30 June 2026

 



Monthly Reflections

 


Tuesday Treasures

 

April 2026 - Toronto ON

Tom hosts Tuesday's Treasures.

I originally posted this lane in 2020, during the pandemic. In February 2026 the city installed  a plaque by Ching Lane.



A new Heritage Toronto plaque honours Sam Ching, one of the earliest recorded Chinese men in Toronto, who operated a hand laundry near Adelaide St. E. in 1878. The plaque was unveiled at the Birkbeck Building during Chinese Heritage Month, and the lane beside it is named after him.

The plaque acknowledges him being Toronto’s last Chinese laundromat owner.

The lane beside the Birbeck Building is also named for him, as his 1878 business was located across the street. ​

Barred from most jobs in the 1800s, many Chinese immigrants opened hand laundries, working 12–16 hour days. They faced discrimination at every level of government, including the federal head tax and the Chinese Exclusion Act, along with provincial and municipal restrictions.

The plaque acknowledges both racism and resilience. Speakers at the ceremony said it’s about recognizing the barriers early Chinese Canadians faced, and the lasting impact their hard work and community-building has had on Toronto.

Systemic Discrimination: The plaque explicitly mentions the barriers faced by the community, including:
The Federal Head Tax and the Chinese Exclusion Act (1923), which severely restricted immigration.
Provincial and municipal restrictions, such as high licensing fees specifically for Chinese laundries and laws prohibiting them from hiring white women.

Obsolescence of Hand Laundries: It notes that by the time the Exclusion Act was repealed in 1947, the rise of home washing machines and commercial laundromats had made traditional hand laundries nearly obsolete.




Morning Reflections

 


29 June 2026

FORD

 Ford had the audacity to say he’s disappointed in protestors at Ford Fest! From his Gravy Plane to healthcare, ODSP, homelessness, Ontario Place, Greenbelt, TO airport, FOI law, OSAP, autism list and massive debt, Ontario is so disappointed in him it’s time he step down. LAURA BABCOCK



Funnies

 









Monday Mural

 I'm linking up at Monday Mural


Taken on Dundas West.

Mural by Toronto artist Megan Oldhues. It transforms the side of a brick storefront on Dundas Street West into a vivid urban scene. Titled Choosing to Leave, the piece was painted in 2022 and captures a woman standing with a floral bag in hand as a TTC streetcar rolls by behind her. Oldhues, known for her figurative realism and thoughtful storytelling through large-scale works, describes the mural as reflecting a difficult but transformative period that brought chapters to a close.