Author Archives: dougdraper

Cutting Via Rail Transit Services Another Giant Step Backwards

A Foreword by NAL publisher Doug Draper

In an age when growing numbers of individuals and groups around the world are pointing to public transit as more environmentally friendly alternative to cars, you may already know that Canada’s Via Rail has recently announced cuts to its rail transit services, including those running between the Niagara, Ontario region and the Greater Toronto Area.

This recent announcement came before a not-for-profit U.S. group called the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy, ranked Canada 11th out of 12 industrialized nations around the world when it comes to the use of public transit and other technologies to conserve or reduce the use of non-renewable energy. Continue reading

Canada/United States Turning To Advanced Technology To Ease Border-Crossing Waits

 By Doug Draper

 The Canadian and U.S. governments are installing new technology at the Peace and Queenston-Lewiston border bridges and along car and truck routes approaching the bridges in an effort to reduce wait times for people crossing the border.

A line-up of traffic – and this isn’t even a big one – at the Peace Bridge crossing at Fort Erie, Ontario and Buffalo, New York. File Photo

 An announcement of the installation of the technology was made at the Peace Bridge crossing in Fort Erie, Ontario this July 17 by Canada’s Justice Minister and Niagara Falls MP Rob Nicholson.

 “Canada and the United States are taking action to promote the safe, secure and efficient movement of people and goods across the border,” said Nicholson. “This technology will make cross-border travel easier for Canadians and facilitate trade by providing reliable, up-to-date information to help drivers plan and choose the fastest crossing.” Continue reading

Canada’s Party Dominated System Is In Desperate Need Of Electoral Reform

By Will MacKenzie

As an observer of politicians and politics for the past 47 years, I have come to the conclusion that in order to bring about political reform in this country, we must start with electoral reform.

Ballots should have a space for “none of the above.”

The various political parties are too entrenched in their ways and ideology to change to meet the needs of the citizens of today.

The political parties will not change unless forced to. All one needs to do is look at the federal Liberal party and one can see the intense reluctance to change. Continue reading

Rodeos – A Celebration of Humanity’s Ruthlessness?

By Dan Wilson

Two recent news stories affirm the callousness and cruelty that is humankind. Both involve the exploitation, maiming and killing of animals by their owners, and sadly, both incidents are perfectly legal and supported by most people in our society.

An image from a CBC video of the latest chuckwagon mess at a rancid circus event for cowboy rednecks called the Calgary Stampede. These people care for horses the way plantation owners in the old American south said they cared for their slaves.

The first story is about the practice of tripping horses for human entertainment at rodeos south of the border. 

A video by SHARK (Showing Animals Respect and Kindness) was posted online depicting horses at the Jordan Valley Big Loop Rodeo in Oregon being lassoed and then tripped to show off the cowboys’ roping skills. Here’s the link:

http://eugeneweekly.com/blog/oregon-rodeo-horse-abuse

Did you watch the video? If not, please watch it right now: http://youtu.be/zmp8pkbU03I

Did it sicken you? Yet people in attendance are heard cheering and applauding. I don’t know how anyone could think this is fun to watch, but apparently lots of people – normal people by society’s standards – do. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Needs A Real Regional Transit System – And We Need It Now

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 My wife Mary recently returned from her first trip back to her homeland of Italy since leaving there with her family as a young child and one of the first things she discussed was the culture shock she felt after she got back down on the ground here.

Less than a year after the ribbon cutting for a three-year-pilot inter-municipal transit system in Niagara, Ontario, some reginoal councillors already want to pull the plug on it. File Photo from September, 2011 by Doug Draper

What she was talking the seemingly endless maze of roads and highways, with cars and truck buzzing in and out of clogged asphalt lots for box stores and strip malls, and in and out of the dead worm roads and cul de sacs for those those low-density, residential zones we so loosely describe as “planned communities” or “family-oriented neighbourhoods.” Continue reading

A Happy 50th To One Of The World’s Greatest Rock And Roll Bands – And To Keith Richards. It’s Amazing That He’s Still Around!

A Brief Note from Doug Draper 

“I can’t get no, I can’t get no … no satisfaction, no satisfaction! ”

Those words were among the first heard around the world by a London, England-based band called The Rolling Stones.

A cpver of one of their earliest albums

It was 50 years ago this July that The Rolling Stones, fronted by Mick Jagger, an ever-menacing survivor and blues/rock guitarist and composer Keith Richards, the late Brian Jones, bassist Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts, played their first gig in a club in their hometown of London.  A couple of years later, they were performing their gritty brand of rock and blues around the world. Continue reading

Ontario PC Leader Offers Condolences To Those Killed And Injured in Niagara Car Accident

Tim Hudak – A Statement On Tragic Pelham Car Accident 

The following is a statement by Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak on the deadly car accident that took place on Regional Road 20, west of Fonthill:

“On behalf of the Ontario PC Caucus, it is with great sadness that we learn the news of those involved in this most tragic and fatal car accident.

Ontario Conservative Leader and Niagara area MPP Tim Hudak

“My deepest condolences are especially with the family and friends who unknowingly said goodbye for the last time to the three individuals who died so unexpectedly. We also continue to pray for those who remain in serious condition.

“As the MPP for Niagara West-Glanbrook, it pains me to know that an accident of this magnitude has happened here in my own riding. I know all residents are in mourning. Devastating news like this truly hits our small town, and close knit community, hard.

“I want to acknowledge the brave EMS staff, fire fighters and police officers, who with such professionalism and care, arrived at the scene of this terrible accident to bring calm, resolve and reassurance to those left distraught and in fear.

“I know families will hold those impacted by this tragedy in their prayers.”  

 

Letters To The Editor Worth Another Read

(A Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – As a hopelessly addicted newspaper reader, one of the first sections of any newspaper I turn to is the editorial section, and what  I often check out first, even before I read the paper’s editorial opinions, are the letters to the editor.

To me, and as a columnist whose faults at least sometimes include being too wordy or long-winded, there is nothing I enjoy more than a letter to the editor that, in more than two or three paragraphs on an issue, just plain nails it.

Such is the case with the following letter to the editor, in my view, from the July 13, 2012 edition of The Globe and Mail, one of the last great daily newspaper left in Canada and, thankfully, not owned by Sun Media. Continue reading

Another Note On The NHS Mess

A Commentary by Doug Draper 

I’ve got to be honest. I’m getting kind of tired after all these years of writing about the nonsense coming out of the Niagara Health System.

Road widening and other costly infrastructure work underway near new NHS super hospital in west St. Catharines, Ontario. File photo by Doug Draper

There again, it is hard to let the story appearing on the front page of July edition of the St. Catharines Standard and its two Sun Media companion papers, the Niagara Falls Review and Welland Tribune. The story begins like this; There might yet be hope for pediatrics and obstetrics services with south Niagara’s hospitals. .. “Where there’s life, there’s hope,” Niagara Health System supervisor Kevin Smith said.

Well, excuse me Mr. NHS supervisor, but there is plenty of life in Niagara, Ontario’s southern tier to justify keeping pediatrics and obstetrics services there. There are more than 175,000 people if you include Niagara Falls in the mix with Welland, Port Colborne, Fort Erie and Wainfleet, and they were never told those services would be taken away until the NHS’s so-called ‘Hospital Improvement Plan’ was tabled four years ago this summer by the system’s former CEO Debbie Sevenpifer and her board full of brown-nosers and sycophants. Continue reading

Niagara At Large Joins The Dog Days Of Summer

A Brief Note from NAL publisher Doug Draper

During this relatively slow news period in July and August, this publisher will take a little more time to walk whatever open beaches we have left for the public to walk on in Niagara and, yes, I will be walking a few along the shores of my dear old home away from home, Cape Cod.

A favourite beach along the shores of Cape Cod Bay. Photo by Doug Draper

Therefore, we are going to kind of join the rest of the summer set in taking a little more easy during what we in the news business sometimes call ‘the dog days of summer.’

That does not mean Niagara At Large won’t be posting news and commentary on issues of interest and it certainly does not mean we will not be posting your responses to posts on this site or some of the news and commentary pieces we receive from contributors. It just means that we will be slowing down a little to do a little reflecting and recharging of our minds for what will likely be some challenging times ahead for our region, our country and for the world most of us wish to live a safe, peaceful and prosperous life in. Continue reading

Health Canada Launches Wind Turbine Noise And Health Study

(Niagara At Large is posting the following release from Health Canada for our readers’ information. The study is a response to ongoing concerns expressed by residents living near industrial-size wind turbines about the potential negative impacts of these facilities on their  quality of life and health.)

