Yearly Archives: 2012

McGuinty’s Revenue Grab Includes Sucking More Young Adults In To Gambling

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Now there is a great idea for addressing Ontario’s economic woes. Get more young people gambling.

Preying on the young. How much more desperate is Ontario going to get for gambling revenue?

 Let’s take a whole generation of young adults, many of whom are graduating from college and university these days with huge debts to pay off, if they can find a decent job to pay them off with,  and get them more engaged in buying lottery tickets and wandering into casinos to play the slots and crap tables.

That was one of the barely disguised messages that came out of the report and recommendations Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation chairman Paul Godfrey, joined by the province’s Finance Minister Dwight Duncan, introduced this past Monday, March 12 for “modernizing” the gaming racket in Ontario. The report identified as one of a number of weak points in Ontario’s grip on “gaming customers” the fact that young people in their 20s and 30s make up the smallest percentage of casino visitors and lottery ticket purchases. All the more reason to make the province’s gambling opportunities available online and at grocery store and other retail checkouts, and to develop other strategies for luring in more young players. Continue reading

OLG’s Plan to Modernize Gambling Could Cripple Niagara, Ontario’s Gaming Industry

From the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce, March 13

(The following post is one Niagara, Ontario business group’s reaction to news from Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation chairman Paul Godfrey this March 12 that the OLG is recommending locating a new casino in the Greater Toronto Area and possibly closing one or more existing casinos. A decision on the fate of one of the two casinos in Niagara Falls, Ontario could be decided as soon as this coming Friday, March 16. The OLG’s plan also leaves the future of the Fort Erie, Ontario Racetrack and adjoining Slots venue on the ropes.)

Niagara, Ontario – After a review of the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation’s (OLG) plan to modernize the gaming industry in Ontario, which includes the opening of a new casino in Toronto and shuttering the slots at racetracks such as the Fort Erie Racetrack, the future of Niagara’s gaming industry is in doubt.

OLG chairman OLG unveils plan that could significantly downsize gambling operations in Niagara, Ontario.

 “Niagara has an established gaming industry,” explains Kithio Mwanzia, Director of Policy and Government Relations for the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce. “From horse racing and slots to casinos – Niagara has pioneered gaming in Ontario. The report by the OLG, if acted on by the provincial government, puts the sector at considerable risk.” Continue reading

Ontario Teachers May Be In For One Rude Reality Check

A Commentary by Doug Draper

(The following commentary was written in the wake of news earlier this month that the province’s Liberal government is asking elementary and secondary school teachers to accept a two-year freeze in wages and a cut in some of their benefits, including the number of banked sick days they can cash in on upon retirement, to help beat a monster $16 billion deficit down.)

In a well-worn book on my shelves called ‘Teaching as a Subversive Activity’, there is a recommendation for teachers I believe makes as much sense now as it did when the book was first published 43 years ago.

Ontario Education Minister Laurel Broten is now asking teachers to accept what MPPs have agreed to again - a wage freeze.

The recommendation made by the book’s authors Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner, who collectively had many years of experience teaching in elementary and high schools, and in Postman’s case, teaching teachers at New York University, goes like this; ‘Require every teacher to take a one-year leave of absence every fourth year to work in some field other than education.”

The authors of the book went on to explain why taking a job doing almost anything else from driving a cab to stocking shelves in a retail store might do teachers (who, after all, have spent a good deal of their lives in a school, moving from one side of the desk as students to the other side as teachers) some good every once in a while. “Such an experience,” they wrote, can be taken as evidence, albiet shaky, that the teacher has been in contact with reality at some point.” Continue reading

Robo-Call Scandal Gives Us More Cause To Guard Our Freedom Against Electoral Fraud

By Mark Taliano

 On Sunday, March 11 rallies were held in about 30 cities across Canada to protest the infection of electoral fraud that tainted the 2011 Canadian federal election.

Ontario residents gather in Toronto to protest robo-call scandal. Photo by Tori Crispo.

The Toronto rally of about 2,000 people was hosted independently by Occupy Canada moderator Jonathan Allan, and featured numerous speakers, including Sherif Azer, Assistant Secretary General of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights.
 
The rally started at Yonge and Dundas Square, the heart of consumerism, and ended at the old City Hall  and the Cenotaph, the hearts of freedom.  Electoral fraud is a direct, frontal attack on democracy and freedom, so the setting at the Cenotaph was particularly poignant.
Continue reading

Buffalo, New York’s Architecturally Rich History To Be Focus Of Public Lecture

A Niagara At Large News Brief

In case you don’t already know, some of the finest architecture of the late 19th and early to mid 20thcenturies  can be enjoyed right here in the greater Niagara region, in the many classic neighbourhoods in and around downtown Buffalo, New York.

Architectural Historian Martin Wachadlo leads tour of Buffalo, New York neighbourhoods. File Photo

Buffalo’s history as an architectural mecca on this continent will be the focus of a public lecture this March 20 by respected architectural historian and preservationist Martin Wachadlo at Buffalo’s D’Youville College Campus off Porter Avenue near the Peace Bridge. Continue reading

A Great Ontarian Who Overcame Racism Dies

A Niagara At Large Brief

If we Canadians think we are much better than our American neighbours when it comes to race relations, consider the life of would-be National Hockey League star Herb Carnegie.

Herb Carnegie

Carnegie, who was born in Toronto, Ontario and died there at age 92 this March 9, was honoured with the Order of Ontario and Order of Canada during his lifetime, but he never was able to realize his dream of playing in the National Hockey League. That is because he was barred from playing in the NHL in the 1930s and 40s because he was black.

In the United States, even major league baseball finally opened the doors to Black Americans in 1947 with the signing of Jackie Robinson to the Brooklyn (now the Los Angeles) Dodgers. Yet Carnegie’s formidable talents as a player were confined to a number of teams in the then Quebec Provincial League, winning numerous Most Valuable Player Awards, until he retired from hockey in 1953. Continue reading

Daylight Savings Leaves Me In The Dark

A Brief Comment by Doug Draper

Is it time to turn the clocks ahead one hour already? Damn!

They call it “daylight savings time,” and I don’t get it. If it means having to get used to getting up in the pitch black again to feed the cats at 7 o’clock in the morning – just as I was starting to enjoy the sun rising at that hour  –  then where does the daylight part come in?

I’ll be thinking about that when I get up in the dark this March 11 to feed the cats and do what we all have to do on that date – turn every damn clock in the house ahead one hour so we can begin an extra hour of light in the evening, when it is still technically winter and too early in the year to start the gardens or sit out under a tree reading a book..

I’m all for doing what we used to and waiting another three or four weeks to turn those clocks back when it’s warmer outside and there is more daylight to enjoy in the evening and the morning. What do you think?  

 

Obama Military Cuts Could Cost Niagara Falls, New York Area 845 Jobs – Beware The Military-Industrial Complex

By Doug Draper

An already struggling Niagara Falls, New York has received some news that could deal the city yet another serious economic blow.

One of the cargo carriers from the Niagara Falls, New York Air Force base.

The city, which has suffered more than its share of job losses in recent decades with the erosion of its once mighty manufacturing base, was informed this past March 6 that U.S. Pentagon cuts could mean the loss of 845 jobs, including 580 part-time Air National Guardsmen positions, at the Niagara Falls, New York Air Reserve Station, according to a recent story in The Buffalo News.

