Author Archives: dougdraper

Layton To Lie In State In Ottawa And Toronto

Niagara At Large is sharing the following media release for those interested in honouring the life and death of Jack Layton. Further to this release, there are reports that Jack Layton’s body will lie in state at Toronto City Hall on Friday, August 26.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
AUGUST 23, 2011

THE HONOURABLE JACK LAYTON TO LIE IN STATE IN OTTAWA

Flag on Ottawa's Parliament building at half mast for Jack Layton

OTTAWA – Friends, colleagues, staff and all those who admired and loved Jack Layton will have an opportunity to pay their final respects to him in Ottawa.

The Honourable Jack Layton, Leader of the Official Opposition, will be lying in state on Parliament Hill from Wednesday August 24th to Thursday August 25th at 2:00pm.  There will also be visitation hours at Toronto City Hall.

There will be an opportunity for Members of Parliament and other dignitaries to visit starting at 11:00 am Wednesday morning. Visitation will be open to the public at 12:30 pm on Wednesday. A book of condolences will also be available for people to offer thoughts and prayers.

In addition to the condolence book on parliament hill, people across Canada will be able to visit local NDP MPs offices to write a message of condolence and pay their respects.

A ceremony celebrating the life of Mr. Layton will take place on Saturday, August 27, 2011 at 2 p.m. at Roy Thompson Hall in Toronto.

A Poem For Jack Layton – From A Cancer Survivor

As millions of Canadians find their own way of expressing their sorrow over the death this August 22 of Jack Layton, Niagara At Large has received a poem written by Pamela Murphy of St. Catharines, who is fighting her own battle with cancer.She shared it with the Niagara NDP constituency office of Peter Kormos in the hope it may be passed on to Jack Layton’s family, and Niagara At Large has received permission to share it with you.

GOODBYE-

There are many ways to say goodbye-
A gentle touch in passing,
A shaken hand,
A backward glance,
A hug that’s everlasting.

There are many ways to say goodbye-
In song or word or prayer,
A gift, love-wrapt,
A thoughtful note,
A footprint softly there.

There are many ways to say goodbye-
A smile, a kiss, a call.
For Jack so dear,
You’ll always be near,
And we’ve already said it all.

There are many ways to say goodbye-
As we softly leave in sorrow,
But your spirit will live
In the love we give
To our family, today and tomorrow.

From Pam and Mike Murphy and family of St. Catharines, Ontario to the family of Jack Layton.

We hope this poem gives you some comfort and conveys our deepest
sympathies. We extend our prayers to you all.

(Niagara At Large invites you to share your thoughts below.)

‘Love Is Better Than Anger. Hope Is Better Than Fear. …’ – Jack Layton’s Last Letter To Canadians

Jack Layton’s family has released the following letter, written by the federal NDP leader two days before to his death this Monday, August 22 at the age of 61. The text of that letter follows.

August 20, 2011, Toronto, Ontario

Dear Friends,

Canada's NDP leader Jack Layton

Tens of thousands of Canadians have written to me in recent weeks to wish me well. I want to thank each and every one of you for your thoughtful, inspiring and often beautiful notes, cards and gifts. Your spirit and love have lit up my home, my spirit, and my determination.

Unfortunately my treatment has not worked out as I hoped. So I am giving this letter to my partner Olivia to share with you in the circumstance in which I cannot continue. Continue reading

Canada Has Lost A Leader Of Intelligence, Hope And Compassion

A News Brief from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Here is some very sad news that many of us on the Canadian side of the border – regardless of our political stripes – braced ourselves for, yet hoped would never happen.

A very upbeat Jack Layton with Welland NDP MP Malcolm Allen in Niagara, just this spring during the federal election. Photo courtesy of Malcolm Allen's constituency office.

Jack Layton, leader of the federal New Democratic Party, lost his battle with cancer this Monday, August 22. He slipped away at his home in Toronto shortly before 5 a.m., surrounding by members of his family. He was only 61.

Layton, who only this July announced to the country that he was taking a little time off to fight a new cancer after fighting down another one over the past few years, has been taken away after leading the federal NDP to its highest heights in half a century – from a party with 13 seats only a decade ago to 103 seats, more than enough to win it official opposition status for the first time in its history.

Now it is left up to his friends and colleagues in his party, including Welland Riding MP Malcolm Allen to build on his legacy. “I know he would want us to make sure that the things he would have said, we will say for him,” Allen told Niagara At Large hours after hearing the news of Layton’s death. Continue reading

Province Gives Expansion Of Niagara’s 406 Highway A Sixty-Two Million Dollar Green Light

By Doug Draper

Niagara’s regional government had a good day this Friday, August 19 when it comes to one of the things on its wish list with the province.

Niagara regional chairman Gary Burroughs

The regional government has been pushing for the expansion of Highway 406 to four lanes and further south, and this August 19 it received news that the province will come through with another $62 million, carrying the four lanes of this mid-peninsula highway right up to Welland’s main street and the Welland Canal tunnel.

“It is wonderful to finally get that push forward,” said Niagara regional chair Gary Burroughs in an interview with Niagara At Large. “This is huge (and) it helps open up the southern end of our region.” Continue reading

A Lesson For Hospital Bosses In Niagara

By Doug Allan

There is a lesson in the government take-over of the Niagara Health System (NHS) for hospital bosses.

Public health care advocate and CUPE representative Doug Allan

The NHS hospital bosses pushed and pushed the so-called “Hospital Improvement Plan” even when the local communities rose up in revolt. Even the Ontario Hospital Association (or at least its CEO) waded in  to fight the plan’s critics.

The ultimate result? The government, facing an election and even more problems at the hospital (in the form of superbug outbreaks) turned tail and admitted the hospital had lost the confidence of the community. (Duh!)

First, the hospital CEO was removed by the hospital board in January, then the government announced in May it would allow a review of the Hospital Improvement Plan, and now the government is putting the hospital under a supervisor. Will the hospital board be next? Continue reading

Niagara Conservationist Produces Book On One Of Ontario’s Great Conservationists

A Note from Doug Draper

Chances are many out there don’t know who Edmund Zavitz is.

I’ve been covering environmental issues for more than 30 years and I’m almost embarrassed to say that I didn’t, until a year or two ago when I read a story about him by John Bacher.

Bacher, a veteran conservationist and member of the Niagara-based Preservation of Agricultural Lands Society (better known as PALS), has now written a book about this great preserver of trees and forests who grew up in Fort Erie Ontario in the late 1800s and went on to become a chief forester of Ontario. An avid planter of trees to restore the province’s forest cover, the one billionth tree was planted under his watch by Ontario Premier John Robert’s, shortly before Zavitz’ death in 1968. Continue reading

New NHS Supervisor Should Sweep Out Board, Starting With Its Chairman

A Commentary by Doug Draper

When the new supervisor the Ontario government is appointing to oversee the Niagara Health System comes on board, one of the first things they ought to do is fire the whole NHS board, beginning with its chairman Paul Leon.

Niagara Health System board chairman Paul Leon

If you’ve ever attended one of the NHS’s board meetings, you will see for yourself that, however smart they may be as individuals, they turn in to a mass of mindless dip sticks that pledge allegiance to the former CEO Debbie Sevenpifer, bounced out of her job without any real explanation seven months ago, or whoever happens to be in charge at the time.

This past August 15, in response to news that the province’s health minister, Deb Matthews, was appointing a supervisor to oversee the NHS, mindless dip-stick number one – Paul Leon, chairman of the health system’s board – began by responding that the board “will work collaboratively with whatever (Matthews) decides.”

