Author Archives: dougdraper

In Wake Of Latest Stats Can Job Numbers, Ontario’s Wynne Government Pushed For ‘Real Economic Plan’

Statement from PC Economic Development, Employment & Infrastructure Critic Monte McNaughton on December Job Numbers

Posted December 8th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, TorontoProgressive Conservative Economic Development, Employment & Infrastructure Critic Monte McNaughton today issued the following statement on December Job Numbers:

“The job numbers released today show that for the month of December, Ontario’s unemployment rate did not exceed the national average.

Ontario Conservative Party's economic development critic Monte McNaughton

Ontario Conservative Party’s economic development critic Monte McNaughton

While we are hopeful that these positive job trends continue, the volatility we’ve seen in the global economy, stock and commodity markets in the past weeks has people worried. Our province was devastated by the financial downturn of 2008 and economists see echoes of that in what’s happening today.

That is why it’s vitally important that the Liberal government finally start heeding the calls of the Auditor General, the Financial Accountability Officer, and the Ontario PC Caucus to create a real economic plan for Ontario. Continue reading

Ontario Adds 34,000 Jobs In Last Month Of 2015

Niagara, Ontario’s Jobless Rate Goes Up AGAIN! – Almost A Full Percentage Point Higher Than The Average For All Of Canada

News from the Government of Ontario with a Foreword by  Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted January 8th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Foreword by Doug Draper

While the job figures released by Statistics Canada this January 8th, 2016 show a drop in the average unemployment ratejobless sign this past December 2015 for regions across Ontario compared to the month before, the unemployment rate for Niagara, Ontario has gone up during the same time period.

The latest Stats Can numbers show that unemployment in St. Catharines/Niagara rose from 7.8 per cent in November of last year to 8 per cent in December – almost a full  point higher than the 7.1 per cent unemployment rate averaged out for all of Canada and more than a point higher than the 6.7 per cent rate for Ontario during the same time period. Continue reading

You Are Invited To An Upcoming Open House For Maple Acre Design In Downtown Fenwick

Some Community News from Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn

Posted January 8th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

The Town of Pelham in Niagara, Ontario – Members of the Maple Acre Advisory Committee and I want your feedback on the design of the renewed Pelham Library Branch in Downtown Fenwick.

We invite you to an Open House on Wednesday, January 13 from 4:00 to 8:00 PM at Pelham Fire Station #2 (766 Welland Road) where the architect and builder will display the latest designs.

Maple Acre Library Branch in Pelham community of Fenwick

Maple Acre Library Branch in Pelham community of Fenwick

Council and the Library Board recognized years ago that the aged Maple Acre Library branch required renewal; we struck a joint committee back in 2008 to make recommendations. While that committee looked at many ideas – building a joint Library / Firehall (prior to the new Fires Station #2), constructing a new library either in Centennial Park or at the former Fire Station (Welland Road at Canboro) – it got a bit bogged down. Continue reading

The Price Ontarians Will Pay For Bruce Nuclear Power – What Is The Provincial Government Hiding?

From the Ontario Clean Air Alliance, A Toronto-based citizens advocacy group

Posted January 7th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

While Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli crows about what a great deal the new contract with Bruce Power is, his government is simultaneously refusing to make public the key clauses in the deal that will determine the real price that we will pay for the next 49 years for power from Bruce’s reactors.

Bruce Nuclear Power Plant along the Ontario shores of Lake Huron

Bruce Nuclear Power Plant along the Ontario shores of Lake Huron

What’s clear is that there are clauses in the contract that compensate Bruce Power for any decision to not proceed with re-building reactors in the face of falling electricity demand, and falling costs for faster-to-deploy and more flexible renewable power sources.

And there are clauses that set out just how high the Bruce Re-Build’s capital costs can soar above $13 billion before the government can trigger an “off ramp” and end all or part of the Re-Build project. Continue reading

Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario’s Shaw Festival Adds 14 Performances To 2016 Season

News from The  Shaw Festival

Posted January 7th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario Due to popular demand, the Shaw Festival is adding 14 performances to the 2016 season. Early ordering prices continue until January 31 with the newly added dates already on sale.

Inside the Festival Theatre in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario. Photo courtesy of Shaw Festival

Inside the Festival Theatre in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario. Photo courtesy of Shaw Festival

“In her final year as Artistic Director, Jackie has programmed a season that showcases the diversity and strength of work created here at the Shaw Festival and our patrons have responded enthusiastically,” said Tim Jennings, Executive Director of the Shaw Festival. “Based on the first month of sales, we’ve decided that we need to provide more opportunities to see some of the Festival’s highlights.”

Already the darling of the 2016 season, Engaged, a comedic look at love, marriage and money by W.S. Gilbert, has been extended with additional performances on October 19 and 20 at 8 p.m., October 22 at 2 p.m., and October 23 at 6 p.m. Continue reading

Brock Expert Says Eating Fruits And Vegetables A Resolution For Better Overall Health

An ‘Expert Advisory’ from Brock University

Posted January 7th, 2015 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, OntarioIf you’re still looking for an achievable New Year’s resolution, a Brock University professor has a nutritious suggestion: eat more fruits and vegetables.Variety of fresh fruit and vegetables

Wendy Ward, Professor in Brock’s Department of Kinesiology, says eating a well-balanced diet based on Canada’s Food Guide is an excellent goal for 2016.

“With New Year’s resolutions fresh in our minds ­— likely many for improving health – we can start by increasing our intakes of fruits and vegetables, as well as being more mindful of our food choices,” says Ward, the Canada Research Chair in Bone and Muscle Development. Continue reading

Ontario’s Conservative Opposition Party Advocates For Dedicated Anti-Human Trafficking Efforts

  • Ontario is a major hub for human trafficking in Canada

From Ontario’s  Conservative Party

Posted January 7, 2016 on Niagara At large

WHITBY-OSHAWA, Ontario – In Durham Region today, the Ontario Progressive Conservative Critic for Women’s Issues, Laurie Scott (MPP for Haliburton-Kawartha Lakes-Brock) and Lorne Coe, Progressive Conservativehuman trafficking candidate for Whitby-Oshawa, held a press conference calling for the Liberal Government to take immediate action to create a province-wide taskforce to combat human trafficking. Canadian law states that human trafficking –a form of modern day slavery – involves the recruitment, transportation, harbouring and/or control of a person for sexual exploitation or forced labour. Continue reading

Members of Provincial Parliament Traveling Across Ontario for Pre-Budget Hearings

You Are Invited To Join Rallies “To Stop Devastating Hospital Cuts”

A Call-Out To We, The People, from the Ontario Health Coalition, A Toronto-based citizens advocacy group

Posted January 5th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

The Ontario Provincial Parliament’s Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs has chosen Hamilton, Windsor, Thunder Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Ottawa and Toronto to hold pre-budget consultations.save hospitals 

We are now entering the 9th consecutive year of hospital cuts – the longest stretch of hospital cuts in Ontario’s history. Every service cut is privatized, subject to user fees or moved far from our home towns.

Every year, the Ontario Health Coalition and local coalitions across the province have presented at the hearings. Continue reading

Ontario Needs A Cabinet Minister Dedicated To Protecting & Preserving Heritage Sites In Our Communities

 “Heritage preservation has been a difficult walk uphill (in Ontario) and has been a neglected part of our culture.” –  Heritage Thorold (LACAC) Committee 

A Submission To Ontario’s Liberal Government from Pamela Minns and Heritage Thorold LACAC

Posted on Niagara At Large, January 5th, 2016

A Submission To Ontario’s Liberal Government from Pamela Minns and Heritage Thorold LACAC

(A Brief Foreword from Doug Draper, Niagara At Large – Pamela Minns and the other volunteers on Heritage Thorold LACAC (LACAC is an acronym for Local Architectural Conservation Advisory Committee) deserve a good deal of credit for caring enough about protrecting and preserving heritage sites in our communities to put together such a well-thought-out and detailed submission to the Ontario government.

The Port Mansion, once located in Port Dalhousie in St. Catharines and in a provincially designated heritage district, was demolished a few years ago for a high-rise condo that still isn't there and seems to be in perpetual limbo. File Photo by Doug Draper

The Port Mansion, once located in Port Dalhousie in St. Catharines and in a provincially designated heritage district, was demolished a few years ago for a high-rise condo that still isn’t there and seems to be in perpetual limbo. File Photo by Doug Draper

The submission is a response to the Liberal Government of Premier Kathleen Wynne call for public input on what shape a strategy for embracing the arts, culture and heritage across Ontario should take for the future. The question is will the government take the input seriously since, as Pamela Minns has stressed for years, heritage issues have hardly ever been given the priority they deserve at the provincial level.

If you have any doubts about the correctness of Minns’ concern over how little respect heritage sites – even ones that have been designated as such by the province – get in Ontario, look no further than the community of Port Dalhousie in the Niagara, Ontario City of St. Catharines.

Continue reading

Mayor Of Niagara’s Ontario’s Largest City To Deliver Second Annual Address On City’s Future On January 29th

“My new vision is to make this the most dynamic, innovative, sustainable and livable city in North America.” St. Catharines Mayor Water Sendzik

News from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Posted January 4th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario – Walter Sendzik, Mayor of St. Catharines, will address his community at the 2016 State of the City event, the second of its kind, presented by the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce (GNCC).