The cuts could also reduce the number of the U.S. Air Reserve Station’s  C-130 cargo planes – aircraft people on both sides of the Canada-U.S. borders have sometimes seen lumbering in the skies overhead – from 11 to eight in the year ahead.

 Word of possible big cuts at the Niagara Falls, New York Air Force Base has been brewing since the start of the year when U.S. President Barack Obama outlined his desire to finally make some cuts to military spending after a decade of war in Afghanistan and Iraq. The U.S. Congress also has a target to cut the military budget by $487 billion over the next 10 years. Continue reading

Ontario NDP Budget Priorities ‘Put People First’

(Niagara At Large is posting the following March 9 media release, prepared by the province’s New Democratic Party, for our readers’ information.)

 Horwath lays out NDP’s budget priorities
Ontario needs a balanced approach to balancing the books

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath

Queen’s Park – NDP Leader Andrea Horwath says the goal of the upcoming provincial budget must ensure the financial well-being of families who make our province work and laid out her priorities for the upcoming budget in an open letter to Premier Dalton McGuinty.

“The people of Ontario expect politicians to work together to make their lives better,” said Horwath. “We’re putting forward some concrete ideas that we hope to see reflected in the next budget and telling the Premier we expect him to put people first.” Continue reading

In Some Countries, You Can Face Death For Trying To Do What Too Many Canadians Take For Granted

By Dr. Gary Screaton Page

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post another  in a series of articles by Dr. Gary Screaton Page, a Niagara, Ontario resident and a chaplain with the Niagara Regional Police Service who also assists immigrants and refugees to Canada.  In this series, he recounts the experiences some of thse newcomers he has assisted faced in their homelands and it has been necessary not to give the full name of some indiv. in their homelands.)

To become involved in the political process is not only a right for Canadians, it is a duty. Not to participate is a slap in the face to those who gave their lives that we might be free to vote for the candidates of our choice. In Romuald’s homeland, politics can be deadly.

Dr. Gary Screaton Page

 Leaving the university and his students behind, Romuald headed home. As he rode along, the wind blowing through his hair, his thoughts turned toward home and the coming election. Romuald believed he had the support he needed to win a seat in the Senate. Little did he know that what lay ahead would change his life forever.

 As Romuald neared home, he didn’t see the rope strung across the roadway but he did feel it strike hard against his chest, knocking him from his bike. Dazed, disoriented, and bleeding from hitting the ground so hard, he was unable to fend off his attackers as they fell upon him. Pushing his knee into Romuald’s back the first assailant shouted at him as he pressed a gun against Romuald’s temple, “Stay down or I’ll kill you!” Continue reading

Newly Born Marmosets Delight Visitors To Niagara, Ontario Butterfly Conservatory

By Doug Draper

 An exhibit of ‘rainforest animals’ that had already been charming visitors to the Niagara Parks Commission’s Butterfly Conservatory has recently given them two more reasons to ooh and aah.

A newly born Marmoset rides on dad's back at Butterfly Conservatory. Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission

 

To the delight of NPC staff and visitors the Conservatory alike, two Common Marmosets (small monkeys from the rainforests of Brazil) became the busy parents this past March 1 of a pair of twins.”

“It has been very exciting for us and our visitors are delighted to see them,” the Conservatory’s curator Cheryl Tyndall told Niagara At Large in a recent interview. “The Marmoset babies are seven days old (as of March 1 and) they are doing quite well and growing rapidly.” Continue reading

Port Dalhousie Group To Developers – Scrap Condo Tower And Come Back With Plan More In Keeping With A ‘Heritage District’

 An Announcement from the Port Dalhousie Conservancy

(NAL is posting the following March 8 announcement from the Port Dalhousie Conservancy, a St. Catharines, Ontario area citizens group that has been fighting a development group’s plans to build 17-storey condo tower complex, dubbed Port Place, in the heart of a designated heritage district.

This announcement is a response to the recent news that the developers have decided not to move forward with a promised 415-seat theatre that would have been part of the Port Place project and may build a grocery store instead.)

MEDIA ANNOUNCEMENT

DROPPING PORT THEATRE WOULD COMPROMISE REVITALIZATION AND REQUIRE FULL NEW APPLICATION

Conservancy Would Welcome Scaled Down New Application Consistent With Planning Policies

The old Port Mansion, located in the heart of a designated 'Heritage District', would be completely levelled as part of the 17-storey condo tower project . Photo by Doug Draper

 St. Catharines, March 8, 2012. The Port Dalhousie Conservancy has concluded that removing the theatre and/or making other major changes to the Ontario Municipal Board-approved Port Place proposal, will require a full new application and public meeting process. This conclusion was reached based on meetings with the City’s senior Planning staff, a review of the OMB decision and attendant By-Law and advice from lawyer Jane Pepino.

Three years ago, following a marathon hearing, PDVC won OMB approval of virtually 100 per cent of their proposal despite vigorous, and extremely costly, opposition by the community and the City. At the OMB, PDVC insisted the theatre would work even though they were told by expert witnesses that it would not be successful or profitable and, they were alerted about the likelihood of a downtown Performing Arts Centre. Suddenly, it has been reported that they now see the theatre as a liability and they want to drop it. Continue reading

Hawkwatch Is One Of Niagara’s Great Spring Nature Adventures

An Invitation from the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

Celebrate the Arrival of Spring and Hawkwatch Activities at Beamer Memorial Conservation Area

With the spring like temperatures continuing, the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority and Niagara Peninsula Hawkwatch invite you to join us at Beamer Memorial Conservation Area for the annual hawk migration.

Photos courtesy of Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

 Get out your binoculars, and head to this majestic conservation area to discover Niagara’s best viewing location for the annual spring migration of hawks, eagles, falcons and vultures.

The migration is a spectacular natural phenomenon and Beamer Memorial is the best place to be to observe these birds of prey as they make their spring flights from South and Central America, the Caribbean and the United States to their nesting territories in Canada.  Members of the Niagara Peninsula Hawkwatch group (NPH) will be on site from March 1st, monitoring species of these bird populations. Continue reading

Nominations For Niagara, Ontario Regional Environmental Awards Now Open

A Brief Foreword by Doug Draper

Each year for more than two decades now, Niagara, Ontario’s regional government has honoured individuals, families, businesses and other groups in the region for their efforts to protect and preserve our environment.

Here is your chance to nominate an individual, business or group you feel deserves to be recognized for their green efforts. Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following message about these awards, including a link you can click on to obtain more information about the awards program and nomination forms. Continue reading

Climate Change Is Already Wreaking Mega-Bucks Worth Of Damage To People, Property And Business In Ontario – Environmental Commissioner’s Report

By Doug Draper

Ontario’s government needs to be doing more to reduce greenhouse gases and prepare residents and businesses in the province for the impacts of climate change, says Ontario Environmental Commissioner Gord Miller.

Environmental Commissioner of Ontario Gord Miller

“Climate change is one of the defining issues of our age and it is already having an impact on our lives,” said Miller this March 7 as he released a report at Queen’s Park called ‘Climate Ready, Ontario’s Adaption Strategy and Action Plan, 2011-2014.

The report, which shares none of the doubts a legion of deniers out there do that climate change is a real thing that is being driven significantly by human activies, stresses that climate change is already producing a higher frequency of extreme and damaging weather, from high winds and ice storms to flooding rains followed by pro-longed periods of drought, that is translating into hundreds of millions of dollars of damage and insurance losses. Just one flooding rainstorm in Hamilton – lasting only two hours in July of 2009 – caused between $200 and $300 million in destruction to homes and other property. Continue reading

Buffalo, New York Says ‘No’ To Toxic Fracking Waste

By Doug Draper

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown's council pushes for state-wide fracking ban.

