Website Toronto Food Trucks
launched in 2011 to monitor the city’s “developing food truck scene”
and provide daily locations, and a handful of trucks were featured
earlier this month on street food TV show Eat St."
"For food truck entrepreneurs, the problem is simple but crippling: there’s almost nowhere to park.
“I licensed it, the city took my money, then they said I couldn’t
park it anywhere,” said Tony Vastis, owner and operator of a Greek food
truck, Blue Donkey Streatery. “I don’t know what the thought process was
there.” The city’s municipal code prohibits the trucks from setting up shop
on city streets and limits parking on licensed premises, such as parking
lots, to 10 minutes."
HT: Marc Purcell
" then they said I couldn’t park it anywhere,”
ReplyDeletenope.
they said you could not park on land you did not own.
if you own the land, you can certainly "park"...right?
so.. should the city sell "leases"?
would that be fair?