Author Archives: dougdraper

Ontario’s Home Care System Needs Major Surgery – Citizens’ Health Coalition

A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

In the wake of a new report by the not-for-profit ‘Ontario Health Coalition’, charging that more than 10,000 people across the province are desperately waiting for home care services, Ontario’s NDP is calling on the Liberal government to scrap competitive bidding for home care services.

Ontario NDP health critic slams government on home care

Competitive bidding for the province’s home care system was introduced more than eight years ago by the former Ontario Conservative government of Mike Harris, despite naysaying from then Liberal opposition leader Dalton McGuinty. But when the McGuinty formed a government in 1983, it allowed the bidding to move forward and one of the first victims was the Niagara chapter of the Victoria Order of Nurses, which had been providing home care servces across the region for the better part of a century.

The VON lost the bidding in a highly secretive process (where not even the cost of the bids was made public) to a private sector firm that hired many of the VON nurses back for lower wages and benefits. Continue reading

During Niagara, Ontario Stop, Harper Reprises Federal Conservative’s Determination To Kill Long-Gun Registry

(Niagara At Large is posting below a media release circulated this April 4, 2011 on the long-gun registry. In the release and in statements Prime Minister Stephen Harper delivered during a short stop in the rural Niagara municipality of Wainfleet, he vowed to get rid of the decade old gun registry “once and for all” if his government is re-elected.

In a CBC Radio report, it was noted that the Harper Conservatives are targeting the federal riding of Welland, of which Wainfleet is a part, because in the 2008 federal election, the NDP incumbent, Malcolm Allen only won by “a few hundred votes. Allen joined fellow NDP members and Liberal MPs last year in supporting the continuation of the decade old gun registry, which also has the support of many police departments across the country.)

Niagara At Large welcomes you to share your views on this issue below this post. Please remember that we only post comments on this site by individuals willing to share their first and last names)

An April 4. 2011 media release by the Conservative Party of Canada.

Today (April 4), Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced that a re-elected Conservative Government will introduce legislation to scrap the long-gun registry once and for all, and establish a hunting and wildlife advisory panel to ensure that government decisions are based on sound science and balanced advice.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper in Wainfleet, Ontario. Photo from Conservative Party of Canada website.

Prime Minister Harper pointed out the Government’s strong record of support for law-abiding farmers and hunters.  “Our Government has long opposed the wasteful and ineffective long-gun registry,” Harper said.  “We must stop targeting law-abiding gun owners, and instead focus our resources on real criminals.  That’s why a re-elected majority Conservative Government will scrap the wasteful and inefficient long-gun registry once and for all.” Continue reading

Why Are So Many Canadians Groaning About Another Election When People In Other Parts Of The World Are Dying For One?

A  Commentary by Doug Draper

“Canadians enjoy a great privilege that many of them take for granted and don’t realize how appreciated it should be. That privilege is democracy.”

–         Karim Ahmed, a new generation Canadian and native of Egypt, now residing with his family in St. Catharines.

You could almost hear a collective sighs of “oh no” a” from many Canadians a week ago this Friday when word circulated that the federal government was brought down in a non-confidence vote, triggering another election.

Neda Agha-Sultan, a 27-year-old Iranian woman, was shot through the heart two years ago, ralling for the chance Canadians have to vote in a fair and open election.

That’s the reaction this columnist has received over the past week from many in this region. “What a waste of time and money,” one person told me. “I’m so fed up, I’m probably not even going to vote,” said another.

This March 26, as Prime Minister Stephen Harper met with Government General David Johnston to officially dissolve parliament for what will be a May 2 vote, CBC TV played a news piece noting that “people (across the country) are feeling a little less than inspired about another campaign.”  A political science student at Nova Scotia’s Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova told a CBC reporter that “no one” in his classes were talking about the election “because it doesn’t seem to matter.” Another young woman told the reporter she is “not really excited at all (about the election) because I don’t really follow politics all that much.” Continue reading

Remembering The Day A Submarine Surfaced in Niagara, Ontario’s Black Creek

By Doug Draper

Fifty years ago today, residents living in the Black Creek area of Niagara, Ontario were startled to find an American submarine forced to surface in their community due to the shallowness of the creek waters.

An American sub, on a covert mission, gets tangled up in reeds in Niagara, Ontario's Black Creek. Image courtesy of Paul Kassay.

The  sub allegedly crossed the Niagara River from a port upstream in Buffalo, New York and was on a Cold War-era surveillance exercise when it got tangled up in the mud and reeds in Black Creek. Authorities on the Canadian side of the river quickly reported the incident to Ottawa, and then-Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, furious over what he regarded as a serious breach of Canada’s sovereignty and an act of provocation on the part of the United States, responded with a hotline call to then-U.S. president John F. Kennedy. Continue reading

Children with Autism Shortchanged, says Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

(For our readers information, the following is a March 31 media release from Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath, two days before ‘World Autism Day’ this April 2)

QUEEN’S PARK – NDP Leader Andrea Horwath says the McGuinty government is ignoring its own Autism Intervention Program guidelines and is allowing children to lose their therapy prematurely and languish without proper supports.

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath

“Children with autism and their families are being given the short shrift in Ontario,” Horwath said.  “They are victims of a process that is deeply flawed and terribly unfair.”

Horwath found problems in the government’s Autism Intervention Program (AIP) after filing a Freedom of Information to obtain details about the review of the government’s controversial benchmarking policy.   Benchmarking deems whether a child is making sufficient progress to remain in IBI therapy.

In the $118,000 contract to review the benchmarks, the government’s hand-picked consultant, Dr. Louise LaRose, reported that no psychological data from assessments existed.  This runs afoul of Ministry of Children and Youth Services guideline for the AIP, requiring final assessments before ending a child’s IBI, Horwath says.  It validates the concerns parents across the province have raised with Horwath about missed assessments, arbitrary terminations and lack of fair and transparent protocols, she said. Continue reading

Buffalo Area Congressman Makes High-Level Pitch For Twinning Of Peace Bridge

A News Brief by Doug Draper

It is hard to believe we still don’t have a shovel in the ground after all the many years of discussing the need to build a twin span for the Peace Bridge.

Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins makes pitch for expanding Peace Bridge crossing.

The talk has been going on for so long that had someone simply dusted off the blueprints for the original Peace Bridge, built in the 1920s, when serious talk of a new span more than a decade ago, we could, by now have six or bridges just like the original one, serving one of the busiest border crossing areas in all of North America.

Political representatives on both sides of the Canada/U.S. border have pushed over and over again for some movement on constructing a new span. The latest push came this March 30 from U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins, who represents Buffalo, New York area.

For the information of our readers, Niagara At Large is posting a media release from the office of Congressman Higgins below.

Congressman Higgins Meets with U.S. Secretary of Transportation to Discuss Peace Bridge

On Wednesday, March 30 Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-27), a member of the House Foreign Affairs and Homeland Security Committees, met with United States Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood to discuss the Peace Bridge project in Western New York. Continue reading

A Rose By Any Other Name … A View On The Green Party And Its Exclusion From The Leadership Debates

By Mark Taliano

I’d be more inclined to vote for the Green Party Of Canada if they’d simply change their name.

Green Party leader Elizabeth May barred from federal leaders' debates

The million or so supporters of the party don’t seem to mind, but the name evokes connotations of hippies and Flower Power, or some kind of marginalized movement, and the Party is substantively quite different.

Its philosophical basis of environmental stewardship means it is opposed to subsidies for the fossil fuel industry and the nuclear industry on the basis that such incentives are counter-productive to a balanced and sustainable economy that serves the public well being.  Translation? They’re concerned about long-term public welfare rather than short-term corporate profits.  The party sees what science sees, which is that if we don’t transition right now to non-carbon and non-nuclear sources for our energy needs, then we’re making a catastrophic blunder.  (The Japanese nuclear catastrophe should be enough of an incentive to move away from nuclear, and, by extension, carbon fuels, but some federal parties don’t share that opinion.)

