Author Archives: dougdraper

CBC’s The Nature Of Things Journeys In To The Animal Mind

A Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

If you have been a regular visitor to our Niagara At Large news and commentary site, you know that we have shown an ongoing interest in the welfare of all creatures great and small.

Nature of Things host David Suzuki

Someone from the CBC knew about NAL’s passion for animals and sent us the following note on a program we’re sure many of you who share our panel will want to check out.

The program, featured on CBC’s long-running and ever-popular ‘The Nature of Things’ hosted by the one and only David Suzuki, is called  ‘Mysteries of the Animal Mind’ and is being broadcast this Thursday, January 26 at 8 p.m. EST on CBC Newsworld Cable channel 6. Niagara At Large is pleased to share the following write-up from CBC on this program. Continue reading

Ontario Premier Says Province Is ‘Stronger, More Competitive And Poised For Growth’

–  McGuinty stresses need to control spending and and public-sector wages

A Foreword by NAL publisher Doug Draper – Followed by Premier’s address

Ontario’s economy is growing and “now we need to take further action on another important front and that is the deficit,” said Premier Dalton McGuinty this January 24 during an address to the Canadian Club of Toronto.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty

 

 “Tackling the deficit is simply an essential step in building the strong economy (that) supports good jobs and quality public services,” said McGuinty, adding that “borrowing money to help Ontarian through a terrible recession is one thing, but living beyone our means, constantly adding to the debt we are leaving to our children (is) quite another thing. That would be wrong for our children and for us.”

 McGuinty said that driving down a debt that now stands at $16 billion and ultimately balancing the province’s budget in the fiscal year 2017/2018 “won’t be easy (and) getting there will require that we slow down our spending significally.” Continue reading

Niagara Regional Council Urged To Ban Sale Of Shark-Fin Soup And Other Shark-Related Products

(Niagara At Large is posting the following open letter from Arthur Miller of the citizens advocacy group Marineland Animal Defense/Shark Allies Niagara to regional councillors in Niagara, Ontario, urging them to support a ban here on the sale of shark-fin soup and other products with shark remains in them. Such a ban has already been passed in other Ontario municipalities including Toronto, London, Oakville, Brantford and Mississauga.)

 Dear Regional Councillors,

 We are writing you this letter as concerned citizens from across the Niagara (Ontario) Region.

A shark butchered for its fins before being thrown back in the ocean to drown.

 As advocates for other animal species we see a sweeping change in attitude towards our relationships with other animals and the environment and we are urging local council to act on these issues. One current illustration of this change is the sweep of shark fin bans across North America. Municipal bans have been passed in Toronto, Brantford, Mississauga, Oakville and London and there is now momentum behind a proposed federal ban being introduced by Fin Donnelly (NDP – New Westminster – Coquitlam). We are writing to you in hopes to not only expedite municipal bans in the Niagara Region, but also in hopes of pushing for a more comprehensive ban. Continue reading

Ontario’s Conservatives Call For Competition In Public Services

(Niagara At Large is posting the following January 23 media release from Tim Hudak’s Progressive Conservative Party. The party believes Ontario residents may receive lower-cost, higher-quality services if wants to see competitive bidding for public service work.)

 “This white paper says loud and clear that it shouldn’t matter if providers are from the state, private or voluntary sector as long as they offer a great service. The old, narrow, closed    state monopoly is dead.”

– David Cameron on the Open Public Services White Paper, The Guardian, July 11, 2011

ONLY ONTARIO PCs WILL CREATE COMPETITION IN PUBLIC SERVICES

QUEEN’S PARK– Public sector unions would compete with private sector unions, not-for-profits and businesses to provide and deliver government services under an Ontario PC government, Leader Tim Hudak said today.

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak in provincial legislature. Photo courtesy of PC leader's office.

“If we’re going to pull Ontario out of Dalton McGuinty’s jobs and spending crisis we need to think in innovative new ways,” Hudak said. “Creating competition in government service delivery can help us break away from hidebound, dated approaches to serving the public. It will also make government more efficient, freeing up savings for the services we all value – such as health care and education.” Continue reading

Canada Doesn’t Need Corporations Like Caterpillar To Survive And Prosper

 By Preston Haskell

Everywhere one looks, the headlines scream out misery regarding foreign corporations abusing  their power, abusing their employees, abusing abusing Canadian customs and abusing Canada.

Preston Haskell

In the specific case of the Caterpillar plant in London, Ontario  (where workers are fighting a bid to slash their wages and benefits) it is truly is an all-out assault on humanity by this giant  corporation.

Demonstrators cast slurs against greedy corporations. Canadian unions defend their cash flow of dues. Politicians do their best to (to speak falsely or) prevaricate. Socialists blaspheming against every private enterprise, while offering only the imperialistic and failed practice of government-run institutions. However, there is more than enough greed to destroy any society. A greedy growing ‘Patrician Class’ suckling on the life-blood of prosperity, on the power hungry unions playing  their part in the inequality of Canadian fortune, and all carving up the nation as if they own it. Continue reading

Niagarians Join Thousands In Giant London, Ontario Rally Against Corporate Greed

– Close to 15,000 decry foreign company’s bid to slash Canadian workers’ wages and benefits 

By Mark Taliano

If it wasn’t so ridiculous or “radical”, or “extreme”, it might even be funny.

Thousands demonstrate in London, Ontario park against Caterpillar's bid to rip workers' wages and benefits. Photo by Tori Crispo

In 2010, Industry Canada allowed American-owned Caterpillar to bulldoze its way into London, Ontario to purchase Electro-Motive Canada, a plant which assembles locomotive diesel engines.  They even humbly accepted offer an offer from Canada’s prime minister, Stephen Harper, of $5 million dollars of taxpayers’ money in the form of tax breaks. 

Politicians were no doubt pleased that Caterpillar profits increased by 95% in the first three quarters of 2011, which amounted to a staggering $3.4 billion in profits.  Better yet, production was up by 20 per cent and Canadian workers, who were being paid about $36.00 per hour, hadn’t had a raise for about six years.

Then, in a scene that could have come directly from Naomi Klein’s Shock Doctrine (create or exploit a “shock” to undemocratically force societal changes), the corporation insisted that its Canadian employees accept a 50% pay cut from about $36.00 per hour to $16.50 per hour, no cost of living adjustment, a new co-payment plan for health insurance and the elimination of pension plans.  This was the “shock”. Continue reading

Mayor Works To Restore Health Care ‘Autonomy’ In South Niagara

A Brief Foreword by NAL publisher Doug Draper (followed by a media release from Port Colborne, Ontario Mayor Vance Badawey)

While the Niagara Health System – the body the province established more than a decade ago to amalgamate most of Niagara, Ontario’s hospital services has been systematically dismantling acute care services, including two hospital emergency rooms, in Niagara’s southern tier, Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey and his council have been working with doctors and other health care professionals to build a health system for the southern tier’s future.

Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey

To this end, the City of Port Colborne established a South Niagara Health Care Corporation in 2008 with an aim to provide southern-tier residents with efficient and accessible primary and acute health care services for the 21st century.

A new system for the community is already emerging, said Badawey in a note to Niagara At Large, with the “introduction of Family Health Teams and Community Health Centres in our areas. In Port Colborne alone,” added the mayor, “we have recognized that 18% less patients are utilizing the ermegency rooms and urgent care centres throughout the Niagara Health System because enhanced services are available to them through community based primary health care, especially allied health care of which is required in some cases. Therefore, it’s working!” Continue reading

Student Transit Passes Now Work On Niagara Region Buses

By Doug Draper

 Close to 30,000 Brock University and Niagara College students will now be able to use the transit passes they purchase through their tuition fees to hop a ride on Niagara Region’s inter-municipal buses.