The week has started off well for greater Niagara region residents on both sides of the Niagara River who are fighting to keep toxic fracking waste away from this region and the Great Lakes.

This Monday, March 5 the council of Niagara Falls, New York passed resolutions banning fracking waste within city limits and calling for a state-wide ban on fracking, and this Tuesday, March 6 the council of Buffalo, New York passed its own resolution, urging the state’s governor Andrew Cuomo to impose a ban on fracking in the state.The Niagara Falls, New York resolutions, in particular, ensure that plans will not move ahead to use the city’s wastewater plant to treat and dump any of the toxic fluid into the Niagara River above the American and Horseshoe Falls. Continue reading

Niagara Falls, New York Says No To Toxic Fracking Waste – Decision Spells ‘Great News’ For Niagara River/Great Lakes

By Doug Draper

Mayor Paul Dyster and his five-member council in Niagara Falls, New York voted unanimously this March 5 to place environmental protection ahead of any monetary gain with a city-wide ban on chemically-contaminated “fracking” waste that would have been discharged through the city’s wastewater treatment plant to the Niagara River.

Niagara Falls, New York Mayor Paul Dyster says city has not forgotten Love Canal disaster.

At the same March 5 meeting, the council also agreed to send a resolution to New York State  Governor Andrew Cuomo, calling on him to impose a state-wide moratorium on fracking or hydraulic fracturing for natural gas until, reads the resolution, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency makes public “specific details on the dangers and possible environmental impacts of such operations.”The council’s passage of the resolutions was greeted as “great news” by Andrea Duncan, a Niagara Falls, Ontario resident who joined numerous Niagara Falls, New York at the meeting and earlier made a presentation to the council, saying; “Metaphorically speaking, why turn Niagara Falls into a giant toilet and flush the residual toxic waste over the Falls?” Continue reading

Critical Anti-Fracking Resolutions Up For Vote In Buffalo and Niagara Falls, New York

A Niagara At Large News Brief by Doug Draper

If you are among those concerned about the potential impact of chemically contaminated “fracking” waste our health and environment, decisions this March 5 and 6 could help determine whether this waste ever gets dumped into the waters of the Niagara River and Lake Ontario.

One of many demonstrations in New York State in past year overr fracking.

This Monday, March 5, Niagara Falls, New York’s city council is scheduled to vote on an ordinance opposing the treatment of the chemical-laced swill left over from the hydraulic fracturing of shale for below-ground deposits of natural gas through a city owned and operated plant that discharges wastewater to the Niagara River near the  Horseshoe and American Falls. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario’s Largest Local Chamber Of Commerce Merges With ‘Greater Niagara Chamber’

By Doug Draper

The largest local Chamber of Commerce in Niagara, Ontario has merged with a region-wide chamber in a bid to build a stronger voice for business in the region.

From left to right, Nancy Diamond, chair of the St. Catharines - Thorold Chamber of Commerce), Al Simpson, treasurer of the St. Catharines - Thorold Chamber, Steven Megannety, co-founder and director of the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce, and Mike Watt co-Founder and chair of the Greater Niagara Chamber signing the official documents to complete the merger.

The merger of the St. Catherines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce with the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce occurred at a joint meeting of the two chamber’s board of directors with the signing this March 1 of a joint agreement that integrates  all of the more than 1,100 members of the STCC into a year-old GNCC that now represents more than 1,300 businesses across Niagara.

“Our goal is to establish the strongest business voice possible to advocate for business and prosperity in Niagara with all levels of government,” Mike Watt, chair of the Greater Niagara Chamber, told Niagara At Large following the signing of the merger agreement. “We have some issues here as a community that we need to deal with to prosper and GNCC wants to wants to wade into these debates,” Watt, who is also a senior executive at Niagara, Ontario-based Walker Industries, added. Continue reading

Can Niagara, Ontario Stake Claim To The Title – ‘Green Capital of Canada’?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Niagara is already world-famous for the Falls and for its title as the ‘Honeymoon Capital’. And more recently, the Ontario side of our greater Niagara region was named by Canada’s federal government as this year’s ‘Cultural Capital’, partially as a nod to however many local artists and art centres we have here, and to the many commemorative events that will unfold across the region for the bicentennial of the War of 1812.

Niagara hydro facilities a source of clean, renewable "green" energy.

Yet why stop there? The late Joe McCaffery, who was mayor of the Niagara city of St. Catharines some 20 years ago, began almost every speech he gave with the declarations that the city  was the ‘Rowing Capital of the World’, the ‘Recycling Capital of the Universe’, the ‘Doughnut Capital’ because of the disproportionately large (or should I say enlarging as in fattening)  number of doughnut shops per capita, the ‘Polka Capital’ because Canada’s “Polka King” Walter Ostanek lives in the city, and on and on. I think that if a bunch of revelers stumbled out of a pub on St. Patrick’s Day and swore they say a herd of unicorns galloping through the streets of downtown St. Catharines, Mayor Joe, as he was affectionately called, would have wasted less time than it takes to down another shot of Irish Whiskey to declare the city the Unicorn Capital too.

So along with the ‘Honeymoon Capital’ and ‘Cultural Capital’ and ‘Wine Country’ and whatever other brand I may be missing at the moment, why not dub Niagara, Ontario Canada’s ‘Green Capital’? Continue reading

Why Is A Vile Creep Like Limbaugh Still On The Air?

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

In America, apparently it is okay to use the nation’s airwaves to call a female university student a “slut” and even to invite her to post sex videos of herself online, as long as you are Rush Limbaugh and you have the captains of the country’s Republican Party kissing your ring as if you are the party’s Godfather.

Neo-con radio talk show kingpin Rush Limbaugh

The relentless, rancid ranting of this vile, hate-mongering excuse for a radio talk show host – which unfortunately poisons the airwaves above communities on both sides of the Niagara River thanks to the WBEN station in Buffalo, New York which continues to carry the syndicated Rush Limbaugh Show – reached another low this past February 29, if that is even possible. Continue reading

‘Expensive, Inefficient, and Inequitable’ For-Profit Health Care Has No Place In Canada

 By Mark Taliano

Hybrid cars and privatized health care share one commonality: they’re both too expensive. 

Apart from that, they’re worlds apart. Hybrid cars represent a wonderful, forward-looking technology.  Privatized health care, on the other hand, is regressive and exploitative.

An article by Thomas Walkom, published this past January 24 in in the Toronto Star and titled “Why Ontario’s bid to cut health care costs could backfire”  highlighted a key difference: He cites  Dr. S. Woolhandler, a professor at Harvard Medical School, who says, All (studies) showed that for-profit hospitals cost the government treasury more – by about 18%.  The evidence of higher cost is irrefutable.” Continue reading

Thirty Years On – Where Is The Passion In Ontario For Preserving Our Heritage?

By Pamela Minns

As is traditionally the case, Heritage Day has come and gone in Ontario with hardly a ripple.

Heritage Day – first established in 1974,  to take place every year on the third Monday in February – has not only come and gone but has been re-named Family Day by the Province and “heritage” has been dropped from the calendar entirely. 

The run-down Beaverdams Church in Thorold, Ontario - one of the oldest churches of its kind in the province - has become a symbol of heritage neglect.