Aligning themselves with this mandate, then, are Green Party policies which include their opposition to further corporate taxes cuts, but also initiatives such as their opposition to increases in E.I premiums.

Monies generated from these policies would help make alternate energy sources mainstream, create countless jobs and industries, and render the economy and the environment more sustainable.

Green Party voices deserve a spot at the televised leaders’ debates, and they deserve a spot in the House of Commons.  We owe it to ourselves, and to our democracy.

Maybe they’ll even change their name to something more suitable.  How about The Progressive Party Of Sustainable Growth?

Mark Taliano is a Niagara resident and frequent contributor to Niagara At Large.

(Share your comments below on the decision by a “consortium” of broadcasters to exclude Green Party leader Elizabeth May from the federal leadership debates to be televised later this month and visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary on matters of interest and concern to residents in our greater Niagara region and beyond.)

Niagara College Praises Province’s ‘Commitment’ To Post-Secondary Schools

(Niagara At Large is posting this March 29 media release from Niagara College on the Ontario budget for your information.)

Niagara College is pleased with the funding for literacy, instructional
equipment and 60,000 new postsecondary places announced today as part of
the 2011 provincial budget.

Niagara College president Dan Patterson

“The government is equipping Ontario colleges to train the graduates
we need to grow the province’s economy,” said Niagara College
President Dan Patterson.

“It is vital that we support students in achieving basic skills and literacy, and provide them with the equipment they need, to develop the cutting edge job skills required by employers.” Continue reading

Get Ready For Spending Cuts In Ontario

By Doug Draper

Virtually every provincial program, including health care and education, could be the targets for possible cuts as Dalton McGuinty’s Liberal government aims to beat down a projected $16.7-billion budget deficit for the coming year.

Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan


Whatever cuts are made, including the elimination over the next two years of 1,500 public sector jobs, the government will try to make them without applying “a slash-and-burn approach,” Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan after tabling the McGuinty government’s latest budget this March 29 and possibly the last one before this coming October’s provincial elections.

‘Slash and burn’ was a phrase many critics, including the Liberals, tagged on the former Conservative government of Mike Harris when it made numerous deep cuts to environment, education and other programs across the province in the mid-to-lake 1990s. While clearly trying to assure the public there will be no repeat of a scenario like that, the McGuinty Liberals are nevertheless undertaking a review of all programs with an eye to finding areas where they believe cuts can be made without compromising the quality of front-line services. Continue reading

All Three Ontario Parties – Liberal, Conservative and NDP – Weigh In On Provincial Budget

By Doug Draper

In what is very likely the last budget the Ontario Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty will table  before this coming October’s provincial election, the Liberals and opposition Conservatives and NDP have been quick this March 29 to offer their spin.

Niagara At Large is offering you the media releases it has received from Ontario Liberal cabinet minister and St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley, and from the province’s Conservative leader and Niagara area MPP Tim Hudak, and NDP leader and Hamilton area MPP Andrea Horwath.

We will leave it to our readers, for now, to wade the releases below and share their comments. Just try to remember to abide by NAL’s comment guidelines and be civil in your comments and share your full name.

Ontario Liberal Party  Media Release, March 29, 2011

Niagara Families to Benefit from Budget’s Focus on Protecting Education and Health Care

McGuinty Government Invests in 60,000 new higher education spaces, 90,000 more breast cancer screening exams

St. Catharines – The 2011 Ontario Budget continues the McGuinty government’s support of Ontario’s economic recovery. The budget focuses on eliminating the deficit while protecting education and health care, St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley announced today.

Liberal cabinet minister and St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley

“Strategic investments in education and health care lay the foundation for more and better jobs, increased productivity and a better quality of life for all our families in Niagara.  We have a plan that is on track to eliminate the deficit while protecting the gains we have made in our schools and hospitals,” Bradley said.

Niagara College and Brock University will benefit from the 60,000 new post-secondary spaces that the government is funding, while keeping education more affordable for students.

The McGuinty budget expands breast cancer screening in Niagara to reach women between the ages of 30 and 49 who are at high risk for breast cancer due to genetic factors, medical or family history, and support additional exams for women aged 50 to 69 who are currently covered under the program. Province wide there will be 90,000 more screenings funded. Continue reading

No Looking Back – There Is No Place In Canada Like Niagara

A View by Port Colborne, Ontario Mayor Vance Badawey

There has been a great deal of healthy discussion with respect to Economic Development within the Region of Niagara. My intent is to not get caught up in looking back at what was, rather, to move forward to what will be.

Port Colborne, Ontario Mayor Vance Badawey

To achieve economic recovery we must all contribute, and be focused on, a Regional economic strategy, steering the economy in a direction which builds on our strengths.

“There exists a myriad of valuable resources throughout Niagara.
It’s time to bring them all together and move forward.”

To accomplish this, it is critical that all 12 municipalities, the Region, education institutions, organizations and the private sector work together and contribute to a strategy with NIAGARA in mind versus a parochial mindset. We have a great deal to offer collectively versus individually. There exists a myriad of valuable resources throughout Niagara. It’s time to bring them all together and move forward.
It has already begun. Continue reading

Where Is The Renewed Agreement Between Canada And The United States To Protect The Shared Waters Of Our Great Lakes?

A Niagara At Large prologue to an important commentary by veteran environmental activist John Jackson

Two years ago this coming June, U.S. secretary of state Hillary Clinton stood out in the middle of the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara, for an event celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Canada/U.S. Boundary Waters Treaty that led to the creation of the International Joint Commission.

Hillary Clinton, on the Rainbow Bridge two years ago, promises an updated Great Lakes agreement. File photo by Doug Draper

During that moment, on June 13, 2009, Clinton declared that her country was committed to working with Canada to renegotiating the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement that has so much to do with honouring the promise of the 1909 Boundary Waters Treaty to protect and preserve one of the largest natural basins of fresh water in the world.

“We have to update (the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement) to reflect new knowledge, new technologies and, unfortunately new threats (to the Great Lakes),” Clinton said.

Almost two years after Clinton made those remarks on the Rainbow Bridge, millions of residents in the Great Lakes basin, on both sides of the Canada/U.S. border, are still waiting for that updated agreement.

Niagara At Large is posting a piece by veteran Canadian environmentalist John Jackson on this subject.

By John Jackson

The review and renegotiation of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement has now been going on for almost seven years. We still don’t know when it will come to a conclusion with the signing of a revised Agreement between Canada and the United States.

Our Great Lakes from space. Photo courtesy of Kevin McMahon from his documentary film Waterlife.

Early in the review process, it became apparent that there was a consensus among the governments and stakeholders that the GLWQA as last amended in 1987 needs to be updated to reflect new threats to the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River ecosystem and our advances in understanding the problems in the basin, and to commit to solutions to these problems. This understanding, however, of the massive threat to the well-being of the Great Lakes basin and its inhabitants has not sufficiently concentrated the minds of the governments on renegotiating the Agreement and getting on with its implementation. Continue reading

Defining Niagara Through A New Lens – Our Key To The Future

By Arlene White

A common mistake that we human beings regularly make is not being able to see the forest for the trees – missing the big picture because we are so focused on the small details we are involved in that we take the progress we are making or the assets that we have for granted because we are too close to actually see them for the value they provide.

Arlene White

Niagara is like this in many ways – so focused on old definitions, geography and boundaries that were used to describe us, the things that other communities are doing, or that we feel aren’t being done or done well in our region, that we totally miss the great things that are happening, and the opportunities right in front of us.

And there are tremendous opportunities all around us – if we choose to break down old barriers to thinking and how we do things, and start to redefine a “greater” Niagara region that encompasses and promotes the best of what this new Niagara can offer. Continue reading

Brock University Launches New Unit On Environmental And Sustainability Issues

By Samantha Craggs

A group of Social Sciences faculty members at Brock have launched a new research unit with a focus on environmental and sustainability issues.