A Niagara Region Transit bus making a stop in Welland. Photo by Doug Draper

 A majority of Niagara, Ontario’s regional councillors voted this January 19 to accept what are called student “U-Passes” on Niagara Region Transit buses for a trial period starting now through to this April. The decision, following a heated council debate on the matter this past December, was applauded by Brock and Niagara College student representatives. Continue reading

Niagara Region Commencing Review Of Way We Are Governed

 By Doug Draper

Gary Burroughs and his Niagara regional council will soon begin addressing an issue that has often been treated as if it was radioactive by previous councils.

Niagara Regional Chair Gary Burroughs

 That issue is how Niagara, Ontario is governed at the municipal level and whether the system of governance residents here has had since the establishment of regional government 42 years ago should be changed.

 “We are opening it up and everything is on the table,” Niagara Regional Chair Gary Burroughs told Niagara At Large following a meeting of regional council this January 19. That means everything from sticking with the status quo to making changes to the region’s committee system, to how many individuals should sit on the council and how the regional chair is selected. And yes, the council will also review the ever thorny issue of amalgamating municipalities, right up to an including the idea of one ‘City of Niagara’. Continue reading

Here’s To The Survival And Growth Of The Occupy Movement

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 “The movement must address itself to restructuring the whole of American society. The problems we are dealing with are not going to be solved until there is a radical redistribution of economic and political power.”

–         Martin Luther King, 1967

 This past Monday, January 16, I drove around Niagara Square in Buffalo, New York where the Occupy Buffalo encampment was first set up last October and lo and behold, even through some of the frigid weather we’ve been having lately, the encampment was still there.

The Occupy Buffalo encampment in the shadow of Buffalo, New York's city hall. Photo by Doug Draper

That Monday also happened to be Martin Luther King Day in America and I can’t help but believe that the late civil rights leader would be pleased to see this encampment and the fight for economic justice it stands for. There can also be little doubt, given King’s record of perseverance, that he would want to see the Occupy Movement in the United States and Canada that this Buffalo encampment is part of survive and grow.

 I predict that the Occupy Movement will grow in the months ahead because the economic conditions that gave rise to the movement this past fall – the growing wage gap between the rich and almost everyone else, the loss of good-paying jobs, the high cost of living and the diminishing of health care and other essential services – are not going to change. Continue reading

President Obama Stands Up to Big Oil

(Niagara At Large is posting this column by veteran American filmmaker and longtime environmentalist Robert Redford on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline project for your information. The column was originally posted on the online news site Reader Supported News. You can visit Reader Supported News and subscribe for the many insightful posts on that site by clicking on http://readersupportednews.org/)

 Robert Redford,  January 18, 2012

Let’s face it: Big Oil is used to getting its way. But not today… and we have President Obama to thank for standing up to them in spite of the political risk.

Robert Redford, photo from Reader Supported News

President Obama has just rejected a permit for the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline – a project that promised riches for the oil giants and an environmental disaster for the rest of us.

His decision represents a victory of historic proportions for people from throughout the pipeline path and all across America who have waged an uphill, years-long fight against one of the most nightmarish fossil fuel projects of our time. Continue reading

Kudos To Obama, Shame On Harper

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

 Kudos to U.S. President Barack Obama for at least stalling a proposal for the

U.S. President Barack Obama

controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada until the completion of an environmental review.

 Shame on Canada’s Stephen Harper government and its Republican allies in the U.S. for wanting Obama to give his approval to this pipeline from Alberta’s filthy tar sands to Texas. Then again, what can you expect from a Harper government that recently became one of the first countries in the world to withdraw from the Kyoto climate-change agreement – a move that even drew criticism from major greenhouse gas emitters like China and India. Continue reading

No Cure For Ontario’s Gambling Addiction

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

 Like a drug user hooked on heroin or crack, the Province of Ontario seems hopelessly addicted to gambling.

 Call it “gaming” or call it a tax on suckers and lower income people, successive provincial governments – Conservatives, Liberals and NDP – going back to the 1970s have become ever more dependent on gambling as a source of revenue.  And with the current Liberal government facing a projected $16 billion deficit, the dependence on any and all loot that can be drawn in from lottery tickets, slot machines, crap tables and the like  has become desperate. Continue reading

Region Finally Getting Closed Council Sessions Under Control

A Brief Comment by Doug Draper

Well, it is about time!

Niagara regional council in session. File photo by Doug Draper

 After years of complaints from members of the press and public, Niagara, Ontario’s regional government has decided that all regional council meetings will now begin at 6:30 p.m. sharp without the possibility that a mere half hour later, the council will go into closed session for whatever period of time. Continue reading

Ontario PC Leader Wants All Public Sector Salaries Frozen

(Niagara At Large is posting this media release from Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak for our readers’ information. NAL will continue to post newsworthy media releases from all political parties in the province and we invite you to share your views on them in the comment space below.)

 “We can’t manage the deficit without addressing what is the single biggest line in our budget – public sector compensation.” – speech by Finance Minister Dwight Duncan, Toronto, July 20, 2010

 January 16, 2012

Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak

 HUDAK: ONLY ONTARIO PCs WILL FREEZE PUBLIC SECTOR SALARIES

 QUEEN’S PARK – Dalton McGuinty’s dithering over his jobs and spending crises demands an immediate and mandatory public sector wage freeze, Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak said today.

 “We have 560,000 Ontarians out of work and a spiralling $16 billion deficit,” Hudak said. “It’s time for immediate action – starting with our repeated call for a public sector wage freeze to help protect funding for front-line services.” Continue reading

Ontario Liberals Boast Progress On The Job Creation Front

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from the Ontario Liberal government for our readers’ information. NAL invites you to share your views on the content of this post in the comment area below. Please remember that we only post comments that are signed with a real name.)

January 16, 2012

Ontario Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty

Increased Output in Manufacturing Drives Growth

 The McGuinty government remains focused on jobs and the economy.  Despite uncertainty around the world, Ontario’s real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rose 0.7 per cent (2.7 per cent annualized) in the third quarter (July to September 2011).

 Provincial GDP has now increased 5.8 per cent over the past nine quarters, putting it one per cent above its pre-recession level. Continue reading

Ontario Citizens’ Campaign Targets ‘Costly’ Nuclear Power Projects

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from the Toronto-based Ontario Clean Air Alliance for our readers’ information.)

Don’t Let Nuclear Projects Blow Our Electricity Bills Through The Roof!  

Despite the fact that Ontario electricity use has fallen by 10% (while GDP increased) since 2005, plans to spend tens of billions of $$ on new nuclear projects are moving full-steam ahead.  That’s money that could be spent on energy efficiency (where Ontario still lags behind most of its major competitors), more renewable power, and safe combined heat and power technology. 

With the province struggling to address a $19 billion deficit, there has never been a better time to end the expensive nuclear goose chase.  This is the year that will decide where Ontario dollars flow: into more bloated nuclear projects or into more cost-effective options.  Continue reading

Ontario NPD Leader Says People Must Be Priority In First Minority Budget

 (Niagara At Large is posting the following January 11 media release from the Ontario NDP for your information. We will post media releases from other parties pertaining to the budget when we get them.)

Queen’s Park– New Democrat Leader Andrea Horwath says all parties in Ontario’s first minority government in over twenty years have to listen to everyday families when setting priorities for the upcoming Budget and work together to meet their challenges.

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath

“In a minority parliament it’s even more important for politicians of all stripes to close our mouths and open our ears,” said Horwath. “Our province is facing tough times and we have difficult choices to make in the upcoming Budget. It’s time to hear from the people who elected us.”