Of course, it is good to have another holiday for families, but there are 365 days in the year from which to choose a new holiday.   Since heritage preservation is basically in the hands of volunteers, this a “black eye” for all of those who work so diligently indicate the lack of importance the government places on heritage and all of its hard-working volunteers in Ontario. Continue reading

‘Dirty Trick’ Calls Made In Niagara During Last Ontario Election

NAL robo calls Niagara,

 

 By Doug Draper

 The kind of ‘dirty trick’ robo-calling that seems to have slithered its way into last spring’s federal election in Canada also surfaced in a Niagara riding in last fall’s Ontario election.

Former Ontario St. Catharines (Ontario) Riding candidate says robo-calls 'slandered her integrity'.

Irene Lowell, who was the NDP candidate in the provincial riding of St. Catharines, first found out about the recorded calls when riding constituents contacted her campaign office in the final days of the October 6, 2011 provincial election to complain about them.

 Lowell said she and her campaign manager were told by constituents that calls were urging voters to support her rather than the Liberal incumbent Jim Bradley because he “has been in Toronto far too long.” And what troubled Lowell the most is that who ever made the recording said the calls were coming from her campaign.

“They weren’t coming from us at all,” Lowell told Niagara At Large during an interview this March 1, and “I felt so bad for Jim (Bradley) that I went straight to Jim’s office. … He wasn’t there,” she added, “so I just let his staff o that I had nothing to do with this. I am not that kind of person.” Continue reading

Cross-Border Travellers Encouraged To Get Nexus Passes

NAL nexus,

Niagara At Large is posting the following March 1 media release for our readers on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border.

BUFFALO, NY/FORT ERIE, ON– Today the Buffalo and Fort Erie Public Bridge Authority (PBA) and Niagara Falls Bridge Commission (NFBC) – in conjunction with respective Canadian and American Customs agencies, as well as numerous community groups, regional organizations, and area attractions – announced a new marketing campaign to educate Western New York and Southern Ontario residents on the ease of border travel through enrollment in the NEXUS program and proper use of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology.

You can wait and wait at a border bridge crossing in the lines to the right or apply and receive a NEXUS card and sail through the clear NEXUS booth at left.

“Our region already has more combined NEXUS and Enhanced Driver’s License (EDL) registrations than any other location along the Can-Am border,” said PBA General Manager Ron Rienas. “However, our outreach work is far from over. By educating additional residents on the benefits of these programs, we can ensure even faster border travel for motorists, and also reduce congestion on area bridge crossings.” Continue reading

Niagara Governance Discussions Highlight A Busy 2012 For Region

 By Doug Draper

It has been “the elephant in the room for years,” said Niagara Regional Chair Gary Burroughs, but this year the region’s council will face it head on.

Niagara, Ontario Regional Chair Gary Burroughs

The elephant Burroughs was referring to is “governance reform,” added Burroughs during his annual ‘State of the Region’ address to a large gathering in Thorold, Ontario this February 29, and it is “one of council’s top business plan initiatives.”

Though a potentially thorny and controversial issue,” he told the gathering hosted by the St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce, “I strongly believe this exercise is about respecting our differences while maximizing our limited resources, and using them as effectively as we can for taxpayers, certainly. … but also for leveraging investment from public and private sectors.” Continue reading

U.S. Citizen Groups Applaud Obama For Great Lakes Restoration Initiative

A Foreword by Doug Draper

Once again the U.S. administration of President Barack Obama has stepped to the plate with $300 million in funding for protection and cleanup programs under a Great Lakes Restoration Initiative that the U.S. government has poured more than $1 billion into since Obama entered the White House three years ago.

Obama's secretary of state Hillary Clinton in Niagara Falls in 2009 to announce plans to update Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement. File photo by Doug Draper

The following media release was circulated this February 29 by the Alliance for the Great Lakes, Environmental Law & Policy Center, National Parks Conservation Association, National Wildlife Federation and other U.S. environmental groups, applauding the Obama administration for its support for the Great Lakes.

The question citizens on the Canadian side of the Great Lakes should ask is where is the Stephen Harper government on working to protect these precious freshwater bodies other than cutting Environment Canada’s budget and calling environmentalists, as it recently did through its natural resources minister Joe Oliver, “enemies of the Canadian people.” Continue reading

Port Colborne Calls On All South Niagara Communities To Work Together For Better Health Care

A Mayor’s Report from Vance Badawey of Port Colborne

February 27, 2012

Due to a great deal of interest on the subject of the future of South Niagara’s Health Care, in particular, our community’s interest in providing leadership for continued collaboration, I felt it appropriate to add clarity to the intentions of the South Niagara Health Care Corporation.

Port Colborne, Ontario Mayor Vance Badawey

The South Niagara Health Care Corporation is a corporation that received corporate status in 2008. When the Hospital Improvement Plan was released, the corporation was developed as a means of developing a tangible plan that would meet the health care needs of our residents. The South Niagara Health Care Corporation is a private, not-for-profit, without share capital corporation pursuant to the Corporations Act. The establishment and operation of this corporation was for all interested persons in South Niagara for the purpose of: Continue reading

Our Crime-Fighting Federal Justice Should Be Calling For A Criminal Investigation On Robo-Calls

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

Okay, so where is our big tough law and order man now?

Niagara Falls, Ontario MP and Federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson

Yes, I’m talking about Canada’s answer to an old-time southern American judge – our Niagara Falls MP and ‘lock-‘em-up-and-throw-away-the-key’ federal justice minister Rob Nicholson.

Never mind the predictable responses coming from spin masters in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s office that the Conservative Party of Canada had nothing to do, except perhaps as “inadvertent mistakes,” with “robo-calls” and scripted messages coming from phone centres – messages that were disguised as ones from Elections Canada officers, directing voters with a record of voting Liberal or NDP in closely-contested ridings across the country to the wrong voting stations during last year’s federal election. Continue reading

Niagara MPP Wants To Know What Failing Food-Packaging Company Did With Taxpayers Money

By Doug Draper

A provincial NDP representative from the Welland, Ontario riding wants to know what happened to $900,000 of taxpayers money given to a food-packaging company that has suddenly closed its doors to more than 120 workers in the region after going into receivership.

This sign went up on a farm in north St. Catharines after the last fruit processing plant closed to employees and fruit growers on the same Niagara site more than three years ago

The NDP member, Cindy Forster demanded to know what happened to the money the province’s Liberal government gave to New Food Classics, an Alberta company that relocated to an abandoned canning plant in Niagara-on-the-Lake two years ago, during question period at Queen’s Park this February 27. Continue reading

A Hybrid Of Public And Private Health Care May Be Best For Ontario And For Canada At Large

By Preston Haskell

The World Health Organization lists France as number one in health care for its citizens. 65 per cent of hospital beds in France are provided by public hospitals, 15 per cent by private non-profit organizations, and 20 per cent by for-profit companies.

Preston Haskell

Italy is rated second by the WHO and is served well with their Hybrid system of health care. Predicated on competition, Italy’s 75 per cent of public hospitals is competing well with their ‘leading edge’ privately run hospitals.

Germany’s health care system has increased the private segment of their hospitals from 15 per cent to 33 per cent while maintaining a cost/service balance better than in Canada.

Obviously competition has not hurt the European Health system, which as it turns out, has propelled Europe’s health care to the top of the WHO’s list with: Continue reading

Province’s NDP Leader Outlines ‘Plan For Jobs And Prosperity’ For Rural Ontario

(Niagara At Large is posting the following February 27 media release from the Ontario NDP for our readers’ information and possible comment.)