July 10, 2012
For immediate release

OTTAWA – Health Canada, in collaboration with Statistics Canada, will conduct a research study that will explore the relationship between wind turbine noise and health effects reported by, and objectively measured in, people living near wind power developments.

“This study is in response to questions from residents living near wind farms about possible health effects of low frequency noise generated by wind turbines,” said the Honourable Leona Aglukkaq, Minister of Health. “As always, our Government is putting the health and safety of Canadians first and this study will do just that by painting a more complete picture of the potential health impacts of wind turbine noise.” Continue reading

‘Art In The Gardens’ Returns To Niagara Parks’ Botanical Gardens

A Submission from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission 

Niagara Falls, Ontario, July 11 – The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC), in partnership with the Parkway Artist Guild (PAG), is pleased to announce the return of the annual Art in the Gardens event at the Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens. On July 14th and 15th, from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m., PAG artists will be on hand to showcase and sell their local artwork while demonstrating their skills in the beautiful setting of the Botanical Gardens.

The Horseshoe Falls from Niagara Park’s Table Rock area. Photo by Doug Draper

This year, the art show will also feature a free Children’s Paint Corner. Children of all ages are invited to try their hand at basic painting techniques with the help of a skilled PAG artist. All art supplies will be provided. Just bring your imagination. 

The Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens is located at 2565 Niagara Parkway, also home to the popular Butterfly Conservatory attraction. Continue reading

Enbridge Oil Spill Disaster May Help Sink Other Tar Sand Pipeline Proposals

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Opponents of plans by Canada’s Harper government and its corporate masters to build the Keystone pipeline from the Alberta tar sands to Texas and the Northern Gateway pipeline from the same hell hole of a place to the Pacific coast in British Columbia now have another powerful argument in their favour, courtesy of Enbridge Inc.

An aireal shot of the awful mess a leaking Enbridge oil pipeline made of the waters of Michiigan. The Calgary-based oil company is expected to pay $800 million or more in an attempt to clean this filth up, although some experts wonder if the ecosystem will ever fully recover in our lifetime.

In case you missed the July 10 nightly news broadcasts on CBC and numerous American channels, the Calgary, Alberta-based petroleum firm was blasted in a report prepared by the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board for its negligence in a major oil pipeline leak in Michigan two years ago. And it speaks to exactly the kind of concerns raised by environmental groups that have been written off as fear-mongers and enemies of Canadian interests by Harper and company over their opposition to the Keystone and Northern Gateway pipeline. Continue reading

Story On St. Catharines Mayor’s House Woes Serves No Public Interest

By Willy Noiles 

At what point does the public’s right to know cease? It’s a question I’ve been asking myself ever since a story appeared on the front page of one of Niagara, Ontario’s local daily newspapers detailing how the bank took over St. Catharines Mayor Brian McMullan’s home.

Brian McMullan, St. Catharines, Ontario mayor and chair of Canadian and U.S. cities around the Great Lakes advocating for the lakes, signs an agreement with Ontario Environment Minister and St. Catharines MPP to safeguard the lake waters in Quebec City a few weeks ago.

What point did publishing this story serve? Firstly, it was hardly ‘front page news’ according to the usual definition because the bank seized the property back in April and the story was running two-and-a-half months later. If it had been any other story about an event that took place two-and-a-half months ago, the reporter would’ve been lucky if it appeared on page four, if at all.

So why did the story warrant front page? One almost wonders if it was done to publicly embarrass the mayor. Continue reading

Our Neighbours To The Far South Celebrate 200 Years Of Canada/U.S. Peace

A Foreword by NAL publisher Doug Draper

I have got to be honest. I had my doubts, at first, whether remembering a blood, 200-year-old conflict between what was then a fledgling United States republic and an Upper and Lower Canada still under the yoke of the British Empire was a great way to “celebrate 200 years of peace.”

Americans and Canadians gather together at Georgia Peace Garden Ceremony for War of 1812

Yet the more I watch this bicentennial of the War of 1812 unfold, the more I come to the conclusion that this is one great way for two of the friendliest democracies in the world realise how fortunate we are to inhabit a continent together. My wife and I crossed the gaborder a few days ago, as we do almost every one or two weeks of the year, and we did the usual grumbling about wait times at homeland security and customs. But that is bullshit compared to what other parts of the world have to go through.

We are fortunate, we Canadians and Americans are, that we have this bond, although some on the extremes may not agree.

Here, this past July 4 in Georgia, in the community of St. Marys, the folks in that community dedicated a ‘Peace Garden’ to remember those who fought and died on both sides in the War of 1812.

Here is a submission from the Canada/U.S. Binational Business and Tourism Committee on this event.

Buffalo/Niagara/Georgia – On Wednesday, July 4, dignitaries from Canada and the U.S.

joined  community leaders in St. Marys Georgia to dedicate their 1812 Binational Heritage Peace Garden. St. Marys Garden is now the 10th of 23 Canadian and U.S. Peace Gardens that make up the new Binational Heritage Peace Garden Trail: a special initiative to commemorate the Bicentennial of the War of 1812 and 200 years of peace between Canada and the U.S.

The Georgia War of 1812 Peace Garrden

St. Marys is Georgia’s southernmost coastal city, and is the first Binational Peace Garden to be located beyond the Southern Great Lakes.  This community has many binational stories to share, from its Acadian history to the War of 1812 Battle of Point Peter that took place between January 11 and 15, 1815.  

The garden, originally the St. Marys EarthKeepers Memory Garden, is situated next to historic Oak Grove Cemetery.  It will be dedicated at 1 p.m. with a number of guests including Binational Alliance Executive Director Arlene White from Niagara, Canada, Robert Pengelly, Consul from the Canadian Consulate General in Atlanta, State Representative Jason Spencer, R-Woodbine, Civic, Business and Tourism Leaders, and a Navy Color Guard.  Both countries’ national anthems will be sung, and permanent signage for the garden will be unveiled.

 According to Alex Kearns, Chair of the St. Marys EarthKeepers and coodinator of the St. Marys Peace Garden project “This effort represents a wonderful economic and tourism opportunity for all of the communities involved. St. Marys has a deep connection to Canada through our history and our tourists and we celebrate this chance to further strengthen those ties by celebrating 200 years of mutual peace and cooperation between nations.”    

Beyond the Binational Peace Garden Trail, St. Marys Peace Garden is also paired with one in Fort Erie, Ontario, located along the Niagara River, at the mouth of Lake Erie, and the site of some of the most significant battles of the War of 1812.  Old Fort Erie, one of Canada’s historic sites operated by the Niagara Parks Commission, dedicated their Peace Garden on June 29 at the launch of the 26th Annual Binational Friendship Festival, with recognition of the special sister city relationship that has come about as a result of the Peace Garden initiative.

“The 1812 Bicentennial was definitely the catalyst for this project.  When we began in 2008, we had no idea how many communities would be interested in creating peace gardens or if we would have enough gardens to make a trail.  But by 2010 the initiative had grown beyond the binational Niagara Region to communities across the Southern Great Lakes.  With the inclusion of St. Marys, we have far exceeded our initial vision, and now anticipate more peace gardens along the Eastern seaboard and new opportunities to demonstrate our shared history and the many trade and tourism connections we have binationally throughout the U.S. and Canada”, advises Arlene White, Executive Director of the Binational Alliance, and Project Lead for this initiative. “We expect more than 60 bicentennial themed gardens will be launched by 2014, and we will continue to work with binational communities to create new peace gardens with a variety of binational peace themes in 2015 and beyond.” 