St. Catharines, Ontario Mayor Walter Sendzik

St. Catharines, Ontario Mayor Walter Sendzik

At this annual event, the Mayor shares his civic vision for the future of the city, and the means by which it is to be realized. Since his election in October 2014, Mayor Sendzik has been a force for change in St. Catharines and Niagara. With so many new developments on the horizon, 2016 is sure to be a remarkable year.

“These addresses provide unique insight into what our municipal leaders have in store for the future,” said Ian Kowalchuk, Chair of the GNCC’s Board of Directors and Partner at Merit Contractors Niagara. “We’ve already had great discussions and progress on issues like updated infrastructure, and we’re looking forward to seeing what the Mayor plans for 2016.” Continue reading

Corporate CEOs Power Lunch On Average Canadian Wage, Study Shows

“What we’ve learned is that the average pay of the top 100 CEOs in Canada has proven to be extraordinarily resilient, in good times and bad.”

News from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

Posted January 4th, 2016 on Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

Toronto, Ontario – On the first working day of the New Year, Canada’s highest paid 100 CEOs are seriously power lunching: by 12:18 pm today, their average

While everyday Canadians, like their American counterparts, see the income gab between them and the upper one per cent widen ever more, CEOs continue to party at the trough

While everyday Canadians, like their American counterparts, see the income gab between them and the upper one per cent widen ever more, CEOs continue to party at the trough

pay is already $48,636 — what it takes the average full-time, full-year worker all of 2016 to earn.

In the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives’ (CCPA) annual examination of CEO pay in Canada, the country’s top 100 CEOs pocketed, on average, $8.96 million in 2014 — 184 times more than the average wage in Canada. Continue reading

In Wake Of Controversial Deer Cull In Niagara, Ontario, Province Set To Kill Off More Wildlife – This Time Wolves & Coyotes Up North

A Call-Out from the citizens advocacy group Niagara Action For Animals

January 2016

Dear Friends of Animals -This is an urgent call to action!!

Many controversial government announcements are released when no one is watching, so too was the announcement by Ontario’s Wynne government to begin a wolf cull in Northern Ontario.wolves

Posted on Ontario’s Environmental Bill of Rights Registry on December 17th, right when most are busy with the holidays, the Ontario government. is proposing to remove the previous requirements for hunters to purchase a special hunting ‘seal’ to kill wolves and remove the restriction to kill only one wolf per season.

The limit on killing coyotes will be lifted and hunters can kill as many coyotes as they want. Unlike targeted culls where a specific number of wolves are killed, the Ontario cull allows for thousands of wolves to be killed each year. Continue reading

Gun Happy Texas Is Off My Travel List

A Brief Comment from Doug Draper

Posted January 4th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Yee Haw! Bang! Bang! Bang! We sure in hell showed those gun control varmints the way out of this state, didn’t we! Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang!gun holster

Minus the shooting, that’s pretty much the way it reportedly was across Texas this first day of January, 2016 as large numbers of Texans celebrated a state law that now allows them to openly have guns hanging out of their belts in public.

This right-in-everyone’s-face show of lethal force is in keeping with what many Americans interpret to be their 2nd Amendment right to own and bear arms under the U.S. Constitution to own and bear arms, and with a position advanced by the National Rifle Association – one of the lobby groups that runs the United States government – that the more people who carry guns on school campuses, in shopping malls and just about everywhere else, the safer they will be. Continue reading

Niagara At Large Starts Rockin’ Again On January 4th. 2016

In The Meantime, Don’t Stop Visiting And Commenting On The Posts On Our NAL Site Now

By Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

January 1st, 2016

Well, here we are just barely into another new year (as this note is posted) and not that many hours past the final minutes of 2015 and the ritualistic countdown to midnight where many of us find ourselves feeling a renewed sense of hope for better times to come.happynewyear

2016 sees us entering the second half of the second decade of the 21st century and we at NAL believe that it will take a lot more than hope to drag our politicians – particularly those at the municipal level in Niagara, Ontario – out of the 1950s and into a present and future that gets away from costly, low-density sprawl and paving over what is left of the countryside, and embraces greener, more sustainable communities.

Moving forward to a healthier, more prosperous future will require more of us getting involved in the affairs of our communities, especially at the regional government level where a relatively small but highly fractious group of councillors have assumed positions of dominance on the council and under Al Caslin, who has served as the council’s chair for the past year, appears comfortable to let civility – even toward leaders of Niagara, Ontario’s business and academic communities – sink to levels unprecedented in the 46 year history of this municipal body.

But we will focus more on that dysfunctional mess in the days and weeks ahead.

For now and for the first few days of this New Year, we are taking a bit of a break, and that includes our canine mascot Pinky who, as you can see in the photo below, needs some down time to recover from a wild New Year’s Eve party that saw her hollowing at the moon after the clock struck twelve.Pinky's new bed

One again, we at NAL wish you a Happy Harper-less New Year and we encourage you to join us in the discussion as we continue our efforts as an online voice for progressive change in our greater Niagara region.

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

 

Goodbye Natalie Cole – A Soulful Voice Leaves Us

A Brief One from Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

January 1st, 2016

“This will be an everlasting love.”

Those were the first words she sang in her very first hit ‘This Will Be’, a song for which she also won her very first Grammy Award for best R&B vocal performance in 1976.Natalie-Cole closer

Years later, in 1991, there was her fabulous album ‘Unforgettable With Love’ – a collection of songs made famous by her legendary father, the late Nat ‘King’ Cole’ and featuring moving duet with her late father on the title song, made possible through he wonders of modern recording technology.

 Natalie Cole’s death late this past December 31st at 65 was made public this January 1st with the following statement from her family – “Natalie fought a fierce, courageous battle, dying how she lived … with dignity, strength and honor. Our beloved Mother and sister will be greatly missed and remain UNFORGETTABLE in our hearts forever.”

Trusting that NAL subscribers don’t mind my posting this one as a longtime fan of both Coles.

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

 

Pinky Joins Us In Wishing You All A Happy New Year

 From Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

Final Days of December, 2015

We at Niagara At Large are thrilled to have our mascot Pinky – one tiny but might chiwawa – here for a holiday visit and joining us in wishing you the best in 2016.

Our mascot Pinky may look a little too bundled up given how mild it has been so far this winter. But she's up for a visit from Florida, and by Sunshine State standards it's a bit ch-, ch-, chilly in these climes for a pint-size chiwawa.

Our mascot Pinky may look a little too bundled up given how mild it has been so far this winter. But she’s up for a visit from Florida, and by Sunshine State standards it’s a bit ch-, ch-, chilly in these climes for a pint-size chiwawa.

If you are a regular follower of news and commentary on Niagara At Large, you may remember Pinky’s last visit to NAL headquarters during Canada’s 2015 federal election. It was a bit of a roller coaster ride for her, as it was for many of us.

She was accused by Stephen Harper supporters of showing some of the tell-tale symptoms of what they called “Harper Derangement Syndrome”, with her muffled growls and flashes of tongue and teeth at almost every mention of Harper’s name and when it looked, during the early days of the race, like his Conservatives still had a chance of winning another term of government.

Some Harperites even accused her of being a partisan for the NDP or Liberals, depending on which party they loathed the most and despite the fact that on that score, her belief in a universal pharma care program that would make prescription drugs affordable for all Canadians and in closing down the tar sands had her tilting, on principle, in the direction of the Green Party. Continue reading

2015 Was A Big Hit For New CDs By Aging Pop Artists & Adele

By Doug Draper,

Posted December 30th, 2015 on Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com.

Those of you who have been visiting Niagara At Large for a while, know I like to break up all the news and commentary on the site with the odd piece on pop culture.

During this Holiday Season, following month after month of relentless politicking, punctuated shocks of one sort or another from around this crazy world, I get the impression that many people out there could use a bit of a break from that sort of stuff. So let me try a little end-of-year pop music round-up here.

Cory Wells, a Buffalo, New York native and a lead singer in the legendary rock band Three Dog Night, passed away this past October

Cory Wells, a Buffalo, New York native and a lead singer in the legendary rock band Three Dog Night, passed away this past October

If you are in your late 50s or early 60s like me – you know, more than half a century old – and you find yourself feeling almost totally out of touch with the current music scene while thumbing through the review section of Rolling Stone magazine, 2015 offered a little relief.

For lovers of classic pop music, this passing year saw a bumper crop of very good to great CDs from artists stretching back to the golden years of the 1960s and 70s.

Being the music addict I am, I go running out to get almost any new CD the classic performers put out and am always thrilled when the music lives up to the legend. At the same time, I find myself feeling a little sad, knowing that most of these artists are now in their 60s and 70s, and it ain’t gonna last. The latest CD by them could turn out to be a final encore. Continue reading

Half A Century Of Rubber Soul

Still Great Listening After All These Years

A Brief One from Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 28th, 2015

Fifty years ago this December 2015, I did what we all sometimes do around Christmas time.

I went out and bought a gift for myself that I knew my parents wouldn’t get for me because it was a record by a rock group. And to them, all that rock groupsrubber soul produced was electronic noise and a fear in their hearts that I might spend less time doing school work and more time with a guitar, making some electronic noise of my own.