Queen’s Park– During a speech to the Ontario Good Roads Association / Rural Ontario Municipalities Association combined conference today, Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called on the minority Liberal government to protect and create good jobs in rural municipalities.

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath

“Ontario’s books won’t be balanced if Ontario families are falling behind. Too often they get a sense that their government just doesn’t care about their challenges, especially in rural Ontario,” said Horwath.

“We’re facing tough times and the plan to deal with them has to be balanced. Balanced by looking at government revenue and spending as we confront the provincial debt and balanced in terms of priorities. That means focusing not just on the deficit but on creating jobs, making life affordable, and ensuring our healthcare system is there when we need it.” Continue reading

Hudak Will Make Big Push For More Corporate Tax Cuts

By Doug Draper

In a February 26 media advisory, Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak says he will be leading a “special debate” in the provincial legislature this February 29, pressing Premier Dalton McGuinty and his government to keep their  pre-election promise to lower business tax rates to 10 per cent in 2013.

Conservative leader Tim Hudak follows his former party boss Mike Harris as an unwavering disciple of corporate tax cuts and trickle-down economics

The debate will be initiated by an “opposition day motion” Hudak will table that reads as follows; “I move that the legislative assembly of Ontario reaffirms its support for the planned reduction of the business tax rate on Ontario’s job creators to 10 per cent by next year, to help get the nearly 600,000 unemployed Ontarians working again.” Continue reading

Be Part Of The Greener Transportation Solution – Join Efforts To Launch A Niagara Community CarShare Program

 (A few years ago, a handful of people in Buffalo, New York launched a CarSharing program, aimed at getting people where they need to go without the costly burdens of car ownership. You can learn more about that program by visiting www.BuffaloCarShare.org . Now there is a move afoot to launch a similar program in Niagara, Ontario. Niagara At Large encourages you to read the following post by Melissa Hellwig to learn about the time and places of upcoming meetings and how you can get involved in something that could save all of us money and reduce the number of cars on the road.)

By Melissa Hellwig

In Buffalo, New York it was a dynamic student population wanting to practice in real life the private enterprise examples they were studying. In Grand River, Ontario it began as ten friends who hung out together and decided they might as well start co-owning resources. Continue reading

Hey Fellow Canadians – Welcome to Harperland!

By Mark Taliano

Naomi Wolf’s article in the Huffington Post, entitled “Ten Steps to Close Down an Open Society “ (April, 2007) which eventually led to her novel, The End Of America, is starting to resonate in Canada as well. And that isn’t good news.

One step is to invoke a terrifying internal and external enemy. Voices of dissent are quickly seen as an internal threat to society.  Activists are labeled as radicals and extremists.  External, “foreign special interest groups” are seen to be underminingCanada’s “national interest”.  People who don’t support Bill C-30 – the Snoop and Spy Bill, are on the side of child pornographers.  It’s “us” against “them” in this dualist Conservative world-view, and it belies an insecure and fearful governing style. Continue reading

Recommendation No. 363 – Defeat Ontario’s McGuinty Government ASAP

A Commentary by Doug Draper

There is no recommendation to bounce the McGuinty Liberals out of power in the bombshell report former TD Bank chief economist Don Drummond released this past February 15. That recommendation is mine and I’ll get back to it in a moment.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty hasn't got the guts to raise taxes, even when the province's economy is at stake.

In the meantime, let me put my reasons for wanting to see the back of Premier Dalton McGuinty and his government into context with a brief look back at the sledgehammer Drummond dropped on us last week.

There were actually a grand total of 362 recommendations in the report that Drummond, who was appointed by McGuinty to do a review of our province’s fiscal house, offered the premier for wrestling down a deficit now totaling $16 billion and growing like a metastasized tumour. Continue reading

Why is Canada’s Gas So Much Cheaper Across The Border?

 It is not only far cheaper. A lot of that gas that growing numbers of Canadians appear to be driving across the border for comes from Canada since this country just happens to be the largest importer of crude – most it from the Harper government’s coveted tar fields – to the  United States.

Canadians getting far more hosed at the pumps than Americans. An our country has all that oil!

Yet while the price of a U.S. gallon’s worth of gas is approaching $5 on the Ontario side of the border, Joe Somers notes below that a gallon of gas can be bought this February 25 for $3.54 at station on Native reserve lands near Lewiston, N.Y. and, as NAL’s publisher Doug Draper discovered, a gallon of regular gas, was selling for $2.69.9 at a station on the Main Street of Buffalo, N.Y. Continue reading

A Niagara, Ontario Citizen’s Case For One ‘City of Niagara’

An Open Letter to All Niagaras Municipal Councillors from Elaine Manocha, a citizen of St. Catharines, Ontario

(Niagara At Large is posting this open letter it received from Elaine Manocha because it focuses on one of the most important issues Niagara, as a region, has to address in the months ahead. We hope the thoughtful points this Niagara residents raises in the letter adds meaningful to the discussions and debates we should all be joining in on the question of how our region should be governed in the years ahead and we encourage you to share your views in the comment boxes below.)

Niagara's regonal headquarters. Is it time to put all of Niagara's governance under one roof?

 Reduce Local Government Duplication and Cost – A Call to Action!

We ask for leadership in elected officials to reduce the costly duplication of local government in Niagara.

How?  By combining the current 13 municipalities into a single City of Niagara

Why? A streamlined, less complex government system is good for all taxpayers – home owners and businesses.

Action? #1.  The ask is that the following motion be put before every municipal Council with a recorded vote – NOW:   To enact a single tier city government for the 2014 municipal election that reduces service and job duplication and reduces cost. Continue reading

The Murderous Price Paid For Wanting To Go To School

 

By Dr. Gary Screaton Page

(This is the second in a series of articles by Dr. Gary Screaton Page that Niagara At Large is posting about some of the immigrants and refugees who have come to Canada to begin a new life after some often unimaginably brutal experiences they have suffered through in their countries of origin. In these posts, based on stories Dr. Page has learned from helping newcomers to the country in his border town of Fort Erie, Ontario, names have either been changed or last names have been omitted to protect individuals and their families and friends from any repercussions in their native lands.)

All Gassilde’s mother wanted for her was what Canadians enjoy as a right for their children. She wanted her daughter to go to school.  Her husband, however, would not allow it!

Dr. Gary Screaton Page

An education would mean a whole new life for Gassilde. No longer would she depend solely on the men in her family. She could live her own life. That is what Father didn’t want! Women in Burundi had few rights.

Nevertheless, Mother had decided! She and Gassilde’s younger sisters would work harder in the field so Father would not miss Gassilde’s labour. He and her brothers spent the day with the other men of the village anyway. Besides, he cared only how much money the harvest fetched. Continue reading

Great Lakes Groups Demand More Action To Stop Invasive Species

(A coalition of 36 American environmentalists, including the Buffalo, New York-headquartered Great Lakes United and Buffalo Niagara Riverkeepers, is calling on the U.S. Environmental Protection to strengthen proposed regulations for ships discharging ballast water that may be hosting zebra mussels and other invasive species from waterbodies elsewhere in the world to the Great Lakes.

Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following February 23 news release from the groups for our readers’ information. Canada’s federal government and the Ontario government have shown little interest to date in joining the U.S. in further regulating the discharge of ballast water to the lakes.)

Zebra mussels like these have clogged up water intakes and other infrastructure in the Great Lakes basin, doing incalcuable hundreds of millions of dollars worth of damage over the past two and a half decades since they entered the lakes in the ballast water of an overseas ship.

