I wouldn't be so hard on the guy — the same strategy worked for my father for years

'Too bad I need to eat!' Store sparks outrage with post for 'volunteer' job

  • A pharmacy in Toronto is facing backlash online after posting a 'volunteer' job ad

  • Shoppers Drug Mart has removed the post and claims it was made in error [Spoiler alert: it wasn’t]

A Shoppers Drug Mart pharmacy in downtown Toronto posted the unpaid position on job site LinkedIn on Thursday, CBC News reported.  

'Your role as a volunteer is crucial in ensuring that our customers have a positive and seamless shopping experience,' the listing read. 

The unpaid role would require 'assisting customers, restocking shelves, and organizing inventory.' 

The job was advertised by Emil Harba, the pharmacist owner at the Shoppers Drug Mart located at King and Peter in Toronto. 

Shoppers Drug Mart has since claimed that it was put online by mistake. 

… However, Harba told [CBC] that the position was posted intentionally but he was only 'trying to help people seeking Canadian experience.' 

'The post wasn't for any bad intentions, it was for good intentions,' he told the publication.

Harba explained that he often receives messages from people who want to gain work experience but that once he was told by the company it would not be allowed he immediately took the listing down. 

Bah humbug: Pharmacist Harba should have stood his ground and insisted on employing this time-tested approach to labor relations.

When my parents sold their W. 11 St. brownstone and moved the family out to Riverside, the property they bought on Gilliam Lane had 1 1/3 acres, almost an acre of it lawn, and that posed a daunting weekend mowing job for anyone pushing a mower. So he bought a 1954 Jacobsen mower, with sulky, to ride on while slicing down those pesky blades. As it turned out, a riding mower was a novelty back then, and the local teenage boys (Bruce Moger? Dan? Dickie Wallace? Still around?) competed with one another to do the job for him, for free. (it’s important to note that, kind-hearted man that he was, father never took advantage of the boys, and so never charged them for the privilege).

That worked for quite a few years, until the teens grew up and wised up and, sadly for us, the Fountain boys reached an age (10, if I remember) to take their place. Still, that purchase worked out just fine for “The Commander”, and the boys gained valuable experience that surely benefitted them as they proceeded through Yale and Cambridge and on through their successful careers.

A slow seller

(blame plate tectonics for this slide)

682 Lake Avenue (corner of Clapboard Ridge) has lowered its price to $5.395 million. The owners paid $4.950 million in May 2023, performed some basic maintenance* on the 24-year-old house and relisted it last month for $5.950. That has proven to have been a tad aggressive.

But, so far, they haven’t done as badly as their predecessors, who paid $5.8 million when it was new in 2001, and sold it to these owners in ‘23 for the aforementioned $4.950.

*

Well, it's close to the Merritt, and if these city buyers are still commuting there, this location could be attractive, I suppose.

16 Hedgerow Lane was listed at $6.750 million and after 15 days on the market it was sold to the listing agent’s own client for $6 million.

I wrote abut this house last week when it was reporting pending but before the sales price was reported:

This strategy often doesn't work out, but it did here

Back in September, 16 Hedgerow Lane was put up for sale at $5.650 million, and the market’s response (and, probably, comments from colleagues of the listing agent) must have been overwhelmingly negative, because it was yanked two weeks later. Builders were called in, repairs made, and it was put back on the market in late March at $6.750 million, with this notation on the listing:

Extensively renovated 2024 (new roof, new floors, new kitchen, new boilers, new bluestone front and rear, updated exterior, systems, electrics, plumbing etc.)

That did the trick — it was under contract a month later, and now it’s pending. In my experience, an owner is usually better off lowering the pie-in-the-sky price of a house that won’t sell, rather than gambling that expensive repairs and improvements can be recouped with an even higher price, but this time that gamble paid off.

So, good for the seller, but I still wouldn’t advise it in the usual case, where owners simply want to sell their house and move on — better to leave the renovations to the next owner.

That opinion was based on the quick time between listing and selling, which suggested that the final price would be close to or even above the asking price. At $6 million, deducting an estimated 7% transaction cost, net proceeds were $5.650 million. Applying that same 7% cost factor to the original price of $5.580 would have yielded $5.254. The renovations surely didn’t cost $400,000, so the sellers did come out ahead, probably, but not by very much, and they were saddled for 10 months with a house they no longer wanted. I’ll stand by my original advice.

The market has spoken

Back in January I posted on a new listing in Havemeyer Park, and was not particularly impressed:

Oh, heck, I don't know any more

Coming to Havemeyer Park, 5 Northridge Road, a remodeled, redone cape, $3.495 million. Northridge isn’t one of the best streets in this development — it’s a busy road, and $3.495 seems like an aggressive price, but who knows? We’ll see what the market says.

And now we know: it has sold for $3.3 million — that should be close enough to $3.495 to satisfy the seller.

The builder paid $1.248 for this 1953 house a year ago June and blew it up to 5,200 square feet (some of which will be found in the basement) from its original 1,248. As you can see, this it not the previous owner’s grandfather’s house anymore.

It has the orange

and the zebra masquerading as a dead cow, but…

is the next victim?

The Patience of Joe

Sotheby’s Joe Barbieri’s client purchased 555 Riversville Road for $16.125 million in January, 2006. The buyer subdivided its 31.6 acres into four lots: 7.9 acres; 8.71; 5.7; and 9.44, and put all four back on the market in November 2013 at $17.9 million for the full 31.6 acres, and finally withdrew it in 2016 after no buyer had appeared, even though its price had dropped to $12.995. The land surfaced again in August 2023 at $13.995 and stubbornly stayed at that price until today, when it’s finally been reported as pending.