Other Peace Gardens being dedicated on the trail this year include: 

May 27 Victor, NY  

June 1 Burt, NY 

June 15 Leamington, ON 

June 16 Grimsby, ON, Sacket’s Harbor, NY 

June 21 Tecumseh, ON 

June 29 Fort Erie, ON 

June 29 Youngstown, NY 

July 19 Windsor, ON 

July 20 Colchester, ON 

July 22 Lancaster, NY 

Aug 9 Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON 

Aug (tbd) Lewiston, NY

Aug 26 Black Rock, Buffalo, NY 

Sept 1 Winery, Colchester, ON 

Sept 8 Olde Sandwich Towne, Windsor, ON 

Sept 15 Kingsville, ON 

Sept 22 Botanical Gardens, Buffalo NY 

Sept (tbd) Niagara University, NY 

Sept (tbd) Thamesville, ON

Oct 13 Amherstburg, ON – 2 sites 

Go to http://NAL July 4 to learn more about this legacy project.

(Niagara At Large invites you to share your thoughts on this post.)

 

Niagara, Ontario’s Regional Councillors Renew Their Support For A Mid-Peninsula Highway

By Doug Draper

Just when many Niagara, Ontario residents may have thought the two-decade old plan for a mid-peninsula highway was history, the controversial idea is back on the regional council agenda again.

Niagara,regional councils have  supported the idea of a ‘mid-peni highway’ going back to the 1990s when Debbie Zimmerman, still sitting on the council, championed it as regional chair.

At its July 5 council meeting, a clear majority of regional councillors, including mayors across Niagara, voted in favour of asking Ontario’s Ministry of Transportation to “accelerate” an environmental assessment review on what the ministry calls the ‘Niagara to GTA corridor’, but is often referred to as the mid-peninsula corridor or highway in the Niagara region.

As part of the council’s support for moving forward with the mid-pen corridor project, it also supported resolutions asking the ministry to “accelerate the placement of a highway designation on the proposed new corridor,” and to direct regional staff “to promote the mid-peninsula corridor, specifically the connection to Highway 401, south of John Monroe Airport” in the Hamilton area. Continue reading

Harper’s War On Environment Takes Aim On Research

By Mark Taliano

Cut off the serpent’s head to kill the “snake.”

Information streams in Canada have been polluted by science-denying misinformation for years now, but apparently the country’s Harper government thinks more toxins need to be added to an already murky corporate mix.

Canada’s Harper government aims to shut down federal environmental research work at the Experimental Lakes Area in Kenora, Ontario.

 How to accomplish such a soul-destroying task?  Simple.  Eliminate the source.  Cut off the source of science before the information reaches the information streams and “pollutes” his ambition to keep foreign investors happy and tar sands anarchy unregulated. 

First, and under the guise of austerity, Harper muzzled and then fired federal scientists.  The impacts to the scientists and their families are devastating, as are the continuing impacts toCanada’s environmental and economical stewardship.  Continue reading

Thumbs Up For Ontario Elementary Catholic Teachers’ Union

 By Doug Draper

 Here is one teachers union in Ontario that deserves top grades for its willingness to show some restraint and responsibility to the rest of the province’s taxpayers during tough economic times.

Ontario Education Minister Laurel Broten reaches wage freeze agreement with Catholic teachers union

This July 5, the union representing some 43,000 Catholic elementary school teachers across Ontario, agreed to accept the provincial government’s call for a two-year wage freeze for teachers and some significant concessions with respect to teachers’ benefits.

“This is a historic and transformational agreement that has been reached between government and the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Association,” the Ontario Liberal government’s education minister Laurel Broten told the CBC in a statement this July 5. “It talks the issues that we wet out to tackle when we began these provincial discussions.” Continue reading

Canadian Cabinet Shuffle Is A Non-Story – How Energy Efficient Light Bulbs Could Make What Is Left Of Our Democracy One Helluva Lot Cheaper

 A Commentary by Doug Draper 

It must be a pretty slow time for news in Canada when national newspapers and broadcasters are making Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s cabinet shuffle one of their lead stories.

Canadian parliamentary democracy at work

I’m serious when I say that this cabinet shuffle is a non-story. I mean does it really matter who sits on Harper’s cabinet? Every reporter and columnist – liberal or conservative – who has spent any length of time covering the way Harper does governance knows that he calls all of the shots anyway. You could have Curly, Larry and Moe, along with Homer Simpson and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in this prime minister’s cabinet, and it wouldn’t make any difference.

They are all, each and every one of them, no more than knobs on a seat. Trained seals. Whether they are a member of Harper’s cabinet, and every member of his caucus right down to the lowliest member of his caucus can’t even make a few statements about a historical plaque being unveiled in a park in their constituency without those statements first being filtered through the prime minister’s office.

So who cares who sits on Harper’s cabinet? And who cares who makes up his caucus of MPs, for that matter. In fact, we could save hundreds of millions of dollars a year in scarce money that could be used for health care or education for young people if we simply replaced all of these MPPs – each raking in $157,737 a year, not counting expenses – with a box of light bulbs that can be rigged up on the desk tops in front of their parliamentary seats. Continue reading

A Brief Tribute To Andy Griffith – Television’s Best Sheriff and Dad

NAL andy Griffiths

 

(A note from NAL publisher Doug Draper – At the dawn of the 1960s, following all of the black listing and cold war bluster of the 1950s, television viewers were introduced to a magical little town called Mayberry, where the town drunk Otis let himself in and out of the jail cell and the worst crime might involve a kid riding his bike on the sidewalk or some hick up in the hills running a still.

My brother Dave and I watched the Andy Griffith Show religiously and like millions of others, we were warmed over by the sheriff who never needed a gun and who was about the best TV model ever of a father for a son named Opie.

When I heard the news this July 3 that Andy Griffith had died earlier that day in his native state of North Carolina, I immediately thought of Dave and our times watching the Andy Griffith Show together. So I asked my brother, who also once visited the lot where the show was filmed and has collected practically every episode aired on DVD, to write this brief tribute.)

By Dave Draper

Yesterday, a lot of people felt like they lost a neighbor.

Mayberry, North Carolina may not have been the place where those people actually lived, but it certainly was a place that a lot of them wanted to live, or wished the place that they actually lived was more like. And the lost friend was the sheriff, Andy Taylor, a man of gentle wisdom, guided by the golden rule, and a sheriff who never carried a gun. But what sheriff would need a gun… with a deputy like Barney Fife (played by the late, great Don Knotts) who could ‘turn his whole body into a weapon’ when confronted with danger! Continue reading

You Are Invited To Join Niagara Park’s Annual War Of 1812 Battle of Chippawa Memorial Ceremony

A Submission from the Niagara Parks Commission

Niagara Falls, Ontario – On Thursday July 5, 2012, The Niagara Parks Commission and Chippawa Branch 396 of the Royal Canadian Legion will be conducting its annual memorial ceremony in honour of all those who served during the Battle of Chippawa. The ceremony is scheduled to begin at 7:00 p.m., at the Battle of Chippawa Monument, with NPC Chair Janice Thomson providing opening remarks followed by a special presentation by NPC Historian, Sherman Zavitz.

A previous ceremony at the Chippawa Battlefield Park in Niagara, Ontario.

Fought on July 5, 1814, the Battle of Chippawa was the opening engagement of the Niagara campaign, the longest and bloodiest military operation of the War of 1812. A memorial service is held on July 5 each year to commemorate those who fell in service of their nation – this pivotal battle cost the lives of about 200 American, British, Canadian and native warriors allied to both sides, most of whom are thought to be buried at the site. The Battle marked the first time American regulars faced British regulars in a stand-up military action fought in the open and many historians cite Chippawa as the birthplace of the modern American army. Continue reading

Wishing You A Happy Canada Day And Fourth Of July

As  residents on both sides of the Niagara River in our greater Niagara region celebrate Canada Day and the Fourth of July on the first long weekend of summer, Niagara At Large wishes everyone peace and happiness.

This photo of the Peace Bridge at night was submitted to Niagara At Large by Terry Tong, a resident and avid photographer in the Buffalo, New York area.

We also wish to thank  NAL’s many supporters on both sides of the border, and in other regions of the world, and we encourage you to invite all of your friends and associates to visit this independent news and commentary site, subscribe to it and if you have an idea for news or commentary that you feel out be of interest to our readers for posting here, please send your idea for a post to NAL publisher Doug Draper at drapers@vaxxine.com.

Thanks again for continuing to visit Niagara at Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

 

Hospital Plans Get Lowest Grades From Residents In Niagara, Ontario’s Southern Tier

By Doug Draper

A public survey conducted for the Niagara Health System this spring concludes that residents in the four Niagara, Ontario municipalities that may see  their hospitals closed – Fort Erie, Niagara Falls, Welland and Port Colborne – are most opposed to NHS supervisor Kevin Smith’s recommendations for restructuring the region’s hospital services.