Thirty six diverse organizations from across the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River region joined together to call on the Environmental Protection Agency to strengthen a proposed permit regulating ballast water discharges from commercial vessels. The group letter was sent on the last day of the EPA’s comment period on the permit.  The EPA must now issue a final permit by November 30, 2012.

Invasive species introduced and spread via ballast water discharge are wreaking havoc on the Great Lakes and other U.S. waters. A litany of non-native invaders—including zebra mussels, quagga mussels, spiny water fleas, and round gobies—have turned the Great Lakes ecosystem on its head, altering the food web and threatening the health of native fish and wildlife. Non-native ballast water invaders cost Great Lakes citizens, utilities, cities, and businesses at least $1 billion every five years in damages and control costs, according to research by the University of Notre Dame.
Continue reading

Chorus Niagara Presents ‘No Mortal Business’

Chorus Niagara, the fine Niagara, Ontario-based choir that went viral around the world two Christmas seasons ago with a video of their rousing, flash mob performance of the Hallelujah Chorus at the Seaway Shopping Mall in Welland, is presenting a much anticipated performance of ‘No Mortal Business’ this March. Continue reading

New Tour Boat Agreement Marks Beginning Of End For Maid Of The Mist Steamhip Operations Below The Falls

By Doug Draper

In what Niagara Parks Commission Chair Janice Thomson celebrated this February 22  “a great day for tourism in Niagara and across Ontario,’ an agreement has been approved with a new company to operate tour boats in the mist below the world-famous American and Horseshoe Falls.

Niagara Parks Commission Chair Janice Thomson. Photo by Doug Draper

The agreement, approved earlier that day by the provincial government and estimated to be worth more than $500 million dollars in revenues for the NPC over the next 30 years, also means the beginning of the end of American-owned Maid of the Mist Steamship Co. operating tour boats in the Canadian side of the Falls and another American-owned company, Hornblower Canada, preparing to take over the popular tour operation with a new fleet of boats in 1214. Continue reading

Whistleblower Bob Gale Saved Ontario Taxpayers $300 Million – Will The Government Finally Thank Him For His Efforts?

Case also demonstrates that Ontario’s whistleblower protection system needs strengthened.

From David Hutton

OTTAWA, February 22 —When Niagara Parks Commissioner Bob Gale began to question a secret deal that some board members had struck with the Maid of the Mist tour operator, he had no inkling that he would face a two-year battle pitched battle – against the very authorities who are supposed to be guarding the public purse in Ontario.

Niagara resident and former NPC commissioner Bob Gale

Gale was vindicated last year, when the controversial contract was finally cancelled, several board members replaced and the Maid of the Mist lease put out to competitive tender. But today we learned how much he has benefited Ontario. The increase in revenue to the taxpayer is at least $300 million – without taking into account the likely boost to local tourism because of much-improved services to be provided by the new operator. None of this would have happened without Gale’s persistence.

Had he been in the position of the typical whistleblower – a regular, vulnerable employee – he would surely have been crushed and silenced and the rigged contract would probably still be a secret. But he was a member of the NPC board, a prominent local businessman and philanthropist, and a former cop. He had the means, the moxie and the know-how to take on the Commission – and when necessary the government. After investigations instigated by Ontario’s Integrity Commissioner found nothing amiss, Gale went public. It was this relentless publicity, not ‘official channels’, that exposed the magnitude of the problem and finally forced corrective action. Continue reading

Hudak To McGuinty – Cut With The “Vapid Rhetoric” And Give Us Some Action

Hudak To McGuinty – Cut The “Vapid Rhetoric” And Give Us Some Action

(Niagara At Large is posting the following February 22 release from the office of Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak for our readers information.)

Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak

“What Ontarians don’t want are the same old tired talking points…”

– Dalton McGuinty on the opposition parties, The National Post, February 21, 2012

HUDAK: ONTARIANS NEED ACTION – NOT TALKING POINTS

 

QUEEN’S PARK – Ontario has racked up $302.4 million in new debt and, based on current trends, will have lost another 1,800 full-time jobs in the week since the Drummond report’s release – yet all Ontarians have heard is more vapid rhetoric from their Premier, Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak charged today. Continue reading

Niagara’s Active Citizens Meet On The Bus – With Special Guest Wesley Prankard, a nationally recognized active citizen . . . and he’s 13 years old!

Submitted to Niagara At Large by Jennifer Sinclair

This Wednesday evening, February 22, 2012 a group of Niagara’s active citizens will be Meeting on the Bus to discuss how active citizenship can build a better Niagara.

Click on the image above to blow it up to full screen for information on the bus schedule and the location of stops for this 'Meeting On The Bus' event

The event is part of a grass-roots initiative known as Meetings on the Bus which provides a unique forum for people who want to engage in issues affecting the Niagara Region.  The initiative is comprised of two complementary components: “Meetings” and “On the Bus”.

“Meetings” is a way for citizens to get together to discuss pressing issues within Niagara.  These meetings empower active citizenship by bringing together a diverse group of people to share ideas and build networks.  “On the Bus” is a way for citizens to support the new regional public transportation system. By using the bus as a public meeting space, citizens can support the new service during its critical start-up phase. Continue reading

Cross-Border Business Groups Establish Network For Growing Bi-National Region’s Economy

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following news item from the recently created Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce in Niagara, Ontario about a precedent-setting meeting, hosted by the Canadian Consulate in Buffalo, New York, with Buffalo-Niagara Partnership to establish a network for working “to work together … for the benefit of the bi-national region.”)

Greater Niagara Chamber Establishes Network with Buffalo-Niagara Partnership

Niagara,February 20, 2012 – At a special meeting hosted by the Canadian Consulate in Buffalo, members of the Board of Directors for the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce and the Buffalo-Niagara Partnership met to explore ways in which the two regional organizations can work together to enhance business in the bi-national community.

Mike Watt, Walker Industries vice-president and chair of the Ontario-based Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

“The luncheon was designed as an opportunity to open a dialogue with the Buffalo-Niagara Partnership as both organizations represent businesses at a regional level,” explains Mike Watt, Chair of the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce. “Businesses on both sides of the border are facing the same pressures and challenges and there are some real opportunities to work together for the benefit of the bi-national region.”

The meeting featured members of the Canadian Consulate, including the Consul General Marta Moszczenska, members of the executive team and board members of the Buffalo-Niagara Partnership along with Watt, Wade Stayzer and Steven Megannety of the Greater Niagara Chamber Board of Directors as well as Walter Sendzik and Kithio Mwaniza from the Chamberʼs staff. Continue reading

The Grass Can Be Greener For Communities On Both Sides Of The Niagara River

An Analysis by Doug Draper

There’s that old line that goes; ‘The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence,’ or should we say the other side of the river.

Crossing the Niagara River to the greener side?

According to a story in a recent issue of Artvoice, a news and entertainment tabloid published in the Buffalo, New York area, the greener side of the river – believe it or not – is Ontario’s Regional Municipality of Niagara.

That’s right. While we on the Ontario side of the Niagara River often wring our hands over a shrinking manufacturing base, business closures and jobless rates above the national average, an Artvoice article, written by Buffalo State College visiting economics professor Bruce Fisher and titled ‘Being Right And Wrong About Buffalo’ gives an impression that when it comes to growth and prosperity, Niagara, Ontario is a land of opportunity compared to the Buffalo/Niagara Falls, New York area. Continue reading

A Provocative New Book Asks Canadians – Are We Peacekeepers?