The group was The Beatles and the album was Rubber Soul which to this day, alongside handful of other albums like Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited, released the same year with Like a Rolling Stone as its first track, remains one of the most influential pop records of all time.
Continue reading

Happy New Year? Ontarians Hit With Yet Another Increase To Hydro Rates

From Ontario’s Opposition Conservative Party

Posted on Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com

December 29th, 2015

Queen’s Park, Toronto – As a result of poor (Ontario) Liberal government policies, January 1st represents another unaffordable hydro increase for Ontarians.hydro-meters

“Starting on the first day of the new year, residents of Ontario will see their hydro bills on average increase by almost $100 dollars,” said PC Energy Critic John Yakabuski. “This further ingrains Ontario as one of the most expensive and uncompetitive energy jurisdictions in North America.”

On January 1st, the Wynne Liberal Government is terminating the Clean Energy Benefit. This represented a 10 per cent reduction on total electricity charges for residential consumers, small business and farms. Continue reading

Statement by U.S. Press Secretary on the Official Visit of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Announcement from the White House
December 28th, 2015

President Obama and the First Lady will welcome Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada and his wife, Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau, to the White House for an Official Visit with a State Dinner on Thursday, March 10, 2016.

President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and their wives have a March date at the White House

President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and their wives have a March date at the White House

 The visit will be an opportunity for the United States and Canada to deepen their bilateral relationship, which is one of the closest and most extensive in the world and is based on a shared history, common values, and a vast and intricate network of cultural, familial, and commercial ties.

The visit also is intended to advance cooperation on important bilateral and multilateral issues, such as energy and climate change, security, and the economy. Continue reading

U.S. President Signs Ban On Plastic Microbeads Threatening Great Lakes And Other Waters

A Year-End Win For The Great Lakes

Posted December 28th, 2015 on Niagara At Large

A Message from the U.S.-based Alliance for the Great Lakes to its many American and Canadian supporters.

President Obama just signed legislation (this Monday, December 28th) that will phase out the manufacture and sale of plastic microbeads in personal-care products.

Plastic microbeads wash up along Lake Erie shores. These beads can literally choke the life out of fish populations in lake waters.

Plastic microbeads wash up along Lake Erie shores. These beads can literally choke the life out of fish populations in lake waters.

This couldn’t have happened without you. When research showed these tiny plastic pieces were flowing down the drain and into the Great Lakes, we asked for your help. And you responded. Thousands of you spoke out, sending action alerts to elected officials and telling them how much the Great Lakes matter.

A Great Lakes state — Illinois — became the first in the nation to ban this unnecessary form of plastic pollution. Indiana and Wisconsin followed, along with 3 Great Lakes counties in New York. The wave of action spread from California to Maine. And now a national ban will protect the Great Lakes and all our nation’s waters. Continue reading

What Follows In Wake Of The Paris Climate Summit?

Come Hear From Some Buffalo, New York Area Citizens Who Were There

An Invite to You from the Sierra Club’s Climate and Clean Energy Writers Group in Western New York

Posted on Niagara At Large, December 28th, 2015

This is your chance to learn all about the Paris Climate Talks from three Western New Yorkers who were there!paris talks

The Sierra Club Climate and Clean Energy Writers Group presents UB Law School students Andrea DiNapoli and Alyssa Erazo, along with local climate activist and interfaith minister Sandy Chelnov, for an interactive talk about this important conference.

When: Monday, January 4th, 2016 from  6:00 to7:30 PM

Where: Unitarian Universalist Church  695 Elmwood at Ferry (Garden Entrance), 2nd Floor Alliance Room Continue reading

What Is A Canadian?

A Note from Doug Draper, Niiagara At Large

December 28th, 2015

A friend from the United States (whose name I will not share here in order to protect the innocent) posted this on Facebook and I am passing it on to you.

The following is an answer someone very may get in Tampa Florida, Charleston, South Carolina or even someplace as close to the border as Toledo, Ohio if they ever take a moment away from Donald Trump or the NFL football playoffs to wonder what a Canadian is.what is a canadian

(NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.)

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

PM Offers Canadian Welcome To Refugees In Christmas Message

From Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Ottawa, December 2015 –

“Around the world and across Canada, Christians gather on Christmas to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ. This is a time when families, friends, and colleagues come together to celebrate the spirit of the season.

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

“Christmas is an opportunity for giving as well as receiving. Whether it is volunteering time at a local food bank, buying gifts for children in need, or opening doors to someone who may be celebrating alone, the true spirit of Christmas is about connecting with our neighbours and our community.

“This year, Canadians are welcoming thousands of Syrian refugees to our country — people who have been forced to flee their homeland due to war and conflict. I encourage all Canadians to show them a warm holiday welcome in keeping with our values of compassion, kindness, and generosity.

“From our family to yours, Sophie and I wish you all a most joyous holiday season and a merry Christmas.”

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

Queen Speaks For Those ‘Lighting Candles Of Hope’ In The World

A Brief One from Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 25th, 2015

I am certainly no monarchist nor do I care to belong to any church that would accept a person like me as member, but I have to bow to a few words Queen Elizabeth II of England shared with the people of her country and other Commonwealth nations, including Canada, this Christmas 2015.queen

So I am taking a few moments on this Christmas Day to pass them on to you. I think there are some good words here to remember when the voices for greed, hatred and violence seem to over-ride those working to make this world better for all.

“It is true that the world has had to confront moments of darkness this year,” said the Queen in her annual Christmas message, “but the Gospel of John contains a verse of great hope, often read at Christmas carol services: “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it. …”

“There’s an old saying that “it is better to light a candle than curse the darkness. There are millions of people lighting candles of hope in our world today.”

“Christmas is a good time to be thankful for them, and for all that brings light to our lives.”

To View Queen’s Full 2015 Chrismas message click on =https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Mzor6Hf1tY .

(NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.)

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

 

Wishing You All A Happy Harper-less Holiday Season

From Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 24th, 2015

From me and my family to you and yours, here’s hoping you have a Holiday Season full of peace and warmth with people you love to be around – even if some of that has to be done through calls to loved ones far away.harper that's all folks

That’s all I really want this Holiday Season. I have enough stuff and as for anything else, I got what I wanted this past October 19th when enough votes came in from across Canada to spell the end of a decade of the worst government this country has had in generations going back to the end of the Second World War.

I look back at this year we are about to say goodbye to with a sense of pride for any small role I may have played as a poster of commentary on Niagara At Large calling for an end to a Harper government that has weakened our economy at home and tarnished our reputation as an environmental leader and as a voice for tolerance and peace around the world. Continue reading

Canada’s Trudeau Government To Repeal Law Protecting Parents Who Engage In A ‘Barbaric Cultural Practice’ Called Spanking

A Commentary by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

 December 23rd, 2015

 Most Canadians no doubt remember that during this past fall’s federal election, the then Conservative government of Stephen Harper vowed to wage war against what it called “barbaric cultural practices.”

Niagara Falls MP Rob Nicholson - from Harper's justice minister to Ambrose's justice critic, still doing the 'wrath of God' shtick

Niagara Falls MP Rob Nicholson – from Harper’s justice minister to Ambrose’s justice critic, still doing the ‘wrath of God’ shtick

One of the weapons the Harper government promised to employ in this war was a “snitch line” we could call to report to police anyone we saw wearing strange or foreign clothing or engaging in any other conduct we deemed to be “barbaric” or falling outside a zone of acceptability or tolerance for old stock Canadians.,

Now I’ve got to say this.

As much as I found this snitch line idea totally repulsive, if Harper and his party for old stock Canadians had won another term of government this past October, and if they had gone on to set up such a line,  I would use it the next time I see something I’ve unfortunately seen too many times in shopping mall and other places – an adult grabbing an arm of a toddler they are presumably a parent of until the child is dancing on tippy toes, then smacking his’ or hers’ backside until the child is reduced to crying and tears.  Continue reading

Tigger The Cat Has A Great Last-Minute Gift Idea For Your Holiday Season And New Year

Buy His 2016 Tigger Calendar And You’ll Be Making A Donate To Animal Assistance In Niagara

By Doug Draper, Niagara At Large 

December 23rd, 2015

We featured Tigger on Niagara At Large almost a year ago this past January 2015 when this most handsome celebrity of a cat was celebrating his 7th birthday at his permanent residence – the Pet Valu store at the Pine Street Plaza in the Niagara, Ontario City of Thorold – with a  fundraiser for the Animal Assistance Society of Niagara.

Tigger the Cat. Photo courtesy of Joe Krawchuk at Pet Valu Thorold in Niagara, Ontario.

Tigger the Cat. Photo courtesy of Joe Krawchuk at Pet Valu Thorold in Niagara, Ontario.

 Now Tigger is back with a purr-fect last-minute Holiday Season gift idea – a 2016 Calendar featuring month-to-month photos of him with proceeds from the calendar’s sale going to the year round efforts of the Animal Assistance Society to protect, care for and find good homes for orphan cats and other animals. 