The Welland hospital site is one of four current hospitals in the region that would be closed if a new hospital is built in Niagara’s southern tier. File photo by Doug Draper

The phone survey, conducted by the polling firm Pollara between May 25 and June 5, after Smith tabled his hospital restructuring plan in early May, also found that less than half of the residents contacted have a positive impression of the NHS as an administrative body. The most negative impressions were expressed by survey respondents in Port Colborne, where less than three out of every 10 residents held a positive impression, and in Fort Erie, Wainfleet and St Catharines. The best impression scores were recored in West Lincoln and Grimsby where, interestingly enough, those municipalities are mainly served by the West Lincoln Memorial Hospital which is one of the only hospitals in the region that is not run by the NHS and which has often received praise from the residents it serves. Continue reading

Past Generations Were Green Before ‘Being Green’ Became A Light-Feathered, Baby Boomer Fad

 A  Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper Niagara At Large has received the following post from one of our many readers. We receive numerous posts, as you may imagine on , but this one kind of said it all as far as the phony “green movement” too many of our politically correct politicians and others are putting forth these days. They claim they support environmental protection or “green” projects when they don’t.

There are suburban neighbourhoods today that make hanging clothes out on a line against the law because some in the suburbs take offience to seeing someone else’s clothes hanging ona line to dry. Those who take offience ought to perhaps be sent off to an island of their own, and leave the rest of us who want to get away from consuming more electricity around drying clothes alone.

 Today’s political leaders and their enablers care about a greener economy? Except for possibly a handful of them, bullshit! I am old enough to remember talking to generations, now all but gone, who lived through the Great Depression and the Second World War who knew what it was like to have to conserve, recycle and reduce their consumption of natural resources and commercial goods. It is true that many people from that generation  – what former American news anchor Tom Brokaw dubbed “the greatest generation – were living through the worst depression on this continent and one of the world’s most destructive wars, so there were obvious reasons for conserving and living what some today might call a minimalist lifestyle. Continue reading

Long Weekend Events At Ontario’s Niagara Parks, Above And Below The Mist Of The Falls

 Niagara At Large is posting  the following for our readers’ information. The Niagara Parks lands overlooking the American and Horseshoe Falls are among our greatest natural gems in this region of the world. Let’s not take them for granted. Take the time to treasure them as we wish you all, on both sides of our shared Niagara border, a great Canada Day and Fourth of July.

Niagara Falls, Ontario– The Niagara Parks Commission is pleased to announce an exciting line-up of events for the upcoming Canada Day / Independence Day holidays.

Niagara Parks in Niagara Falls, Ontario is making it happen for the Canada Day weekend. Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commision

Free Coca Cola Concert Series and Falls Fireworks

Spectacular fireworks displays are scheduled at 10 p.m. for June 29 and July 1 – 4. (Note: the July 3 fireworks display will be 25 minutes long and will be fired from the U.S. side, courtesy of the Seneca Casino).

The free Coca Cola Concert Series will take place at 8 p.m. on the Illumination Tower Stage in Queen Victoria Park, before the Falls Fireworks at 10 p.m. Concert goers will have a prime view of the fireworks displays, making for the perfect family outing. Continue reading

Ontario Conservative Leader Ready To Take On ‘Union Bosses’

A Brief Foreword by Doug Draper

Those who have been following some of the more news on Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak’s positions on the challenges facing the province and its economy, may know that he has made some strong statements about the need, as he sees it, to reign in the wage and benefit demands of unions representing teachers, police and other public sector employees.

Yet the following release, distributed this June 27 by the office of the PC leader and posted here for our readers’ interest, is arguably the closest Hudak has come to date to declaring all-out war on union leaders in Ontario.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

June 27, 2012 

ONTARIO PCs RELEASE PATHS TO PROSPERITY: FLEXIBLE LABOUR MARKETS

 QUEEN’S PARK– Ontarians will thrive in a future of balanced budgets, lower taxes, affordable energy and a well-educated, competitive workforce – but to help get there, we must modernize Ontario’s workplace laws, regulations and agencies, Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak said today.

Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak

“The world has changed, and our economy has changed with it,” Hudak said. “But the rules governing the workplace, and the way unions are run, have not. It’s time to open up economic opportunities for individual workers, not union bosses. 

“More broadly, this is about getting our economic fundamentals right – things like lower taxes on job-creating businesses, affordable energy and more flexible and responsive regulation.” Continue reading

At Long Last, Let’s Have A Niagara Health System Board With Real Community Advocates On It

A Commentary by Doug Draper

As one of his final acts before leaving his provincially appointed role as supervisor of the Niagara Health System, Kevin Smith could do something that might place this body on the road to earning some public trust it has never enjoyed in its more-than-decade long existence.

At a 2010 annual meeting, the back-slapping hacks on the Niagara Health System”s board assure those of us in the gallery that everything is going great. Seven months later the board would suddenly dump NHS CEO Debbie Sevenpifer for reasons it refused to devulge to the public it was supposed to be serving. File photo by Doug Draper

That act would involve staking any new Niagara Health System board with people from across this region who, when it comes to the hospital services the NHS is mandated to deliver, will place the interests and concerns of their fellow Niagara residents ahead of playing kissy face with whoever is the chief executive officer of the NHS at the time.

In other words, Mr. Smith, show the courage and wisdom to appoint people to the NHS board who care passionately enough about the quality of hospital services people in our Niagara communities need to question the CEO and his or her support staff if need be. And whatever you do, for the sake of people across this region, sir, Do Not … let me repeat that … DO NOT reappoint any of the shameless sychophants and brown nosers who have sat on this board in the past. Continue reading

Citizens Group Offers Nature Tours Of Region’s Great Waterways

A Foreword by Doug Draper

 One of the very best and most active advocates for our precious waterways in the greater Niagara region is Buffalo Niagara Riverkeepers – a not-for-profit group of citizens that was presented a certificate of recognition by the Canada/U.S. International Joint Commission three years ago for its many years of preservation and restoration efforts. 

This group is once again inviting members of the public to join it on free tours of area waterways as one more opportunity for those of us to live in the region to learn more about a part of our natural environment that is so vital to our lives.

Niagara At Large is therefore pleased to post the following information from Buffalo Niagara Riverkeepers on the tours planned for this year. 

Buffalo Niagara RIVERKEEPER – Media Release

Join Buffalo Niagara Riverkeeper on Western New York waterways to learn about nature, while enjoying some great paddling and hiking! We have tours for experienced and beginners, family-friendly events, a diversity of locations all over Western New York, and some fun creative themes you won’t want to miss.

A Riverkeepers’sponsored waterways tour.

 Some paddles are interpretive with educational themes and some are leisurely to just get out on the water!   

For a complete listing of tours and to register, please visit bnriverkeeper.org. For more information, please contact Elizabeth Lamont at elamont@bnriverkeeper.org org 716.852.RIVER (7483) ext. 19. Continue reading

Give It Up For Uggie – A Great Canine Has The Greatest Of Dog Day Afternoons

Honour Uggie By Adopting A Great Animal Friend

A Short Note from Doug Draper 

As you who’ve been following Niagara At Large for the past couple of years may know, we have a very soft spot in our hearts for our animal friends here.

Uggie at least made the red carpet this past year for his stellar performance in ‘The Artist’.

 

So this time, let’s give two thumbs up and all the applause we’ve ever heard mustered in a theatre for Uggie, the incredible canine co-star of this past year’s Academy Award-winning film, ‘The Artist’ 

In my books, and as someone who was swept away with the magic of this wonderful film in a theatre this past winter in Buffalo, New York, this remarkable pooch should have been nominated for an Academy Award himself – not that the Academy yet has the humanity to  create a category for animal actors.

But the main thing to remember about Uggie, who is now retiring from the movie business, but not before the Jack Russell terrier was the first canine or any other animal to have his paw prints immortalized this June on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, is that he was adopted. That is right. He was adopted from a pound and possibly saved from being “put down,” as they say, in one of those places. Continue reading

Calling On Anyone Interested In Serving On Niagara Health System’s Board Of Director

(Niagara At Large is posting the following information from the blog of Kevin Smith, the provincially appointed supervisor of the Niagara Health System, for our readers’  information. The relationship between the former NHS board, responsible for key decision making around hospital services in Niagara, Ontario, and many members of the public was acrimonious to say the least.