From left, Brock University's Richard Mitchell, Tim Heinmiller, Brad May, Diane Dupont, Steven Renzetti, Tony Ward and Ryan Plummer

The Brock Environmental Sustainability Research Unit (BESRU), which launched last month, is housed within the Department of Tourism and Environment.

“Over the last year, we have been working together, getting to know each other and increasingly recognizing where our interests were coalescing,” said Ryan Plummer, professor of Tourism and Environment and a founding member of BESRU.

The group’s primary areas of research include water resources and resilience, environmental governance, climate change and adaptation, and First-Nations social justice and equity. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario’s Regional Chair Is Willing To Consider The Prospect Of One ‘City Of Niagara’

By Doug Draper

In his first State of the Region address as Niagara, Ontario’s regional chair, Gary Burroughs told hundreds of people packing a banquet hall in Niagara-on-the-Lake this March 25 that he would like to see regional council begin discussions before the end of this year on how all of Niagara might better be governed.

Gary Burroughs takes questions from reporters following his 'State of the Region' address. Photo by Doug Draper

“We need to focus on sustainability and our ability to pay. … We need to recommit to looking at the way we do business and the way we do business (and) this may mean reviewing governance issues which impact on how we do business,” said Burroughs.

“Governance means different things to almost everyone in this room (and) I would like to begin addressing those governance issues in 2011 and I am determined to face those questions head on,” he added to a round of applause from many of those attending the St. Catharines Standard-Thorold Chamber of Commerce-hosted State of the Region event. Continue reading

Demanding To Know How Much Dioxin And Other ‘Agent Orange’ Poisons Were Sprayed In Niagara

By Doug Draper

Back in the 1960s, 70s and even into the early 80s, when chemical manufacturers in Niagara County, New York were burying some of the most toxic chemicals known to science in leaky dumps along the Niagara River, Ontario Hydro was using a cocktail made up of some of those same poisons to defoliate the ground below its giant hydro towers.

One of the signs Love Canal residents in Niagara Falls, N.Y. displayed in the late 1970s after they learned that dioxin, the most lethal ingredient in 'Agent Orange', was among the chemicals contaminating their neighbourhood.

One of the question is, how much of that chemical cocktail – made up of compounds like dioxin and 2.4-D that happened to be the main ingredients in an ‘Agent Orange’ defoliant the U.S. military used during the War in Vietnam – was sprayed along hydro corridors in the Niagara Falls, Ontario area? And what potential impact did that spraying have on human health and the environment?

These are questions Niagara Falls Mayor Jim Diodati and his council agreed this March 21 that they want the province to answer, and they are questions that were echoed in the provincial legislature this week by Gilles Bisson, an NDP member for the riding of Timmins-James Bay. Continue reading

A Beautiful Dog Named Luke Needs A Loving Home

(As Niagara At Large readers may know by now, we have a soft spot in our hearts for our furry, four-legged friends. And from time to time, we run a post for one of these great creatures who need a new home. This time it is about Luke, a beautiful dog (check out the photo below) that we found out about through the not-for-profit group Niagara Action for Animals or NAFA, for short. Luke needs a loving home and here is a bit about him and about who you can call if you are interested in embracing him as a member of your family. NAL will let our readers know how things turn out for this fine doggie.)

We have a wonderful 3.5 yr old collie/shepherd mix named Luke.  But we just had our daughter and we have two boys under three and a half years old .  And we both work.

Luke is looking for a new home.

We just don’t seem to have enough time to provide the love, exercise and attention Luke needs. So we have decided it might be better to find him a forever home with people who can give him these things and be active with him as well. We have attached a photo. You can see how beautiful he is.

He is great with our children, no problems there at all. He is good with other dogs, not sure about cats. He loves the off leash parks and plays well with other dogs and runs.

We got Luke from the Nappanee SPCA about 2.5 years ago. We were so lucky to find out how good he is.

He’s up to date on all vaccines, heartworm, etc…
He’s housetrained
He’s neutered
He is not crate trained

Please feel free to call anytime. Don’t hesitate to leave a message. We will get back to you as soon as we can.

Tanya and Ken Bruger
tanyaroberts111@sympatico.ca
kbruger@worldsourcewealth.com
home 905 619 3555
cell 416 558 8161
We live in Ajax

Niagara, Ontario Businesses Move To Create A Region-Wide Chamber Of Commerce

By Doug Draper

Businesses across Niagara, Ontario – fed up with a parochialism they feel is keeping this region from moving forward – are moving forward with the creation of their own ‘Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce’.

In a media release circulated this March 24, a recently established steering committee for an “advocacy group” made up of more than 40 businesses across the region, said it has received a good deal of support from business owners and others for a body that truly speaks with one voice for Niagara when it comes to attracting more jobs and business. Continue reading

Remembering A Tragedy – One Hundred Years Later – That Set The Tone For Better Labour Rules For Working People Across This Continent

By Doug Draper

It was a tragedy that did not happen in this region, but it is one that led to better rules for protecting the rights and safety of all workers across the United States and Canada to this day.

The women are placed in coffins near the place they plunged to their deaths in one of North America's worst workplace disasters.

One hundred years ago this March 25, at 4:45 p.m. on a Saturday in the Washington Place/Greenwich Village area of New York City, a fire broke out on the lower flower of a building where, on the eighth, ninth and tenth floors, hundreds of young women, most Italian and Jewish Immigrants, were working in sweatshop conditions for an outfit called the Triangle Shirtwaist Company. Continue reading

Niagara Health System’s Chair Is Moving Out

By Doug Draper

For the second time since the beginning of this year, one of the key figures heading up the Niagara Health System is on the way out.

Ousted NHS CEO Debbie Sevenpifer with outgoing Betty-Lou Souter at left, arguing a case before Niagara's regional government last year for not supporting another investigation of the NHS - Photo by Doug Draper.

Betty-Lou Souter, who has served as chair of the Niagara Health System’s board of trustees during a time of controversy and turmoil for this decade-old body that manages most of the hospital services in this region, is, in her words, “wrapping up” her stint as board chair this coming June.

“While there have been some very tumultuous times during my term as chair, there have been a number of accomplishments of which I have been very proud to be a part of,” said Souter in a list of her comments forwarded to Niagara At Large through the NHS. Continue reading

Libya: Could It Have Been Different? Could Liberation Have Come Without A No-Fly Zone?

By Susan Howard-Azzeh

Very sad to see the situation in Libya come to this, to a No-fly zone and military intervention.

Susan Howard-Azzeh

If only Libya’s liberation from the Gadhafi regime could have been achieved by the Libyan people themselves and through peaceful means.

Some people disagree with a No-fly zone because it is foreign interference in a sovereign country, with unknown political and economic motivations, which will interfere with the Libyan people’s own process towards democracy.  Some think Libyans are naive in asking for Western military aid – there will be a price to pay and a civilian toll. Personally, I am saddened that regime change is being attempted through military action, not through diplomatic or peaceful democratic reform.  Couldn’t anyone in Gadhafi’s inner circle arrest him and bring him to trial for crimes against humanity?  Can freedom in this world only be attained through violence and death? Continue reading

Share Your Thoughts On The Federal Election

We’ve gone back and updated this post to note that we Canadians will be heading to the polls this spring.

Shortly after the Stephen Harper’s Conservative government talked its budget this March 22, NDP leader Jack Layton joined the leaders of the Liberal Party and Parti Qeubecois in expressing displeasure with its overall contents. That led to the  non-confidence vote that defeated  the government this March 25 and triggers an election that will culminate in a vote in the first week of May.

NAL has been asking our readers to share their comments below and how you feel about this election and how you would like it to turn out?  Join the discussion and we will be posting more news and commentary on the races in our region of the country as the days and weeks to the final vote unfold.

(Share your comments below and visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary on matters of interest and concern to residents in our greater Niagara region.)

You Had To Know The Condo Developer Would Win Over However Many Little Voices In Fort Erie

By Doug Draper

Well, well, well.

As if you should be surprised in this day and age when the Ontario Municipal Board so often tips its hat to the developer over protests from a mass of residents that live in the community.