That was okay, so far as it went. Then Leon went on, according to a quote in the CBC, to say that a reason for the shake-up of confidence in the NHS, which operates most of the hospital services in Niagara, Ontario, is residents who’ve expressed their concerns about the accessibility and quality of those services. “They’ve been using anything they can to advance their agendas, and this has caused a great deal of confusion and concern within our communities.” Continue reading

McGuinty Government ‘Out Of Touch’ On NHS Crisis – Welland Riding Conservative Candidate

(Niagara At Large is posting the following statement from Domenic Ursini, the provincial Conservative candidate in the Welland riding, for our readers information.)

“Dalton McGuinty’s announcement that a supervisor has been appointed to oversee the Niagara Health System shows just how out-of-touch he is with hardworking families in Niagara. The health care buck stops on Dalton McGuinty’s desk – yet he refuses to be held accountable and rather hide behind his latest NHS supervisor.

Welland riding Conservative candidate Domenic Ursini

McGuinty’s Health Minister admitted the Liberal failure on the NHS file when she was quoted as saying “The people of Niagara deserve to have confidence in their hospitals and I think that it’s clear to me that they don’t have the necessary confidence” (Welland Tribune, August 15, 2011)

Dalton McGuinty is the reason the people of Niagara have lost confidence in their hospitals.

We’ve seen 79 days of inaction on the part of the Dalton McGuinty on the C. difficile crisis in Niagara. And Dalton McGuinty’s Health Minister continues to be Missing in Action. Continue reading

Former Fort Erie Mayor And NDP Candidate Calls NHS Supervisor Appointment ‘A Political Sideshow’

From Wayne Redekop

(Niagara At Large is posting the following information from the NDP camp of Wayne Redekop in the Niagara Falls riding for your information.

Niagara residents deserve a good debate and discussion on where we are going with hospital services in Niagara and if any individual or political party member – Liberal, NDP or Conservative – offers something forward, Niagara At Large will post it.)

From Wayne Redekop,  Ontario  NDP candidate, Niagara Falls riding

“The McGuinty Liberals believe that appointing a supervisor can help them avoid the political fallout from the crisis at the Niagara Health System,” said Redekop.

Wayne Redekop

“If the Minister of Health bothered to come down and talk to the people of Niagara, she would have known about frustration in the community long ago. Niagara residents haven’t had confidence in the NHS for years and the government has been repeatedly told that. Once again the Liberals are trying to put themselves before Niagara families.

“Between the closure of two emergency wards, skyrocketing executive salaries, contracting out of services and the C. difficile crisis, Niagara families have been questioning the NHS for years. Yet the government and Minister of Health has consistently backed the organization, claiming that “Health care is getting better in Niagara; make no mistake about it” and “The NHS is doing excellent work…there is new leadership there.” (Legislative Assembly, March 3, 2011) Continue reading

At Long Last, Province Moves To Appoint Supervisor To Run Discredited Niagara Health System

By Doug Draper

Ontario’s health minister Deb Matthews announced this August 15 she is appointing a supervisor to run a Niagara Health System many residents in the region do not have faith in anymore.

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews calls for new NHS supervisor

Matthews said she is moving forward to appoint a supervisor to “restore necessary public confidence” in Niagara’s hospital system. “I know that they (the NHS) are doing their absolute best under difficult circumstances,” added Matthews in a statement following in the wake of more than 30 deaths from a highly infectious C. Difficile superbug in the NHS’s hospitals over the past three months. “But I can’t ignore the fact that a very large segment of the public (in Niagara, Ontario) has lost necessary confidence in this hospital’s administration.”

The health minister’s announcement comes less than a week after relatives of people who have suffered and died from C. Diff, in the NHS’s St. Catharines, Niagara Falls and Welland hospital sites offered tearful accounts of filthy conditions and neglect in those hospitals during a public meeting.

One of the first Niagara politicians out of the gate with a media release applauding Matthews’ decision to appoint a supervisor was St. Catharines Mayor Brian McMullan. Continue reading

Niagara Health System Only Has To ‘Open Its Mouth’ To Inspire Distrust

By Pat Scholfield

Is there any wonder people do not believe the Niagara Health System?

Niagara health care advocate Pat Scholfield

On Friday I went online to read The Welland Tribune. There was an article reading; “Little change in updated D.difficile case numbers”.

As I read through the short report, the NHS (the body responsible for operating most of Niagara, Ontario’s hospital services) stated an increase of three cases at Welland. “Really,” I said to myself. “This does not sound like little change. It sounds like an increase!” Continue reading

What Was Sevenpifer’s Severance Pay and Why Was She Let Go?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

“I go to bed every night with a clear conscience that the leaders of the Niagara Health System are trying to do the right thing to improve quality of care for all Niagarans” – from an interview former NHS CEO Debbie Sevenpifer did with the Niagara Falls Review two years ago.

Isn’t that nice. And the rest of us are left dealing with the mess.

More than six months have passed since Debbie Sevenpifer was bounced out of her job as president and CEO of the Niagara Health System. And still the NHS has not told us how much of our money they paid her off with.

How much of our money have they used to buy off Debbie Sevenpifer?

Did this individual, who was paid some $345,000 per year plus benefits, receive a six-figure severance package out of our pockets on top of that? And what were the real reasons she was let go? To continue stringing us along with lines like the organization was simply “at a crossroads” and this has “noting to do with (Sevenpifer’s) performance” is just one more instance of how little the NHS – the decade-old body established by the former Ontario Conservative government to manage most of the hospital services in Niagara – seems to care about insulting the public’s intelligence. Continue reading

Why I Voted ‘No’ On The Deficit Deal

By Senator Bernie Sanders
August 5, 2011

(Niagara At Large discovered this piece on the website of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who sits as an independent for the people of his fine New England state and is arguably, one of all too few great voices of sanity in Washington.
NAL shares this with our readers in the wake of an economic crisis enveloping the United States that could have grave consequences for all of us, on both sides of the border, and as a reminder that there are progressive voices in America that all of us, on both sides of the border, can learn and seek inspiration from.
And let us not forget. The concerns Sanders is discussing here around growing loss of social services for people in need may soon be coming to a town or a home near you. Doug Draper. – Niagara At Large.)

A $2.5 trillion deficit-reduction deal brokered by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker John Boehner, and President Barack Obama is grotesquely unfair. It also is bad economic policy. In the midst of a terrible recession, it will cost hundreds of thousands of jobs.

Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont in full throttle

At a time when the wealthiest people in this country are doing extremely well, and when their effective tax rate is the lowest in decades, the rich won’t contribute one penny more for deficit reduction. When corporate profits are soaring and many giant corporations avoid federal income taxes because of obscene loopholes in the tax code, corporate America will not be asked to contribute one penny more for deficit reduction. On the other hand, working families, children, the sick and the elderly – many of whom are already suffering because of the recession – will shoulder the entire burden.

The corporate media – which, by and large, covered this debate as if it were a baseball game with political “winners and losers” – mostly glossed over the real-life implications of $917 billion in cuts over the next 10 years. Nobody can predict exactly what programs will fall under the knife or say how much they will be cut. Continue reading

Never Mind A Review. We Need A Full Purging Of NHS’s Administration And Board

A Commentary by Doug Draper

“It is almost hard to believe this is Canada. … This shouldn’t be happening in our hospitals in Niagara.

Those were the first words spoken by Wayne Gates, a Niagara Falls, Ontario city councillor and president of the Canadian Auto Workers Local 199 following two hours of heart-wrenching accounts from residents whose families have experienced the nightmare of the C. difficile outbreak in hospitals managed by the Niagara Health System.

Gerry Flachs went in one NHS hospital this spring for routine knee-replacement surgery and left another one dead.