It will be very interesting to see who among our region’s citizens are chosen to sit on the new board and whether any of them are individuals who sat on previous NHS boards over the past decade.) 

News from the Blog of NHS Supervisor Kevin Smith

Posted Monday, June 25, 2012 in Dr. Kevin Smith’s Blog

An important part of my job as NHS Supervisor is to rebuild the Board of Directors for Niagara Health System.

NHS Supervisor Kevin Smith. File photo by Doug Draper

As I noted in my Interim Report, I feel strongly that the communities of Niagara Region are best served by a single Board for their hospitals. I have made it clear that I believe this Board needs to seek community input to be successful, and must work to ensure there is transparency in the way the Board is selected. A key step toward reinforcing our culture of transparency and enhanced community input is the establishment of a Community Based Nominating Committee  for the Board. Continue reading

Chinese Wind Tower Manufacturer Helps Energize Niagara, Ontario’s Economy

By Doug Draper

Niagara, Ontario’s economy – battered for years by the loss of manufacturing jobs – received a much-needed boost this June 26.

For the second time this month, Niagara has learned it will be a site for a plant producing parts for wind turbines – announcements that set this region on a path to becoming a hub for green energy production.

TSP CEO Chris Xie announce’s company’s first Canadian manufacturing plant in Niagara, Ontario.

The first announcement was for 50 new jobs and a $5-million investment by a German-based company called ENERCON to produce electrical parts for wind turbines at a plant it is setting up in the Niagara municipality of Lincoln. This time it is a China-based company called Shanghai Taisheng Wind Power or TSP for short, investing $25 million to create 150 jobs, and ultimately 250 or more, at the former Hayes Dana auto parts plant in the Niagara municipality of Thorold to produce the giant towers for wind turbines.

“This is a great way to start summer,” said Niagara Falls MPP Kim Craitor, an Ontario Liberal government member who spoke on behalf of Premier Dalton McGuinty at the June 26 announcement for the new TSP plant.  “You have confirmed this government’s belief (that wind and solar power can lead to new jobs and prosperity for the province) when it created the Green Energy Act,” he told TSP’s chief executive officer, Chris Xie, who had just received the applause of dozens of local officials for making the announcement. Continue reading

Ontario, Cities Renew Great Lakes Protection Commitment

“Ontario’s Great Lakes Mayors are delighted to renew this important partnership with the Province of Ontario to ensure that our governments collaborate on the protection and restoration of the Great Lakes.” – St. Catharines, Ontario Mayor Brian McMullan and chair of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative.

A Submission to Niagara At Large from the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative 

St. Catharines, Ontario– This June 24, Ontario Environment Minister Jim Bradley and St. Catharines Mayor Brian McMullan, chair of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative, signed a renewed Memorandum of Cooperation on the Great Lakes (Great Lakes MOC) between the Province and cities. 

Our Great Lakes – the most abundant, and yet a fragile resource of freshwater in the world, and one we should be protecting for the health of present and future generations here. An image from the Canadian film documentary Waterlife.

“I am pleased to renew this commitment with Ontario’s Great Lakes municipalities as the province moves ahead with further protection for the Great Lakes. Our shorelines and beaches are vital to Ontario’s economy and underpin our quality of life. Our continued collaboration will help ensure our lakes remain healthy for the benefit of all.” Continue reading

Rupert Murdoch, The Power Of Corporate Media Chains Over Governments, And Why Canadians Must Take Heed

By Imogen Reed

The Leveson Inquiry in London, England has opened the doors onto the murky world of the political influence wielded by Rupert Murdoch and his global media conglomerate News Corporation.

Corporate Media kingpin Rupert Murdoch has wielded enough power to have elected governments in England and North America kneeling at his feet.

The operational dynamics of Murdoch, News Corp and the likes of ex-News of the World senior editor Rebekah Brooks have revealed how corporate media actors negotiate the power dynamics of the network society to serve their overarching business goals.

Over a period of decades, Rupert Murdoch appears to have used different strategies to penetrate new markets and expand audience share. These strategies have included political brokering, leveraging public opinion, stretching the boundaries of media content, and diversifying and adapting media holdings in the face of technological and regulatory changes. Continue reading

Watergate And The Death Of ‘Do-It-For-The-People’ Investigative Journalism

 A Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

I almost can’t stand to hear the sound of their names any more. It is largely their fault that I made one of the dumbest decisions of my life – to get in to journalism.

Watergate investigative reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein during their investigative days at the Washington Post

Their names are Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the two young Washington Post reporters who 40 years ago this June began covering what seemed to many others at the time to be a ‘third-rate burglary attempt’ at the Democratic National Committee office in Watergate hotel complex in Washington D.C., and whose continued, dogged investigative reporting ultimately led to the resignation of U.S. President Richard Nixon in August of 1974. 

It was because of the heroics of Woodward and Bernstein, and the all-too-rare support they received from a managing editor at the Washington Post named Ben Bradley, that the newspaper had the guts to produce reporting that ultimately brought down a president of the United States for acts that violated much of what a free democracy in a country like the U.S. or Canada is supposed to be about. Continue reading

The Delicate Balance Between Wallenda’s Walk And The Falls’ Natural Beauty

A Commentary by Doug Draper 

Well, the mayor of Niagara, Falls sure was right!

Jim Diodati, who was a booster of Nik Wallenda’s dream to walk a high wire across the Falls when the Niagara Parks Commission and provincial government were still saying ‘no way’ to it, promised in the days leading up to the June 15 extravaganza that it was “going to be exciting, historic (and) the biggest event in the world.”

Nik Wallenda, to the right, in a media scrum that you would likely not see in Niagara if they found deadly concentrations of dioxon in the Niagara River. Photo by Doug Draper

A drive along the Niagara Parkway the day before the walk certainly gave every reason to believe that was going to be true. Satellite trucks for more than 80 accredited media organizations, including ABC television, which had purchased exclusive rights to air the event live, and a Chinese broadcast network boasting more than a billion viewers, were parked for hundreds of metres along the parkway. Inside Niagara Parks’ Table Rock Welcome Centre, near the brink of the Horseshow Falls, the man of the moment was surrounded by swarms of reporters for another in a series of media briefings where the inevitable, no-brainer question was pitched to him for the umpteenth time – ‘Are you getting nervous?’ Continue reading

One Niagara Resident’s Ancestral Journey Back To The War Of 1812

”Commemorating the Bicentennial of the War of 1812, a war two hundred years ago, well beyond living memory, is critically important. … It shaped our past, shaped our past, our world and continues to shape our future.” 

By John Armstrong 

(A Foreword from Niagara At Large – This post features the full text of an address delivered by John Armstrong, Chair of Niagara, Ontario’s War of 1812 Legacy Council, at opening ceremonies for Bicentennial Commemorations for the War of 1812 at Queenston Heights on Saturday, June 16. His brief account of discovering family roots stretching back to one of that war’s defining battles at Queenston Heights, 200 years ago this coming October, touched a chord with many who gathered for these ceremonies. Niagara At Large is pleased to have received permission from John Armstrong to post his address here.)

 Thank you Brian.  Excellency, Ministers, Lord Mayor, Chair Burroughs, ladies and gentlemen.

I am descendent of 1st. Lieut. George King of the1st Flank Company, Second Regiment of the York Militia.

John Armstrong delivering his address at Queenston Heights opening ceremonies this June 16. Photo by Denis Cahill.

  

We were farmers from East Flamborough, (and) for those who don’t know, that is at the head of Lake Ontario in what is now Burlington (Ontario). 

Lieut. King joined the York Militia on May 9, 1811 and he died December 1812 after seeing action at the Battle of Queenston Heights in October of 1812.

It’s unclear if he died of illness, or from wounds received in that Battle. It is unclear if he died at home with his wife Barbara and his two sons, or if he died somewhere near Fort Erie. I have read both. Continue reading

Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission Appoints New General Manager

A Submission from the Niagara Parks Commission

(Niagara At Large is posting this release from the Niagara Parks Commission, the provincial body responsible for protecting and preserving lands along the Canadian shores of the Niagara River, from Fort Erie, through Niagara Falls to Niagara-on-the-Lake. The release speaks to the appointment of John Lohuis as the NPC’s new general manager. He replaces Fay Booker, who held the position until March of 2012.) 