The calendar can be purchased at the Pet Valu store at 9 Pine Street North in Thorold (phone 905 227-9794) for $25 in cash to cover the cost of producing this high-quality calendar and a donation to the Animal Assistance Society of Niagara.  Continue reading

Global Action Needed To Combat Mercury Contamination In Great Lakes Foodchain

–  Since Turn Of This Century, Levels Of Toxic Mercury Have Increased In Great Lakes Fish

News from the Canada/U.S. International Joint Commission

December 2015

(A Brief Foreword to this News from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Mercury, as many of you may know, can do terrible damage to the health of people and other livings beings if it is allowed to accumulate in fish and other wildlife on up the foodchain to people in high enough concenrations.

Tests on Perch in Lake Erie and other parts of the Great Lakes have recently shown levels of mercury rising once again in their flesh. Consult fish consumption guidelines available online in Ontario, New York State and other jurisdictions on guidance on how much Great Lakes fish is safe to consume.

Tests on Perch in Lake Erie and other parts of the Great Lakes have recently shown levels of mercury rising once again in their flesh. Consult fish consumption guidelines available online in Ontario, New York State and other jurisdictions on guidance on how much Great Lakes fish is safe to consume.

That is why Canadian and U.S. federal, provincial and state governments, working with the binantional International Joint Commission, have been monitoring concentrations of mercury in the Great Lakes ecosystem for more than four decades and have put policies in place through that  time that have been aimed at reducing and eliminating the release of mercury from a host of courses, including coal-burning electrical power plants.

These measures by Canadian and U.S. governments have resulted in declines in mercury levels in the Great Lakes during the 1970, 80s and in to the 90s. However, atmospheric monitoring by Environment Canada and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has tracked mercury reaching North America from other regions around the world, including China, where coal and other fossil fuels remain in massive use.

Once here, the Great Lakes serve as a giant sink for mercury and other airborne poisons from countries far away. This is one of the reasons why, even if you still have doubts about pollution from human activities altering the earth’s climate, it is still vitally important to move toward zero use of fossil fuels that emit these hazardous pollutants.

Now please read the following report on this issue from the International Joint Commission.)

From the IJC Mercury levels in Great Lakes fish declined significantly through the 1970s and ‘80s; atmospheric mercury emissions from the United States declined by about 60 percent between 1990 and 2005, while Canada emissions decreased about 85 percent between 1990 and 2010. This was in part due to closures of coal-fired power plants in Canada and the U.S. Continue reading

On Prices Ontarians Are Paying At The Gas Pump – “Where Are The Savings For Consumers?”

From the Constituency Office of Niagara Falls, Ontario Riding MPP Wayne Gates

December 22nd, 2015

Niagara Falls, Ontario Niagara Falls NDP MPP and Transportation Critic Wayne Gates is concerned consumers have yet to see any substantial savings at the pump with the continued slide in oil prices.gas-pump-price

“Ontarians have seen the price of oil consistently decline, but drivers have yet to see any savings at the pump,” stated Gates. “When I initially brought this issue forward, the price of a barrel of oil was roughly $46. Today it’s nearly $35, but for some reason drivers in Niagara haven’t witnessed any substantial savings.”

The price of oil has trended downward over the past two months—reaching $36 USD a barrel today. However, the average price of gas in Ontario still sits at 97 cents a litre. BMO economist Benjamin Reitzes noted earlier this month that gasoline prices are not correlating with this drop in crude oil prices. Continue reading

Great Christmas Spirit, Even Without Snow

A Yuletide Message to the rest of Niagara from Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn

December 2015

What a joy to join the Pelham Senior Citizen’s group this past Wednesday, December 9th  at Old Pelham Town Hall for a special holiday lunch and carols – including Irving Berlin’s “(I’m Dreaming of a) White Christmas!” Despite the lack of snow, it does feel like Christmas in Pelham!

The holiday spirit began early in Pelham on November 5 when several businesses hosted holiday open houses. Some store-owners even closed their shops for a couple of days and stunningly transformed them into Christmas wonders.pelham crhistmas

Over the following weeks, the Town began decorating much of Pelham – from Peace Park and the Bandshell in Fonthill, to Town Hall, to hydro poles in Pelham’s urbanized areas, to the flagpole and trees in Fenwick.

And, some very dedicated, community-minded elves took it upon themselves to “spruce-up” our Town. While the rest of us were sleeping or working, these elves decorated almost every utility pole and light standard in sight using evergreen boughs and red bows. So many of us appreciate their efforts!

Then, the Fenwick Firefighters Association took the lead for the turkey raffle tradition, followed closely by the Fonthill Lions (with a chili cook off to boot).

Thanks to “Christmas In Pelham” volunteers and Town staff for organizing the third Christmas Under the Arches / Outdoor Christmas Market in Fonthill on December 4. The hundreds participating and the venders, services clubs, and musicians helped make the event wonderful and vibrant.

Main village of Pelham at Christmas

Main village of Pelham at Christmas

Then, hundreds and hundreds shared the true spirit of generosity on December 5th for the 25th Annual Pelham Food Drive for Pelham Cares. Thank you to each of the donors and all the volunteers that went door-to-door to support those less fortunate in our Town. Thanks, as well, for those volunteers unpacking, sorting, and repacking non-perishable food. Finally, thanks to the businesses who donated food and funds so that volunteers were fed and the event was publicized.

This past weekend, the Fabulous Fenwick Lions and others in the community organized the annual Santa Claus Parade. Despite the abundance of candy for kids, all knew it was not another Halloween when “Buddy the Elf” drove Santa through the recently revitalized Downtown Fenwick and to Centennial Park.

Add to all this the Christmas concerts at our schools, the open houses at businesses and private homes, the work parties, and all the celebrations at Pelham’s churches, and we are doing well to prepare for Christmas.

I hope that you and your family experience the joy of the spirit of Christmas this holiday season. I also wish you all the best in 2016!

You may contact Mayor Dave at mayordave@pelham.ca or read past columns at www.pelhammayordave.blogspot.com.

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

Climate Controls ‘Slip Slidin’ Away’ Following Weak Paris Agreement

 A Commentary by Nick Fillmore

December 2015

 “World agrees to historic climate accord”  – The Toronto Star.

“Nearly 200 countries agree to historic pact in Paris to reduce emissions and fight climate change”  –  The Vancouver Sun.

 “Climate deal: World praises France’s diplomacy, showing it’s still a master of the art”  – The Winnipeg Free Press.

nick articleWith these headlines appearing in newspapers across the country, Canadians must have been relieved that they don’t need to worry about climate change nearly as much now that everything has been worked out in Paris.

Unfortunately, this assumption couldn’t be further from the truth. The politicians meeting in Paris, faced with the possibility of total failure, were extremely excited to reach any kind of an agreement. Continue reading

Want To Help The Climate? Stop Buying So Much Stuff!

Brock University Expert Says Consume Less If We’re Serious About Climate Change

From A Brock University Media Release

Niagara, Ontario, December 2015

Lost in the discussion of the recent Paris climate change conference was a big, environment-damaging elephant: a global system that encourages us to buy more and more stuff, says a Brock University expert on consumerism’s impact on the environment.

Brock University Professor of Communications, Popular Culture and Film Jennifer Good

Brock University Professor of Communications, Popular Culture and Film Jennifer Good

“Indeed, economic growth as the heart of our economic system did not seem to be challenged but instead there was a lot of discussion of what alternatives could facilitate business-as-usual economic growth,” says Jennifer Good, Associate Professor of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University.

Good says there’s a certain irony about the COP21 climate change conference beginning on the same day as Cyber Monday (Novemberf 30th, 2015) , a day when consumers spent over $2.2 billion. The production of many consumer goods eat up valuable resources and emit pollution, she says. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario’s Malcolm Allen Receives Honourable Mention On CBC’s The National

A Brief One from Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 18th, 2015

By some accounts from local NDP insiders, Malcolm Allen was feeling pretty depressed about his loss in last October’s federal election. And rightfully so given his own solid record as an MPP for the federal Riding of Welland, as a

Former MP for the federal riding of Welland, Ontario, Malcolm Allen.

Former MP for the federal riding of Welland, Ontario, Malcolm Allen.

parliamentarian for Canada, and as critic and deputy critic for everything from skills, training and apprenticeships to agriculture and food security in NDP leader Tom Mulcair’s shadow cabinet.

But the two-term New Democratic Party MP – and, until two months ago, the only member of the NDP in Niagara, Ontario to serve in government at the federal level – might take some solace from the fact that he received Canada-wide praise for his years of service on CBC TV’s National news program this past Thursday, December 18th. Continue reading

Ontario’s Conservatives And NDP Weigh In After OPP Lays Criminal Charges Against Two Of Former Premier Dalton McGuinty’s Senior Staff

A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

December 17th, 2015

For more than four years now, decisions by the former Ontario Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty to scrap plans to build a gas-fired power plant in Oakville and walk away from another partially built power plant in Mississauga, before and during a hotly contested provincial election in the fall of 2011, have dogged McGuinty and his predecessor – the current Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne.

Former Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty. Two of his former senior staff now face criminal charges in gas plant scandal.

Former Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty. Two of his former senior staff now face criminal charges in gas plant scandal.

Later news, that the McGuinty governments decision to abandon the Oakville and Mississauga sites because of the strong opposition plans to operate the power plants there drew from residents in those communities cost more than a billion dollars, understandably enraged Ontario taxpayers.

Then there were the allegations that thousands of pieces of emails and other records in the Premier’s office were destroyed that elevated the whole affair to a scandal that had members of the Conservative and New Democratic Parties calling for an Ontario Provincial Police investigation, which was launched two and a half years ago.