Gates’ words no doubt channeled the thoughts going through the minds of many of the more than 100 residents who came to the CAW this August 10 to hear accounts that could only make one wonder what has become of a public health system in this province and country that was once a model for the world.

This listener, at least, could also not help coming to the conclusion that a planned “review” by the province of the way the Niagara Health System is managing most of the hospital services of this region may be an unnecessary and costly diversion. What we really need – right now – is a total purging of those in the NHS’s administration and on its board who have been complicit through their negligence, incompetence or their silence while access to quality care in our hospitals has deteriorated to a point where people are going to hospital for one ailment and dying from another. Continue reading

Ontario Government Offers A Boost To Electric Cars

By Doug Draper

The Ontario government is taking steps to usher in a new age of electric cars on the province’s roads.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty recharges an electric car at a charging station in Markham this August 9.

Premier Dalton McGuinty announced this August 9 that his Liberal government will be spend $80 million to jump start the opening of “charging stations” across Ontario for electric cars.

The seed money, said McGuinty when he made the announcement at a charging station in Markham, Ontario, is aimed at encouraging public and private sector bodies to come forward with proposes for making available charging stations that would do for electric cars what gas stations do for cars with internal combustion engines. Continue reading

Saving One Of Ontario’s Oldest Churches – “It Can Be Done”

By Becky Day

I returned a call to a Mr. Sean Fraser, Manager, Acquisitions and Conservation Services, from Ontario Heritage Trust today. He was calling about the Beaverdams Church property and suggested some ways we could conserve it.  It was encouraging, first because he called us. Usually it is the municipality calling the Ontario Heritage Trust.

The historic Beaverdams Church - rotting away but still trying to hang in there. Who will save it?

Fraser has looked at some of the past reports on the building and said there are ways to get help, naming Trillium as an example and even Benjamin Moore for paint. We talked about how this is a provincially designated building and how important it is being the birthplace of Methodism in the area. Many of the earlier settlers of this area were attached to this church. Continue reading

Surviving Victims Of Niagara’s Deadly C. Difficile Outreak To Publicly Air Their Suffering

By Doug Draper

Some of the stories will “surprise” and some will even “shock” people, says Wayne Gates, who says he has been moved to tears by them.

CAW's Local 199 persident and Niagara Falls, Ontario councillor Wayne Gates

Gates, a Niagara Falls city councillor and president of Local 199 of the Canadian Auto Workers, has organized a public meeting and press conference for this coming Wednesday, August 10 at the 11:30 a.m. at the CAW Hall in St. Catharines, Ontario where members of families stricken by a C.Diff oubreak that has so far killed more than two dozen people in Niagara will tell their stories.

“I really think that the people who have been most affected by this have to have an opportunity to speak out,” said Gates. “They should have a chance to not only tell about the impact (C Diff.) has had the person infected, but the tool it takes on their family.” Continue reading

Former Welland Mayor Gets NDP Nod In Welland Riding

A News Brief from Niagara At Large

Cindy Forster, a former Welland mayor now serving as a regional councillor for the city, has been chosen by New Democratic Party members to run in the Welland Riding in the upcoming provincial election.

Welland NDP candidate Cindy Forster

Forster won the nomination for the riding at meeting of the riding’s NDP members in Welland this August 7. Her only challenger was Mick Riddle, a retired Niagara Regional Police officer. The victory for Forster means that she will be the one campaigning to keep a seat that the NDP has held firmly for more than three decades, with the late Mel Swart and retiring Peter Kormos serving the riding’s constituents as MPP. Continue reading

The Terrorists Are Winning

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Remember one of the first things U.S. president George W. Bush told the American people following September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks?

He may be dead, as this Time cover shows, but who's winning the war?

‘Go shopping,’  W said, ‘or the terrorists will win.’

Well, there aren’t too many Americans going out and buying lots of stuff now, even if they are flocking to air-conditioned malls to escape the heat – at least not according to some of the latest consumer statistics in that country, which show everything from the sale of goods in retail stores to the sale of big ticket items like homes and cars down.

And why wouldn’t sales be down. With an alarmingly high nine per cent unemployment rate and many more millions who have simply given up finding a job in a country on the verge of financial bankruptcy, it is surprising there is anything other than a ‘going out of business’ sale.

It may be instructive to remember what W’s arch nemesis Osama bin Laden said back six or seven years ago when W and his brain, Dick Cheney, marched America into two trillion-dollar wars in Afghanistan and Iraq without ever once asking the wealthier members of the American power structure to give up an extra cent in taxes to pay for them.

“We are continuing this policy in bleeding America to the point of bankruptcy,” said bin Laden, who was obviously a murderous psycho but wasn’t completely stupid when it came to draining empires of their wealth, in one of his  natorious tapes. Continue reading

Ontario Government Makes Transit Riding Easier With New Fare Card

A News Brief from Niagara At Large

Niagara riders using the Go Train service out of the St. Catharines, Ontario railway station may now find commuting easier with a fare card called PRESTO.

A GO Train on the way to Niagara.

“With PRESTO,  riders using Niagara’s GO Train service can travel across multiple transit systems with just one card (that makes it) simple and convenient,” said St.  Catharines  MPP and Liberal cabinet minister Jim Bradley in a media release this August 5. “Improving public transit is part of the Ontario Government’s plan to create jobs and opportunities in Niagara and across the province.” Continue reading

Harper Government Taking Meat Axe To Environment Canada

A Commentary by Doug Draper

There was a time – some 30 years ago – when Environment Canada had an international reputation as a leading body in environmental research and protection. And its Ontario region office hosted one of the hottest environmental watchdog teams of all.

Federal Green Party leader Elizabeth May was among the first and a very few who have expressed concern over cuts to Environment Canada.

In Niagara, a number of the people that worked in that worked in that office, including directors Bob Slater and Jim Kingham, and more frontline scientists and others like Doug Hallett, Rick Findlay, Tony Wagner and Jeanne Jabanoski, became household names. This was especially so during the early to mid-1980s as public concern grew over the concentrations of dioxin and other toxic chemicals washing down the lower Niagara River from Love Canal, Hyde Park and other waste sites along the U.S. shore.

Environment Canada’s Ontario office, with the support of former environment ministers John Roberts and Charles Caccia for the then-federal Liberal government of Pierre Trudeau, played a lead role in convincing American governments to sign a ground-breaking agreement for slashing the concentrations of industrial poisons gushing into the Niagara River by at least 50 per cent within 10 years. The was goal was more than met and arguably this office helped flushing into the Niagara River and Lake Ontario helped prevent the lower Niagara River and Lake Ontario from becoming a cauldron for killer concentrations of man-made chemicals for generations to come.

That was then and it now seems to be ever so long ago. Now, the new majority Conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper is talking about slashing 776 jobs in environmental protection, climate change, weather and other programs Environment Canada provides across this country, form coast to coast. Continue reading

Fed Up With The NHS, Some Niagara Residents Seek Hospital Services In Hamilton

A Commentary by Doug Draper

This past July 28, Niagara At Large published St. Catharines, Ontario resident Steve McMullen’s account of his family’s life and death struggle with a C. difficile  outbreak that has claimed the lives of more than two dozen area residents over the past few months in hospitals managed by the Niagara Health System.

Maria McMullen, still suffering from the deadly C. diff superbug in a St. Catharines hospital. NAL published this photo only a week ago, but it remains one for a family in our region that puts a human face on this superbug disaster.

Steve’s account (which is available for your view on this site) of his 75-year-old mother Marion, still fighting this deadly superbug at the NHS’s St. Catharines General Hospital site, tugged at the hearts of many NAL readers, and has created enough of a stir to get some of our elected representatives across the region speaking out.