There you go folks, for better or worse.

So much so that Fort Erie’s recently elected town council finally buckled and gave its final approval, by a vote of four to three this March 22, to a controversial agreement between the town’s last council and a Toronto-area developer to move forward with a 12-storey condo tower in front of one of the few remaining public beaches in Niagara, along the Lake Erie shore. Continue reading

Niagara MP Brings Growing Cry For Liberation Therapy To Parliament

(This March 21, the NDP member for the Welland Riding called on the federal government to support sugery that may improve the lives of MS patients. Niagara At Large is posting a media release on this matter below.)

OTTAWA – Many Canadians living with MS see hope in the Chronic Cerebro-Spinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI) surgery treatment and feel it should be made available in Canada, according to Malcolm Allen.

Welland Riding MP federal member Malcolm Allen

The MP for Welland brought that message to parliament today, as he tabled a large petition calling on the Minister of Health to make CCSVI, also known as liberation therapy or the Zamboni treatment, available to more Canadians by making it available in Canada.

The procedure itself is relatively common for non-MS patients with blockages in their veins. Developed by Italian Dr. Paolo Zamboni with early reports of significant improvements for MS patients, the treatment has become a beacon of hope in the MS community. Continue reading

Fort Erie Lawsuit Against Citizen-Based Blog Site One More Sign Of How Divided This Ontario Municipality Is

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Hey folks, check out a blog site called the Crystal Beach Strand!

One of a number of Fort Erie town hall meetings so packed with people concerned about the Bay Beach condo plan that they spilled out into the lobby. Photo by Doug Draper

It must be one smoken’ watchdog site on municipal affairs if both it and Google, Inc., which carries it, and two anonymous commenters are now named in a legal suit filed by the municipality’s Economic and Development and Tourism Corporation. And oh, by the way, you can check out the site for yourself at www.crystalbeachstrand.com.

Then again, don’t go checking out that site until you finish reading the rest of this.

There is an old rule of human nature that is probably as true now as it was going back to the advent of the first printing presses centuries ago. What that rule says is this – if you want to give your opponents more publicity than they have possibly ever hoped for before, then just try to sue them or ban whatever they are saying. Continue reading

Niagara Public May Eventually Get The Goods On Fired Hospital CEO’s Severance Package

By Doug Draper

In response to questioning from Ontario’s NDP leader Andrea Horwath, Health Minister Deb Matthews said this March 21 that the cost of the severance package for the Niagara Health System’s fired CEO Debbie Sevenpifer will eventually be made public.

Public may one day learn cost of Debbie Sevenpifer's severance package. File photo by Doug Draper

“The income of all the people who work in our health care sector with incomes over $100,000 do have that income reported on the sunshine list every year. That includes severance packages, so this information will become public,” said Matthews after Horwath asked her  “how many hundreds of thousands of dollars will Niagara families be on the hook for (Sevenpifer’s) sweetheart severance deal. Continue reading

If You Don’t Want A Wind Farm In Your Backyard, How Bout A Nuclear Power Plant?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Here’s an idea I’ve been tossing around that may get me in trouble – not that I am already in enough trouble – with a few more people.

Melting nukes in Japan - once considered one of world's most secure nuclear power facilities.

Maybe, just maybe, some of those residents’ groups in Niagara and other parts of Ontario and New York State who are so opposed to solar energy and wind farms should be among the first to have their communities targeted for a brand new nuclear power plant. Or at the very least, let them host a warehouse for storing the spent radioactive waste.

How about that for an energy alternative? Well, all of that power we consume has to come from somewhere. Continue reading

Vegan Food Event Is Shut Down At Brock University

By Tayler Staneff

The halls of Brock University are often filled with student groups fundraising by selling baked goods and other foods to raise money for a certain cause. Walk through MCA Block on any given day and you are bound to see some sort of bake sale or food giveaway.

A scene from a past vegan food event at Brock University, before the bust.

Students line up to purchase vanilla cupcakes and other ‘goodies’… but doesn’t anyone stop and ask, “Where are the hand washing stations?

This is the reality that the Brock Animal Rights Club (BARC) was faced with this past Monday, March 14 during their annual Vegan Taco Day. BARC’s annual vegan taco day has been a huge success for the past five years, bringing line-ups of people to enjoy a cruelty free lunch. This March 14, BARC was at it again, promoting compassionate food choices by handing out free vegan tacos to anyone interested in trying one.
BARC has always distributed quality food in a health conscious and appropriate manner, using gloves, separate spoons and napkins etc. Although this is almost unnecessary due to the lack of animal products and therefore, lack of contamination issues, BARC has always strived to handle the food served in appropriate measures.

Walking through the hallway bake sales, I have never once, seen a table with a “hand-washing station” and rarely see gloves being used. However, BARC’s Vegan Taco Day fells victim to scrutiny this March 14 when the Niagara Health Board showed up saying they received a complaint about the fundraiser. Apparently, someone called in and complained that they did not have the cheese refrigerated (it was non-dairy, so there was no need) and they didn’t have a hand-washing station. Continue reading

Driving The Mid-Pen Highway Back To The 20th Century

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Here is one helluva plan to pursue while the cost of gas and diesel fuel keeps going up, up, up.

Click on this map to blow it up and note the words 'Continue Monitoring Needs' to view where a mid-peninsula highway would go.

Take two or three billion dollars and use it to build a multi-lane highway right through the heart of Niagara’s countryside. And never mind that by the time the plan is approved (if it is approved) and the highway is opened 10 or 20 years from now, cost of gas may be up to 10 a litre (that’s about $40 a gallon for our U.S. readers), and we might be experiencing enough of a global food shortage to wish we never paved over all that farmland.

Then again, why let a few things like that keep us from marching backward to the last century when a number of our provincial and municipal leaders latched on to the idea of constructing a “mid-peninsula highway” south of the Niagara Escarpment as an alternative to adding more lanes to the QEW. Continue reading

A Few ‘Jolts’ The Media Should Zap Out To Masses

By Mark Taliano

Sesame Street, television’s teacher to countless kids, was once banned in England.  It was thought that the technical wizardry of the well-constructed shows would dissuade kids from reading.  And they may have been right.  Books don’t have flashy lights, nice music, fast scene changes, and so on.

Mainstream media, on the other hand, hasn’t been banned, but it does feature a great deal of technical wizardry that often glues us to the set. This fixation of form over substance comes with a price though: depth, context, and perspective are lost. There’s a formula for this media technique, and it’s called Jolts Per Minute.  Continue reading

A Wonderful Series Of Speakers At A Historic Niagara, Ontario Location

By Doug Draper

The gorgeous old estate known as Willowbanks is located on a hill in the historic old village of Queenston, Ontario, and will be the setting for a great series of speakers on matters of heritage over the next few months.

The historic Willowbanks estate in Queenston, Ontario. Photo Courtesy of Friends of Willowbanks.

This beautiful building had a date with the wrecking ball a decade ago but finally, a group of caring residents, calling themselves, and some of the municipal councils of the day, including then lord mayor of Niagara-on-the-Lake (the municipality Queenston is a part of) and now Niagara regional chair Gary Burroughs, fought to save it. Continue reading

Can Niagara, Ontario Ever Get Its Act Together On Economic Development?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

I know that almost any talk of amalgamating government services in Niagara, Ontario is repulsive to a number people, including some I have a lot of respect for.

Dennis Parrass, present chair of Niagara Economic Development Corp., tells regional councillors system is "broken" and "dysfunctional." Photo by Doug Draper

Yet I talk to few people who feel that the status quo is working very well in Niagara when it comes to anything from launching a 21st century transit system (similar to the one Waterloo has) for our region, doing away with a two-tier system for dealing with water and wastewater that is costing too many residents too much for the privilege of turning on a tap in their homes, or drawing more business to our region that will create jobs and keep young people here.