Joined by NDP Finance Critic Michael Prue, Horwath announced her plan to visit communities across the province over the next few weeks to discuss ideas New Democrats have already put forward: like taking the HST off home heating bills and replacing reckless corporate tax giveaways with smart tax investments that reward companies creating jobs. Continue reading

A Year Later, Where Are The Goods On Sevenpifer?

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

It may seem hard to believe given how much Debbie Sevenpifer loomed in the lives of Niagara, Ontario residents for far to long, but a whole year has now passed since her sudden departure from the top job at the Niagara Health System.

Former NHS CEO Debbie Sevenpifer

 Only a few months before she disappeared like a ghost in the night last January, the NHS board, including Betty-Lou Souter, Paul Leon and company (all now thankfully gone following the appointment of Kevin Smith last September as NHS supervisor,) were continuing to boast about what a superlative job she was doing.

Then suddenly and shamelessly, Souter and others were telling us that she was out, not because she did anything wrong, but because the hospital system was at a “crossroads” and could stand to have new leadership. What we, the residents of this region whose taxes go to pay for this costly empire have never been told, were the real reasons why she was let go and how much of our money she received from us a severance pay or for all we know of the transaction, a golden parachute.

To have us believe that Sevenpifer’s hand-picked sycophants suddenly woke up one day and said it is time to let her go is an insult to her intelligence. Continue reading

A Tribute To One Of Niagara, Ontario’s Unsung Heroes

 By Doug Draper

 Journalism, like any other job, has its share of ups and downs, and one of the ups for me has been the many people I’ve met across our region who have accomplished some pretty extraordinary things.

Percy McKay,always there to fight for re-introducing fish in a Lake Ontario we too often have laced with man-made poisons

 I’m not talking so much about people with big titles and positions – the makers and shakers in the community who often find ways of recognizing each other’s efforts through the bestowal of the obligatory service club awards, honorary college degrees, etc. I’m talking about ordinary people living their lives quietly on the side streets and back streets of our cities and towns. They are people who often don’t have big titles or a great deal of wealth,  but who work just as hard, with little or no compensation, to make our communities better places to live in.

 They are the people I call unsung heroes and they are the people who have so often inspired me the most.

 One of those people is Percy McKay who passed away at his St. Catharines home last week at age 87 following a year-long battle with cancer. Continue reading

Hey Mr. Premier, Where Is The Openness On The Niagara Health System.

A Commentary by Doug Draper.

So Mr. Premier, you parachute a new guy in to take over supervision of this Niagara, Ontario region’s ravaged hospital system.

Welland's NDP represnetative demands full disclosure of parachute deals for NHS executives.

We get the impression from him – one named Kevin Smith, CEO of the St. Josephs Hospital System in the Hamilton area – that we might get more ‘openness, accountability and transparency’ than we had before, which under former CEO Debbie Sevenpifer and company was practically none. But where is the openness and accountability?

Bad enough that we still don’t know how much your government paid off Sevenpifer to leave the system a year ago after her tenure of turning our hospital service system into a train wreck. Now we learn that Smith, your latest minion down her, has dismissed other members of the Sevenpifer crowd and we can’t even find out why they have either left or been fired – let alone what kind of golden parachute your government has granted them at our expense.

In a media release this January 12, Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster said it right when she put it this way. The McGuinty Liberals (in Ontario have to) come clean and releast the details of the severance packages awarded to departing NHS executives. … Families in the Niagara region feel let down by the healthcare system,” she went on to say and “the public have a right to know where our taxdollars are going and how much money is being diverted from frontline care to pay for secret ‘ golden handshake’ severance payouts.

Indeed, they do. Continue reading

Ontario Government Missing in Action to Halt the Loss of Biodiversity

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post this one from one of the province’s bravest appointed representatives, Environment Commissioner Gord Miller, on the continued loss of our natural spaces due to low-density sprawl and the failure of the province and regional municipalities to do much of anything about it. Rest assured that Niagara At Large will have more to say about his issue later.)

 Toronto, January 10, 2012 – The Environmental Commissioner of Ontario says the Government of Ontario must come up with a new strategy to stem the continuing decline in Ontario’s species and natural spaces.

Ontario Environment Commissioner Gord Miller

In a special report released today, “Biodiversity: A Nation’s Commitment, an ligation for Ontario,” Gord Miller says unless Ontario and all other provinces take action, the international commitments made by the federal government will be meaningless.

 “The Ontario government did adopt a Biodiversity Strategy in 2005,” says Gord Miller. “Unfortunately, it expired in 2010, and the government has so far chosen not to adopt an updated plan. Our government cannot avoid its obligation,” says Miller, “to guide Ontario’s response to this urgent crisis.” Continue reading

Pathways to Peace – Art Studies of Upper Canada about the War of 1812

(As we prepare to officially remember the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812 this coming spring, check this exhibit out.)

 Ball’s Falls is proud to host an exciting new art exhibit from Canadian Art Cards, part of their Binational 1812 Art Collection – a Lasting Legacy Project. The art work depicts the effects of war on communities and the local population.

Click on this image to blow it up to full screen.

 The exhibit has opened at the Ball’s Falls Centre for Conservation (operated by the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority) this January and will continue to April 30th, 2012.

Two hundred year ago, US President Madison declared war on the British Empire launching years of conflict along the borders of Upper and Lower Canada, and with Britain’s Indian allies. This art exhibit portrays life in Upper Canada prior to the war and illustrates the challenges and struggles of living through the ensuing events. Continue reading

St. Catharines, Ontarion City Council Votes to Support Local Marine Jobs

(Niagara At Large is posting this January 10 media release from the office of St. Catharines Conservative MP Rick Dykstra for your information. It speaks to the New York State government’s plans to introduce legislation for controlling the dumping of ballast waters in the Great Lakes with possible invasive species in them and the concern major shipping companies in Canada have that this legislation could hurt their business.)

St. Catharines– City councilors last night voted unanimously to support a resolution opposing New York State’s “unachievable” incoming ballast water regulations, urging the American and Canadian governments to take all possible measure to stop them from being implemented as proposed.

St. Catharines, Ontario federal MP Rick Dykstra.

 Stephen Brooks, vice-president of the Chamber of Marine Commerce, flanked by St. Catharines MP Rick Dykstra, made a presentation to council last night, outlining for councilors how potentially devastating these regulations could be for marine shipping on the St. Lawrence Seaway.  Afterward, he praised council for its support. “We’re pleased that the City of St. Catharines recognizes the potential harm that New York State’s regulations could bring to their city and region and we are hopeful that other Canadian and American cities around the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway will also adopt similar resolutions.” Continue reading

Local Press Is Now More Of A ‘Barrier To Getting Messages Out

By Bernie Slepkov

 Understanding, interacting with, and affecting the world around us and the communities in which we live call for both telescopic and microscopic visions. Ever since its local owners sold the St. Catharines Standard we have been gradually losing our microscopic visions.

Niagara citizen activist Bernie Slepkov

Meanwhile, without alternate local dailies, skewed telescopic visions foster ill-informed readers and limited worldviews.

 Realizing back in 1996 that certain critical aspects of our societies were on the verge of significant needed change, I began to research and track societal trends. For this I read or scanned every newspaper on which I could get my hands. Frankly, I wanted to—and ultimately have—played a role in influencing the kinds of societal changes I thought would eventually benefit St. Catharines, and indeed, Niagara at large. Continue reading

Jobs In A Faltering Economy

Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from the St. Catharines and District Council of Women for our readers information. It draws attention to an event, scheduled for Thursday, January, 12 at the Centennial Library in downtown St. Catharines Ontario.