(Niagara At Large is posting the following notice circulated by the Hamilton Coalition to Stop the War on the March 6 launch by Canadian author Yves Engler of his latest book, “Lester Person’s Peacekeeping; The Truth May Hurt” at McMaster University in Hamilton. The book launching event will get underway at 6 p.m. with a presentation and question & answer session and will take place free of charge in the university’s Gilmour Hall Council Chambers, Room 111.)

Although Canada projects the image of being a responsible global player, Yves Engler has studied our country’s role as a willing helper to aggressive U.S. foreign policy.

At a time when government personalities and media urge our military to “protect” people in hot spots all around the world, we need to take a second look at the history of Canadian interventionism.
Continue reading

A Song For Canada’s Chief Pushers Of ‘Ethical Oil’

By Dave Toderick                  

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following quotes chosen by Niagara, Ontario resident Dave Toderick as samples of the verbal, jackboot bullying any Canadian who dares to dissent is getting these days from a prime minister emboldened by a majority government and his partisan toadies.

 These verbal assaults against any Canadian and against any of our American neighbours who question Harper’s narrow, 19thcentury recipe for economic growth are followed on this site by links to two versions of a song and video Toderick and fellow members of a Niagara-based band called ‘Bag of Hats’ put together on the controversial plans to build pipelines to transport crude from Alberta’s tar sands to refineries in Texas and to Canada’s west coast for export to China.)

Working the crude out of Canada's tar sands

Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver, in a recent open letter about the Northern Gateway Pipeline hearings: “Unfortunately, there are environmental and other radical groups … [whose] goal is to stop any major project no matter what the cost to Canadian families in lost jobs and economic growth.” Continue reading

The Ornge Mess – Another Bureaucratic Nightmare

A Commentary by Preston Haskell

Same scenario, same politician, same snafu!

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews batles Ornge air ambulance spending controversy

Anybody remember the Niagara health care service debacle? Anybody? Well surprise!

We have another ‘Big budget’, Ontario government controlled, (accountable to no one) bureaucracy, complete with overpaid, dictatorial officials making investments on the side into private enterprises. Continue reading

McGuinty’s Continued War On Our Neighbourhood Schools

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty has the audacity to portray himself as an “education premier” and as the leader of a Liberal Party and government that encourages ‘smarter, more economically sustainable growth’ over the low-density sprawl that has been tearing at the heart of our communities and making them less socially rewarding and less affordable places to live in.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty Follows former Tory premier Mike Harris's lead on school closings

The McGuinty government’s willingness to allow ever more of our neighbourhoud schools, with their proud histories and the vital role they play as community centers for people of all ages, shows once again what a fraud this premier and his government’s promises are.

I wrote the commentary below with a plea at the end to you and to all of your friends and neighbours across our region to contact your provincial member of parliament and let them know that we have had enough of McGuinty’s wrecking ball approach to our cherished schools and to the older neighbourhoods that surround them in the heart of our communities. Let him know that we will be pleased to see his now-minority government defeated by the opposition Conservatives and NDP if it does not begin to take our concerns seriously when it comes to issues like this. Continue reading

Canadians Need To Join Americans In Waking Up To The Health Threats Of Fracking

By Andrea and Malcolm Duncan 

Methanol, formaldehyde, carbon disulfide, benzene, toluene and hundreds of other chemicals. …  just a sample of what you might be breathing and drinking in should the following scenario be approved.

A 'No Fracking' poster promoting the documentary film 'Gasland'

Just across the Niagara River, our neighbours in Niagara Falls, New York, are debating whether or not to ‘treat’ toxic waste from hydro-fracturing (fracking) at their wastewater treatment plant on Buffalo Avenue. This ‘treated’ water would then be released into the Niagara River.

Hydro-fracking is a process of drilling for natural gas. Deep holes are drilled vertically then horizontally. Millions of gallons of fresh water mixed with proprietary, secret chemical mixtures are forced into the well. This loosens the shale layers which in turn free the natural gas for collection.  Continue reading

Municipal Leaders Begin Exploring How Best To Reshape Niagara, Ontario For The Future

By Doug Draper

Should the number of municipalities in Niagara be reduced to possibly eight or six or three, or maybe even just one?

Municipal affairs expert David Siegel speaks to regional councillors and mayors at first session of governance review. Photo by Doug Draper

Do we need as many politicians as Niagara now has – a total of 125 or one for every 3,419 residents at the regional and local municipal levels – serving a region with a total population of 427,421?

Which level of municipal government, regional or local, should be responsible for delivering what services to Niagara’s residents? Or should our regional and municipal governments simply continue with the status quo? Continue reading

Do Canadians Have a Heart for Refugees?

By Dr. Gary Screaton Page

 (Niagara At Large is pleased to post what we hope will be the first in a series of articles by Dr. Gary Screaton Page, a Niagara, Ontario resident and a chaplain with the Niagara Regional Police Service who also assists refugees, on the challenges newcomers to Canada face. Stay tune to more articles by Dr. Page on this subject to run on this site on a more or less weekly basis.)

Dr. Gary Screaton Page

There is much criticism of newcomers to Canada. “They take our jobs.” “They work for nothing and pull our wages down.” “They don’t speak the language.” “They drain our economy and are prone to be criminals.”

The reality is quite different. While American in origin, there is reason to believe the findings of recent studies do not apply equally toCanada. A White House report of the findings states unequivocally that “immigrants not only help fuel the nation’s economic growth, but also have an overall positive effect on the income of native-born workers.” Continue reading

MPP Opens New Satellite Office in Thorold, Ontario

A Niagara At Large News Brief

“Welcome to the new Thorold Satellite Office” said Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster during a recent official opening of the office.

Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster, joins Thorold Seniors rep Allen Campbell and the city's mayor Ted Luciani for opening of Forster's Thorold satellite office.

With Thorold Mayor Ted Luciani on hand, Forster said it is very important for the seniors we serve and other people in Thorold and South St. Catharines to be able to meet with the staff of their MPP. Through arrangements with Thorold City Council, a space is being provided at the Thorold Seniors Drop in Centre. Continue reading

Yuck It Up For An Evening With The Three Stooges!

By Doug Draper

Hey all you knuckleheads out there, and I’m not just talking to our political leaders. I’m talking to you and me, and all of us!

If the cabin fever of winter is starting to drag you a little bit down maybe it’s time to shuffle off to the classic old Riviera Threat in North Tonawanda, New York this Saturday, February 18 where you can spend an uproarious evening watching the original knuckleheads – Curley, Larry and Moe – slapping themselves silly at the greater Niagara region’s first-ever ‘Winter Stoogefest’. Continue reading

Baby Boomers Hell-Bent On Leaving Younger Generations Crumbs

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 (A brief foreword by the writer – After a similar version of this commentary ran recently in the weekly spot I am granted in the weekly newspaper Niagara This Week, I received more than a few emails from people identifying themselves as Baby Boomers who told this Baby Boomer that they did not appreciate what I was saying here about our generation.

They were quick to stress that they don’t fit my caricature of Boomers, and I take them at their word that, in their case, it is probably true since I would like to believe that I don’t fit it either. But I was quick to respond to these people who felt wounded by my thoughts that many do fit that caricature and there is the record of  Boomers spending themselves and their communities into debt, investing in the greediest of corporate ventures for short-term gain, and using up or despoiling the non-renewable resources we should be protecting for future generations on this planet.