For too long now, Niagara has suffered from some of the worst unemployment rates, lowest average income rates, and highest rates of people in desperate need of food banks and affordable housing in the country. And all the while, we’ve had 12 local municipalities in Niagara that seem more interested in competing with one another over which one gets a new police headquarters or hospital complex or a private business that may be located here, than they are in working together as one Niagara. And we have had one regional council after another that has been too timid to do anything about it. Continue reading

A Happy St. Patrick’s Day As We Celebrate The Green And, Oh Yes, The Arrival Of Spring

By Doug Draper

I’m almost ashamed to admit that I don’t know as much about my family tree as I would like to so I can’t be completely sure there isn’t a wee bit of Irish blood in me along with a touch of Scottish, English and some of the other stuff.

Some of the early arrivals for last year's St. Patrick's Day parade in Buffalo, New York. Photo by Doug Draper

Then again, on St. Patrick’s Day, it is almost a mute point. Just dig into your closet for a green sweater or shirt, pin on an “Irish for a Day’ button that any of us who care to can pin on an “Irish For A Day” and join the crowd at bars for a pint or more of green beer. And if you are working this St. Patrick’s Day, as many of us are this Thursday, March 17, and can’t make it to the party, don’t despair. Continue reading

Fort Erie Speedway Opponents Brace For David vs. Goliath Battle Even As They Ask – Where Are The ‘Completed Studies’ To Support This Project?

A Commentary by Sandy Vant“We do not inherit the land from our ancestors; we borrow it from our children. We will be known forever by the tracks we leave.” – Native American Proverbs 

On the heels of the Bay Beach condo tower fiasco, the Ontario Municipal Board appeal process concerning the largest proposed development in Fort Erie in recent history, the Canadian Motor Speedway project, begins with a pre-hearing on Friday, April 8th, 2011 at 11:00am in Fort Erie Town Council Chambers.

Trees being cut on a portion of the more than 800-acre site in Fort, Erie, Ontario planned for NASCAR racing stadium.

Although environmentally destructive for Niagara, this application for a NASCAR speedway was hastily pushed through the approval process in late 2009; primarily due to the demands of the proponent, who expressed their exasperation and impatience with the lengthy approval process in Canada.  Apparently, the investors’ concerns were unaccustomed to being constrained by procedures meant to protect area citizenry.

Not to worry though.  Politicians at both the local municipal and regional levels of government agreeably towed the line and adhered to the proponent’s deadline of December, 2009 with their vote to amend the Official Policy and make way for this leviathan.  Approvals were so swift, in fact, that many of the required studies were not provided and remain outstanding to this day. Continue reading

Stop ‘Golden Handshakes’ For Ontario’s Health Care CEOs – NDP

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from Paul Miller, the Hamilton-East, Stoney Creek MPP for the Ontario NDP for your information. It includes references to the undisclosed severance package for recently ousted Niagara Health System CEO Debbie Sevenpifer.)

Queen’s Park – With local frontline healthcare in crisis, Ontario must put an end to exorbitant ‘golden handshakes’ given to fired CEOs, says NDP MPP Paul Miller and make all contracts with CEOs publicly available so people know exactly what they’re paying for.

Ontario MPP Paul Miller

“Windsor is facing a long-term care bed shortage, crowded emergency rooms, and surgeries are being cancelled,” said Miller. “Every public healthcare dollar should go to frontline care, not six-figure golden handshakes.”

News reports indicate Warren Chant, recently fired from Windsor’s Hotel Dieu Grace Hospital, received $300,000 in severance.

The revelation comes less than two months after the Niagara Health System dismissed Debbie Sevenpifer but refused to disclose the details of the severance package. Continue reading

Working To Get My Happy Back

By Vickie Fagan

Maybe it’s the time of year but lately, I’ve been commiserating with a lot of friends and colleagues on the state of their happiness.  Relationship woes, financial hardships, identity crisis, emotional meltdowns, bad – hair days, you name it- there is a significant lack of the big happy out there.

There is a new catch phrase floating around that you may have heard.  “ I need to get my happy back.”  This is an all-encompassing cry for help for 90 percent of the population who generally can’t get through a week without dodging a variety of curve balls. Okay, so I heard it on the “Real Housewives of Atlanta”, sue me but if that group, of over-indulged southern belles has to work to find “happy” then I think it’s safe to say the rest of us are screwed. Continue reading

Canada’s Federal Government Stands Ready To Gut More Of What Is Left Of The CBC

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Okay, so we know Canada’s economy is suffering so much, according to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Conservatives that we have to make some sacrifices.

One of CBC's best and brightest, Jian Ghomeshi.

Those sacrifices may apparently come in Harper’s March 22 budget with more corporate tax cuts, more subsidies for the tar sands and close to $30 billion now to be spent on American-manufactured fighter jets – more than $12 billion more than originally estimated. But let’s cut more funding for health care, environmental protection, post-secondary education for future generations and, finally,  for the CBC.

While Harper and his bunch defend a $12-billion override on weapons of destruction they seem hell bent on purchasing, at any cost, from U.S.- based Lockheed-Martin – one of the global king pins of the military-industrial complex – and looks at spending billions more on prisons, why should they care about things as paltry to them as the CBC? Continue reading

Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario’s Shaw Festival Celebrates 50th Season With Artistic Director Jackie Maxwell At The Helm

(Niagara At Large is posting this media release from the Shaw Festival as it opens its 50th season as one of Canada’s most popular theatrical venues.)

Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, March 14, 2011 . . . Shaw Festival Board of Governors Chair Gary Comerford revealed today that Jackie Maxwell will continue as The Shaw’s Artistic Director for another four years.

Shaw Festival artistic director Jackie Maxwell

“As the Shaw Festival embarks on its momentous 50th season, the Board of Governors of the Shaw Festival are very pleased to announce that Jackie Maxwell’s contract has been extended for four more years,” said Gary Comerford, Chair of the Shaw Festival Board. “It is because of Jackie’s outstanding artistic leadership and dedication that the Shaw Festival is recognized as one of the finest theatrical companies in North America.”  Continue reading

Our Region’s and Country’s Post-Secondary Students – Forever In Debt!

By Jessi Gilligan

(Niagara At Large thanks The Brock Press for permission to re-post this article.)

Debt: it is one small word, but has a large effect on the economy. From the very beginning of adulthood in Canada, credit is offered – and even encouraged – to young adults.

Brock University student Jessi Gilligan.

According to a report on Canadian debt and income by the Vanier Institute of the Family (VIF), over half of students getting a post-secondary education are paying for it with student loans and will be at an average of $18,000 in debt when they graduate. The students don’t usually worry about it, however. Many of them simply plan to “pay off” their student loans with the professional jobs that will be offered after graduation.

Unfortunately, a pattern that began in mid-2009 warns Canadians that only five per cent of new jobs created will be given to young people, especially 15 to 24-year-olds. Therefore, despite the recent increase of jobs in Canada, there is still a prospect of rising unemployment rates. Continue reading

Join The Fight Against Potholes And Our Crumbling Road And Highway Infrastructure

By Doug Draper

It was a year ago this March that I was driving down one of the busier urban roads in our region and hit a pothole so jagged and deep it rattled the bolts holding together the frame of my car and almost yanked the steering wheel out of my hands.

A monstor pothole, waiting for another victim, on St. Davids Street West in Niagara's Thorold, Ontario community.

I had just had my car in for a front-wheel alignment, along with a couple of ball-joint and tie-rod replacements for a good two or three hundred bucks, and the car was now  driving nice and steady until I hit that crater on the surface of one of the roads we pay for to be maintained with our hard-earned tax money. Suffice to say, I had to go back to the garage for another round of front-wheel work that cost me another two or three hundred dollars.

I’ve always been on the lookout for teeth-rattling potholes – even before that particularly costly incident – and have tried calling the municipal and county, or provincial or state government responsible in our greater bi-national Niagara region to maybe take out a little time from hiring high-priced consultants to tell them what they already know on one issue or another, and to bring out a bit of asphalt and fill the bloody things!