NIAGARA FALLS, ONTARIO, June 22  – John Lohuis, former Director of Recreation and Parks for the City of Mississauga, has been appointed General Manager of the Niagara Parks Commission, Chair Janice Thomson announced today.

The Niagara Parks Commission’s new general manager John Lohuis

“John’s strong background in all areas of Parks management and development is an excellent fit for the NPC and his proven, disciplined approach to meeting customer needs within a structured budget will help achieve the organization’s goals,” Thomson said. 

As General Manager of the Niagara Parks Commission, Lohuis will work with the Commission to provide leadership and strategic business direction that maintains profitable growth, inspires and engages management and staff in pursuit of Commission goals, and builds effective relationships with employees, community and business. Continue reading

Ontario’s Conservative Leader Envisions A Province More Friendly To Business and Job Creation

By Doug Draper

At what he called a “town hall meeting” in Niagara Falls, Ontario this June 21, Tim Hudak finally got around to doing what many of his supporters and would-be supporters wish he had done in the weeks leading up to last October’s provincial election – spend less time bashing the province’s premier and more time talking about what he would do if he were premier.

Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak fields questions from a local labour representative at a ‘town hall’ meeting in Niagara Falls. Photo by Doug Draper

“I did a really good job last time of telling you what was wrong with Dalton McGuinty,” said the Ontario Conservative leader to a mixed crown of municipal, business and labour residents attending the meeting. I didn’t do a very good job of telling you what is right about our (party’s) plan.”

It was a mistake at least some political pundits believe may have been responsible for Hudak losing his early lead in last fall’s election, one the leader seems to have learned from as he spent more than an hour at the June 21 meeting talking about what a government led by him would do to boost Ontario’s economy and create more jobs. Continue reading

Ontario Government Finally Passes A Hotly Debated Budget

A Release from the Ontario Premier’s Office

(Niagara At Large is posting the following release from the office of Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty for our readers’ information.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty

NAL does so with just a few preliminary points we wish to make here.

There is no heading in this release for environmental protection issues covered in this provincial omnibus budget legislation for reasons that may have to do with the fact that the legislation pulls more of the teeth out of an already weak ‘Endangered Species Act’ in this province at the pleasure of the mining industry and other developers. The legislation also gives discretionary power to the provincial cabinet to ignore the Fish and Conservation Act if it feels that act’s protection clauses are standing in the way of favoured development projects.

On the education file, you will note in the premier’s media release that the budget is “protecting 20,000 teaching and support jobs by ensuring smaller class sizes and the full introduction of full-day kindergarten.”  Continue reading

Niagara Regional Council Says ‘No’ To Moratorium On Wind Farms

By Doug Draper

It wasn’t a good night for residents opposing plans to erect giant wind turbines in their rural Niagara communities.

Rural residents opposed to wind turbines in their communities pack regional council chambers, Photo by Doug Draper

More than 70 rural residents from the West Lincoln, Wainfleet and surrounding areas packed the gallery in the Niagara regional council chambers this past June 14, hoping the council would support a motion that would call to Ontario’s provincial government to, among other things, agree to a moratorium on approving any more wind farms until independent studies are completed on health and other impacts they may be having on people and their properties. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario’s Regional Government Recogizes Environmental Champions

A Foreword by Doug Draper

For more than two decades now, Niagara’s regional government has honoured individuals, groups and businesses that have gone out of their way to protect and preserve this region’s natural heritage.

Earl Plato of Fort Erie wins Niagara Region’s life-time achievement award for his environmental protection efforts.

 

This year, the region has done the same and has honoured Earl Plato, in particular, with its ‘Lifetime Achievement Award’, and what a wonderful choice.Earl Plato, a Fort Erie, Ontario resident, a professional teacher, now retired and in his 80s, has devoted most of his adult life to his love of nature, and protecting it and sharing it with young and older across our region, alike. He has also been an advocate for preserving Marcy’s Woods, a rare gem of forest and dunes along the shores of Lake Erie. He is one of a number of individuals and other parties that have been honoured this June, at an awards evening for Niagara Region’s 23rd annual Environmental Awards. Continue reading

PUBLIC MEETINGS ON HEALTH CARE CUTS AND RESTRUCTURING IN ST. CATHARINES AND NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE

(Niagara At Large is posting the following public advisory from the Niagara Health Coalition and its umbrella group, the Ontario Health Coalition, for our readers’ information.)

When:   Tuesday June 19, 2012 at 6:30 pm

Where: St. Catharines Central Library (Banker’s Room) located at 54 Church Street

When: Wednesday June 20, 2012 at 6:30 pm

Where: Niagara-on-the-Lake Community Centre located at 14 Anderson Lane, Niagara-on-the-Lake.

Who:  Niagara Health Coalition

What: Town-hall meetings concerning the recent Ontario austerity budget. This harsh budget has set health care funding even lower than the most radical of recommendations. It will result in a new round of significant health cuts at the local level. The health coalitions and the public will discuss issues specific to St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake, including Dr. Kevin Smith’s proposal to close all southern tier hospitals and urgent care centres in the southern tier and replace them with one new hospital. Furthermore, Dr. Smith has proposed the closure of the Niagara-on-the-Lake site and its 20 complex care beds. This centralization of services means that people will have to travel further to get the care they need. There have been no public meetings to receive input from those who will be most affected by these recommendations. This is an opportunity for the health coalitions and the public to share information and strategies about health care concerns in St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake. 

For more information visit www.ontariohealthcoalition.ca .

War Of 1812 Commemorations Begin On The Grounds Where General Brock Fought His Final Battle

By Doug Draper

“It remains a defining point in our history,” said Niagara, Ontario Regional Chair Gary Burroughs as opening ceremonies began this June 17 for commemorating the bicentennial of the official ‘Declaration of the War of 1812’ .

Niagara, Ontario Regional Chair Gary Burroughs speaks at opening ceremony for War of 1812 bicentennial commerorations. Photo by Doug Draper

 

Hundreds of people from both sides of the Canada/U.S. border gathered on the verdant grounds of Queenston Heights as Buroughs and other dignitariesopened the curtains on three years of special events that will bring back to life a history that began with bloody battles, yet ended with 200 years of friendship and peace between two nations that is too often unheard of in this world today. Continue reading

Harper Government Destroying More Good Jobs Than It Is Creating

By Mark Taliano

Recently in Canada’s House Of  Commons, Green Party Leader Elizabeth May cautioned, “Beware the wages of spin”.  

Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper, emboldened by his majority of seats, dictates his party’s economic ideology.

May’s comment was directed specifically at the undemocratic nature of Bill C-38 (known more simply as the omnibus budget bill),   but it applies just as appropriately to the economic mismanagement of the Harper regime. Without the “spin”, this government’s economic record reveals itself to be a failure on many levels.  Continue reading

There Is Nothing Very ‘Smart’ About Niagara Mega-Mall Project

A Commentary by Doug Draper 

Niagara, Ontario’s regional council has given a developer the green light to build what is being marketed as the largest outdoor, outlet mall in Canada off the Queen Elizabeth Way in Niagara-on-the-Lake.

Forget about ‘smarter growth’ or urban renewal. This field out in the hinterlands and off the QEW is where our Niagara, Ontario regional leaders approve of locating the ‘largest’ outlet mall in all of Canada. Photo by Doug Draper

The 720,000-square-foot mall, to be located off the QEW/Glenridge Avenue interchange near a campus of Niagara College and the White Oaks Resort and Spa, will mean a big boost for jobs and business in Niagara, said some of an overwhelming majority of regional councillors who supported it.

“We are always saying that we (as a region) are open for business,” said Niagara-at-Large Lord Mayor David Eke whose (give the fact that the mall is going in his municipality) was the most vocal supporter of the proposal put forward by long-time shopping mall developer Ivanhoe Cambridge of Toronto. “We need to work with these people.”  Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Regional Chair Urges Harper Government Not To Close Canadian Consulate in Buffalo, New York

By Doug Draper

You may recall that a few weeks ago it was learned that the Harper government in Canada had made up its mind – all by itself – that it is going is going to close down the country’s consulate office in Buffalo, New York, serving one of the busiest and most economically vital cross-border regions shared by Canadians and Americans on the continent.