And now finally, on this December 17th, 2015, two individuals who were about as senior as you can get in McGiuinty’s office when he was premier, have been charged with criminal offences that could get them up to 10 years in jail. Continue reading

Niagara Regional Chair Presents $25,000 for Syrian Refugee Resettlement to Mennonite Central Committee

  • “We are grateful for the generosity of the Niagara community, and deeply moved by their welcoming of refugees to their region.” – Rick Cober Bauman, Executive Director of MCC Ontario

News from Niagara, Ontario’s Regional Government

December 17th, 2015

Niagara Region – This December 17th, Niagara Regional Chair Alan Caslin presented $25,000 to Mennonite Central Committee Ontario for the

From left to right at funding presentation, St. Catharines Regional Councillor Bruce Timms, Mayor of Pelham Dave Augustyn, Niagara Regional Chair Alan Caslin, Mennonite Central Committee Refugee Program Coordinator Moses Moini, Mennonite Central Committee Executive Director Rick Cober Bauman

From left to right at funding presentation, St. Catharines Regional Councillor Bruce Timms, Mayor of Pelham Dave Augustyn, Niagara Regional Chair Alan Caslin, Mennonite Central Committee Refugee Program Coordinator Moses Moini, Mennonite Central Committee Executive Director Rick Cober Bauman

resettlement of Syrian Refugees in Niagara.

This donation follows the unprecedented outpouring of support from Niagara residents, who raised the same amount now being matched by the Region.

“We are grateful for the generosity of the Niagara community, and deeply moved by their welcoming of refugees to their region,” said Rick Cober Bauman, Executive Director of MCC Ontario. “Collaboration of this kind makes an incredible difference, and inspires communities and municipalities across the province to play such a part in responding to the flight of Syrian refugees. Continue reading

A New Year, A New Chance To Stop Devastating Hospital Cuts Across Ontario!

  • Rallies to Stop the Devastating Hospital Cuts & Privatization of our Local Public Hospital Services

News from the Ontario Health Coalition, a province-wide advocacy group for quality public health care

You can help to save local public hospital services! We’re heading into the 9th year of real-dollar hospital cuts, the longest stretch in Ontario’s history. Funding for hospitals is now at the lowest rate of any province in the country. Local community hospitals are at risk of complete closure, while birthing, emergency departments and other services are constantly at threat. Thousands of hospital staff positions have been eliminated.save hospitals

By every measure, Ontario’s hospital cuts are deeper than any other jurisdiction. Virtually every service cut from our local hospitals is being privatized.  Continue reading

Spirit Of Christmas Is On The Menu At Niagara College’s Canadian Food And Wine Institute

  • Students and chef professors at Niagara College’s Canadian Food and Wine Institute have a taste for holiday giving.

News from Niagara College in Niagara, Ontario

On Monday, Dec. 21, they will be cooking up a storm for hundreds of community residents in need. The festive holiday fare – including trays of turkey, stuffing, veggies and all the trimmings – will be served  at the 16th annual Spirit of Christmas Dinner in St. Catharines on Christmas Day.turkey dinner

Preparing a feast for the Spirit of Christmas Dinner has become an annual tradition among staff and students at the College’s Canadian Food and Wine Institute. While staff and students prepare the meal in advance of the event, Niagara College president Dan Patterson regularly volunteers on Christmas Day to help serve the meal.

The DeDivitiis family Spirit of Christmas Dinner will be held on Dec. 25 at Gord’s Place in St. Catharines. The event offers a free Christmas dinner to those who attend, which often includes the homeless, those facing financial challenges, those without families, and newcomers to Canada.

For a Google Map for locating Gord’s Place on 84 James Street in St. Catharines’ downtown area click on –  https://www.google.ca/maps/place/Gord’s+Place/@43.1594606,-79.2461119,15z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0xf2056d8ac4dbed62 .

Niagara College is the lead sponsor of this year’s event. Other sponsors include the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce, Lancaster Brooks & Welch, and Brock University.

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

 

Innovation Leader, Social Justice Advocate Wendy Cukier Will Be Next President Of Brock University

News from Brock University

December 17th, 2015

Brock University, St. Catharines, is pleased to announce the appointment of renowned scholar and Brock alumna Wendy Cukier PhD, MBA, MA, BA, DU (hon) LLD (hon) M.S.C. as its sixth President and Vice-Chancellor. Cukier, currently Vice-President Research and Innovation at Ryerson University in Toronto, is an internationally respected researcher, expert in emerging technology and innovation and advocate for social justice.

Wendy Cukier to begin a new journey as Brock University's 6th President and Vice Chancellor in September, 2016

Wendy Cukier to begin a new journey as Brock University’s 6th President and Vice Chancellor in September, 2016

She will join Brock as President and Vice-Chancellor on September 1st, 2016.

The announcement was made today by John Suk, Chair of Brock’s Board of Trustees, and culminates a year-long search to select a successor for President Jack Lightstone. The search was overseen by an internal committee led by Joe Robertson, immediate past chair of the Board.

Cukier will be the first female President in Brock’s 51-year history, as well as the first Brock graduate to hold the University’s highest office. Today’s announcement comes two months after Brock installed First Nations filmmaker Shirley Cheechoo as its first-ever female Chancellor. Continue reading

Mad Magazine Has Trump’s Number – Even If Many American People Don’t

A Brief One from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

December 17th, 2015

You had to know that sooner or later, with Donald Trump being the self-obsessed, circus ringmaster that he is, that America’s poster boy for all that is MAD – the one and only Alfred E. Neuman – would do a number on him.

And MAD’s number on Trump, whose slogan for his campaign for the U.S. presidency is ‘Make America Great Again’, is ONE – as in the magazine’s pic of the number one “dumbest person, event or thing” of 2015.mad mag donald trump

Inside the magazine’s covers, Alfred’s mad cap team of writers had this to say about the Donald under a heading that read ‘The Art Of The Heel’; “Donald Trump’s mouth is just like the hose that drain’s your septic tank – you never know what is going to come out of it, but you know it won’t be good. Whether insulting Mexicans, veterans and women or ridiculing Rand Paul, Roger Ailes and Jeb, candidate Trump takes delight in travelling around the country in his Trump logo-emblazoned helicopter, leaving voters waist-deep in his verbal diarrhea.” Continue reading

NDP Calls On Ontario Government To Make School Buses Safer For Young Riders

An Open Letter from Ontario’s New Democratic Party To The Province’s Education Minister Liz Sandals

December 16th, 2015

Dear Minister,

Students and families across Ontario were shocked by this month’s scathing Auditor General Report. Several sections of this report highlight serious shortcomings in your department and that of the Ministry of Transportation.school-bus

I am calling on you to take the recommendations of the Auditor General seriously and to immediately act in several key areas that will help ensure the safety of students as they travel to and from school.

Notably, the Auditor General is concerned that you have taken a “hands off approach,” to safety by not setting guidelines for collision and incidents reporting among transportation consortia. Approximately one in eight school buses, carrying 830,000 kids annually, was involved in a crash. Continue reading

Ring In The New Year In Niagara, Ontario’s Queen Victoria Park

An Open Invite to You from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission and the City of Niagara Falls

Niagara Falls, Ontario, December 16th, 2015  – The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) and the City of Niagara Falls, along with its Niagara Falls New Year’s Eve event partners invite the public to join the celebrations and be part of one of Canada’s longest running New Year’s Eve festivities and concert series, taking place in Queen Victoria Park.

New Years fireworks over the Falls. A Niagara Parks Commission file photo

New Years fireworks over the Falls. A Niagara Parks Commission file photo

This year’s concert line-up will feature musical performances by Canadian rock artists Down with Webster, along with Alan Doyle, best known for his work as lead singer for Newfoundland’s beloved band Great Big Sea. The show continues with Dennis DeYoung, founding member of the famed rock group Styx, and concludes with Canadian rock icon Tom Cochrane and Red Rider. This highly anticipated free show will begin at 8:00 p.m., in Queen Victoria Park, overlooking the majestic American and Canadian Horseshoe Falls. Continue reading

City of Welland In Niagara, Ontario Fined $150,000 After City Worker Dies From Infection Following Injuries

News from the Ontario Ministry of Labour

Welland, Ontario, December 16th, 2015The City of Welland has pleaded guilty and has been fined $150,000 after a city worker died after being critically injured on the job and subsequently contracted an infection from the incident.justice gavel

On December 9, 2013, the worker was part of a crew of municipal employees sent to a site located at 255 Willson Road in Welland to correct a sewer backup. The crew determined that the sewer/access cover had a blocked lateral pipe and attempted to clear the blockage using a Vactor truck equipped with a rodding system, a process where a vacuum hose sucks waste materials out of the sewer/pipes and into a storage tank and a pressure hose loosens the blockage to facilitate suction.

The crew could only empty approximately six feet of waste and the workers could not actually see the pipe or blockage. The crew then attempted to use the pressure hose to loosen the blockage in the pipe. Continue reading

Ontario NDP Leader Calls For Establishment Of Anti-Racism Secretariat

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

From the Office of Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

December 16th, 2015

Queen’s Park, Ontario – Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath is calling for the creation of an Ontario Anti-Racism Secretariat. The NDP will introduce a motion calling for the creation of the secretariat in the next session.