This August 3, Mike Haines, a senior assistant to Welland MPP Peter Kormos, wrote an open letter to Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews referring specifically to the ordeal Marion McMullen and her family is facing, and demanding to know when her ministry “is going to start taking this (the C. difficile outbreak) seriously and make a concerted effort to ensure the proper care of people who have nowhere to turn but the Niagara Health System.”

In the letter to Matthews, Haines stressed  that “people are now living in fear of taking their loved ones to any Niagara Health System hospital for fear they may never leave again. … Some people are going to Hamilton hospitals in desperation but are being turned away.” Continue reading

Niagara Group To Hold Hiroshima and Nagasaki Commemorative Lantern Service

By Fiona McMurran and Timothy Healey

Every year, Project Ploughshares Niagara holds a memorial service in the Peace Garden in Rennie Park in Port Dalhousie, to remember those who perished when the Americans bombed the Japanese city of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, followed on August 9, by the bombing of Nagasaki.

Lighting up the dark, from a previous Ploughshares memorial event in Niagara.

The bombing of those two cities marked the first use of nuclear weapons in wartime and ushered in the nuclear age.

As well as the actual deaths from the bombs themselves, many thousands died from the radiation and these deaths continued for years. At the service, we recognize our connectedness to those in Hiroshima, and in other towns and cities in Japan and all over the world, who observe this date every year. We take the opportunity to offer our prayers for all those who have died in war, and we renew our commitment to the peaceful resolution of conflict and to the abolition of nuclear weapons. Continue reading

Rib Fest 2011: Another Time-Honoured Celebration Of Summer, Community And The Slaughter Of Other Animals

 By Dan Wilson

“You have just dined, and however scrupulously the slaughterhouse is concealed in the graceful distance of miles, there is complicity.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

This event has it all: food, booze, live bands AND (now here’s the bonus) a portion of the proceeds going to local charities. What could be better?

A pig dancing at Niagara, Ontario Rib Fest. Photo by Dan Wilson

The thing is that this benign, altruistic, helping-others-while-we-all-have-fun event, like so many others in our society, revolves around the exploitation, suffering and slaughter of other animals (mostly pigs).

There’s no question that pigs (and for that matter cows, chickens and other “food” animals) are at least as intelligent as cats and dogs (and it’s been documented that pigs may be more so). The question is: why don’t we care about these animals the way we do about cats and dogs? Continue reading

War Of 1812 Battle Re-Enactment Comes To Old Fort Erie

From Niagara At Large

With the countdown to this coming year’s War of 1812 bicentennial commemorations now less than five months away, groups on both the Canadian and U.S. sides of the border are stepping up their efforts to promote the event with re-enactments of the war.

An image from a previous battle re-enactment at Old Fort Erie. Courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission.

This coming Saturday, Aug. 6 and Sunday, Aug. 7, the Niagara Parks Commission is once again joining in the build-up to the commemorations with a ramped up battle re-enactment weekend at Old Fort Erie, a strategic battle front in the real war, located at the mouth of the Niagara River in Fort Erie, Ontario and directly across the waters from Buffalo, N.Y. Continue reading

Public Has Right To Know Who At Niagara Parks Allegedly Abused Funds And Services

By Doug Draper

The Niagara Parks Commission – a steward, for well over a century now, of what remains of the precious natural lands along the Canadian side of the Niagara River corridor– is one of the pioneering public bodies of its kind on this continent.

The NPC's Oak Hall headquarters in Niagara Falls, Ontario. File photo by Doug Draper

Niagara At Large has praised this body many times before for its important conservation work and has made it clear that the commission’s executive director, Fay Booker, and its interim chair, Janice Thomson, have been moving the NPC back to its original mandate as a protector of these world-renown lands. But there are some ghosts in the closet – from the not so distant past – and they need to be exorcized now.

According to a July 30 article in The Globe and Mail – a paper that has been doing a much better job than the local media of exposing alleged abuses of public funding the NPC – a recent audit the paper got its hands on shows that “staff at the Niagara Parks Commission broke the rules for meals, travel and hospitality expenses, and engendered contracts were handed out without proper justification” Continue reading

Shakespeare in Delaware Park Is A Great Way To Spend A Summer Evening

By Doug Draper

If you are looking for a great night of theatre in a beautiful outdooir setting, it is not to late to take in ‘Shakespeare in Delaware Park’ in Buffalo, New York.

A Shakespeare play in progress in Buffalo's Delaware Park. File photo by Doug Draper

It is still not too  catch William Shakespeare’s ‘As You Like It’ – the  play famous for the line “all the world’s a stage” – and it is on stage ever Tuesday through Sunday, beginning each evening at 7:30 p.m. and running right through to Sunday August 14. Continue reading

Niagara Could Be At Centre Of Manufacturing An All-Canadian Electric Car

By Doug Draper

We’ve heard our elected people in Niagara say we need 21st century ideas to keep the manufacturing sector in this region alive. And here may be one.

John Scott, director of Project Eve, with a Canadian-made electric car at Niagara's regional headquarters. Photo by Doug Draper

Why not get a group of Niagara-area industries together to build and assemble the parts for a homegrown, all-Canadian electric car?

“This is a regional opportunity,” said Bryan Webb, a representative for the Niagara Industrial Association. “We can do it. We have companies here that can all benefit and the chances for prosperity boggles the mind.” Continue reading

Former Top Cop Seeks Peter Kormos’s Seat

By Doug Draper

There is another contender to fill the big seat Welland Riding MPP Peter Kormos has chosen to vacate at Queen’s Park.

Mick Riddle

His name is Mick Riddle, a 60-year-old retired Niagara Regional Police officer and resident of Welland who now teaches at Niagara College. He will be vying for the NDP nomination as a candidate in the Welland Riding at the party’s Sunday, August 7 nomination meeting.

“I would be honoured to step into one shoe of Mel Swart (the late NDP representative for the riding who held the seat until his retirement in the late 1980s) and one of Peter’s cowboy boots,” said Riddle in a recent interview with Niagara At Large. “I have no doubt in my mind that I can step into those boots and keep this riding (orange for the NDP) rather have it swallowed up in blue or red.” Continue reading

Butter The Cat Needs A Loving Home

The good news is that, as of this August 16, Butter has found a home.

Niagara At Large is pleased to continue posting stories that help the volunteer group Niagara Action for Animals and its supporters find homes for some of our furry friends.

Butter needs a loving home

This time we are talking about a cat named Butter, an adult neutered male who was found huddling under a highwa overpass and who, at the time, was in need of immediate medication attention.

Butter has since received veterinary care and has made a complete recovery from his injuries. He is described by the friends of NAFA as a cat “full of love and affection.” He is “now safe but lonely,” they say, and he “longs for a loving life-long indoor home.”  He’s also decribed as a guy with “a lovely crème shade with gorgeous truy blue eyes,” and he has been vaccinated.

If you are interested in adopting Butter call Dean at  (905) 321-0882  or Jen at  (905)321-0906.

NHS Wants You To Have Faith In It Again

By Doug Draper

The Niagara Health System is embarking on a communications campaign aimed at restoring trust in the communities it serves across the region.

Interim NHS CEO Sue Matthews

“Our communities in Niagara deserve better, and we will be taking bold steps in the coming weeks and months to address trust and reputation issues.” Said the NHS’s interim CEO Sue Matthews in a media release circulated this Thursday, July 28. “Our communities deserve to have hospitals they trust and are proud of,” she added. “Today there is a disconnect between what we are trying to achieve and how we are viewed.”

