Toronto woman launches social media campaign to locate owner of lost teddy bear on TTC - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:07 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Toronto woman launches social media campaign to locate owner of lost teddy bear on TTC

Rhonda Riche located a teddy bear on a subway car at High Park TTC station and decided to launch a social media campaign to locate its owner.

Rhonda Riche spotted the stuffed polar bear on subway car at High Park station

Rhonda Riche found the teddy bear when she entered a subway car at TTC High Park station on Monday. (Rhonda Riche)

Rhonda Riche said she needed an escape from the heat on Monday.

She caught an eastbound train from High Park subway station toward herfavourite Vietnamese restaurant with her husband around5 p.m..

When the doors of the train openedRiche noticed a peculiar passenger on board.

"I noticed this little polar bear sitting by himself on a seat," she said over Facebook messenger. "He wasn't totally alonesomebody had left him some chocolate chip cookies."

Lost and found was closed, so Riche launched a social media campaign to help find the bear'sowner.

Riche postedon Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Craigslist and Bunz, that hascollectively generated over 1,500 likes and counting.

Riche named the stuffed animal Ossington bear. The TTCthen started usingthe hashtag "Ossingtonbear" on Twitter.

"I have faith in Toronto the Good and that we'll be able to reunite Ossington Bear with his buddies quickly," said Riche.

TTCreceives thousands of lost items a year

Stuart Green, media relations and issues management specialist at TTC, says that each year the lost and found receives 50,000 items.

He said this year they've returned about 31 per cent of lost items367 of those items were categorized as toys.

Riche said that if she's unable to locate the owners of the bear, she will take it to the TTC lost and found.

Once there, it will remain for 60 days before being auctioned at Police Auctions Canada.