Less than 24 hours earlier, the 45-year-old head of the city’s municipal and licensing standards department told a throng of reporters she should be allowed to keep her $140,000-a-year job.
“Unfortunately, I guess there is a possibility that I will be looking for a new job soon if my first choice of serving the city is no longer an option,” she said, flanked by her 12-year-old daughter Emma and 16-year-old son Jake on the doorstep of Toronto City Hall.
No matter what the perception, Coburn added, she saw nothing wrong with the office fling.
“I, like all employees, and all citizens of this city, I’m human, and I cannot regret that I came to care deeply for another person,” she said. “I did not choose to feel this way, but it was a life event for me.”
But now, their relationship is over.
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Weather forecasters are predicting the warmest weather of the year so far over the weekend and, according to the AA, motorists can expect to experience one of the top five busiest weekends of the year.
An AA spokesman told the News: "We are likely to see the key motorways and A-roads busier than normal on Sunday and there may be localised traffic congestion, particularly on roads leading to the coasts, national parks and other countryside spots."
Archie Robertson, chief executive of the Highways Agency, has issued his
A professor and a student, both consenting adults, share a common academic interest that develops into romance.
On the surface, it doesn't appear to be a problem. But when this passion fades, the relationship rarely results in a simple split.
In some cases, the outcome can be ugly for all involved, triggering repercussions ranging from fistfights and bruised feelings to public scandals and firings.
Two high-profile cases at Western Oregon University illustrate the problems that such trysts pose for universities that try to address faculty-student relationships.
Three years ago, Dean Bethea was one of the most popular and influential professors at Western Oregon University
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"Reed swam through the theories and the official statements, the terse assurances of the well-oiled managers.
" ... Reed pieced together a version of the
Beijing May 7 -- It has been some time now since people in this country talked about the decline of tradition and custom as something that worries them. Some have even appealed to the government for help to honour our national heritage.
One appeal, which was heard from the debate in the National People's Congress earlier this year, is for the inclusion of more traditional festivals into the official holiday system. This appeal, I think, will gain more widespread support with time.
Currently, in the Chinese mainland, people take days off only
BEIJING, May 9 -- China's tourism industry saw record business during the May Day holiday, also known as the golden week holiday.
Official statistics show that tourist sites across the country received 120 million people. They spent a total of 47 billion yuan, or almost six billion US dollars on their trips.
Shao Weiqi, the Chinese Minister of Tourism, attributes the good results to good tourism research and proper services at tourist sites.
"Not only in China, but also some foreign travel agencies were catching this golden