Featured speaker David Alexander

 That event will feature an address by David Alexander, executive director of the not-for-profit Niagara Workforce Planning Board and it will focus on jobs in this region. As you may know Niagara has recently suffered from some of the highest jobless rates in the province and country. So this is a timely talk on one of the most challenging issues we face as a region. Here is the media release. Continue reading

Be Damned With Parochialism – Niagara Region’s Services Are Only Way To Go

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 We often hear a great deal of complaining these days about government and how poorly it is working. These complaints and the anger that so often propels them provide grist for  neo- conservatives and libertarians in our midst to say lets gut government or get rid of it all together.

Image courtesy of Niagara Region.

 Yet there are successes – some of which we take for granted – and in Niagara, Ontario one of the very best is the regional government’s recycling program.

 Thanks to that program and thanks to residents across Niagara who have participated by making use of Blue and Grey boxes for recycling plastics, metal and paper and the like, and those Green bins for compostable organics, we are keeping almost half of the waste we generate in our homes and businesses out of landfill sites – a fantastic achievement given that a mere three decades ago, many skeptics in and outside of government believed  most of us would not go to the trouble to recycle. Continue reading

Recycle Your Christmas Tree And Enjoy A Special Family Day At Niagara Parks

(Niagara at large is pleased to post the following media release from the Niagara Parks Commission on this site. It highlights one of the Ontario-based Park Commission’s great annual events – coming to you in January when you might think there aren’t many fun things to do in the Parks. )

 Send your Christmas Tree to the Curb and Give Back to the Environment

 Niagara Falls, ON– What do you do with your Christmas tree once Christmas and New Year’s have passed? Come to the Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens and School of Horticulture on Sunday, January 15 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. for the annual Project Tree Cycle event.

Get out of the January cold at Niagara Park's Butterfly Conservancy. Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission.

 The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) invites you to bring your own bag and shovel to collect FREE wood chips recycled from discarded Christmas trees. Christmas trees will be collected on Saturday, January 14 through the Regional Waste Program and NPC staff will mulch the trees on Sunday, January 15. The wood chip mulch will be available in the north end of the parking lot directly in front of the Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens and School of Horticulture. Continue reading

A New Year’s Resolution For Canada – ‘To Thine Own Self Be True’

By Mark Taliano

In a world dominated by hollowed-out newspapers, vacuous television, and political campaigns obsessed with sound-bites and banalities, it’s always refreshing to dig deeper and expand the public discourse. 

Entering the Wahgoshig First Nations reservation. Is this another country or is it Canada? Photo courtesy of Mark Taliano.

 This is what John Ralston Saul does in A Fair Country Telling Truths About Canada.  Interestingly, his message resonates with today’s grassroots citizens’ movements (i.e the world-wide Occupy Movement). The underlying message is that if we, as Canadians, find the confidence to be true to ourselves, and to understand who we are, we will be empowered to the benefit of ourselves and the world.  Continue reading

Humbug To Those Hyper-Happy Holiday Newsletters

NIA Dec29 col Complete DD

 

  A Commentary by Doug Draper

Goodbye to the good, bad and ugly of 2011.

A typical template for a holiday family newsletter for people that can't use their own imagination.

 It has been a year of blood-letting wars and revolutions overseas, destructive flood, fire and wind storms, a world economy teetering on the brink and continued high unemployment rates here at home.

Whether 2011 has been a good year or bad one, or something in between depends on your perspective.

 If you lost your job or lost a loved one to illness or a fatal accident, or if some other tragedy of that magnitude shook you on the home front, then this year may be one you won’t look back on very fondly. Then again, if you were fortunate to keep your job and avoid any other calamities, then it may be a different story.

 One of the things I find most interesting in this regard are those family newsletters some people insist on sending around in place of a mere card or, dare I dream, an actual visit or phone call during the holiday season. You know the kind of newsletters I’m talking about, don’t you? They’re the ones written like form letters with no references to you or your family other than your name keyed in after the word “Dear …” Continue reading

The Death Of Demcracy In Canada and the United States

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 I get sick and tired of reading these stories about newspapers being gutted by corporate vultures across this continent.

One more once-proud newspaper going to the corporate barons' slaughter house.

 One newspaper after another – and I belonged to one called the St. Catharines Standard that had its inners ripped out more than a decade ago by Conrad Black and his Hollinger terrorists – has been dismembered by corporate chains that could not give a flying fig about news. They are only interested in gutting the resources needed to cover the news so they can make greater profits.

 I also get sick and tired of those in our communities who pretend to lament the passage of the newspaper as it was, yet continue to purchase a shelled-out piece of crap of that paper, served upby the corporatists anyway. Continue reading

Niagara’s Most Remarkable Family Of The Year – The Anzovino/Kennedy Family

By Doug Draper

 In my 33 years as a reporter, I’ve covered my share of people facing bad times and have been so often impressed with how remarkable people facing the worst of times in their lives can soar above them with strength and dignity.

Reilly's parents, Tim Anzovino and Denise Kennedy, making a final statement following the inquest in to their daughter's death. Photo by Doug Draper

There is no award I can think of in Niagara, Ontario for a family that fits that tall bill, but if I could pick one for the year 2011, it would be the Anzovino/Kennedy family of Fort Erie, Ontario.

 This is the family of Reilly Anzovino who died at age 18 – two years ago this December 27 – following a car accident on a stretch of Highway 3 between Port Colborne and her hometown of Fort Erie. The accident occurred after the Niagara Health System had shut down the emergency rooms in the Fort Erie and Port Colborne hospitals earlier that year. And to say that this family has

 The family, including  Reilly’s mom, Denise Kennedy, and Reilly’s dad, Tim Anzovino, their son Kain and so many other supportive members, worked with the support of the Fort Erie area community to get Ontario’s chief coroner, Dr. Andrew McCallum, to hold a “discretionary inquest” in to the matter – no small thing since mandatory inquests are usually only held for cases of murder and the like. Continue reading

Where Is Ontario’s Ombudsman On The Niagara Health System?

By Charles Davies, a citizen of Fort Erie, Ontario

(Niagara At Large is posting this piece with the permission of Charles Davies because it is the most detailed one we’ve received yet, expressing disappointment that Andre Marin, Ontario’s Ombudsman, has still not responded in any affirmative way calls from Niagara residents for an investigation by his office into the Niagara Health System, the body responsible for operating most of this region’s hospital services. If anyone one else out there would like to share their views on this issue, read Mr. Davies’ notes then post your comments below. Doug Draper, Niagara At Large.)

 Dear Mr. Draper,

Some time ago, in one of your columns, you  stated that the Ombudsman of Ontario now had the power to investigate the NHS because a government supervisor was in charge. I jumped at the chance to send in a complaint to Mr. Marin.

Where is Ontario Ombudsman Andre Marin on the NHS?

In response to my submission I received a request from Angela Alibertis, from his office, to call her back. Which I did. Her question was, “What is your complaint.”  My response – ” It is in the submission that I sent to your office.”  Her suggestion, “You should take your complaint to LHIN or to NHS or to Ken Smith, the government supervisor. It was nothing but a run around. So the power is there to investigate but it is not going to happen. He is a government employee. Marin has no intention of investigating.

Several of my friends sent in submissions with the same result.
It appears that Kevin Smith is only there to put out fires and to “improve communications with the public” . He has stated that he will not look at the past – only the future. They are all in this together – NHS, LHIN, the Ministry of Health, and Dalton McGuity who want to stay as far away from the problems as possible. Continue reading

My Lost Moment With Marilyn

By Doug Draper

If you are movie buff, you may know that a film called ‘My Week With Marilyn’ is hitting screens around North America.