“Ontario is at its best when we’re all included and nobody is left behind. That’s why I am calling for the government to create the Ontario Anti-Racism Secretariat,” said Horwath. “Too many people in Ontario face racism in one form or another; by establishing the secretariat we can take positive steps to challenge inequality and make choices that focus on creating equality and fairness.” Continue reading

PM Calls It “One Of Darkest Chapters In Canadian History”

Statement By Prime Minister On Release Of The Final Report Of The Truth And Reconciliation Commission

December 15, 2015, Ottawa, Ontario

The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, issued the following statement after receiving the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission:

“The Indian residential school system, one of the darkest chapters in Canadian history, has had a profoundly lasting and damaging impact on Indigenous culture, heritage, and language. As a father and a former teacher, I am overwhelmingly moved by these events.

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

“Seven years ago the Government of Canada apologized for this abhorrent system. The apology is no less true, and no less timely, today. The Government of Canada ‘sincerely apologizes and asks forgiveness of the Aboriginal peoples of this country for failing them so profoundly’.

“Today, on behalf of the Government of Canada, I have the honour of accepting the Commission’s Final Report. It is my deepest hope that this report and its findings will help heal some of the pain caused by the Indian residential school system and begin to restore the trust lost so long ago. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Industry Fined $150,000 In Death Of Worker In Port Colborne

News from Ontario’s Ministry of Labour

St. Catharines, Ontario, December 15th, 2015 – Ingredion Canada Incorporated has pleaded guilty and has been fined $150,000 in the death of a worker who was crushed while riding a rail car.justice gavel

Part of the Ingredion workplace in Port Colborne contains a rail spur owned by the company that allows rail cars access to the facility to be loaded with product (the company is a maker of fructose sweeteners).

Two workers are involved in the movement of rail cars at the facility. One worker operates the Trackmobile; the other ensures the path is clear for the moving cars, and is also responsible for engaging and disengaging the hand brake, located at the end of a rail car. Continue reading

A Few Thoughts On The Latest Newsroom Massacre And What It Means For Democracy And Our Sense Of Community

By Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

The evisceration of news departments in this region and others across Canada and the United States just goes on and on and on and on.

So much so that we may not be far away from the day when there are no professional reporters left working in our communities at all – a circumstance that will surely tickle those politicians and others who’d feel a heck of a lot bolder doing whatever without any watchdogs from the fourth and fifth estates around.

Lauran Sabourin, a long-time reporter of affairs in Niagara for CHCH news

Lauran Sabourin, a long-time reporter of affairs in Niagara for CHCH news

The latest news department to get run through the meat cutters was the one at CHCH TV in Hamilton/Niagara that began the morning of Friday, December 11th with more than 150 full- and part-time staff and ended the day around a declaration of bankruptcy and a new corporate owner – something rather fittingly called Channel Zero – offering to hire back about 70 of them.

The rest – many of them veteran journalists with families and strong roots in the community – were herded out the door with no severance pay and low chances of finding another gig in a field where there are less than half as many jobs across the continent than there were two decades ago.

But no hard feelings and, while we’re at it, enjoy the rest of the holiday season.

Two members of the CHCH news staff who were among the casualties in this massacre were two people I had the pleasure to work beside on some of the same stories going back to my early years as the environment reporter at the once good St. Catharines Standard three decades ago. So I’m declaring my bias here as one of many of fellow journalists in this region who had a great deal of respect for these people – a respect, I would stress, that was well deserved because they earned it through years of good reporting on issues that mattered to our communities. Continue reading

Paris Climate Deal Misses Mark On Many Crucial Fronts

An Initial Analysis Of The COP21 Climate Agreement

“This agreement coming out of the Paris COP falls far short of what is needed to actually address our climate crisis.”

From Brent Patterson, Political Director, Council of Canadians, a nation-wide public advocacy group

December 2015 – A new draft climate agreement has been reached this past December 12th, 2015 – the last day of the COP21 talks in Paris.campaigns

Unfortunately, despite the framing of this agreement as “ambitious and equitable”, it falls well short of what is needed in terms of real commitments to emission reductions, keeping fossil fuels in the ground, adequate financing for mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage, recognition of human rights, and protection from transnational corporate lawsuits. Continue reading

In Wake Of Paris Climate Agreement, ‘What Matters Now Is What We Do Next’

“It is absolutely true that Canada announcing support for 1.5 degrees mid-way through the conference made a huge difference in keeping that target in the treaty.  I heard that from friends and contacts around the world.” – Elizabeth May  

A Statement from Paris from Canada’s Green Party Leader Elizabeth May on the morning of Sunday, December 13th, 2015, after 13 days and 3 all-nighters

The Paris Agreement is accepted.  The COP21 decision is agreed.  What does it all mean?

Canada's Green Party Leader Elizabeth May was in Paris for entire Climate Summit

Canada’s Green Party Leader Elizabeth May was in Paris for entire Climate Summit

I have been working on climate for the last 29 years.   In that time I have seen lip service from most politicians, courage from a few politicians, venality from some corporations (Exxon come to mind), leadership from others.

I have witnessed opportunity after opportunity squandered for political expediency.  Agreements signed and then ignored.   Overall we have procrastinated and lost decades when we could have averted the climate crisis nearly entirely.

Now we are in it.  With loss of life and devastating droughts and heat waves, extreme weather events, sea level rise and loss of Arctic ice and permafrost.  No longer are we arguing about a future problem.  We have already changed the climate, so the debate of 2015 is “can we avoid the very worst of the climate crisis?  Can we ensure the survival of human civilization?  Can we save millions of species?” To do so requires transitioning off fossil fuels.  Continue reading

Canada Joins World In Reaching ‘Historic, Ambitious And Balanced’ Climate Agreement – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Statement By The Prime Minister Of Canada On Successful Conclusion Of Paris Climate Conference

  • “Here at home I will meet with the Premiers within the next 90 days to work on a plan to meet our international commitments in tackling climate change and transitioning to a low carbon economy.” – Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Ottawa, Ontario – The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, issued the following statement this December 12th, 2015 on the successful conclusion of the Paris Climate Conference:

Members of the Canadian Youth Climate Delegation work to make their views known in Paris. Visit the coalion's website at www.ourclimate.ca

Members of the Canadian Youth Climate Delegation work to make their views known in Paris. Visit the coalion’s website at http://www.ourclimate.ca

“The world gathered in Paris to fight climate change and its devastating impacts on our earth, our health, our economy, and our very way of life. We also gathered with a common vision to leave a sustainable planet for our children and grand children.

“I am very pleased that Canada and 194 other countries were able to reach a historic, ambitious, and balanced agreement to fight climate change. Together with our international partners, we agreed to strengthen the global response to limit global average temperature rise to well below 2 degrees Celsius as well as pursue efforts to limit the increase to 1.5 degrees. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Poducer’s Holiday Season Tale – The Curse Of Clara – Premiers On CBC TV Monday, December 14th

See It Again On CBC TV This Coming Christmas Day

And Come See It For Free This December 17th At The Niagara Artist Centre In St. Catharines

Niagara At Large congratulates Vickie Fagan of Niagara, Ontario for her successful role in producing and writing The Curse Of Clara – A Holiday Tale.

Now here are the details on this production and when and where you can see it.curse of clara-logo

Toronto, Ontario, December 2015 – Smiley Guy Studios is decking the halls with THE CURSE OF CLARA: A HOLIDAY TALE, a new original animated special airing on CBC-TV as part of its holiday programming lineup. A young dancer’s dreams come true when ballet, hockey and the holidays converge.

Inspired by the autobiographical short story “The Curse of Clara or My Big Fat Disappointment” by Vickie Fagan, the 30-minute special is set against the backdrop of The National Ballet of Canada’s The Nutcracker and the 1972 Summit Series, a Canada-USSR showdown that shaped hockey history. Continue reading

Climate Change Agreement Reached In Paris

Canada, United States And All Other Nations Sign Agreement To Keep Global Warming Below 1.5 Degrees Celsius

From Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

News of the signing of an international climate change agreement just came out of Paris around 8 a.m. our time on this Saturday, December 12th, and everyone interested is still scrambling to review to digest it and determine its implications.

Shoes from around the world in Paris to press for a solid climate agreement

Shoes from around the world in Paris to press for a solid climate agreement

 

Niagara At Large will have much in the way of analysis on this deal, at least parts of which (for the first time for a global climate change pact) are legally binding.

For now, we leave you with a link to the draft agreement and a list of a few of the key features of it.

Click on the following link to read the draft agreement –http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2015/cop21/eng/da01.pdf . 

Here are some key points from the draft:

  1. As expected, the agreement commits the world to limiting warming to well below 2C but to try to keep it below 1.5C.
  2. Countries will be requested to revisit their existing pledges for emission cuts by 2020, and every five years thereafter.
  3. On the thorny issue of money, the legally-binding part of the agreement requires that developed countries (as defined in 1992) shall continue to provide finance to developing countries to help them adapt to climate change and cut their emissions. The most contentious part – how much money – is in the non-legally binding ‘decision text’. Currently, developed countries are obliged to ‘mobilise’ $100bn a year of public and private finance to help developing countries by 2020. The decision says they “intend to continue their existing collective mobilization goal through 2025” and then by 2025 set a new goal “from a floor of $100 billion”.