The Harper government’s reason for this – articulated by Niagara Falls MP and Harper cabinet minister Rob Nicholson, who appears to be placing his partisan ties with Harper ahead of the region he should be serving on this one –  – is that visa requests for Canada can now be more easily processed on line. It is a reason that shows how little Nicholson and other Harper government members know or care to know about the larger roles this consultate office has continued to play in bringing business and other key sectors together to address the economic challenges and improve the quality of life for residents throughout Western New York and Southern Ontario. And these are the politicians we should be counting on to serve the best interests of our region and country. Continue reading

Wallenda High Wire Walk Puts Niagara Parks On Global Stage

This post submitted by the Niagara Parks Commission 

Walk pays tribute to the Niagara’s daredevil traditionwhile showcasing the national treasure of the Falls and Niagara Parks 

NIAGARA FALLS, Ontario– With his high wire walk across the Niagara Gorge (this June 15), Nik Wallenda has helped showcase Niagara Parks and remind people around the world of the many reasons to visit, according to Janice Thomson, Chair of The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC).

These cranes at Table Rock in Niagara Falls, Ontario hold the wire Nik Wallenda walked on. To the left, in the distance, cranes at Terrapin Point on the U.S. side of the Falls hoist the wire where the walk began. Photo by Doug Draper

“The Commission congratulates Mr. Wallenda on a thrilling performance. It captured the imagination of millions and allowed Niagara Parks to showcase its beauty and put our national treasure – The Falls – on display for the entire world to see,” Thomson said.

In tonight’s walk, Wallenda became the first person in more than 100 years to cross the Niagara Gorge on a high wire and the first person ever to walk across on a wire so close to the Horseshoe Falls. Part of the walk was over the Horseshoe Falls itself. Wirewalkers in the past have performed downstream from the Falls. Continue reading

NDP Leader To Ontario’s Premier – Stop Election Threats And Pass The Budget

A Foreword by Niagara At Large

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty seems intent on playing a game of chicken with the opposition parties in the provincial legislature, leading one to won to wonder if he can count enough seats in that chamber to remind himself that he has a minority government that could be defeated at a moment’s notice.

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath urges province’s premier to back off his election threat and pass a budget

While McGuinty insists that the NDP and Conservatives are demanding concessions that may cost provincial taxpayers billions of dollars, where has his government been on fixing an arbitration system that continues to rubber stamp unaffordable wage and benefit increases to police, teachers and other unions he seems to sleepin bed with? Why won’t he kick the high-priced teachers out of the early learning classrooms and abide by the advice experts gave him to allow early learning professionals nurture those children at half the cost? The list goes on, and this premier, that has run this province into a debt ditch so deep it may take generations to get out of it, has the nerve to threaten an election call.

Some of us may very well say; “Hey Dalton, make our day!” Continue reading

Niagara Regional Chair’s Announcement On New Hospital Sites In Southern Tier

Here is the full test of Niagara Regional chair Gary Burroughs’s announcement on the decision southern tier mayors have made to date on where a new hospital for Niagara’s southern tier should be located. 

“Dr. Kevin Smith tasked the 6 southern mayors (along with myself) to recommend a unanimous decision on a location or locations to be included for consideration with his report to be filed with Health Minister Deb Matthews later this month.

Niagara, Ontario’s Regional Chair Gary Burroughs

He set Friday, June 15 as the deadline to arrive at that decision.

 The 6 southern mayors and I have now met five  times. Regional GIS staff have been providing objective, ongoing data and analysis mapping as requested by the mayors and have provided excellent mapping work relating to population density, EMS call volumes, drive times, municipal infrastructure, and a number of others factors. Continue reading

South Niagara Mayors Have Settled on Two Locations For New Hospital

QUICK BULLETIN

By Doug Draper 

In an announcement at this June 14 Niagara regional council meeting, the Region’s chair, Gary Burroughs, said the six mayors in south Niagara – representing Wainfleet, Port Colborne, Niagara Falls, Welland, Pelham and Fort Erie – have reached consensus on two areas where a new hospital could be located in Niagara, Ontario’s southern tier.

Those locations include the QEW (Queen Elizabeth Way) and Lyons Creek area near the border of Niagara Falls and Fort Erie and the East Main Street and Highway 140 area in Welland. Continue reading

A ‘Once-In-A-Lifetime Stunt’ Isn’t The Answer To Niagara Falls’ Problems

A Comment by Stuart MacDonald

This weekend marks the opening ceremonies commemorating the bicentennial of the War of 1812 in our city.  How sad that those celebrations are receiving such little attention in the face of a stunt that has brought ridicule to our city.

Media zooms in on high-wire walker Nik Wallenda during recent media scrum in Niagara Falls, Ontario. Photo by Doug Draper

 

As Stephen Colbert said on his television show this June 13, “[Nic Wallenda] received an exception to the Falls’ no-stunts policy, thanks to the local economy’s sluggishness […] You know a town is in bad shape when they have to create a tourist attraction to attract tourists to their tourist attraction.” 

If the tourist industry is sluggish it has little to do with Niagara Falls not having potential.  It has everything to do with a mentality that sees a once-in-a-lifetime-stunt as the answer to problems. Continue reading

Should We Really Be Encouraging The Wallenda Falls Walk?

By Imogen Reed

There can be few people in Niagara who haven’t yet heard of Nik Wallenda. His daredevil antics over the Falls this Friday, June 15 will be the latest in a long line of feats that have taken place at world’s most famous waterfall.

High wire walker Nik Wallenda joins Niagara Parks Commission chair Janice Thomson this June 13 at a media conference in Niagara Falls, Ontario. Photo by Doug Draper

Wallenda is not the first to tightrope walk the Falls. The stunt was first achieved by Jean François  Gravelet, aka Charles Blondin, in 1859, and dozens have accomplished the same feat since. Although, Wallenda’s 1,800 feet walk is the first across the actual brink of the Falls, as other attempts have been downstream, and not for more than 100 years. Continue reading

Marineland And Animal Advocates Face Off At City Hall

By Doug Draper

Marineland and animal advocates dedicated to shutting down the iconic Niagara, Ontario amusement park’s animal exhibits – most particularly its whale and dolphin exhibits – faced off at a Niagara Falls city council meeting this June 12, and it wasn’t a pretty.

Animal activists demonstrat on Portage Road in front of Marineland. File photo by Doug Draper

The faceoff was triggered by a three-year draft lease agreement, ultimately approved by the Niagara Falls council at the end of the night. That agreement allows Marineland to lease a portion of public space on Portage Road around its entrance gate to the park where animal advocates have spent years offering park-goers information flyers on why mammals as large as whales should not be kept in cement ponds for the public’s amusement. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Students Continue To Rally In Support Of Striking Quebec Students

A Media Release from Niagara Labour Movement representative Bruce Allen

Post-secondary students from across Niagara, Ontario and their allies in the labour movement and in the community will gather  at 6:00 pm this Wednesday, June  13th in front of St. Catharines City Hall for the third consecutive week in a show of solidarity with the Quebecois student movement and its struggle for fully accessible and affordable post-secondary education.

We will also be gathering in a show of opposition to the Quebec/Charest goverrment’s draconian Bill 78 which frontally assaults civil liberties and freedom of expression and has facilitated nearly 3000 arrests and widespread police violence. The event will be one of dozens of similar events anticipated across Canada in support of the Quebecois student movement.

 

As Controversial Plans For A NASCAR Race Track In Fort Erie, Ontario Go To Public Hearings, A Few Niagara Residents Take A ‘Hidden Look’ At Waters and Woodlands That Would Be Lost

By John Bacher

For now, the 827 acres of land in the headwaters of Frenchman’s Creek and Miller Creek in Fort Eire, Ontario, assembled for the proposed Canadian Motor Speedway, is off limits.