My father Doug Sr. with me and Casey Adams, starring in the Hollywood film 'Niagara' from 1952. Marilyn Monroe, another star in the film, was greeting fans in the Table Rock restaurant in the background. And why wasn't I there???!!!!

My wife Mary and I first saw it at a wonderful independent theatre on Cape Cod late this November and liked it so much that we went to see it again the week before Christmas at another great old independent theatre in Buffalo called the North Park.

The movie is about a young guy in his early 20s who managed to get a job working as a third-string producer on a film being made in England in the mid-1950s by the late great actor Lawrence Olivia and co-starring Marilyn Monroe, who was on the verge at the time of making her mark as one of the greatest sex symbols in films in such hits as ‘Some Like It Hot’, ‘The Seven Year Itch’, ‘Bus Stop’ and ‘The Misfits’. Continue reading

Great Lakes Mayors Raise Concern Over Proposed Fracking Waste Discharge To Niagara River

By Doug Draper

 A coalition of Canadian and U.S. mayors around the Great Lakes, chaired by St. Catharines, Ontario Mayor Brian McMullan, is calling on provincial, state and federal governments for public hearings and “for utmost transparency and disclosure” when it comes to the potential impact of ‘fracking wastes’ on Great Lakes waters.

St. Catharines mayor and Great Lakes mayors' coalition chair Brian McMullan.

 “We are saying that this is such an important issue that we want to make sure that municipalities are part of the discussion and that the discussion is transparent,” said McMullan in a recent interview with Niagara At Large following a meeting of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative earlier this December.

 This initiative or coalition, established in 2003 and made up of 82 mayors from cities and town around the Canadian and U.S. shores of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River, used the same resolution passed this December in Chicago to ask for complete disclosure of the chemicals used in a fracking process that involves injecting chemically treated water deep into layers of shale rock to free up natural gas for extraction and use as a source of energy. Continue reading

Wishing You All A Happy Holiday Season

A Note from NAL publisher Doug Draper

 How I sometimes wish I could go back to my early childhood when Christmas seemed so magic and my brother and I used to sneak out of bed hoping to catch a glimpse of Santa Claus, Rudolph and company casting a shadow across a full moon on the ‘night before.’

Our Christmas frog. Have a froggy Christmas.

 Of course, our staying up like that made it a bit hard on our mother and father who had to outlast us to put the presents under the tree and do whatever they did with the milk and cookies we left out for the jolly old guy. But it was nice and it sure beats going out for a few last things on the day before Christmas and putting up with ugliness of people playing chicken in shopping mall parking lots for a spot to leave their car and trying to shove in before another at the cash registers. Continue reading

Kyoto Be Dammed! ‘I’m Dreaming Of A Green Christmas’

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 One of the arguments often used against the Conservative government of Stephen Harper by its critics is that thanks to its policies, Canada is losing its reputation as a world leader in such areas as health care, peace keeping and the environment.

A green mushy lawn, along with deflated lawn ornaments, is now what we have of a display that has won awards in the past. It's a green Christmas and let's hope for many more. Bring on climate change! Photo by Doug Draper

 I’ve got to confess. I’ve been among those critics, especially when it comes to what I’ve viewed as the Harper government’s failure to be a leader in making decisions on environmental issues that have potentially catastrophic consequences, not only for Canada but for the rest of the world.

All of that changed last week though when Peter Kent, the environment minister for the Harper government, announced Canada’s intentions to be the first of more than 140 nations to pull out of a Kyoto agreement our country signed in the 1990s to reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases to combat climate change. If that isn’t showing leadership on an environment issue of international importance, then what the hell is?!!! Continue reading

Coroner Inquest Ends With Recommendations Anzovino Family Feels Satisfied With

 By Doug Draper

 The coroner’s inquest into the death two Christmas season ago of Fort Erie, Ontario teen Reilly Anzovino is over and it spawned 27 recommendations in all for improving responses to traffic collisions that result in life-threatening injuries.

With Tim Anzovino, Reilly's father to the right, family member Patricia Anzovino behind her and lawyer Maureen Currie to the left, Reilly's mother, Denise Kennedy, reads statement at conclusion of inquest. Photo by Doug Draper

 The recommendations came from a five-person jury in a Welland courtroom after those jurors listened to three weeks of evidence, involving the testimony of about three dozen witnesses, and at the end of the day, the Anzovino family said it was satisfied with the results.

Denise Kennedy, Reilly’s mother, said after the jury completed its deliberations his December 21 that the family hopes the recommendations, if followed through by various levels of government, will prevent other families from suffering the tragedy her family did.

 Those recommendations include reviewing the need for a centre to deal with trauma patients in Niagara and the need for paramedics to adhere, as much as possible, to a 10-minute standard when it comes to loading patients on an ambulance and rushing off to a hospital. In this inquest, there were concerns raised about the roughly 17 minutes of time it took for paramedics to leave the scene of the accident after  Reilly was placed in the ambulance. Continue reading

Reilly Anzovino’s Friends Plea For New Law

By Doug Draper

Friends of Fort Erie, Ontario teen Reilly Anzovino are asking the province to establish a new law, requiring that families of loved ones involved in serious car crashes be notified of the incident as soon as possible.

Reilly's brother Kain, with Reilly's friends from left, Kate Kutka, Jamal Mills-Alexander, Emma Kutka and Brianna Reay at the Welland courthouse. Photo by Doug Draper

 

 Reilly’s friends shared their plea for what they are calling “Reilly’s Law” with members of the media at a Welland courthouse this December 21, where an Ontario coroner’s inquest in to the circumstances surrounding their friend’s death two years ago this holiday season was in to its final hours.

 The Fort Erie teen was pronounced dead at the Niagara Health System’s Welland hospital site at 1:21 a.m. on December 27, 2009 following an accident that occurred almost two hours earlier on a Fort Erie stretch of Highway 3. Reilly’s parents were contactd by Ontario Provincial Police at 1:17  a.m. Continue reading

Inquest On Fort Erie, Ontario Teen’s Death Reaching Its Conclusion.

By Doug Draper

 A five-person jury is expected to table its findings and recommendations at 3 p.m. this December 21 following more than three weeks of testimony into the circumstances surrounding the death two years ago of Fort Erie teen Reilly Anzovino.

The Welland Courthouse where the Inquest has been held. Photo by Doug Draper

 Reilly Anzovino was pronounced dead at 1:21 a.m. on December 27, 2009 following a traffic collision in the late hours of Boxing Day on Highway 3 between her hometown of Fort Erie and Port Colborne. Many residents in Niagara’s south end, including members of Reilly’s family, have wondered ever since if she would still be alive today if the Niagara Health System had not converted emergency rooms at hospitals it operates in Fort Erie and Port Colborne to urgent care centres that could no longer accept with life-threatening injuries or illnesses. With the closing of those ERs, Reilly was transported that night to an emergency room further away at the hospital in Welland. Continue reading

Maybe Niagara Region Transit Ought To Be Scrapped

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 There have been those from the start that have said “No” to the idea of a full-fledged regional transit system for Niagara, Ontario, and that is sad.

Niagara regional chair speaks at launch of Niagara Region Transit last September. Is it already time to pull the plug on this "pilot" transit system? Photo by Doug Draper

 Why can’t a region of more than 400,000 residents, with hundreds of thousands more visiting Niagara during the height of the tourist season, have a region-wide transit system of its own, just as Erie and Niagara Counties, New York do, and just as Waterloo Region, Ontario does, and York and Durham in this province?

 Those who’ve read my columns on this site and in other publications over the years going back to my days as an environment reporter at The St. Catharines Standard, may know that I have always been an energetic supporter of public transit. Continue reading

Remembering Christopher Hitchens

A  Comment by Doug Draper

 He was one of my favourite fellow atheists, not to mention one of the most brilliant and provocative journalists and essay writers of our age.