 (NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.)

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

Happy 100th Birthday, Frank!

“I’ll be seeing you in ev’ry lovely summer’s day, In everything that’s light and gay, I’ll always think of you that way, I’ll find you in the morning sun and when the night is new, I’ll be looking at the moon, but I’ll be seeing you.”

  • Lyrics from one of Frank Sinatra’s earliest hits.

From Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

By September of 1941, most of Europe was under Nazi occupation and then-British Prime Minister Winston Churchill was pressing U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon MacKenzie King for more supplies and military support as his country braced for itself for a possible invasion of his country’s shores.

Frank Sinatra during those golden years at Capitol, with Nelson Riddle in the 1950s.

Frank Sinatra during those golden years at Capitol, with Nelson Riddle in the 1950s.

On a lighter note, baseball fans everywhere were tuned into radio sportscasts as the Brooklyn Dodgers were on their way to winning the National League pennant and facing World Series showdown against their arch rivals, the New York Yankees and their star slugger Joe DiMaggio.

Yet for a few hours on September 19th of that year, war and baseball were far from the minds of thousands of bobby soxers – the term used for teeny boppers in those days – as they packed main floor and balcony of Buffalo, New York’s grand old Shea’s Theatre to see one of the most popular bands of the era and a young singer who was becoming an international sensation.

The band, featuring one of the all-time great drummers, Buddy Rich, was led by jazz trombonist and composer Tommy Dorsey and the singer was Frank Sinatra, and my mother, then 15, was in the audience that day when this first of a brand new breed of pop singers took the stage to fans who let out screams every time he performed one of his hits, just as later generations would during an Elvis Presley or Beatles performance. Continue reading

Statement By Canada’s The Prime Minister On The Arrival Of Syrian Refugees

“Canada is doing the right thing by providing refuge for those so desperately seeking safety.” – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Toronto, Ontario, December 11th, 2015 – The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, issued the following statement after welcoming Syrian refugees to Canada late last night:

“Today, we welcome many Syrian refugees who were forced to flee their homeland because of war and conflict. Canada is doing the right thing by providing refuge for those so desperately seeking safety.

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greets Syrian refugees arriving late this December 10th at Pearson International Airport in Toronto

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greets Syrian refugees arriving late this December 10th at Pearson International Airport in Toronto

“This is a significant step in fulfilling our plan to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada in the coming months. It also demonstrates our commitment to refugee resettlement, which is part of Canada’s proud humanitarian tradition.

“I know that, even for those facing extreme hardship, tragedy, and war in their country, leaving home is very difficult. The transition to a new life in a new country can be a very daunting process.

“Let me reassure those coming to our country that our communities and all orders of government will work closely, together, to make it easier for you to adjust to these changes and become full participants in Canadian society. While it might be much colder outside than back home, I am sure that you will find warm welcomes from your new neighbours.

“In the years to come, Canadians will look back with enormous pride on the contributions made by Syrian refugees and how they have made our country even better.”

For more information about the Government of Canada’s plan to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees, please visit the #WelcomeRefugees website.]

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Canadians Will Pay More for Food in 2016 – University of Guelph Food Price Report

“The struggling Canadian currency, climate factors and consumer trends will all play important roles,” report says.

News from the University of Guelph’s Food Institute

Guelph, Ontario, December 2015 – Canadian consumers will have to pay more for food next year, according to the 2016 Food Price Report  from University of Guelph researchers.food on grocery shelves

After a year in which a lagging Canadian dollar led to substantial price jumps for many products, shoppers will face smaller increases in 2016, especially for meats, fruits and nuts, and vegetables.

Overall, the researchers expect prices increases averaging two to four per cent, above the general rate of inflation.

The struggling Canadian currency, climate factors and consumer trends will all play important roles in 2016, said Prof. Sylvain Charlebois, lead author of the sixth annual report from the Food Institute of the University of Guelph. Continue reading

Health Care Wait Times In Ontario – What is the Real Story?

From the Desk of Natalie Mehra, Executive Director of the province-wide public interest group, the Ontario Health Coalition

December 2015 – This past December 8th, a high-profile report tracking health care wait times was released from the Wait Times Alliance. Eliminating Code Gridlock in Canada’s Health Care System, is a credible summary and a useful addition to public policy decisions about health care planning. It is written by an alliance of physician specialists’ organizations to track progress in wait times and public reporting.

Ontario Health Coalition executive director Natalie Mehra

Ontario Health Coalition executive director Natalie Mehra

Leeching off of the publicity for the day, the Fraser Institute — a pro-privatization think-tank (see Who Funds the Fraser Institute? here and here) — also released their annual wait times report. Releasing this report at the same time as the release of the Wait Times Alliance Report may garner extra media, but it is bound to cause confusion. 

Both reports are about wait times in health care. But the similarities stop there.

The methodology of the Fraser Institute is based on the subjective viewpoints of the small proportion of physician specialists who answer their surveys. If you read the methodology section of their report, you will find that their response rate is only 21%. That is, they received answers from just one in five of the physicians they surveyed. Continue reading

Statement By The Prime Minister Of Canada On Former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney Receiving South Africa’s Highest Award To A Foreign National

From the Office of Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

(A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – We can say what we want about former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney. I still can’t forgive him for stuffing the country’s Senate chambers with a rat pack of partisan hacks and cronies, shoving the regressive Goods & Services Tax (GST) down our gullets, and negotiating a North American Free Trade Agreement that provided rocket fuel for industries to leave our country for regions south of the U.S./Mexican border where labour and environmental laws were either weak or non-existent at the time and where wages were many times lower.

Nelson Mandela visits Canada to thank the Mulroney government and Canadian people for pressing for his release from a prison in his native South Afica

Nelson Mandela visits Canada in 1990 to thank the Mulroney government and Canadian people for pressing for his release from a prison in his native South Afica

And that’s just to name a few of the items on Mulroney’s I take issue with.

Yet on one key file – that of expressing public condemnation for South Africa’s now-abolished system of racial segregation (known in that country as apartheid) and the imprisonment of civil rights icon Nelson Mandela, Brian Mulroney shone above all of his closest political allies and friends, including then-British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and U.S. president Ronald Reagan who refused to say or do a thing to end the system or win Mandela’s freedom. Continue reading

Cover Of New York City Tabloid Nails Trump On His Muslim Bashing

From Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 9th, 2015

There’s no possibility way he can win, his critics say. There isn’t?

He’s been running for half a year now and for most of that time, he’s been ahead in the polls.

Donald Trump, drawing cheers and high poll numbers for sweeping political correctness aside and telling it the way he sees it.

Donald Trump, drawing cheers and high poll numbers for sweeping political correctness aside and telling it the way he sees it.

So consider the possibility that in little more than a year from now, we Canadians could have a major-league bigot with a record of trashing anyone who gets in his way running the country right next to us.

And won’t that be great for Canada/U.S. relations – unless we just tow the line and go along with him on everything from banning the immigration of all people Muslim to , as he’s put it, bombing the “sh–” out of ISIS and anyone else(most likely Muslim’s)  who happens to get in the way.

I’m talking about billionaire tycoon and U.S. Republican presidential contender Donald Trump and all his latest bluster about blocking every person of the Muslim faith from entry to his country – an idea that has him strengthening his lead in the polls has even been embraced by some Canadians, judging by letters to the editor and calls to radio talk shows.

Through the stench of all this, the New York Daily News, a newspaper tabloid that has also hitting hard on gun violence lately, published a front page this December 9th that gets two thumbs up from this Canadian, anyway. It pins the donkey tail right where it belongs so I share it below for all of you who may be wish all here it is below.trump new york daily news

Trump also has England swinging at him for recently saying that police are afraid to go into some London neighbourhoods because of “radicalized” Muslims that have moved in their.

That claim prompted the following response from London’ England’s Mayor Boris Johnson;

London, England Mayor Boris Johnson rips into Trump

London, England Mayor Boris Johnson rips into Trump

“As a city where more than 300 languages are spoken, London has a proud history of tolerance and diversity and to suggest there are areas where police officers cannot go because of radicalisation is simply ridiculous,” Johnson said.

“Crime has been falling steadily both in London and in New York ,” he added, and “the only reason I wouldn’t go to some parts of New York is the real risk of meeting Donald Trump,”

That was quite a shot coming from the mayor of one of the world’s major cities. But none of that sort of criticism or editorial  punches from the media seems to matter to Americans who are so put off with establishment politicians and the mainstream media that growing numbers of them turn to Trump every time another politician or journalist takes a run at him.

Like Time magazine noted in a cover story Trump’s rhetoric, however repugnant it may seem to some, is tapping into a fear and anger that is out there and the rest of us are left to “deal with it.”

And that shouldn’t just mean how do we deal with the possibility of a President Donald Trump saying and doing things that may not only have a profound impact on his country, but on ours and othes around the world.

We also need to deal with whatever put all of that fear and anger there in the first place.

At least some of that fear and anger may have been caused by the same politicians and m media outlets that are now bashing Trump.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

(NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.)