In Niagara, Ontario, you can contact CAA Niagara (this Ontario region’s chapter of the Canadian Automobile Association) and link into its ‘Pothole Watch’ program to fill out a report on car-damaging potholes you know about, and it will bring those potholes to the appropriate government body’s attention. That link is www.caaniagara.ca/pothole . Continue reading

A River Flows Through Us

By Tom Millar

I got a real liking for rivers. Rivers in all seasons of the year. And in particular rivers in Ontario.

I grew up on the river. The Rideau River. That portion of the river that flows through Ottawa.

Well, I spent a lot of time on or around the Rideau River. The family home was just up the hill from the river banks. Continue reading

As Many In Niagara Already Know, Deb Matthews Is About The Worst Of The Worst Health Ministers Ontario Has Ever Had – She Ought To Be Impeached

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Many in Niagara already know how impulsively unthinking and callous Ontario’s minister of health, Deb Matthews, continues to be when it comes to taking their concerns about the deterioration of hospital services in this region seriously.

Jill and her children, Laila, 2, and Benjamin, 4. Photo courtesy of Jill and her family, and the public interest group, Rethink Breast Cancer.

So impulsive, that Matthews – as if she had less mental faculties than an ant – snaps to say that the Niagara Health System, the amalgamated hospital board for the Niagara, Ontario region – is doing an “excellent job.” And she mouths those words, as if they were coming through a voice mail message from a computer, each and every time citizens across this region, along with their municipal leaders, try to point out to her what a disastrous job the NHS is doing on behalf of those among us who need medical help. Continue reading

A Sign Of The Times – ‘Let’s Keep Development Coming’. Yes But What Kind, And At What Cost?

By Doug Draper

If you drive down Fort Erie, Ontario’s Garrison Road past all of those box stores, strip malls, gas bars and fast food outlets buffered by acres of asphalt lots that make this ‘Canada-U.S. gateway’ so un-aesthetically pleasing to locals and visitors alike, you will now be greeted by a billboard that reads as follows; “Let’s keep development coming, so our children stay.”

This curious sign shows a young child playing on a sandy beach that seems a world away from the cornucopia of cindar-block retail bunkers that line so much of Garrison Road until it moves further west and becomes Hwy. 3. As you progress further west down that highway, the features on either side become greener as prepare, if you so choose, to make a left turn to the historic old summer town of Crystal Beach (home of the late and legendary amusement park of the same name) and a popular public beach still kissing the shores of Lake Erie called Bay Beach. Continue reading

A Deer Strives To Survive In The City Of Buffalo

By Doug Draper

I recently drove along Buffalo, New York’s Main Street, past its classic Forest Lawn Cemetery, when my wife Mary said; ‘Look over there in the cemetery. There is a deer!’

Best deer in Buffalo's Forest Lawn Cemetery Park. Photo by Doug Draper

She was right. Near one of the main gates of that cemetery, where Buffalo buries its war dead, a lone deer, looking like an adult female, stood inside the wrought-iron fencing. She stood there majestically in the grass-covered snow as I and a few groups of adults and their children approached for a closer look. I ventured closer for a photo and she barely took four or five steps back. Continue reading

Tired Of Winter? Aren’t We All – Think, Just Thng, Of Garden Walk Buffalo, And It May Make You Feel A Whole Lot Better!

By Doug Draper

Just about everyone is grumbling about what a long, cold winter it has been. It has been a tough one – we know, we know!

Only one of the many great gardens to explore in this great city. Photo by Doug Draper

But believe it or not, there are warmer, sunnier days just around the corner. Aside from the first sight of a robin in my backyard this March 9, a reminder to this ‘I’ve-had-enough-of winter’ writer, that there are only weeks to go to warmer days, there was a media release from the people who organize what has become the most popular and largest garden walk event in all of North America.

The media release from Garden Walk Buffalo, an amazing group of volunteers in Buffalo that is doing possibly more to showcase the grand old neighbourhoods in this city than practically anyone else, is calling on even more residents to showcase their lawns and gardens at what will be the 17th anniversary of this very public and open and free event to all who love making the most beautiful use of landscape in an urban environment.

If you enjoy the outdoors and beautiful trees and gardens, don’t miss Garden Walk Buffalo this year – an event that always takes place on the last full Saturday and Sunday of July, and this year takes place on July 30 and 31.

In the meantime, Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following media release for a not-for-profit group that should receive the equivalent of an ‘Order of Ontario’ award north of the border. How about that, Governor Cuomo?

Garden Walk Buffalo garden applications now available

Garden Walk Buffalo invites gardens, and their gardeners, from the Peace Bridge to Main Street and from Erie Basin Marina to Forest Avenue/Rumsey Road to be part of the 17th annual Garden Walk, to be held Saturday and Sunday, July 30 and 31 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Share your garden and show your pride in our neighborhoods and city.

Enter by May 15, 2011
Enter online at http://www.GardenWalkBuffalo.com. If a mailed, paper application is preferred, a printable .pdf application can be found there.

More information can be found at http://www.GardenWalkBuffalo.com.

Garden Walk Buffalo, the largest  garden tour in the U.S., is held the last weekend of July each year. More than 350 residences and businesses throughout the west side of Buffalo open their creative urban gardens for tens of thousands of visitors from around the U.S. and Canada. For more information, visit http://www.GardenWalkBuffalo.com.

High-resolution, print-worthy, professional photography of Garden Walk Buffalo is always available in the Garden Walk Press Kit, found here.

(Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary on matters of interest and concern to residents in our greater Niagara region and beyond.)

Ontario Conservative Leader Tim Hudak Renews Call for Moratorium on Wind Turbines

(Niagara At Large is posting this media release, dated this March 11, from the Ontario Conservative Party for your information.)

A Future PC government will restore local decision making powers to municipalities

Ontario Conservative Party leader Tim Hudak

NEWS:

WEST LINCOLN – Today, Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak, MPP for Niagara West-Glanbrook, was joined by West Lincoln Mayor Doug Joyner, Wainfleet Mayor April Jeffs, and members of the West Lincoln and Glanbrook Wind Action Groups to renew his call for a moratorium on Dalton McGuinty’s wind turbine projects—like the one he is forcing on West Lincoln and Wainfleet. Continue reading

Chamber Calls For Creation Of Office Of Auditor General For Niagara

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release circulated this March 8 by the Niagara, Ontario-based St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce. Its contents, including what it says about the widening gap between the revenue Niagara’s regional government takes in through assessment growth and the amount it spends, should be of interest to everyone who lives, works and pays property taxes in this region.)

(Niagara) – With the passing of the 2011 Regional Budget last week, and the announcement of a small break in taxes for ratepayers, the St. Catharines – Thorold Chamber of Commerce continues to have serious concerns about the Region’s finances.

Chamber policy director Kithio Mwanzia

While this was the first regional budget in recent memory that clearly outlines the disparity between the tax rates, real assessment growth and regional expenditure growth, this year’s budget failed to address an increasing gap between assessment growth and expenditure growth. Continue reading

Eighty-One Per Cent Of Ontario’s High School Students Now Graduating – 72,000 More Students Succeed In Province’s High Schools

(The office of Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty released the following statement this March 8 on the growing numbers of students that have graduated from high school since his Liberal government took office more than seven years ago.

Niagara At Large posts this media release for your information and welcomes you to share your comments at the end of the post.)

March 8, 2011, Ontario is becoming even more competitive now that more students are graduating from high school.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty

Graduation rates have risen in each of the last six years — going from 68 per cent in 2003–04 to 81 per cent in 2009–10. That’s an increase of 13 percentage points.

The increased graduation rate means about 72,000 more students have graduated than otherwise would have if rates had remained at the 2003-2004 level. Continue reading

Afghanistan – When In Hell Are We Getting Out!

A Commentary by Doug Draper

That’s right when are we getting our brave young Canadian and American people the hell out of there!

One sign of the times.

Never mind this nonsense from the federal governments of Canada and the United States that in Canada’s sake for example, we are going to end “combat operations” there later this year and keep our troops there for some kind of peace-keeping or nation-building exercise, or that the U.S. is going to be out by 2014.