Nice land, great views.

It even comes with a house, although that’s downplayed in the listing, so probably not the man attraction and is possibly headed for the dumpster

What a perfect opportunity to begin reforming California's higher education establishment — too bad it won't be taken

Univerity of California - Irvine

48,000 California Student Workers Vote to Strike Due to Protest Crackdowns

The kids voted to authorize their union, United Auto Workers 4811, to strike when they deemed it appropriate. It shouldn't be too long given the crackdowns are continuing on campus. Police removed a pro-Palestinian camp at the University of California-Irvine Wednesday evening.

So why go on strike?

Rafael Jaime, the union’s co-president and a PhD candidate at UCLA, said the goal would be to “maximize chaos and confusion” at the schools that sent in the police to clear the pro-Palestine camps.

“Our members have been beaten, concussed, pepper sprayed, both by counter-protesters and by police forces. As a union, it is our responsibility to stand beside them,” the union said in a statement. “In order to de-escalate the situation, UC must substantively engage with the concerns raised by the protesters — which focus on UC’s investments in companies and industries profiting off of the suffering in Gaza.”

There's only one problem for the student union members: it's illegal for them to strike. The office of the president sent a letter to graduate student workers informing them that there would be severe consequences if they went on strike.

“The University’s position is that the Union’s strike is unlawful, and as a result, a work stoppage is not protected strike activity. This means that participating in the strike does not change, excuse, or modify, an employee’s normal work duties or expectations. And, unlike a protected strike, you could be subject to corrective action for failing to perform your duties,” the unsigned letter from the office of the president said.

Los Angeles Times:

The academic worker strike would be modeled after last year’s “stand up” strikes against Ford, Stellantis and General Motors and similar to recent strikes at Southern California hotels. The walkouts would not target all campuses at once, Jaime said, but one by one based on how receptive administrations are to pro-Palestinian activists.

UC Riverside and UC Berkeley have reached agreements with protesters to end encampments and explore divestment from weapons companies. Leaders at those universities have rejected calls to target Israel specifically or for academic boycotts against exchange programs and partnerships with Israeli universities.

While some Jewish students have supported pro-Palestinian protests, national Jewish groups have criticized the divestment push, saying it is antisemitic because it aims to delegitimize the only predominantly Jewish nation.

Another small problem for the student unionists: they already have a contract.

The strike vote “is not about economics. It’s not about a raise or more benefits. It’s political,” said Jeff Schuhrke, a labor historian who teaches at SUNY.

Among their demands is amnesty for students and faculty members arrested during the unrest. We can assume that means any expulsions would be rescinded and student records expunged.

More on what the baby anti-semites “demand”:
David Duane

The strike authorization vote, which passed with 79 percent support, comes two weeks after dozens of counter-protesters attacked a pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of California, Los Angeles, for several hours without police intervention, and without arrests. Officers in riot gear tore down the encampment the next day and arrested more than 200 people.

The vote does not guarantee a strike but rather gives the executive board of the local union, which is part of the United Auto Workers, the ability to call a strike at any time. Eight of the 10 University of California campuses still have a month of instruction left before breaking for summer.

1) Amnesty for all academic employees, students, student groups, faculty, and staff who face disciplinary action or arrest due to protest.

2)Right to free speech and political expression on campus. 

3) Divestment from UC’s known investments in weapons manufacturers, military contractors, and companies profiting from Israel’s war on Gaza. 

4) Disclosure of all funding sources and investments, including contracts, grants, gifts, and investments, through a publicly available, publicly accessible, and up-to-date database. 

5) Empower researchers to opt out from funding sources tied to the military or oppression of Palestinians. The UC must provide centralized transitional funding to workers whose funding is tied to the military or foundations that support Palestinian oppression.

If those demands are not met, then, checks notes, 48,000 antisemitic and/or terrorist-supporting PhD candidates, teaching assistants, and others university employees will...continue the protests in which they've already been engaging. This time, though, their placards will be more professionally mounted to a stick.  

Even with the overwhelming call for a strike by UAW 4811, the larger body of the United Auto Workers are not going to walk off the assembly line, so your Ford five-door electric sedan grossly misnamed the Mustang Mach-E is safe to for you to continue to avoid buying...for now. But if this wing of the union does walk, and no one notices or cares, the rest of the union will have to get involved. Can you imagine selling that strike proposal out of solidarity to a line worker in Michigan or Ohio? 

As for me, I hope they go on strike. I'm pro-union in this case. Walk out. Yeah, I said it. If there's anything this state needs less of, it is 48,000 pretend intellectuals either with phony degrees or working to obtain a phony degree. If the walkout doesn't cause administrators to change course and clean house out of self-preservation, at least it will hasten their collapse. 

And if the larger U.A.W. has to get involved, I'm perfectly fine having the debate about unions now siding with the antisemites. If they do not get involved, and it becomes protracted for this one loony chapter, maybe that can bring about the demise of that particular union. I see nothing but upside to this happening. 

In fact, call for the strike right before the DNC Convention in Chicago. If you're going to strike, you've got to time it so that it has the desired effect. Perhaps the convention center workers in the Windy City can join the strike out of solidarity, and drag the hotel and restaurant workers out on the picket lines with them. 

August is going to be swell. 

“See ya”