Public Poll In Niagara, Ontario – Urban Sprawl Needs To Be Curbed

  • “A number of municipalities want to pave over the province’s treasured Greenbelt, but this recent public polling reveals that residents are just not on board.” – Burkhard Mausberg, CEO, Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation

 News from Andreea Nicoara and the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation

December, 2015 – Recent polling in Niagara Region shows that more than nine out of 10 respondents (91 per cent) believe it’s important to limit urban sprawl. Conducted between August 19 and September 8, 2015,

The green area on this map highlights the Niagara lands within Ontario's protected Greenbelt circling Lake Ontario and the Greater Golden Horseshoe. In Niagara, low-density sprawl, sanctioned by municipal governments, is pressing right up against the boundaries of these protected lands.

The green area on this map highlights the Niagara lands within Ontario’s protected Greenbelt circling Lake Ontario and the Greater Golden Horseshoe. In Niagara, low-density sprawl, sanctioned by municipal governments, is pressing right up against the boundaries of these protected lands.

Environics online polling also found that nine out of 10 respondents in rural communities agree that growth can be accommodated by making more efficient use of existing lands in urban areas.

Additionally, three out of four respondents overall convey that the boundaries of the Greenbelt should be preserved forever.

These polling results come on the heels of the release of 87 recommendations by an expert advisory panel chaired by David Crombie. The panel was tapped by the Ontario government to review the Greenbelt Plan and three other land use plans. Continue reading

It Was 35 Years Ago This December. … Hello Bruce, Goodbye John

A Brief Remembrance of John Lennon by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 8th, 2015

On a crisp Thursday night in Buffalo, New York, 35 years ago this past December 4th, I was climbing up to my seat in the blue section of the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium – more warmly known to locals as “the Aud” – for one of the most anticipated rock concerts of the year.

John Lennon

John Lennon

On that night in 1980, Bruce Springsteen and his E Street Band took the stage in front of more than 15,000 cheering fans for another show in their now-legendary “River Tour” and Bruce counted “one, two, three, four” and ripped right into one of his anthems, “Born To Run,” to cheers that were ear-piercing before he finished singing the first line.

The energy and wealth of great sounds from “the boss,” his powerful sax man Clarence Clemons and other band mates, rolled on for two hours before the lights dimmed and the performers left the stage to every fan in the place clapping and shouting for more. Continue reading

Ontario Advisory Panel Tables Recommendations For Planning Healthier, More Prosperous Communities Throughout The Greater Golden Horseshoe

  • It’s time for Niagara’s local municipalities and regional government to “get their act together” on public transit – Debbie Zimmeran, an Advisory Panel member, CEO of the Grape Growers of Ontario and former Grimsby regional council and chair of the Region of Niagara

By Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 8th, 2015

A six-person advisory panel, hosting former Toronto mayor David Crombie as its chair and Debbie Zimmerman, CEO of the Grape Growers of Ontario and a former Grimsby councillor and chair of Niagara’s regional government as one of

Advisory panel member and former Niagara Regional Chair Debbie Zimmerman

Advisory panel member and former Niagara Regional Chair Debbie Zimmerman

its members, tabled a lengthy report this December 7th, listing 87 recommendations for updating provincial plans for protecting watersheds, greenspaces and farms, and for making communities in Niagara and other regions in the Greater Golden Horseshoe healthier, more prosperous places to live, work and play.  

“We must step up our efforts to curb sprawl, build complete communities, grow the Greenbelt, support agriculture and address traffic congestion,” states an executive summary of the report the panel drafted after more than 10 months of consultation and submissions received from thousands of individuals and groups across the Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH).

“We owe it to current and future generations to ensure that the GGH supports healthy lifestyles, a high quality of life, a sustainable environment and a prosperous economy,” adds the panel which concludes its report by urging the government to act on its recommendations “in a comprehensive and timely fashion” to strengthenfour provincial plans it was instructed by the province to review. Continue reading

Canadians Could Soon See One Of The Most Dangerous Men Running One Of The World’s Most Powerful Countries – Right Across The Border From Us!

  • If That Happens, Maybe We Should Build A Wall Along The Border And Make Donald Trump Pay For It

A Commentary by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

December 8th, 2015

When billionaire real estate baron and realty show celebrity Donald Trump announced his candidacy for President of the United States last spring, many of that country’s political pundits wrote him off as a clown who would say or do something to blow his campaign up by the end of the summer.

The front page of the New York Daily News this past June, after Donald Trump announced he was running for U.S. president.

The front page of the New York Daily News this past June, after Donald Trump announced he was running for U.S. president.

But the pundits turned out to be just as wrong about that as many of them were when a junior senator from Illinois named Barack Obama announced his candidacy for the nation’s top job in 2007 and their out-of-the gate prediction was that he, with his lack of political experience, his middle name ‘Hussein’ and his black skin, had little or no chance to win.

When Trump stood in his golden tower on New York City’s Fifth Avenue last June and announced his decision to run while Neil Young’s ‘Rockin’ In The Free World’ (appropriated for the occasion without the artist’s consent) was welling up in the background, he immediately drew fire from what liberals are left in the America by declaring that he was going to build a wall along the border his country shares with Mexico to keep what he described as all of the murderers, rapists and drug dealers out. Continue reading

Canada’s New Prime Minister Pledges “Renewed Nation-To-Nation Relationship” With Aboriginal Peoples

A Statement by the Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after delivering a speech to the Assembly of First Nations Special Chiefs Assembly

Gatineau, Quebec, December 8th, 2015 – The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, issued the following statement after delivering a speech today to the Assembly of First Nations Special Chiefs Assembly in Gatineau, Quebec.

Years of lobbying Canada's recently defeated Harper government for a public inquiry on murdered and missing aboriginal women and girls went nowhere. Now there may finally be action

Years of lobbying Canada’s recently defeated Harper government for a public inquiry on murdered and missing aboriginal women and girls went nowhere. Now there may finally be action

“There is no relationship more important to me – and to Canada – than the one with First Nations, the Métis Nation, and Inuit.

“It is time for a renewed, nation-to-nation relationship with First Nations peoples: one that is based on the understanding that the constitutionally-guaranteed rights of First Nations are a sacred obligation that we carry forward. This obligation is based on respect, co-operation, and partnership; it is guided by the spirit and intent of the original treaty relationship; and it respects inherent rights, treaties and jurisdictions, and the decisions of our courts.

“Bringing about real change will take more than just individual people – or even individual governments. What is needed is nothing less than a total renewal of the relationship between Canada and the First Nations peoples.

“I am also proud to say that, as promised, we have begun the process to create a national public inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada.

“A priority moving forward will be to make significant investments in First Nations education. We will deliver increased funding for First Nations education and we will work on education reforms for First Nations children that are led by First Nations.

“We will lift the two per cent cap on funding for First Nations programs. It is time for a new fiscal relationship with First Nations that gives these communities sufficient, predictable, and sustained funding.

“In partnership with Indigenous communities, the provinces, territories, and other vital partners, we will also fully implement the calls to action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, starting with the implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.  

“Finally, we will conduct a full review of the legislation unilaterally imposed on Indigenous peoples by earlier governments.

“Working together as partners, I am confident that we can make meaningful and immediate progress on the issues that matter most to First Nations communities.”

From the Prime Minister’s Web Siteavailable at http://www.pm.gc.ca/

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

(NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.)

Ontario’s Tories And NDP Are Driving The Wrong Way On A Congested Highway In Their Opposition To High-Occupancy Toll Lanes

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

When the Ontario government set up high-occupancy vehicle lanes – HOVs for short – to ease highway congestion around Greater Toronto Area during last summer’s Pan American Games, former Toronto mayor and city councillor Rob Ford boldly confessed that he violated the rules for using them.

HOT lanes for reducing highway congestion opeating in the Washington, D.C. area.

HOT lanes for reducing highway congestion opeating in the Washington, D.C. area.

“These HOV lanes are a complete disaster,” said Ford of the province’s decision to dedicate one lane on some of the multi-lane, 400-series highways around the GTA to vehicles with at least three people in them. Fort admitted using them while driving alone and whenever he couldn’t spot “cops over (his) shoulder” because they were less congested and as he put it; “I have to get to where I have to go.”

One would expect that kind of brazen opposition to the concept of lanes dedicated to vehicles which (by virtue of carrying more than one person) place a lighter carbon footprint on the planet from a character like Rob Ford or from another guy last summer who apparently buckled manicans on his car seats in an attempt to get away with using them. Continue reading

High-Occupancy Toll Lanes Pilot Coming To Ontario’s QEW Highway In Summer 2016

Province’s Pilot Project Offers New Option For Quicker Travel

News from the Government of Ontario

Queen’s Park, December 2015 – A High-Occupancy Toll, or HOT, lane pilot project will begin on a section of the QEW between Trafalgar Road in Oakville and Guelph Line in Burlington in summer 2016 to help manage congestion and add another option for travelers.s-QEW-large

The pilot is the first step of Ontario’s plan to implement HOT lanes throughout the region. In this pilot project, existing High-Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes on the QEW will be converted to HOT lanes.

Carpools of two or more occupants will still be able to use the QEW HOT lanes for free, while single occupant drivers will now have the option to purchase a permit to use them. A limited number of permits will be available to allow single occupant drivers to use the HOT lanes during the pilot. Continue reading