Why are we risking any more of our young peoples limbs and lives, not to mention billions of dollars that could be spent on education, health-care and other nation-building exercises at home, on a country run by a bunch of drug lords that seem to get the support of the majority of the population to keep them back in the Stone Age? Continue reading

Niagara Falls, New York Mayor Among Award Winners For Strengthening Binational Ties

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from the Binational Economic and Tourism Coaltion which is holding its annual summit in Niagara Falls, Ontario this March 10 and 11. Read down for further information on the awards and summit.)

Niagara Falls, New York Mayor Paul Dyster, Buffalo Sabres, Dearborn Street Community Association And Niagara Sport Commission to be
Honored at 6th Annual Binational Star Awards Ceremony March 10.

Niagara Falls, New York Mayor Paul Dyster

The 2011 Binational Summit will kick-off on Thursday, March 10, 2011 at 5:30 p.m. at the Americana Conference Resort & Spa, Niagara Falls, ON with an Opening Reception that includes the Binational Star Awards Ceremony,
Binational Cornucopia Food & Wine Event and 1812 Bicentennial Cultural Showcase, co-hosted by Marta Moszczenska, Canadian Consul General in Buffalo and Kevin Johnson, U.S. Consul General in Toronto.

The winners of the 2010 Binational Star Awards are: Political Sector – Niagara Falls NY Mayor Paul Dyster, Private Sector – Buffalo Sabres, Not-for-Profit Sector – Dearborn Street Community Association, Frontline Service Sector – Niagara Sport Commission. Continue reading

Hello Niagara – Join The Discussion This March 10 On The Crisis In Libya. What Can We In This Region, As Global Neighbours, Do To Help?

NAL libya Niagara event, march

Hello Niagara – Join The Discussion This March 10 On The Crisis In Libya. What Can We In This Region, As Global Neighbours, Do To Help?

Niagara At Large is posting this advance on a “mini-march and open discussion” taking place in St. Catharines, Ontario this coming Thursday, March 10 on the ongoing crisis in Libya, and the fight for people in that country for the same rights and freedoms that we too often take for granted here in Canada.

We include an introduction by Susan Howard-Azzeh, a piece activist and brave member of our Niagara community when it comes to human rights issues for peoples in the Middle Easte, and below that, the information on the March 10 event.)

A Note from Susan Howard-Azzeh

The Canadian Libyan Human Rights Committee, based in St. Catharines, Ontario, and peace activists invite you to an open discussion regarding the crisis in Libya. Peace activists and Canadian Libyans are having an on-going conversation regarding what is the best course of action to prevent further loss of life in Libya.

Niagara peace activist Susan Howard-Azzeh

It is a complicated situation. On Friday, March 4,  Mostafa Abduljalil, the Chair of the Transitional Revolutionary Council from the Eastern city of Benigazi, asked the international community via BBC-Arabic for a no-fly zone.

What does that actually entail? What are the consequences of a no-fly zone?

Many people both in Libya and in Canada feel that a no-fly zone is military interference in a soverign country, which could open the door for foreign militaries to enter Libya but not leave. For example, the USA entered Iraq apparently on a humanitarian mission to remove Saddam Hussein, supposedly at the request of some human rights activists in Iraq. Yet years later the US is still in Iraq, the country is in ruins and the Lancet has reported the loss of more than a million civilians. Continue reading

Celebrating 30 Years Of Blue Box Recycling

By Doug Draper

It isn’t too many times that Canadians can look across the border at our more entrepreneurial American neighbours and say – ‘Look what we did! This is one of those times we best you folks on something.”

Image courtesy of Niagara Region

One of those times was of those times may have been 30 years ago, when it comes to recycling and some of the good it is doing for the environment.

It was 30 years ago, in 1981, that a few visionaries in Ontario thought it might be a good idea to start community-wide recycling drives in towns and cities across the province, and it sparked a ‘Blue Box’ recycling revolution that eventually spread across the continent. Continue reading

How About More Trees Along With The Building Cranes Dominating Brock University’s Skyline

A Commentary by John Bacher

Within the corridors of power at Brock University, there is an intense debate over the future of a 52-acre meadow with some native tree regeneration, predominately Black Walnut, along that meadow’s edges.

John Bacher at site where trees could grow.

This debate concerns lands owned by Brock University and situated in between the forested Niagara Escarpment and the Glenridge Landfill Rehabilitation Site – a rather clumsy name given to describe a park owned by the Niagara Region and managed by the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority. Continue reading

Join In A Binational Dialogue On Building A More Promising Future In Our Greater Niagara Region

The Binational Tourism and Economic Alliance – a coalition of businesses and other groups on the Ontario and New York sides of the Niagara River – is holding its annual conference this March 10 and 11, focused on the many challenges and opportunities we face as a greater Niagara region.

This conference will feature business and tourism leaders, academics and a host of other speakers, actively working to fulfill the potential of the Niagara, Ontario and Erie and Niagara County, New York area as a culturally and economically sustainable international gateway for present and future generations of people who live and work here.

Niagara At Large is posting the agenda for this upcoming conference, titled ‘Binational Dialogues 2011 – Building A Binational Community’, below, along with the conference’s location and contacts for further information. Continue reading

Here Is A Kitty In Need Of A Home

The not-for-profit group Niagara Action for Animals has circulated a poster for a young cat in desperate need of a loving home and Niagara At Large is publishing it below, with all the information someone looking for a feline companion needs to adopt this kitty.

Ontario Conservative Leader’s Punch At Niagara Falls Liberal MPP Over Closing Of Hospital Emergency Rooms May Trigger Legal Suit

By Doug Draper

There are the usual pot shots that politicians take at their partisan opponents. Then there are shots that are so cheap and so divorced from reality that one in the media world wonders how giving them publicity adds anything of any value to the public discourse.

Niagara Falls Liberal Riding MPP Kim Craitor

That is how I felt this March 4 when I received a media release from the office of Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak suggesting that Niagara Falls Liberal MPP Kim Craitor may not care all that much about the closing of emergency rooms at hospitals in Fort Erie (part of his riding) and Port Colborne because he apparently congratulated Juanita Gledhill, the outgoing chair of the Niagara area Local Health Integrated Network, for doing a “good job.”

For anyone who has paid the least bit of attention to Craitor’s efforts to save these now-defunct emergency rooms, even at the risk of annoying higher ups in the province’s Liberal government, any suggestion that he may have been less than sincere on that file is patently ridiculous. Continue reading

Niagara’s Henry Burgoyne – A ‘Life Lived’ With Passion For Quality Journalism In Niagara And Yes, For Family, Friends And Fast Cars Too

By John Nicol

(The following is a ‘Lives Lived’ column former St. Catharines Standard reporter and columnist, and now CBC investigative reporter John Nicol wrote for The Globe and Mail this March month on the life and times of the last great daily newspaper publisher in Niagara, Henry Burgoyne.

Niagara At Large reprises it for all in our region who care about building back the kind of journalism Henry and his family worked for more than a century to leave as their legacy.)

Publisher, rebel, philanthropist. Born Aug. 1, 1949, in St. Catharines, Ont. Died Feb. 7 in St. Catharines of cancer, aged 61.

In 1975, Henry Burgoyne walked into The St. Catharines Standard newspaper office to take a job for which he, and not his two sisters, had been destined.

Henry Burgoyne. Photo courtesy of the Burgoyne family.

The only son of William and Dorothy Burgoyne, Henry became the fourth generation of his family to run the paper they had purchased for $1 in 1892.
Problem was, Henry was given the job at 26 because of the early demise of his father. Until then his formal education had included an unceremonious departure from Ridley College and a year of university in New Brunswick. With his penchant for partying and fast cars, he was more likely to go the way of James Dean than Joseph Pulitzer.

But in 1980, he hired a new managing editor (Murray Thomson) with a promise that there would be a fence around the editorial department, and he’d patrol the fence to keep advertisers, politicians and the powerful away from influencing his journalists. The rebel had a cause: to serve the community well with honesty. Continue reading

Will Niagara Region’s Eighteen-Dollar Property Tax Cut Come Back To Haunt Us?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

For the first time in recent memory – and I can’t remember the last time – Niagara’s regional council is delivering homeowners a cut in their property taxes.