Christopher Hitchens

 Christopher Hitchens – award winning writer and best-selling book author, born in England and later a citizen of a United States he both admired and courageously criticized – died following a noble fight with cancer this December 16. He was only 62.

 To say that we humans – all of us who are fortunate to share this planet just for a little while – have suffered a loss of one of the few left among us who kept intelligent and challenging discourse alive in an age of bumper sticker slogans and two-sentence tweets is to say the least. Continue reading

Real Regional Transit One More Reason For An Amalgamated Niagara

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 If we need yet another reason why there should be a change in governance in this region, right up to and including the possibility of amalgamating all 12 local municipalities into one ‘City of Niagara’, take a look at the stumbling around we are doing with a service so vital as public transit.

Photo by Doug Draper

 You may or may not know that as of this past September, we now have an “inter-municipal public transit service” in Niagara. It is all but a secret, except for the noble attempts of the regional government’s communication department to spread the word around through newsletters, pamphlets and so on. But this is where we have to be carefull and almost get down to a whisper about regional buses, lest we offend the parochial interests of our local municipalities. Continue reading

Ontario NDP Demands Disclosure Of Hospital CEO Bonuses

(NAL is posting this December 16 media release from the Ontario NDP for your information. Should their bonuses and perks, including all gifts from contractors working for them like trips to the Vancouver be posted. You better damn believe it. An NAL editorial note.)

Ontario NDP critic Cheri DiNovo

Queen’s Park – As many Ontario hospitals finalize Christmas bonuses for executives, NDP MPP Cheri DiNovo called for full disclosure of hospital CEO bonuses and perks.

“Now, more than ever, everyday people need to know that public money is being spent responsibly on their priorities. If families are being told to tighten their belts they have a right to know exactly how hospital CEOs are being paid,” said DiNovo. Continue reading

St. Catharines, Ontario MP Lauds Decision To Prohibit Face Coverings During Citizenship Ceremony

(Niagara At Large is posting this December 13 media release from St. Catharines MP Rick Dystra for your information. We also invite you to share your views on this issue below.)

St. Catharines MP Rick Dykstra

St. Catharines – Rick Dykstra, Member of Parliament for St. Catharines and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, says he wholeheartedly supports a directive, announced yesterday by Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney to ban the wearing of face coverings during the citizenship ceremony.

This is something our department has been aware of as an issue for some time”, said Dykstra.  “Other MP’s, as well as citizenship judges have told us that the oath cannot properly be recited behind a veil or other type of covering and that those taking the oath must do in an atmosphere of openness and transparency.” Continue reading

Hunters – Where Is The Respect For Life

“Hey Bungalow Bill
What did you kill,
Bungalow Bill?”
– The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill, The Beatles; Lyrics by John Lennon

By Dan Wilson

Far be it for me to stereotype people, make sweeping generalizations or paint everyone with the same brush, but hunters are a despicable lot (despicable, adj. deserving to be despised; contemptible; morally reprehensible; vile).*

Deer remains. Photo by Dan Wilson.

Case in point: I’m hiking out at Rockway last Sunday and I notice these two guys in the parking lot of the Rockway Community Centre doing something out of the back of one of their trucks. I didn’t think too much about it as I figured they were getting ready to go for a hike as well.

When I returned a few hours later, they were still there, getting ready to leave. I also noticed something in the grass directly behind their truck so I went over to investigate. Turns out it was a deer carcass, freshly killed and cleaned. The head was severed, the flesh removed and the innards stuffed into two garbage bags along with a rolled up sheet of plastic dripping blood. Continue reading

No Tolls on Christmas Day at the Peace Bridge

NAL peace bridge Christmas day, ….

BUFFALO, NY/FORT ERIE, ON– The Buffalo and Fort Erie Public Bridge Authority (Peace Bridge Authority) is pleased to announce that it will not charge tolls on Sunday, December 25, 2011, in celebration of the Christmas holiday.

Courtesy of the Peace Bridge Authority.

The toll-free period will be in effect for 24 hours beginning at 12 AM Christmas morning.
“Not charging tolls on Christmas Day is a nice way to conclude the year and say thank you to our employees and customers,” said Authority Chairman Anthony Annunziata. “And let me also remind travelers to check out our festive bridge lighting show scheduled for that same evening.”

The Buffalo and Fort Erie Public Bridge Authority, a binational authority, has owned and operated the Peace Bridge since 1933. The bridge, which was opened to traffic in 1927, spans the Niagara River between Fort Erie, Ontario, and Buffalo, New York, and is a key international border crossing. The Authority is governed by a 10 member board with an equal number of representatives from Canada and the United States.

A Colourful Flowerily Christmas At Niagara Parks

(Want to enjoy great flower displays, even at this time of year! NAL may get in trouble with others around this one, but few can do it for you like Ontario’s own Niagara Parks Commission. We share this release on a great display they have ready for you of Poinsettias of many colours and others for free to you at their fine site at the Floral Showhouse along the Niagara Parkway in Niagara Falls, Ontario.Give yourself a big beautiful break and take it in. The media release and particulars from the Niagara Parks Commisson are below.)

NIAGARA FALLS, ON — The gardens may be put to bed, but there is still a great opportunity to enjoy a burst of horticultural beauty at The Niagara Parks Commission’s (NPC) Floral Showhouse.

Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission

Christmas has officially arrived with traditional red, white and pink Poinsettias as well as many unusual varieties and forms. Cyclamen, Azaleas, Christmas Cactus and Paperwhite Narcissus add to this spectacular festival of winter colours.

As a final touch, the Floral Showhouse has been adorned with lights, garland, ribbon, a beautiful Nativity scene and many other holiday surprises. Free flying tropical birds throughout the Showhouse add to the Christmas merriment. Continue reading

Occupy Buffalo Hangs Tough

By Doug Draper

With less than two weeks to go before the official start of winter,   Buffalo, New York has already had its first blast of snow off Lake Erie. And as on this past Sunday, December 11, a chilly wind was whirling around downtown buildings surrounding Washington Square where the canvas covers of tents were flapping wildly.

Paul Rozzman, a U.S. army veteran andan occupier at the Buffalo encampment. Photo by Doug Draper

Yet those hunkering down in these tents – all part of an Occupy Buffalo encampment now into its third month and still surviving in the shadow of Buffalo’s city hall while ‘Occupy’ encampments, including those in Toronto, Calgary, Vancouver, New York City, Boston and so many  other cities across the continent have been folded  by the powers that be – remain determined to tough it ought, even as forecasts call for another blast of icy rain and snow in the days ahead. Continue reading

Canada Craps Out On Climate Change Talks

(Niagara At Large is posting this expected announcement from a Canadian governent – Stephen Harper’s Conservatives – that always viewed any human involvement in climate change as a joke. NAL believes this decision by the Harper Conservatives to pull out of the international Kyoto talks will be a day that is remembered in imfamy for generations to come.)

From Council of Canadians environmental  campaigner, Andrea Harden-Donahue

Canadian Environment Minister Peter Kent Announces Canada is Legally Leaving the Kyoto Protocol

 December 12th, 2011.

Council of Canadians environmentalist Andrea Harden-Donahue


I just returned from a media scrum in the foyer outside of our House of Commons (not the House of corporations) where Minister Kent announced Canada will legally leave the Kyoto Protocol.