There is quite the disconnect, critics of this administration, responsible for managing a majority of the hospital services in Niagara, Ontario repeatedly say. Between the NHS’s decision to build the one and only new hospital complex for Niagara in the north end of the region, while systematically shutting down emergency and other acute care services in the south end, and a recent deadly outbreak of C. difficile in area hospitals, the gap between what the NHS claims it is ‘achieving’ and the lack of confidence among members of the community and even among many of its own front-line staff is wide. Continue reading

Niagara’s Regional Government Imposes Hiring Freeze

By Doug Draper

If you are interested in applying for a job with Niagara’s regional government, you might just as well put your resume on the shelf for now.

Regional councillors voted 13 to 10 this July 28 to impose a hiring freeze, immediately, for all full time positions in the regional government, including those at its partner agencies, boards and commissions.

The freeze, effective to the end of 2012, is another step the council is taking to keep its budget more in line with the ability of people across Niagara to pay property taxes without having to give up other necessities in their lives.

Interestingly enough, the freeze excludes the Niagara Regional Police Service which now has an annual operating budget of about $127 million – more than 90 per cent of it going to wages and benefits and consuming well more than a third of the total net operating budget, totally about $282 million – for every department and partner agencies at the region. Continue reading

NDP To Nominate Peter Kormos’ Successor

A Niagara At Large New Brief

New Democratic members in the Welland Riding will be deciding who will replace retiring MPP Peter Kormos at a nomination meeting on Sunday,  August 7.

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath to speak at Welland nomination meeting

The meeting, featuring Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath as guest speaker will begin at 6 p.m. on that date at the CAW Local 523 on 16 Steel St. in Welland.

The only candidate to vying to fill the shoes of Kormos so far is Cindy Forster, a Niagara regional councillor for Welland and former mayor of that city.

Kormos announced his intentions this spring to leave provincial politics and move on to something else after serving more than two decades as an MPP for a riding that has been an NDP stronghold going back to the late Mel Swart first winning it for the party in the 1970s. Kormos said he plans to continue serving the community but has not yet said in what capacity.

All members of the NDP in good standing and living within ghe provincial electoral boundaries of a Welland Riding stretching from south St. Catharines, through Thorold, Welland, Port Colborne and part of Wainfleet are eligible to vote in the upcoming nomination meeting.

One Niagara Family’s Ordeal With The Deadly C. Difficile Outbreak

By Steve McMullen

(The following account was originally sent to Wayne Gates, a Niagara Falls city councillor and president of Local 199 of the Canadian Auto Workers, on July 19. It was written by Steve McMullen whose 75-year-old mother Marion McMullen is still battling a C. difficile outbreak and, as of the July 28 posting of this account, was back in the St. Catharines General Hospital emergency room area again waiting for a regular hospital bed. Both Wayne Gates and Steve McMullen have agreed to share this account with Niagara At Large, believing that the public at large needs to be informed of what patients and their families are going through with this deadly superbug.)

Dear Mr. Wayne Gates –

I would like to thank you for organizing the rally (near the Greater Niagara General Hospital site in Niagara Falls) on July 6,2011, bringing
to light the serious nature of the C. difficile outbreak.

Marion McMullen still battling C. difficile superbug. Photo courtesy of McMullen family.

I was out of town so I was unable to attend the rally but my family have seen first hand the devastating affect that C. difficile has had on our 75-year-old mother.

My mother, Marion, had finally been properly diagnosed with C. diff. this past June 15 although she had been fighting the symptoms of this since she was discharged from the St Catharines General Hospital on May 16th after her colon surgery on May 6, 2011. Continue reading

Tour The Headquarters Of One Of Canada’s Oldest Newspapers In Queenston, Ontario

(Niagara At Large is pleased to share with our readers the following media release from the Niagara Parks Commission in Ontario on pubic tours of the Mackenzie Printery and Newspaper Museum as we approach the ‘Simcoe Days’ civic holiday weekend from July 30 through August 1.)

Queenston, Ontario  – Visit Niagara’s best hands-on museum in the beautiful village of Queenston over the Civic Holiday long weekend and learn how the nation’s oldest printing press helped John Graves Simcoe shape the province of Upper Canada. The Niagara Parks Commission’s (NPC) Mackenzie Printery and Newspaper Museum is pleased to host Simcoe Days from July 30 – August 1, 2011.

Mackenzie Printery and Newspaper Museum in Queenston, Ontario. Photo by Doug Draper

Celebrate the Civic Holiday, also known as ‘Simcoe Day’, or ‘Emancipation Day’ in the African Canadian community, which honours the first Lieutenant Governor of this province. See the oldest wooden press in Canada, where Louis Roy printed some of the first government documents produced in Upper Canada, including laws such as the Emancipation Act of 1793. This interactive museum also offers the opportunity to make your own customized newspaper with antique cast iron and self-inking printing presses. Continue reading

Ontario Premier Urges Federal Government To Support Province’s Farm-Aid Program

By Doug Draper

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty has called on the federal government to support a program for supporting farmers in Niagara and other regions of the province.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty touring a Stratford, Ontario farm this July 26. Photo courtesy of premier's office.

McGuinty made the call for federal support for the province’s ‘Risk Management Program’ for farmers while touring an antibiotic-free hog farm in Stratford, Ontario this Tuesday, July 26.

“Our risk management program gives farmers stability, which builds a strong Ontario economy and jobs for a generation of farmers and workers. The federal government must do its party and support hard-working Ontario farmers and their families,” McGuinty is quoted saying in a media release. Continue reading

Niagara Parks’ Horticultural School Invites You To Celebrate Its 75th Birthday

By Doug Draper

The late British prime minister Winston Churchill, on a drive some six or seven decades ago along the Niagara Parkway in Ontario, called it one of the prettiest drives in the world.

The botanical gardens surrounding Niagara Park's horticultural school. Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission.

It is quite likely that the meticulously landspaced lawns and gardens along the parkway and Niagara River corridor had something to do with Churchill’s praise. And the driving force behind that landscape is the Niagara Parks Commission’s School of Horticulture, now celebrating its 75th anniversary. Continue reading

Renowned Animal Advocate To Speak At Niagara, Ontario’s Brock University

(Niagara At Large is pleased to share the following media release with our readers from Niagara Action For Animals, Brock Animal Rights Club, Brock Critical Animal Concentration and Niagara Walk for Farm Animals.)

Come join us for a talk with Farm Sanctuary co-founder Gene Baur on Tuesday, August 9th at Brock University, Academic South Room 202.

This event is free to the public and sponsored by Niagara Action for Animals, Brock Animal Rights Club, Brock Critical Animal Studies Concentration (Critical Sociology) and Niagara Walk for Farm Animals. We look forward to seeing you there! Continue reading

Has Province Driven One More Spike Through Plans For Mid-Pen Highway?

By Doug Draper

The provincial government may have driven the last spike into plans for a mid peninsula highway that would cut a swath through Niagara between the Fort Erie/Buffalo border crossing and the Hamilton/Burlington area.

Is Ontario Transportation Minister Kathleen Wynne saying no to whole mid-pen highway plan or just to the part that might run through Burlington?

But then maybe not.

“We are not going to just assume we need to pave a mega highway through the (Niagara) escarpment,” Kelly Baker, a spokesperson for Ontario Transportation Minister Kathleen Wynne was quoted saying in a story posted on the Toronto Star’s website this Tuesday, July 26.

The Star story leads with the news that the controversial proposal for the 400-series mid peninsula highway – a proposal that has been on the drawing board for more than a decade now – “will not proceed as planned.” Continue reading

A Comment by Doug Draper

Will anyone mourn the death of bookstores? Maybe not.

The dying days of a Borders book store in Buffalo, New York. Photo by Doug Draper.

In a day and age when more and more people don’t seem to mind getting whatever they want – from books and pop music to their underwear – over the internet, who needs book and music stores any more. Well, call me retro, out of step or whatever, but I think we’re all eventually going to miss them when they are gone. And they are going out. That is for sure. Continue reading

Here’s For Jack Layton – Wishing A Brave Canadian Leader Well

A Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

By now, many of you have already heard the news.