Here's our 18 bucks. Enjoy it. We may be paying for it big time in the next few years ahead.

That is right folks, for owners of an average home assessed at $210,000 a year, your property taxes will drop this year by slightly more than $18.00 for a total tax bill of about $1,320.

 

Some of the many regional councillors who pushed hard for the cut, including Bart Maves, one of the councillors for Niagara Falls, repeated what has become a mantra for him; than any money the government is holding in surplus belongs to the taxpayers and should be given back. Andy Petrowski, a councillor for St. Catharines, added at this March 4 council meeting, just minutes before the region’s budget for 2011 was approved, that he has always felt that ratepayers “do a better job of spending their money than governments do.”

Those messages may come across as very appealing, and many ratepayers across the region may argue that getting back something – even if it amounts to slightly less than a nickel a day – is better than being hit with a tax increase. And that may very well be cause for raising a few party balloons in the short-term. But what about the long-term? Continue reading

Local Artists And Downtown Business Showcase An Exhibition On ‘Urban Sprawl’

“This is a show of art based around urban sprawl,” says Anah Shabbar, a 20-year-old artist from St. Catharines, Ontario and one of seven area artists who will be showcasing their work at a downtown business in the city this Saturday, March 5.

One of the pieces featured by one of the fine young artists featured at this exhibit.

The work on display speaks to themes that touch,  profoundly,  on protecting our environment and the quality of lives we live in our communities, the artist said.
So if you are interested in this unique display of work from young artists in our community, here is a little information on when and where you can view it below.

A group of local St. Catharines artists will be hosting an art show in the unlikeliest of places — a downtown hair salon.

The group show, Urban Sprawl, will take place at Bang On Hair Salon located at 142 St. Paul St. in downtown St. Catharines. It will feature a collection of works by young artists from or based out of the city.

The artists involved in the show work in a number of different disciplines. The exhibit is held in a groovy little salon downtown St. Catharines, where works featured include paintings, photographs and sculptures, to name a few.

URBAN SPRAWL at Bang On Hair Salon
142 St. Paul St., St. Catharines, Ont.
Exhibit runs: Saturday, March 5 to mid April
Opening reception with artists: Saturday, March 5; 7 to 9 p.m.

Here are a few more links below for this event and its venue –

(Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary on matters of interest and concern to residents in our greater Niagara region and beyond.)

Niagara Author Showcases Book On Past Struggles And Finding A New Live In Canada

(A Niagara At Large post on a book released by an author in our region. Recievce some information below on meeting the author for a book signing at Chapters book store at the Fairview Mall in St. Catharines, Ontario this Saturday, March 5.)

George Suba struggled through World War II, two dictatorships, and an escape from a concentration camp.

He survived by keeping his eyes and his mind open. In 1948 he backpacked through a war-torn Western Europe. He arrived in Canada in 1950 and became a successful house-builder and property-owner.

Canada has given him back the freedom denied him in Hungary, first by Hitler, and then by the Stalin and the communists. In this book, you will read how he survives in prosperity here in Canada while questioning if too much might sometimes be worse than not enough.
Mr. Subalives in Niagara-on-the-Lake and is currently working on his next book, That’s How Life Is – a second collection of historical reflections and personal essays edited and co-authored by Malcolm Matthews.

George Suba will be at Chapters in the Fairview Mall in St. Catharines, Ontario this Saturday March 5 from 1  to  4 p.m. for a book signing.

(Visit Niagara At Large at for www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary on matters of interest and concern to residents in our greater Niagara region and beyond.)

Ontario Health Minister Gives Niagara The Bums Rush Again On Hospital Services

By Doug Draper

What is it with Ontario’s health minister Deb Matthews?

Since the London-area MPP assumed the Liberal government’s health portfolio in fall of 2009, she seems to have gone out of her way to shun the concerns expressed by Niagara municipal leaders and thousands of the region’s residents while eating virtually every bit of self-serving p.r. the Niagara Health System feeds her whole.

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews says 'no' again.


Whether Matthews is making a concerted effort to let the NHS, the board responsible for managing most of the region’s hospital services, take the heat for everything that goes wrong in the system or whether she actually believes the NHS is doing an “excellent” job, many in Niagara view her disinterest in their concerns as a complete abdication of leadership.

 

And so it went again this March 2 when the province’s NDP leader, Andrea Horwath, asked Matthews in the legislature if she would heed the call from Niagara’s regional government and seven of its 12 local municipal councils to undertake an investigation of the NHS and the way it is implementing its controversial “hospital improvement plan.” Continue reading

Antiquated Animal Import Legislation Root Cause Of Asian Carp Crisis

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from Buffalo, N.Y.-based Great Lakes United and a coalition of citizen groups around the Great Lakes basin.)

Conservation and fishing groups are calling on the federal government to improve outdated laws and prevent the next invasion

Buffalo, NY (February 28, 2011) — Asian carp were allowed into this country under a law governing animal imports that was passed in 1900, and which has remained unchanged, despite a drastically different global trade reality. As two species of Asian carp, the bighead and silver carp, knock at the door of the Great Lakes, conservation and fishing groups are calling on federal officials to finally update import screening laws before the next invader gets here.

Asian Carp working their way north from the Mississippi River watershed and now on the verge of invading Lake Michigan.

“Stopping Asian carp should have happened before the first shipment. This incredible threat, this incredible expense, was avoidable,” said Jennifer Nalbone, Director of Navigation and Invasive Species for Great Lakes United. “It’s time for the antiquated Lacey Act to be modernized so that we never have to fight off another invasion like this again.” Continue reading

The DSBN Academy and Castles in the Air

A Commentary by Fiona McMurran

When I first heard about the proposed DSBN Academy, I thought it was a joke. A bad joke.

A public board meeing where, once again, the board supported opening a shool for the poor.

In the hopes of getting a more balanced perspective by hearing for myself the District School Board of Niagara’s rationale for this  project to establish what has been described in the media as a school for students from low-income families, I attended the board’s meeting on February 8. I didn’t get the information I wanted from DSBN officials and trustees. What I got was a selling job on a proposal that nobody seemed to be able to adequately describe, let alone defend. Continue reading

City Of Hamilton Does What Niagara Should Do – Demand That Province Pay Fair Share Of Cost Of Hospital Services

By Sue Salzer

As I watched our Ontario legislature in session today (this February 28), I was impressed with the colourful representative from Welland, Peter Kormos, and his use of the expressive term ‘gonads’.

Fort Erie health care advocate Sue Salzer

Gonads is precisely the term to be used when referring to the council of the City of Hamilton.

They are standing firm and telling the Hamilton/Niagara LHIN (local health integration network) and the province’s minister of health, Deb Matthews, that the downloading of Ambulance service on their taxpayers is unacceptable. Continue reading

When We Have No Futuristic Energy Plan, Why Should We Be Shocked Over The Soaring Cost Of Oil?

By Doug Draper

Sometime one wonders how intelligent we humans really are.

We supposedly have more smarts than any other species on the planet when it comes to learning from the past and using that knowledge, if we choose, to make some good, workable decisions for the future.

At this station and most others on the Canadian side of the border, the price of a litre of gas went up about 15 cents within a matter of hours.

But when it comes to such basics as where are we going to continue getting the energy we need to get ourselves around, to fuel our industries, and to keep the lights and the heat on at our homes and businesses, you have to wonder if we are any smarter than the proverbial ants some say will take over the world after we humans have worked our way to extinction.

These were among the thoughts that crossed my mind when a complimentary copy of the Friday, February 26 edition of a St. Catharines, Ontario newspaper was dropped off at my door and I looked at a front-page headline that read; “Drivers fume over price jump at pumps.” A further headline, for the same article reads; “Driver’s lament: ‘I’m captive’ to car.” Continue reading