Kent coached the announcement with plenty of key words about our ongoing commitment to the Durban platform, (the so called real way forward) a fair
dose of fear mongering (as Megan Leslie referred to it) and that we are committed to taking climate change. But they were just that, words, words that hopefully mainstream media won¹t buy this hook line and sinker. While this announcement may not come as a surprise, the reality is it is a big
deal. Continue reading

NHS Gives The Boots To Heart Niagara. Decades-Old Agency Needs A New Home

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following media release from Heart Niagara, an agency that has received international attention for its heart-care work. After 35 years, the agency has been informed by the Niagara Health System – the amalgamated board for most hospital services in Niagara for the past decade -that the in-kind space it has enjoyed at the Niagara Falls hospital site for the past 35 years is no longer available. )

Heart Niagara is reaching out for community support as they search for a new home in Niagara.

Heart Niagara has recently been informed by the Niagara Health System that the in-kind space they have been providing for the last 35 years will no longer be available due to the need to increase NHS–GNG site isolation bed capacity for patients requiring isolation. The relocation will see administrative areas moved from clinical areas and placed in the Allied Health Centre, leaving Heart Niagara without a site to work from. Continue reading

‘And so this is Christmas, and what have we done?’

A Commentary by Doug Draper

First came the chilly November nights camping out in tents. Then came the pepper spray.

One Christmas yard scene. photo by Doug Draper

The faces of those who were peppered, according to all the reports I read in so many mainstream newspaper from Toronto to Boston and New York, turned red going on purple as their eyes watered up and the sting in their throats caused them to cough violently. “Call an ambulance! Call an ambulance,” one of them yelled as others turned to flee. Continue reading

Niagara Region Finally Says Yes To Byelection In Welland

By Willy Noiles

It was a long, winding circuitous, often pock-marked ride, as Welland Mayor Barry Sharpe put it, but regional councillors finally approved a byelection in the Rose City to fill the vacancy left by Cindy Forster’s provincial victory in October.

Welland Mayor Barry Sharpe finally gets clearance from region for byelection.

After not one but two reconsideration motions, a majority of regional councillors finally came around to supporting Welland city council’s original request for a by-election. At regional council’s last regular meeting on Nov. 17, councillors rejected Welland’s request. At that meeting, they also rejected a motion by Lincoln Coun. Mark Bylsma to appoint the runner-up, former mayor Damian Goulbourne.

Unable to resolve the issue, they ultimately voted to refer the matter back to Welland council, asking them to recommend somebody to appoint. Continue reading

Niagara Region Delays Decision On Use Of Student Transit Passes On Its Buses

By Doug Draper

Should students from Brock University and Niagara College be allowed to use their transit passes to ride Niagara’s inter-municipal transit system?  Or should they pay the $5 fare on top of the $139 they  pay each year for a pass to ride local bus systems.

Almost empty Niagara Region Transit buses leave passengers off at Welland bus terminal this November. Photro by Doug Draper.

Following a vigorous debate on the question a December 8 regional council meeting, a majority of councillors voted to put a decision off until early in the New Year when they get some feedback from the three main local transit operators based in St. Catharines, Niagara Falls and Welland.

Students enrolled at Brock and Niagara College have begun pressing Niagara’s regional government  to honour  their transit passes – also known as ‘U passes’ paid for through their tuition fees – for the Niagara Region Transit system that began rolling between St. Catharines, Thorold, Niagara Falls, Welland and onward with feeder lines to and from Port Colborne and Fort Erie last September.

One of the problems, say students, is that the local transit buses running between campuses in St. Catharines, Welland, Niagara-on-the-Lake and Niagara Falls frequently become full to capacity. At that point, students who can’t get on them are left standing at the side watching one of region’s nearly empty buses drive by, which they can only use if they shell out five bucks per ride. Continue reading

Ontario’s Auditor Does A Slam Dunk On Auto Insurance Costs

A Commentary by Doug Draper

The late Niagara MPP Mel Swart – a champion for fairer auto insurance rates in Ontario – may agree with me with I say three cheers for the province’s  Auditor General Jim McCarter.

The late Niagara MPP Mel Swart was a champion for fairer auto insurance rates.

In his latest annual report, released at Queen’s Park this past Monday, McCarter criticized the eight-year-old Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty for not doing enough during that time to keep we, the people of this province, from being mugged in our pocket book when it comes to the soaring costs of such essentials as energy, health care and, last but not lease, auto insurance.

There are so many important things McCarter addresses in his report but I’m going to focus on auto insurance – an issue I’ve been taken to task for by some members of the insurance industry for arguing that for many years over the past decade and a half,  drivers have been hit with premium increases well above the rate of inflation while the industry has has enjoyed record profits. Continue reading

Enjoy A Free Christmas Concert In Niagara

NAL  Christmas Concert

Niagara at Large is pleased to post the following poster, advertising a free Christmas concert to be performed by the popular Chorus Niagara Children’s Choir on Wednesday, December 14 at 7 p.m. at 7 p.m. at St. Barnabas Anglican Church on 31 Queenston St. in St. Catharines, Ontario.

Please click on the poster below to enlarge it on your screen and after you have had a closer look at that, we are also posting below a media release for the a Christmas concert version of Chorus Niagara with the Niagara Symphony, to be performed at Brock University’s Sean O’Sullivan Theatre in St. Catharines this December 10 and 11.

This one includes ticket fees that you can find out more information out about below, and it is worth it!  Chorus Niagara, as you may by now know, is still receiving hundreds of thousands of hits on top of the millions already received for an online video of its rendition of  an amazing rendition of Hallelujah at of all places, the Seaway shopping mall a year ago this Christmas season in  Welland, Ontario.

We are posting information on the Chorus Niagara concert at Brock University below. Continue reading

How Good Is This Cross-Border Agreement For Us?

A Brief by Doug Draper

This December 7, Canadian Prime Minister  Stephen Harper and U.S. President Barack Obama signed a cross-border agreement – loosely being called the ‘Canada-U.S. border plan – that may be as significant as any binational agreement the two countries have signed going back to the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909.

Canadian PM Stephen Harper and U.S. President Barack Obama embrace over new cross-border agreement. But is it good for us?

Niagara At Large has posted a few media releases and statements from government and business groups on both sides of the border since this agreement was signed between the two leaders in the White House this December 7. We have done so because in our greater Niagara region, including residents in Niagara, Ontario and Erie and Niagara counties, New York, we share some of the busiest border crossings in all of North America, and residents and businesses here will be significantly impacted by this It appears many members of the business community on both sides of the Niagara River have rushed to the conclusion that this agreement, to the extent it will make it easier to move goods back and forth, believe this agreement is a positive step for our economies and for the growth of jobs in a region that has been suffering economically with the out-sourcing of good-paying manufacturing jobs overseas.  Perhaps they are right.

There are others, including the Ottawa-based citizens group Council of Canadians, that are expressing concerns about what this agreement may mean for the loss of individual privacy and national sovereignty. In a statement published on the Council of Canadian’s website this December 7, the group’s director Maude Barlow said the border plan will “create new checks on travel into and out of Canada, and increase the amount of personal information that is shared with U.S. security agenices. It will announce new joint policing initiatives that could make it normal to have U.S. agents operating in Canada.” Continue reading

Beyond the Border: A Shared Vision for Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness

(Niagara At Large is posting this letter, dated December 7, to residents on both sides of our greater Niagara border from the U.S. ambassador to Canada, David Jacobson, on the historic signing of a new cross-border agreement between Canada and the United States for your information.)

I have just come from the Oval Office, where President Obama and Prime Minister Harper took our relationship to the next level as they announced the Action Plans for Beyond the Border: A Shared Vision for Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness.

The U.S. ambassador to Canada, David Jacobson

The United States and Canada have long been the best of neighbors, friends, partners, and allies. Based on foundations of mutual reliance and respect we have built prosperity at home while standing shoulder-to-shoulder defending our shared values around the world. We have long understood that if we work together we are stronger, more prosperous, and more competitive.