Canada's NDP leader Jack Layton

Jack Layton, the leader of Canada’s New Democrats who saw his party win an unprecedented number of parliamentary seats this spring, announced this Monday, July 25 that he is temporarily stepping down as the party’s leader while he fights a new battle with cancer.

Just as Niagara At Large wished Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak and his wife Debbie well this spring while their young daughter Miller was fighting a serious health condition in hospital, we wish the very best to Jack Layton and his family. Continue reading

Another Historic Building In Welland. Another Major Fire

By Doug Draper

The Welland Club – a stately building dating back to 1911 and located next to a tree-covered park and overlooking the waters of the fourth Welland Canal on the City of Welland’s King Street – began burning in the early hours of Sunday, July 25, and may have been gutted beyond any hope of repair.

The Welland Club. 2008 file photo by Doug Draper

This blaze is the second that ripped through an abandoned building in Welland, Ontario in little more than a month. This past June, a fire gutted the old Welland High School building on the city’s Main Street.

What is going on here? Could it just be a coincidence that two empty buildings that have had a long, proud history in the city caught fire through some internal malfunction – an electrical shortage or whatever – within a matter of five weeks. Or could it be arson? Continue reading

Niagara Park’s Historic McFarland House Reopened To Public

By Doug Draper

The two-century old McFarland House in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario – the oldest property owned by the Niagara Parks Commission – is reopening to the public this July 23 following extensive renovations.

A new conservatory, featuring historical exhibits, added to the back of the newly renovated McFarland House. Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission.

Those renovations to this Georgian-style home, built by John McFarland and his 1800 and used as a makeshift hospital by both British and American troops during the War of 1812, is one of three sites that have been upgraded in time for the bicentennial commemorations of that war beginning in next year. The other tow sites include Laura Secord homestead in Queenston and Old Fort Erie across the mouth of the Niagara River from Buffalo, New York. Continue reading

Niagara’s Rob Nicholson Remains Tougher Than Tough On Crime

A Commentary by Doug Draper

One thing you can say for Niagara Falls’ federal MP Rob Nicholson. He’s a determined man who is true to his word.

Hey Rob, why can't we have a prison like this in Niagara?

Nicholson, who also happens to be the justice minister for Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper, is bound, bent and determined to spend billions of dollars of our money – money that could be spent on educating our children to keep up with their counterparts in China and India – that could be spent on educating our children building new prisons and all kinds of new expanded courts and lawyers, and other legal apparatus to fight crime. And yet, why shouldn’t Nicholson hold on to a hard Texas/Mississippi stance against crime in this country?

After all, the latest figures from Statistics Canada show that violent crime in the country has reached levels not seen since 1973, before there were any fax machines, let alone cell phones or ipods. But that is apparently no reason for change for a hot-to-the-trot, crime fighter like Nicholson. Continue reading

Canada Has Lost Its Great Lover Of Classic Films

A Niagara At Large News Brief

Whether it was Casablanca, Citizen Kane, Sunset Boulevard, the Marx Brother’s Night At The Opera, or any one of a number of those black and white flicks from the 1930s, 40s and 50s, he had generations of Ontario and Western New York television watchers – young and old – rediscovering the magic of classic films.

Elwy Yost

Elwy Yost, the ever ebullient host of TV Ontario’s Saturday Night at the Movies for more than two decades from 1974 to 1999, died this July 22 at age 86.

“It is with great sadness that we extend our condolences to the family and friends of Elwy Yost,” said TVO’s CEO Lisa de Wilde. “As creator of  Saturday Night at the Movies, Elwy started a long-standing Saturday night tradition for viewers across the province. And as TVO’s longest-running primetime series, Saturday Night at the Movies continues to have a loyal following today. Continue reading

Ontario Health Minister Slips In And Out Of Niagara Without A Bang Or A Whimper

A Commentary By Doug Draper

Ontario’s health minister slipped into Niagara for a few hours the other day, but not so that most of us would know it.

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews

Deb Matthews, a Liberal cabinet minister who has been the target of harsh criticism in this region for the way the hospital system here is being managed, was at Legends Estate Winery in Beamsville this July 20 to attended a $250.00 a ticket “cocktail reception” for Katie Trombetta, the former West Lincoln mayor running in the Niagara West Glanbrook riding against incumbent Tim Hudak who also happens to be the leader of the provincial Conservative Party.

There were no invitations for the media at large to attend this event to ask the honourable health minister a few questions and  the only way I found out about it was after it was over, when someone slipped me a notice on the event that appeared on the Ontario Liberal Party’s website. Continue reading

It’s Time For Garden Walk Buffalo – The Best Event Of Its Kind On The Continent

By Doug Draper

If you enjoy beautifully landscaped lawns and gardens in neighbourhoods rich in classic architecture, then this event is for you.

One of the many backyard 'Edens' open to you on Buffalo's Garden Walk. Photo by Doug Draper

It is countdown time to Garden Walk Buffalo – by many accounts the best and largest gardening tour event of its kind in all of North America. And 17 years after its debut, it is still free!

“Most people wouldn’t think of Buffalo (New York) as an epicenter of American horticulture, but it looks like gardening may be their official pastime,” said a writer for Martha Stewart Living who joined the self-guided tour a few years ago. “I was knocked out by the flowers and all the people on the streets, and the general atmosphere. … The architecture (in the neighbourhoods) is something to behold, “ added Aldona Satterthwaite, a past editor-in-chief for the Toronto, Ontario-based Canadian Gardening magazine in an interview with a Buffalo broadcaster. Continue reading

On Track For Better Health Care ForAll Ontarians – McGuinty Government Launches 2011 Progress Report

(Niagara At Large is posting the following  July 22 media release from the Ontario government on the state of health care in the province for our readers information.)

Ontario is leading the country in reducing health care wait times, providing families with better access to care while helping children lead healthier, active lives.

That is just some of the good news on health care outlined in the 2011 Progress Report. The annual report shows the results Ontarians are achieving together. Continue reading

Our Largest Lake Fish – Still Toxic After All These Years

A Commentary by Doug Draper

With the summer here, the anglers are out in full force on Lake Ontario, dreaming of catching that trophy trout or salmon.

Yes, it is Salmon Derby time on Lake Ontario, as I was reminded from a recently article in The Toronto Sun, and as a longtime reporter on Great Lakes environmental issues, my mind immediately turned to wondering how much industrial chemical poison is still accumulating in those prize fish.

The Toronto Sun story referred to one 40-pound salmon caught off the northern shores of the lake near the Greater Toronto area and, sure enough, when you look up a coho or chanook salmon that size in that area of the lake in the Ontario government’s latest ‘Guide to Eating Ontario Sport Fish’, its recommended that an adult mail limit their eating to about one meal a month because of the concentrations of poisons like mercury, PCBs and mirex that have accumulated in fish flesh. Children under 15 years of age and women of child-bearing age are advised not consume salmon that size from that area at all.

Sadly, the advice from this Ontario Ministry of Environment guide book is not much different for larger salmon and trout, closer to two feet in length, caught in the same lake, off the shores of Niagara. The same is true for the lower Niagara River where one of the many chemicals of concern is among the deadlier ones known to science – dioxin. Continue reading

Happy Birthday Marshall McLuhan – Too Bad You Aren’t Here To Enjoy It

By Doug Draper

I was about 17 years old when I first tried ploughing through the pages of Marshall McLuhan’s mind-bending book ‘Understanding Media’.

