ontario’s most significant natural habitat, including forests, wetlands and grasslands that serve as sponges during spring run-off and major storms.

Protecting the property as a conservation reserve will provide $10 million a year in what the conservancies refer to as “ecosystem goods and services.”

These include carbon storage, the removal of air pollution and flood-water storage — vital functions in the age of climate change, the groups say.

“Doing conservation at this size and scale is incredibly important in today’s changing world,” said Kristyn Ferguson, program director, large landscapes Ontario Region, Nature Conservancy of Canada.

Alvars are naturally open habitats characterized by either a thin covering of soil or no soil, over a base of limestone or dolostone bedrock. They exist in just a handful of locations across the globe.

The two conservation organizations need to raise $1 million by spring 2021 to protect the area property for the long term, noting it has faced development pressures in the past.

The site is home to a diversity of grassland birds, including grasshopper sparrow, bobolink, eastern meadowlark and upland sandpiper.

“There are hundreds of species using its wetlands, forests, grasslands and globally rare alvars,” Ferguson added.

Once protected, the property will help form a conservation corridor between Carden Alvar Provincial Park to the south and existing conservation lands that extend north to Queen Elizabeth II Wildlands Provincial Park.

For information on how to contribute, go to .

TTC rolls out new bus-only lanes. Here’s what you need to know

TTC bus riders finally have a lane of their own.

The first bus-only lanes installed under Toronto’s are now up and running on Morningside Avenue in Scarborough, part of a wider installation on the that should be complete next month.

Reserved lanes for buses are common in other cities, but Toronto has historically been reluctant to embrace them. That changed this summer when , with proponents arguing that improving bus service would reduce crowding on TTC vehicles and help limit the spread of COVID-19.

Ahead of the bus lanes’ official inauguration on Oct. 11, here’s what you need to know about the latest addition to Toronto’s transit network.

Where are the new lanes?

The lanes are being installed on an 8.5-kilometre corridor between Brimley Road and the University of Toronto Scarborough Campus, via Eglinton East, Kingston Road, and Morningside Avenue. They will eventually be extended from Brimley Road to Kennedy station once the Scarborough subway extension is complete.

The city and TTC plan to install bus lanes on at least four more corridors, starting with Jane Street, between Eglinton Avenue and Steeles Avenue next year. Lanes on Dufferin Street, Steeles Avenue West, and Finch Avenue East would come later.

Bus routes on these corridors serve lower-income communities in Toronto’s inner suburbs where transit ridership has remained high during the pandemic as a result of employees in essential sectors like health care, manufacturing and food distribution relying on the TTC to get to work. Some of the neighbourhoods have also been hardest hit by COVID-19.

“We need to support communities in the suburbs of Toronto who really do rely on surface transit to get around,” said Coun. Brad Bradford (Ward 19, Beaches-East York), who sits on the TTC board and advocated for the new lanes.

The Eglinton lanes are expected to cost almost $8 million, and are being installed as permanent infrastructure, not a pilot project.

How will the lanes affect bus service?

Prior to COVID, four bus routes operating on the Eglinton corridor carried about 47,000 people per weekday. Crowded buses were frequently stuck in a sea of single-occupancy private cars, which experts say is an inefficient use of road space.

The TTC projects that by giving buses their own lanes, the Eglinton East project will reduce travel times on local and express routes by 16.5 and 6.5 per cent respectively. For example, riders on the 905 Eglinton East Express would save 4 to 5 minutes on a trip from Kennedy station to UTSC.

The lanes should also help alleviate crowding by ensuring buses operate at regularly spaced intervals. The goal is to “get to more evenly distributed crowding” so that a packed bus isn’t quickly followed by a half-empty one, said TTC senior planner Eric Chu.

The TTC doesn’t plan to add service to routes operating in the bus lanes. Instead, the agency hopes the lanes will allow it to operate the same number of bus trips per hour using fewer vehicles.

As a result, the city expects the lanes to generate $2.5 million in annual savings for the TTC. According to Chu, that will allow the agency to reintroduce express bus routes that were as ridership plummeted.

Why is the TTC removing stops?

The TTC plans to “consolidate,” or remove, 24 of the 69 stops along the Eglinton corridor. Transit agency officials say removing some less busy stops is necessary to allow buses to move quickly through the new lanes. But with fewer stops people will have to walk farther to catch a bus, and transit “could become less accessible for some riders,” warned Shelagh Pizey-Allen, director of the TTCriders advocacy group.

Chu said the TTC takes those concerns seriously, and the agency is consulting on the stop-removal plan. But he said there are always tradeoffs when the TTC changes its service. “What we try to achieve is the balance that overall more people will benefit from these changes than people that are inconvenienced,” he said.

How were the lanes designed?

As of Friday, the section of bus lanes on Morningside between Kingston Road and UTSC that are already operational were marked with signage and eye-catching red pavement treatment. Diamond and “bus only” pavement markings, as well as RapidTO pole banners, are being added.

Striped red pavement treatment designates sections of the lanes where drivers are allowed to enter in order to access driveways or make right turns.

The design is based on provincial and national standards, and doesn’t currently include physical barriers to separate the bus lanes and regular traffic. That means it will be up to car drivers to pay attention and obey the rules. The penalty for improperly driving in a bus lane is a $110 fine and three demerit points.

Allan Abrogena, project lead with the Toronto’s transportation department, said the city is open to tweaking the design if necessary, but its priority was to get the project operational. “We want to get this rolling first,” he said.

On Friday, compliance was spotty, and a minority of drivers consistently occupied the bus lanes on Morningside. The city and TTC are planning an education and enforcement campaign to alert drivers to the changes.

“It’s not something we can just roll out and expect people to figure it out on their own,” said Bradford.

Ben Spurr is a Toronto-based reporter covering transportation. Reach him by email at or follow him on Twitter: @BenSpurr