 Building on that spirit, in February we set forth a plan for the future of North America. We committed to a shared vision for perimeter security and economic competitiveness. We agreed to work together within, at, and away from our borders to enhance our security, better coordinate our regulatory systems, and accelerate the legitimate flow of people, goods and services. We rejected the false choice between security and efficiency at the border. We realized that by improving the efficiency of the border in smart ways we would enhance the security of North America while lifting the standard of living of our people. We promised to consult with our citizens and to deliver a detailed Action Plan to realize our vision. Today we deliver on that promise. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario-Area Chambers Welcome New Canada – U.S. Border Action Plan

 (Niagara At Large is posting this December 2 media release from members of the Niagara, Ontario businesses community on an unprecedented border agreement between Canada and the United States – an agreement that very much impacts on our greater Niagara region given the fact that it hosts some of the busiest border crossings on the continent.)

(Niagara) As Niagara continues to play a leadership role in Canada’s economic transition, the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce and St. Catharines – Thorold Chamber of Commerce welcomes the new Canada – U.S. Border Action Plan announced today.

Mike Watt, chair of the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce on the Ontario side of the border.

 

A key component of the border deal will be the expansion of pre-clearance programs NEXUS and FAST (Free and Secure Trade). The chambers are encouraged to see that there will also be expanded lanes and booths for NEXUS holders at the Fort Erie and Queenston border crossings.

 “As a community that benefits directly from this trade with nearly 30 per cent of all Canada-US trade passing through Niagara, we certainly recognize the importance of facilitating movement of goods and people between Canada and the U.S,” explains Mike Watt, Chair of the Board of Directors of the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce. “The business community will benefit from expedited access to the United States market as a result of this agreement.” Continue reading

Buffalo Area Constressman Applauds US/Canada Border Agreement

(Niagara At Large is posting the following December 7 media release from Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins, the first area politicians from either side of the great Niagara border to respond to plans to “enhance” and make more “efficient” crossing the Peace Bridge and other area border points. He calls it a “victory.”)

Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-27) celebrated U.S. President Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Harper’s historic agreement declaring a shared responsibility for enhanced security and efficient access for the legitimate movement of people, goods, and services between the northern border.

Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins.

 “For quite some time we have urged changes at our border to increase the capacity, encourage predictability and otherwise facilitate a better flow of goods and people between our two nations,” said Congressman Higgins.   “The specific attention to the Peace Bridge is welcome news for Western New York.  Today’s recommendations provide long-awaited coordination that will lead to better security and great new opportunities between our shared economies. “

 President Obama and Prime Minister Harper first announced plans for a “Beyond the Border” working group to develop a shared vision strategy in February.  On July 14th Congressman Higgins wrote a letter to the President asking that he and Prime Minister Harper address three specific issues to advance the cross-border relationship.  Continue reading

The Man Behind Niagara Citizen Hospital Services Advocate Sue Salzer

By Doug Draper

Behind some of the most dedicated citizen activists I’ve met in Niagara over my 32 years of reporting are incredibly patient and supportive spouses.

Joe with wife and citizen activist Sue Salzer. Photo courtesy of Sue Salzer.

I think most particularly of Norm Howe and Jim Matthews, the husbands of two of the most effective environmental activists whose efforts I covered earlier on in this region – Margherita Howe and Lynne Matthews. And I think of Joe Salzer, the husband of Sue Salzer, a Fort Erie resident and leader of the Yellow Shirt Brigade, a group of mostly south Niagara residents that is continuing to fight for accessible, quality hospital services for all.

Joe  Salzer passed away quietly this past Sunday, December 4 following a lengthy illness. He spent his last hours at the Douglas Memorial Hospital in Fort Erie, one of the hospital s that was taken hostage by the Niagara Health System under an amalgamation of most of Niagara’s hospital services, imposed without any say from the public by the former provincial Conservative government of Mike Harris. Continue reading

Canada Plays ‘International Villian’ At UN Climate Change Talks

By Mark Taliano

 The United Nations Climate Conference has been convening in Durban, South Africa, since November 28 and will continue until December 9, 2011.  This, and Canada’s shameful response to environmental injustices, including human-caused global warming, prompted a rally and protest from the Toronto Occupy Movement this past Saturday, December 3 for a “Global Day Of Action for Climate Justice”), starting at Dundas Square and ending at St. James Park.

Anti-Tar Sands Rally. Photo courtesy of Mark Taliano

  The rally started with a traditional Mohawk ceremony thanking Mother Earth for her abundance.  Next, a speaker from Amnesty International described the tragedy of the Union Carbide/Dow industrial accident in Bhopal, India 27 years ago, and the tragic failures of the clean-up efforts.  Continue reading

Ontario Conservatives Lose Bid For Local Say On Wind Farms

 By Doug Draper

  A bill Tim Hudak and his Ontario Conservatives put forward this past December 1 to allow local communities to have more in where facilities for generating wind energy should be located was defeated by the NDP and governing Liberals.

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak at recent gathering in front of Queen's Park. Photo courtesy of Tim Hudak's office.

  “Local residents have more say over where a Tim Hortons or a chip truck goes in town than they do over the location of an industrial wind farm,” said Hudak during a recent interview with Niagara At Large. “To centralize that decision making (with the provincial government) is an injustice ad it is wrong, and it should be fixed.”

  Hudak said the purpose of the private members’ bill his party hoped to get passed this December 1 was to restore the right of local residents to have some say in deciding where wind farms should go, not to say no to wind energy altogether in Niagara. Continue reading

Coroner’s Inquest Is On Again

By Doug Draper

A provincial inquest into the circumstances around the death of Fort Erie teen Reilly Anzovino will continue in a Welland courtroom this coming Monday, December 5.

Fort Erie teen Reilly Anzovino

The high-profile inquest, which began early this November, has been adjourned twice while the family of Reilly asked for time for a new lawyer, Maureen Currie, to study the circumstances of her death following a traffic accident in the late hours of December 26, 2009.

The inquest was called by Ontario’s Chief Coroner’s office in the wake of questions from the Anzovino family and many others in the south end of Niagara whether 18-year-old Reilly would still be alive if the Niagara Health System – the body responsible for managing most of the hospital services in the region – had not closed the emergency rooms in Reilly’s hometown of Fort Erie and in nearby Port Colborne earlier that year. Reilly was pronounced dead in the early hours of December 27, 2009 following a longer trip to the emergency room at NHS’s Welland hospital site. Continue reading

Niagara Region Balances Affordability With Sustainability In 2012 Budget

(NIAGARA At Large is posting the following media release from Niagara, Ontario’s regional government on the passage of a 2012 budget that will see a $41 increase on the regional portion of property taxes across the region.)

NIAGARA REGION, Dec. 2, 2011– Niagara Regional Council approved their 2012 budget last night with a focus on both affordability and sustainability. Residents will see an increase of 3.14 per cent in Regional taxes this year, after Council passed its 2012 net operating budget of $294.5 million and capital budget of $149 million.

Niagara Regional Chair Gary Burroughs - a budget for a "critical time."

On average, a homeowner with a 2011 property assessment of $219,732 will pay about $1,360 for Regional services; an increase of approximately $41 from the 2011 tax levy.

The proposed water budget will see a 0.02 per cent increase, wastewater a 4.3 per cent increase and waste management will see a 0.24 per cent increase. The combined water and wastewater household impact for 2012 is an average increase of $14. The waste management impact per household is an average decrease of $2 per household. These impacts vary based on the municipality you live in. Continue reading