“Even if the Welland House Hotel is rebuilt, we can never truly bring it back,” Vlossak says. “Now that the building is gone, it becomes even more important that we capture, record and preserve its stories and memories.” – Brock University Associate Professor of History Elizabeth Vlossak
A Report from Brock News at Brock University in St. Catharines/Niagara, Ontario
Posted on July 21st, 2021 on Niagara At Large
The historic Welland House Hotel in St. Catharines burned down Monday, July 12. The loss of the building is about more than bricks and mortar, says Brock Associate Professor of History Elizabeth Vlossak.
When the Welland House Hotel burned down Monday, July 12th, a significant witness to St. Catharines history was lost.

Elizabeth Vlossak. (Image courtesy of Woodruff Family Fonds from the Brock University Archives)
“Its value to our cultural heritage lay not so much in its bricks and mortar, or the artifacts within it, but in its role as a ‘witness’ to the historical events that have shaped our community over the past 170 years, and in the stories of the people who worked, stayed, played and organized there,” says Brock Associate Professor of History Elizabeth Vlossak. Continue reading







The vast majority of it is plastic. How do we know that? Volunteers record and tally every item they pick up. This vast data set is used by researchers to learn more about plastic pollution in the Great Lakes.
TORONTO — The Ontario government has selected 44 community-based projects to receive $1.9 million in funding through the 


TORONTO — With key public health and health care indicators continuing to improve and the provincewide vaccination rate surpassing the targets outlined in the province’s

Andrea Horwath, Leader of the Official Opposition New Democrats, has committed to launch Ontario’s first zero-emissions vehicles strategy, ramping up electric vehicle sales to 100 per cent of all new auto sales in Ontario by 2035.
QUEEN’S PARK — Ontario NDP Ethics and Accountability critic Taras Natyshak released the following statement on tomorrow’s $1,000-per-person Doug Ford and friends golfing fundraiser in Muskoka:









From the Ontario Plant Restoration Alliance; Niagara Chapter Trout Unlimited Canada; SORE; Peninsula Field Naturalists; Niagara Falls Nature Club; Niagara Beekeepers’ Association of Niagara; Ontariogreen Conservation Association; Bert Miller Nature Club; Niagara Birding Conservation and Tourism Collaborative; Hamilton Naturalists; Friends of One Mile Creek; Extinction Rebellion Niagara; St. Catharines Environmental Alliance; Friends of Walker’s Creek; Pelham Tree Conservation Society; Speak For The Creek; Miriam Richards, Professor, Biological Sciences, Brock University; and members of Biodiversity and Climate Action Collective Niagara
“For almost two years, a citizens group, The Coalition for a Better St. Catharines, has been urging the (Ontario) Ministry (of Environment, Conservation and Parks) and the City to get this site cleaned up and, in the interim, monitor the perimeter for any leakage of contaminants off the site



When was the last time that you shelled out a thousand bucks to chow down one hamburger?
The International Joint Commission Great Lakes Water Quality Board invites you to complete the following survey about issues related to the Great Lakes and water quality.




This Canada Day offers us an opportunity to reflect on what we should be proud of as a country and, yes, on past injustices and shames, with a resolve to confront them and make sure they never happen again.
“We as Canadians must be honest with ourselves about our past. And we must recognize that here in Canada there are still people who don’t feel safe walking the streets of their communities, who still don’t have the same opportunities as others, and who still face discrimination or systemic racism in their daily lives.” – Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
“Today, we celebrate our country and everyone who calls it home. We also reflect on everything we have accomplished, and look forward to what more we have to do.


Maybe you heard that this past Monday, June 27, the community of Lytton in British Columbia suffered the highest temperatures ever recorded in Canadian history.
Expressions of frustration and anger are growing on both sides of the border as the ban on all but so-called “essential traffic” using land crossings to re-connect with friends and relatives, and properties they own on either side.




Niagara, Ontario – This past Monday, June 21st,, the Government of Canada announced that Canadian borders would be reopened on July 6 to Canadian citizens and permanent residents who have had a full series of COVID-19 vaccinations.
Toronto, Ontario – A new report released from Environmental Defence illustrates how carmakers’ promises of an all-electric future mask their push to sell more gas-powered SUVs now, contributing to rising carbon emissions from transportation.
Sorry about that Niagara At Large readers.
Written and recorded in 1970, as the God-awful waste of a War in Vietnam dragged on and the causality count grew higher a, and the protests against war grew larger, the lyrics, in a subtle way, speak to all of that. Yet the song, crafted by one of Canada’s national treasures, is still wonderful to listen to. 




TORONTO — The Ontario government is urging everyone to take the necessary precautions to keep their pets safe and protected during the hot summer months.


