Two city councillors are pushing back against planned reductions to public washroom hours downtown, saying it would harm London’s most vulnerable and act as a barrier to core revitalization. Read More
Similar Posts
City briefs: Building boom continues, virtual meeting policy
London’s building boom continued this fall with a total of 3,668 building permits issued by the end of September, worth about $1.3 billion.
Civic election: London candidate decries anti-disabled sign ‘attack’
Joy McCall was driving back from a night shift at the hospital Sunday morning when she noticed black marker scribbles all over one of her husband’s campaign signs. She brought it home and put it in the family’s garage. Later, when Jeremy McCall reviewed the damage, he noticed the words scrawled on his signs, including […]
London councillors demand answers after near-fatal fire in overcrowded house
One city councillor is calling for stronger bylaws and another is demanding to know why complaints to city hall didn’t trigger action, after a near-fatal fire exposed an overcrowded, unlicensed rental in the city’s northeast.
City council trio: London needs its own mandatory-mask bylaw
A trio of city councillors wants to keep mandatory masking in London by reviving a local bylaw to require them indoors.
Budweiser Gardens may cost London taxpayers $100-million by the time the city takes over ownership in about 30 years, but city politicians and ratepayers are being shut out of a report on the arena’s
Budweiser Gardens may cost London taxpayers $100 million by the time the city takes over ownership in about 30 years, but city politicians and ratepayers are being shut out of a report on the arena’s economics.
Church hopes to turn former department store into worship space
A long vacant anchor building in southeast London is primed for a new chapter, with the plaza eyeing an unusual tenant to breathe new life into the commercial property.