Millier Creek floating through a woodlot on the proposed NASCAR site. Photo by Mike Dickman

Blessedly,  through a procedure of the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB),  Mike Dickman, a long-time university professor and biologist, and I were able to access the property this April with three experts employed by the (NASCAR) speedway corporation. We were able to take photographs of streams and forests that could not well be seen from the public access points of Gilmore, Bowen and other roads running around the property. Continue reading

Opening Ceremonies Set For War Of 1812 Bicentennial

A Submission from the Niagara 1812 Legacy Council

(As opening ceremonies are set to begin this June 16, 17 & 18, Niagara At Large is pleased to post this submission from the Niagara 1812 Legacy Council that provides information on events the public can attend in the days ahead. We are also posting a link for the Legacy Council at the end of this post that you can visit for more information on War of 1812 Bicentennial events taking place through the spring and summer.) 

NIAGARA REGION, ON (June 11, 2012)– The Niagara 1812 Legacy Council will be commemorating the official “Declaration of the War of 1812” during their Opening Ceremonies Weekend, June 16-18th.  Almost 20 events both hosted and showcased by the Legacy Council all across Niagara make up the Opening Ceremonies weekend.

On Saturday June 16th, at 10:00 a.m., the public is invited to gather at Queenston Heights, to commemorate the
Declaration of War, and reflect on the beginning of the conflict that helped shape Canada. His Excellency the Right Honourable David Johnston, Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of Canada, will lead the historic ceremony amongst other dignitaries. Join community leaders for this historic occasion under the shadow of Sir Isaac Brock’s monument, with a presentation by the Six Nations Legacy Consortium to follow. Standing on guard will be the Queen’s York Rangers, the Lincoln and Welland Regimental Band and the Niagara Regional Police Colour Guard. Continue reading

Ontario’s Liberal Government Dithers Away Eight Months, PC Leader Charges

A Submission from the Office of Ontario PC Party leader Tim Hudak

QUEEN’S PARK, June 11, 2012– As another Legislative session marked by dithering and delay winds down – bringing the total to eight months of inaction since the last election – frustrated Ontarians want strong action to unleash our province’s true potential, PC Leader Tim Hudak said today.

Ontario PC and official opposition leader Tim Hudak

“There is a way out of this mess,” Hudak said, “and increasingly, the Ontarians I talk to agree that it will require us to get our fiscal house in order and get our economic fundamentals right.

“But I’m concerned that every day’s delay just lets the Liberals keep digging a hole that just keeps getting deeper. Now we’ve wasted yet another Legislative session, instead of digging out. It’s another failing grade for a government we’ve tried to hold to account to cut spending, grow the private sector and ensure value for taxpayers.” Continue reading

Chinese Boxes And The Harper Government’s Ominous Omnibus Budget Bill

By Mark Taliano

Chinese boxes can be broken down into increasingly smaller boxes to ultimately reveal the smallest, most distilled version of the box, which represents an alternate narrative of the original. Such a box is an appropriate metaphor for what is happening in Canada today.

Is Canada’s fate as a democracy and environmental protection leader hidden inside these boxes?

The real driver, the box within the box, of the environmental and corporate devastation of our country today, is Communist China.  

Communist China is not comfortable with our environmental laws, nor is it comfortable with what is left of our democracy, and so they are pressuring us to dismantle both.  Certainly the pressure is not overt, but it is powerful nonetheless. 

How to prove what seems to be an outlandish statement?  Simple.  Sinopec and other Communist Party state-owned companies have a vested interest in Canada’s Tar Sands industry, and they see environmental legislation and democratic procedures as being barriers to business. Continue reading

Canada May Be Taking Its Cue From China On Gutting Environmental Rules

A Brief Comment by Doug Draper

You may remember that one of Canada’s Harper government’s major reasons for being among the first developed countries in the world to bow out of the Kyoto Accord on climate change was that China won’t sign on.

A smoggy day in Beijing town. If China can cover up or ignore its environmental problems, why can’t Canada?

If China won’t make commitments under the accord to reduce greenhouse emissions to the atmosphere, then why should Canada, so the logic of Harper, his environment minister Peter Kent, and apparently the remainder of his ‘we’ll-just-suck-it-up-and do-anything-our-leader-says’ caucus appears to go. Continue reading

Ban On Indoor Tanning Is A No Brainer

A Comment by Doug Draper

If I were to report to you that a corporation was planning to build and operate some sort of facility in your town that could give off enough ultra violet light to raise the risk of skin cancer by as much as  75 per cent for people under the age of 35, I have no doubt that people would be packing council chambers and marching in the streets to keep that facility out of town.

Yet, it is quite likely that at least one out of every 10 people in that community, according to polls conducted for the Canadian Cancer Society, are exposing their skin to ultra violet light in tanning salons and the number of teens is increasing. Continue reading

Will Shakespeare Is Back In Buffalo’s Delaware Park, In All His Elizabethan Glory.

By Doug Draper

If you are looking for a great night of theatre in a beautiful outdoor setting, you can’t do much better than ‘Shakespeare in Delaware Park’ in Buffalo, New York.

Shakespeare in Delaware Park on stage. File photo by Doug Draper .

The  37th season of this – one of the largest and longest running free Shakespeare summer theatre productions in North America – gets underway this Tuesday, June 21st and continues through to the August 19th, with a week’s break this  mid-July  between the two plays being featured this summer. Continue reading

Ontario Environment Minister Jim Bradley Delivers On Groundbreaking Great Lakes Protection Legislation

By Doug Draper

Environmentalists and residents at large in regions around the Great Lakes – both Canadian and American – are giving two thumbs up for legislation Ontario Environment Minister Jim Bradley has drafted for protecting the Great Lakes.

Ontario Environment Minister and St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley and Thurder Bay, Ontario Mayork Keith Hobbs earlier this year, while Bradley was on a consultation mission around a new environmental protection act for the Great Lakes.

This legislation, introduced in the Ontario legislature this June 6 and called the Great Lakes Protectoin Act, promises to ensure cleaner Great Lakes – the largest source of fresh water in the world – for now and for our children’s and their children’s future.

“I think this is hugely important,” said Theresa McClenaghan, executive director of the Toronto-based Canadian Environmental Law Association. This legislation, she said, ushers in a “whole new approach,” involving all of us and a host of other public and private and public stakeholders in protecting the lakes. Continue reading

A Rare Non-Partisan Tribute To A Veteran Niagara MPP

A Foreword from Doug Draper

Say what you want about St. Catharines Liberal MPP, and I’ve just about heard it all right up to and including; ‘isn’t it time for him to retire’, but he was and remains the best environment minister Ontario ever had when he held that portfolio through the mid- to late-1980s for the former Liberal government of David Peterson.

St. Catharines MPP and Liberal Environment Minister Jim Bradley

I don’t know how many times I have heard David Suzuki, the host of CBC’s Nature of Things and one of Canada’s most high-profile environmentalists, mention in addresses he has delivered here in Ontario that Jim Bradley, during that bright and shining period during the 80s, was the hottest environment this province has had to this day.

Some may then argue that he was a far better environment minister than he is now under the current Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty and that is something that remains to be seen. His record then and now will speak for itself.  Continue reading

Great Day For Niagara’s Wine Industry – Says Federal NDP

This Submission is from Welland, Ontario MP Malcolm Allen

Ottawa – Late Wednesday, MPs from all parties voted in support of Bill C-311, after New Democrats passed a motion last week to fast track the legislation.  

“Today is a great day for Niagara’s wineries and overall tourism industry” said Malcolm Allen, M.P. (Welland). “It was essential that parliament passed C-311 quickly as Ontario’s busiest wine country tourism season is upon us. This is why the NDP brokered a deal with all parties to fast track this bill.” Continue reading

Niagara Youth Show Their Support For Quebec Student Movement

By Doug Draper 

They were mostly young people from across Niagara – many of them college and university students, and not just a few having one helluva time finding a job – and they were gathering in solidarity with tens-of-thousands of student demonstrating against proposed tuition hikes in Quebec.

One of the banners young demonstrators in Niagara, Ontario displayed at a ‘solidarity’ rally for striking students in Quebec. Photo by Doug Draper

 

More than 30 of them gathered this June 6 in front of City Hall in downtown St. Catharines, Ontario, wearing the red patches which have become a symbol of the Quebec student movement, and banging on pots and pans, just as Quebec students have been doing when they march through the streets on Montreal during their “casserole” rallies. Above the din of pot banging, they were encouraged by the number of people driving by – young and old – honking their horns or raising a thumbs’ up in support. Continue reading