Canadian media guru Marshall McLuhan

A read of that 1964 book was one of those rites of passage in the 1960s for anyone in their teens or early 20s who wanted to be on the cutting edge of the counter-cultural curve. It was as critical a thing to do as going to the local movie theatre back then and watching Stanley Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey ‘ two or three times. I remember some of my friends and I using words and phrases like “far out,” “heavy” and “cool” with response to both experience, without any of us ever wanting to admit to one another that we were still struggling to comprehend a good bit of what we viewed on the screen, in the case of Kubrick’s movie, or read, in the case of McLuhan’s book. I kept praying that no one would ever ask me to write an essay on what McLuhan meant when he said that “the medium is the message” for fear that my ignorance would be exposed.

Marshall McLuhan, who died in 1980 on New Years Eve, virtually unappreciated by his fellow Canadians and by the academic community and University of Toronto where he taught in the English department, would have turned 100 this July 21.  And it is too bad he isn’t still with us to celebrate because there are numerous tributes this week in his owner as he is at long last being rediscovered for his pioneering insights on how the electronic media has shaped our world. Continue reading

For-Profit Health Care Is A Risk To Our Health

By Mark Taliano

According to the late U.S. president Woodrow Wilson’s Committee on Public Information, “one of the best means of controlling news is flooding news channels with ‘facts,’ or what amounts to official information.”

A recent citizens' rally for better hospital care in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

It seems to me that a variation of this type of propogation of ideas (propaganda) is taking place in Niagara to promote fatal health care decisions.  If this were not the case, more people would be questioning the current private/public health care funding model which is likely a significant component leading to premature deaths and atrocious health care conditions in Niagara today.

Creating a limited agenda is also part of the propaganda game. Tax cuts are the current focus of some political parties, but the effects of these cuts, including horrible health care, are not seen to be linked, and are not as often mentioned.  Right-wing oriented newspapers generally play this card well, to the detriment of life and death issues such as health care. Continue reading

Great Lakes Water Withdrawal Plan Scuttled

By Doug Draper

Here is some good news for Great Lakes residents on both sides of the Canada/U.S. border.

A Lake Erie beach shore near Cleveland, Ohio

According to a front-page article in the July 16 Buffalo News, Ohio Governor John Kasich has vetoed a bill passed by his state’s legislature that would have allowed private businesses to the withdrawal of millions of dollars a day of water from Lake Erie for possible sale outside the Great Lakes basin. Continue reading

Witnessing The American Empire Melting Down

A Commentary by Doug Draper

I couldn’t help it  one Friday morning earlier this July. Like millions of others, I had the tube turned on to watch the American shuttle Atlantis roar into space from NASA’s Cape Canaveral for the last time.

Last NASA shuttle launch

It was hard not to watch it without thinking that this last launch spells another stark end to a United States that dominated the world economically, technologically and culturally for much of the last century, and it took me back to a time when that space program and what it stood for still stood for a U.S. on the way up, not crashing down.

I remember being in Grade 2 or 3 in Welland in 1961 and 1962 when the first American astronauts, making up the then-fledgling Mercury 7, were launched, one after another, into space. The U.S., totally involved in a ‘Cold War’ with a Russia that was then the Soviet Union, wanted to prove its superiority in virtually everything by sending people into space after being stung by the Soviets sending up a satellite named Sputnik and a cosmonaut named Yari Gagarin, who became the first human to orbit this earth. Continue reading

The End Of A Kennedy Era Of Shared Sacrifice – A Postcard From Cape Cod

By Doug Draper

(A note from the publisher – This post, for whatever reason has received many hundreds of  hits on Niagara At Large over the past few days even though it made its appearance here in November of last year.                                                    One can only speculate why. Perhaps it is because the over-riding message about shared sacrifice has found some appeal at a time when American is on the verge of an economic meltdown. Or maybe it is because of recent news that the Kennedy compound may soon go on the chopping block, one more sign that the country’s golden years may be over.
Whatever the reason,  NAL is bumping this post up to the top of the site again.)

“Ask not what your country can do for you.  Ask what you can do for your country.”

Those words,  spoken by the late President John F. Kennedy following his inauguration on January 20, 1961,  inspired generations of Americans to service and self-sacrifice on behalf of their country, their communities and less fortunate others.

The Kennedy compound in Hyannisport, Massachusetts on Cape Cod. Photo by Doug Draper

Today, it is hard to imagine almost any political leader on either side of the Canada/U.S. border speaking those sorts of words for fear of being derided by the masses as a “socialist” or something worse.
‘Putting our country before ourselves? We want a tax cut!’ Continue reading

Buffalo, N.Y. Area Congressman Urges Ohio Governor To Veto Plan To Siphon Water from Great Lakes

A Foreword from Doug Draper

Some in Ontario may remember the public outcry, including that from the Council of Canadians and other groups on both sides of the Canada/U.S. border advocating for the protection of our Great Lakes waters, when former Ontario premier Mike Harris was ready to allow a private firm to siphon water out of the upper Great Lakes for commercial sale.

Buffalo, N.Y. area Congressman Brian Higgins speaks out against the commercial siphoning off of water from our Great Lakes.

The outcry was enough to stop that premier, as much as he was in the habit of thumbing his nose at public interest groups, from moving ahead with a commercial sell-off of our fresh waters in our Great Lakes.

But where is the public outcry on the Canadian side of the lakes over plans now afoot in the State of Ohio to allow private businesses to siphon five-million gallons per day of water out of Lake Erie for commercial purposes?

Five million gallons a day may not seem like a lot. But if it sets a precedent for mining liquid gold from lakes in a world where others are in thirst of fresh water, it could have consequences that are environmentally and economically catastrophic. If it – as it would – ultimately lower lake levels, that would mean less water for hydro power generation, lower water levels for ships plying the Welland Canal, lower shoreline levels leading to a loss of wetlands for wildlife and damaged beach areas for recreation, and more algae growth in Lake Erie that threatens fish populations and leaves our shorelines matted with the rotting stench of the stuff. Continue reading

Ontario’s Cop Union Has Had It Comin’

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Don’t get the wrong idea. I’m no fan of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford. But a police union in this province that has shown an arrogance and lack of regard for property taxpayers in that city, in our Niagara region and other regions across this province has had it comin’.

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford faces off with cops.

You want to go on throwing your wait around and demanding two to three percent wage increases and richer benefits for police departments where the average wages are too often twice or three times higher than the wages paid by the property owners forced to pay them, then maybe its time that the mayor of Ontario’s largest city came along and said; ‘Know what, we are going to start laying hundreds of you off’.

‘Layoffs loom for 500 city cops’, reads the front-page headline in the July edition of The Toronto Star. So here we go and, quite frankly, hallelujah. Someone is finally going to take this over-bloated police union on, and isn’t it interesting that it happens to be a mayor many have dubbed a ‘neo-conservative’ who one might think would be pro-police, going for anything the cops might want, all the way! Continue reading

Garbage Bin May Be Better Than St. Catharines Hospital Site

A Foreword by Doug Draper

This Wednesday,  July 13, C BC Radio Noon program did an hour on the C. difficile outbreak that has so far taken the lives of 22 people and counting at Niagara Health System-managed hospitals in this region and has claimed the lives of others across the province.

One of the accounts phoned in to the program, by someone named  “Michele” in St. Catharines, Ontario who recently had a sister in her 50s in the hospital who contracted the superbug but fortunately did not die, was particularly disturbing. Michele’s account  spoke to so many other claims, including one in a recent letter posted by a former NHS doctor on this site, of the filthy conditions at the St. Catharines General Hospital.