I think that many of my fellow Baby Boomers, who grew up preaching the virtues of peace and love and the common good, know, in the hearts of hearts, that we collectively have a good deal to answer for. Now I will leave the rest to my old friend George Carlin, who was a little too old to be a Baby Boomer, and the words a wrote a couple of weeks back.)

  “Here’s another group I can do without, the Baby Boomers. … Whiny, narcissistic, self-indulgent people with a simple philosophy: “Gimme that! It’s mine!”

 – From a sketch by the late American satirist and social critic George Carlin.

Boy, the Baby Boomers sure know how to get attention, don’t they? They – or should I say “we” since I am a reluctant member of that big, bulging cohort – always have, and why shouldn’t we?

The Baby Boomer's Cry - "Gimme that. It's mine!"

Born en masse between the end of the Second World War and the early to mid-1960s, we Boomers took our place as the most populated group of people on this continent, far outnumbering some of the generations that came before and after us. By virtue of our numbers, we became, among other things, the largest block of consumers and the largest block of voters. So why wouldn’t we get the lion’s share of attention from marketers of goods and services, and from our politicians? Continue reading

Canada’s Short-Term Profits From Dirty Oil Will Never Cover The Crippling Costs

By Mark Taliano

  “The price of oil and quality of freedom invariably travel in opposite directions.As the price of crude oil climbs higher in an oil-dominated country, poor or rich, secular or Muslim, the country’s citizens will, over time, experience less free speech, declining freedom of the press, and a steady erosion of the rule of law.  Neither Texans nor Canadians are exempt… It is the ‘axiom of our age’.”

 –   The ‘First Law of Petropolitics’ as outlined by New York Times columnist Thomas Freidman.

In his book ‘ Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future’, Andrew Nikiforuk delineates the failings of Canada’s Tar Sands industry in the province of Alberta.  What follows is an abridged synopsis of the book and its message.  It is an important message to consider at a time when this country’s addiction to short term oil profits is compromising who we are as a nation.

Canada's tar sands leave scorched earth where forests and clear waters once were

Canada’s headlong rush into the exploitation of the planet’s dirtiest oil is testament to the above axiom, in the same way that we are an icon of how not to exploit what could be a liberating resource.

Instead of transparently controlling and regulating this hydrocarbon as a base for a future low carbon economy, we are being controlled by its siren songs, much as a heroin addict is controlled by the illusory promises of his captor. Continue reading

Ontario PC Leader Urges Premier To Get On With Cutting Deficit

 (Niagara At Large is posting the following response to the Drummond Report from Ontario Progressive Conservative leader Tim Hudak for our readers’ information)

 “The roots ofOntario’s current fix lie in both the economy and in the province’s record of failing to keep growth in government spending in line with revenue growth.” – Page 81, Commission on the Reform of Ontario’s Public Services

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak

 February 15, 2012

HUDAK: GET ON WITH THE JOB, PREMIER

QUEEN’S PARK – Don Drummond’s report has exposed a Liberal spending crisis more severe than anything previously disclosed, requiring immediate action to start reversing the damage – and straight talk from political leaders, Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak said today. Continue reading

In Wake Of Drummond Report

–   Ontario NDP Calls For ‘A Balanced Plan For Balanced Books’

 (Niagara At Large is posting the following February 15 response from the Ontario NDP to the Drummond Report for our readers’ information.)

Queen’s Park– New Democrat Leader Andrea Horwath says Don Drummond’s report on public service ignores the full picture when it comes to balancing Ontario’s books.

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath

“If we’re going to get Ontario’s books into balance we have to take a balanced approach. Recklessly scrapping programs people rely on while handing out corporate tax cuts doesn’t make sense,” said Horwath. “Instead of hitting families with higher electricity bills or scrapping kindergarten for our kids, we need to ask whether we can afford spending on things like corporate tax giveaways.”

The Commission on the Reform of Ontario’s Public Service was struck by the McGuinty Government to look at ways to eliminate the province’s deficit, but was instructed not to consider any revenue issues, like the $2 billion a year impact of the Liberal corporate income tax cuts. Continue reading

ONTARIO GOVERNMENT RECEIVES REPORT FROM DRUMMOND COMMISSION

The McGuinty government today received the report of the Commission on the Reform of Ontario’s Public Services.  Feb. 15

Don Drummond delivers his bitter pill

As part of its commitment to eliminate the deficit by 2017-18 while protecting education and health care, the McGuinty government lowered growth in program spending to about four per cent from about seven per cent last year.  This was accomplished through modernizing the delivery of public services and creating administrative efficiencies to achieve better value for money for Ontario taxpayers. 

Recognizing that this new era of slower global economic growth requires lowering program spending growth further, in March 2011 the government established the commission to provide additional advice on how to make long-term, fundamental changes to the way government delivers services.  Continue reading

Parks Commission Approves Wallenda Tightrope Walk Across Niagara Falls

(Niagara At Large is posting the following February 15 media release from the Niagara Parks Commission for our readers’ information. With this anouncement the NPC is coming on line with Niagara Falls, Ontario Mayor Jim Diodati and New York State officials in approving this event.)

Niagara Falls, Ontario – The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) has approved a request by professional tightrope walker Nik Wallenda to walk across the Niagara Gorge on a tightrope.

Tightrope walker Nik Wallenda will be crossing these falls late this summer

 

“This decision was approved in part in recognition of the role that stunting has played in the history and promotion of Niagara Falls. We have made it clear that this is a very unique one-time situation. It’s not an every day activity and will not be allowed to become an every day activity,” NPC Chair Janice Thomson said. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Police Chief Praised For Major Cocaine Bust

(Niagara At Large is posting the following release from the office of St. Catharines, Ontario MP Rick Dystra)

Niagara, Ontario Regional Police Chief Wendy Southall

St. Catharines Member of Parliament Rick Dykstra says this week’s $30 million dollar cocaine seizure in St. Catharines once again highlights the Niagara Regional Police Service’s proactive campaign against the region’s drug traffickers, under Chief Wendy Southall. 

 “I congratulate the front-line officers, detectives and everyone involved in this extremely significant operation”, said Dykstra.  “Over the years, Chief Southall has been at the helm for a large number of high-profile drug busts and our community is the better for it.”  Continue reading

Ontario’s Next Spending Cuts Promise To Be The Deepest

By Doug Draper

Ontario’s economic D-Day’ reads the front-page headline in The Globe and Mail above a story warning that the province’s “day of reckoning is upon it.”

The day in question – this February 15 at roughly two o’clock in the afternoon – is when Don Drummond, a former TD Bank chief economist appointed by Ontario’s Liberal government, is releasing a report detailing more than 400 recommendations for driving down a deficit totaling $16 billion. Continue reading

Ripping Into The Heart Of A Heritage District For What – A High-Rise Condo And A Grocery Store?

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

Just think of it, a theatre in the heart of Port Dalhousie, Ontario’s heritage district, open year round and drawing thousands of people who just might also patronize some of the nearby restaurants and shops that complain they are starving for business when the summer crowds disappear.

A bit of Port Dalhousie, Ontario from across the harbour waters flowing to Lake Ontario.

Almost sounds too good to be true, doesn’t it?  And as it turns out, maybe it is.

According to recent reports in The St. Catharines Standard – a newspaper that so shamelessly championed a development group’s plan to build a condo tower complete with a 415-seat theatre in the historic port town – the developers are now of the opinion that the theatre may be the “least viable” part of the plan and are thinking of trading it in for, get this, a grocery store. Continue reading