We at Niagara At Large can only wonder why, if what Michele testified about feces on her sisters chair, on the floor and so on. To the extent this is true, and again we’ve had notes from others about the uncleanliness of this hospital site, why aren’t nurses and doctors breaking away from the NHS and speaking out? You’d think that at least a few of them would say; ‘To hell with any flak I have to take from the NHS board. Something has to be done about this, and now!’

Here is the transcribed view from Michele on CBC’s Radio Noon. Continue reading

Where Are More Rebel MPPs Like Kim Craitor When You Need Them?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

I’ve been getting a bit tired of all the criticism thrown at Niagara Falls MPP Kim Craitor recently, as if to say he is a pandering or being some kind of phony populist or opportunist for speaking out against the way the Niagara Health System is managing a majority of this region’s hospital services.

Niagara Falls Liberal MPP Kim Craitor at a recent public rally for better hospital care, Photo by Doug Draper

So I wrote some of the following, and for those of you who may have missed the essence of it in  my weekly column earlier this July in Niagara This Week, I am repeating some of it here since we shall all find it disturbing that an MPP win the region who has the guts to stand up for the constituents in his riding, when     `ZA over what his governing party’s position may be is more or less dumped upon by what has become such a low-end community paper like The St. Catharines Standard.

What follows is is a version of my column which appeared a week ago in Niagara This Week, which still at least has the guts to take the NHS on and ask it a few tough questions.

Well you had to know that something involving the mess the Niagara Health System has made of hospital services in this region was one day going to make the national press.  You can’t just keep having the same old boys and girls club running our hospitals like a bunch of kids playing in a sandbox without the proverbial poop hitting the fan. Continue reading

Why I’m Not Into Partisan Politics

By Doug Draper

“I’d rather not belong to any group that would have me as a member.” That is a paraphrase of one my favourite Groucho Marx lines, and as far as politics is concerned, I’d revise it to say that I’d never want to belong to a political party that would have me as a member.

When it comes to politics, Groucho Marx was right.

After 32 years in journalism, and many years writing stories and opinion pieces for The St. Catharines Standard, Niagara This Week and this online news and commentary site, I continuously find myself swinging between being bemused and upset every time someone tries to peg me as an NDP, Liberal or Conservative, depending on what position I took in an opinion piece or commentary that particular week or day.

In a way, perhaps I should feel flattered that some people accuse me of being a Liberal one day if I write positive things about green energy or the greenbelt zone for protecting what is left of our prime tender-fruit-growing lands, or an NDP the next if I critique the administrators at the Niagara Health System, or a Conservative on another day if I support the amalgamation of local municipalities in our Niagara region. But then why can’t at least a few of us news be accepted as someone who is just expressing his or her take on issues without partisans from one party or another trying to tag them as a card-carrying member of one party or another? Continue reading

Why Lay-Managed Health Care – As In The Niagara Health System – Is Failing By William Hogg MD

By William Hogg MD

Just about everyone by now realizes that there is something seriously wrong with Medicare in Canada.

Dr. William Hogg, speaking last year in Niagara at a hearing on health care. Photo by Doug Draper

Ontario is a case in point. The eHealth scandal, in which a billion dollars was spent on incompetent and corrupt consultants, all for naught, is one example. Another glaring example is the Clostridium difficile outbreak, particularly as managed by an already failing Niagara Health System (NHS).

Furthermore, NHS also ignored advance warnings of ‘time-critical’ emergencies – deaths of patients transported long distances in ambulances as a result of the closure of outlying emergency departments. The faulty notion that centralized services could compensate (and that paramedics might replace doctors), preceded that disastrous decision to close ERs. Continue reading

Is It Not Possible To Have A Civil Discourse?

By Doug Draper, publisher of Niagara At Large

Since Niagara At Large was launched a year ago this past January as an independent news and commentary site for the greater Niagara region, I have strived to encourage a diversity of comments on this site from across the personal and political spectrum.

Among the goals I still wish to achieve were these. There are mainstream media venues out there in Niagara that seem more interested in promoting the status quo than giving balanced attention to alternative points of view, and this site is dedicated to filling that void. And there are too many blog sites that pander to one point of view or another, and never want to give a moment to other views unless it is about lacerating those who express them with comments they hide behind with a blog name like “torpedoed” or “buddy”. Continue reading

McGuinty And The Politics Of A Deadly Infection

By Thomas Walkom National Affairs Columnist, Toronto Star

(You have got to read this column. Finally an editorial writer from the national media gets what is going down in Niagara around our hospital mess, even if the McGuinty government doesn’t.)

For Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty, there is never good news. The C. difficile outbreak in Welland, St. Catharines and Niagara Falls is the latest example.
The deadly bacteria have already killed 17 patients in area hospitals. That in itself is grim. But the politics of the Niagara region’s health system are equally toxic.

For three years, local residents and their elected councillors have been engaged in a kind of guerrilla war with the Niagara Health System (which runs the region’s seven hospitals) and its overseer, the area’s local health integration network.

To read the rest of Thomas Walcom’s column , go to your search engine and click in Thomas Walcom, Niagara Health System and McGuinty. Unfortunately, NAL is haveing some technical difficiults at the moment with the following link to the article –  http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/politics/article/1022007–walkom

The G20 Assault On Canadian Liberties. One Year Later And Still No Justice

By Doug Draper

It was a year ago this July that I drove down a dead-end, rural road on the south side of Thorold, Ontario for an interview with John Pruyn.

John Pruyn. Photo by Doug Draper

I had no idea what to expect before I got there. All I knew, according to information I’d received from a few friends of John Pruyn, was that on June 26, 2010 riot police at the G20 summit in Toronto descended on him on the lawns around Queen’s Park – an area that was supposed to be a “safe zone” for thousands who gathered to talk about joblessness and poverty, environmental protection and a host of other issues. They tore his artificial leg off, bound his hands behind his back and dragged him to some warehouse that served as a makeshift jail where he was locked in for the next 24 or more hours before finally being let go without charges and without explanation.

Even with all of the mayhem many of us witnessed on the tube during the two days of that summit, Pruyn’s story seemed incomprehensible to this Canadian who grew up with a belief that in a democracy as mature as ours is supposed to be, we could collectively gather to express our concerns and that for those of us who gathered peacefully, the police would only be their to keep that peace, not assault it with plastic bullets, teargas, pepper spray and truncheons. Continue reading

Gone With the Papers

(Niagara At Large is positing this piece with the permission of Truthdig, a great and edgy online news and commentary site based in California that you should check out. This piece, originally posted June 27, 2011, just about says it all  about the sad state of newspapers today in both the United States and Canada.)

By Chris Hedges

I visited the Hartford Courant as a high school student. It was the first time I was in a newsroom. The Connecticut paper’s newsroom, the size of a city block, was packed with rows of metal desks, most piled high with newspapers and notebooks.

Reporters banged furiously on heavy typewriters set amid tangled phone cords, overflowing ashtrays, dirty coffee mugs and stacks of paper, many of which were in sloping piles on the floor.

The din and clamor, the incessantly ringing phones, the haze of cigarette and cigar smoke that lay over the feverish hive, the hoarse shouts, the bustle and movement of reporters, most in disheveled coats and ties, made it seem an exotic, living organism. I was infatuated. I dreamed of entering this fraternity, which I eventually did, for more than two decades writing for The Dallas Morning News, The Washington Post, The Christian Science Monitor and, finally, The New York Times, where I spent most of my career as a foreign correspondent.

Newsrooms today are anemic and forlorn wastelands. I was recently in the newsroom at The Philadelphia Inquirer, and patches of the floor, also the size of a city block, were open space or given over to rows of empty desks.

To read the whole article go to your search engine and plug in the words truthdig, Chris Hedges and Gone with the Papers. Unfortunately NAL is  having some technical accessing the following link from this site.  http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/gone_with_the_papers_20110627/