Author Archives: dougdraper

Former Thorold Regional Council Henry Angela Appointed to Niagara’s Police Board

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted March 29th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Former Thorold regional councillor Henry D’Angela has been appointed by Niagara Region’s council to service as citizen member on f the Niagara Police Services Board

Niagara, Ontario – Henry D’Angela, a former Niagara regional councillor for Thorold, has been appointed by the Region’s Council to serve for the rest of the 2018 to 2022 council term as a citizen member on the Niagara Police Services Board.

D’Angela (whose last name ends with an ‘a’ and should certainly not be mistaken for the Region’s now former and very controversial CAO Carmen D’Angelo) served on the Police Services Board prior to 2014, when he was on the Region’s council and Gary Burroughs, who also sat on the board, serviced as the council’s Chair.

D’Angela ran and lost in last October’s municipal election to a strong-showing Terry Ugulini in a bid to serve as Thorold’s mayor for a second time during his time in municipal politics that goes back two decades. Continue reading

We Could Use a Few More Climate-Fighting Politicians like AOC in Canada

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, champion of a Green New Deal for her country and the planet

If you can get the MSNBC news channel MSNBC on cable, try to tune in this Friday, March 29th at 8 p.m. to watch Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez talking about the Green New Deal for fighting climate change

A Brief Comment from Niagara At Large publisher and reporter Doug Draper

Posted March 29th, 2019

When I venture across the border to sane regions of America, which are about the only regions of that country I go to any more, I hear many people there speaking warmly of AOC.

For those who still don’t know, AOC is Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the youngest ever member of U.S. Congress from Queens, who worked as an organizer for Bernie Sanders presidential campaign in 2016 and who is now one of the champions of something called the Green New Deal to fight climate change.

The cover of the latest April 1st, 2019 edition of Time Magazine

AOC is only 29 years old and I’ve heard more than a few of my American friends and neighbours say – ‘Too bad she isn’t old enough to run for president.’

You have to be at least 30-something to run for the U.S. presidency, and some day she will be. The future belongs to young people like her, if we don’t destroy it first.

This Friday, March 29th at 8 p.m., on the cable TV network MSNBC, she will be on for an hour talking about that Green New Deal which, in a federal election year in Canada, we Canadians should be talking about too.

For the sake of our own futures, and certainly for the sake of younger people, we have only years left to head off a global climate catastrophe that will make the severe weather episodes we are already experiencing look like ‘singin’ in the rain’.

We have no choice, if we give a damn about a decent future on this planet, to take bold steps NOW to address the root causes of this climate crisis.

Please watch this MSNBC program this March 29th;

And take a few moments out now to click on the screen below to hear what AOC had to say in the U.S. Congress just days ago –

Meanwhile, back in Ontario, here is the latest news on the climate-denying premier, Doug Ford, who was gifted to us in the 2018 provincial election, mostly by an aging, disgruntled, stuck in the middle of the 20th century  generation of baby boomers who would rather have cheaper gas for the oversized trucks and cars –

Ford gives climate change-denying former Conservative MP a seat on energy system operator

A News Release form Ontario’s Official Opposition and New Democratic Party

March 29th, 2019

Ontario’s ‘What? Me worry about climate change?’ premier, Doug Ford. Watch Canada’s aging baby boomers vote for Ford’s buddy, Andrew Scheer, for  prime minister of Canada next.

QUEEN’S PARK — Peter Tabuns, Ontario NDP critic for Energy and Climate Change, released the following statement in response to the Ford Conservatives’ appointment of Joe Oliver to the board of the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO):

“Doug Ford has handed out yet another golden ticket on his gravy train. It is deeply troubling to see Ford give coal-loving, climate change-denying former Conservative MP Joe Oliver a seat at the table of Ontario’s energy system operator.”

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater bi-national Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

“A politician thinks of the next election. A leader thinks of the next generation.” – Bernie Sanders

 

As Niagara Municipalities Face Possible Amalgamation ….

Brock University Policy Brief Explores Governance Options For Niagara Municipalities

The brief argues that past amalgamations have not saved costs or reduced taxes, but there are reasons other than cost savings why area municipalities might wish to merge.

News from Brock University in St. Catharines/Niagara

Posted March 28th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

How will Niagara’s municipal map look four years from now? If Premier Doug Ford has its way, it could look very different and the number of municipal councillors representing Niagara’s citizens could be much smaller.

To merge or not to merge? That is one of the many questions Niagara and eight other Ontario regions will be grappling with as the province studies how to make municipalities more efficient.

Two advisors appointed by the Ontario government are addressing nine questions related to how decisions are being made, and services being delivered, in two-tier systems. Residents have been asked to provide feedback by April 23, and the advisors’ report is expected to be submitted early this summer.

To help Niagara navigate the issues, Brock University’s Niagara Community Observatory (NCO) has released its policy brief, Under the Knife & Under the Gun: An Overview of Regional Government in Niagara.

How many municipal councillors does a region like Niagara need?

“The purpose of the brief is to provide factual information to inform the discussion on this important issue,” says David Siegel, Professor of Political Science and author of the policy brief. Continue reading

Ontario’s Official Opposition Party Tables Two Bills in Honour of Late Welland MPP Peter Kormos

One NDP Bill Aimed at Increasing Organ Donations. Other Would Prohibit Replacement Workers during Walkouts/Strikes

The late Welland MP Peter Kormos became a political icon across Ontario, and one of the leading voices for the rights of working people

News Releases from Ontario’s New Democratic Party

Posted March 28th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

NDP Health critic France Gélinas Tables Bill To Increase Organ Donation

The bill is named after Welland MPP Peter Kormos, who was passionate about organ donation. Kormos died March 30, 2013.

Queen’s Park — NDP Health critic France Gélinas has re-introduced the Peter Kormos Memorial Act (Trillium Gift of Life Netwoark Amendment), which would change organ and tissue donation in Ontario from an opt-in system to an opt-out system.

“This bill will take people off transplant wait lists,” said Gélinas. “It will help not only save lives, but help transplant recipients live longer, more productive lives.” Continue reading

If You Like Used Books Stores, You Will Love Rust Belt Books in Buffalo, New York

Visit Rust Belt Books this Coming Monday, April 1st thru Friday, April 5th for its annual ‘Backroom Book Sale’ where you can get a Bag of Books for just Five Bucks

One of the very cool cats you may meet at Rust Belt Books in Buffalo

Another Brief Call-Out for Supporting Great Book and Record Stores from Doug Draper

Posted March 28th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

If you are a regular visitor to Niagara At Large, as we hope you are, then you already know that we are strong supporters of locally owned book and record stores here.

We believe that the best of these great stores are not only good for the local economy, they also add, immeasurably, to heart and soul of any community worth living in.

Rust Belt Books on 415 Grant Street in Buffalo, New York.

That’s why we take a little time out to promote some of these stores for no compensation other than this. … For the sake of our communities, we want these places where people can go to share their passion for books and music to survive and thrive.

And one such place that serves as a great commons for book livers in Rust Belt Books, located right across the border from Niagara, Ontario, on 415 Grant Street in Buffalo, New York .

If you have never had the pleasure of shopping in this store, and meeting its nice owner, this coming Monday, April 1st through Friday, April 5th is a good time to start because the store is hosting its annual “Backroom Book Sale” where for five American bucks you can purchase a whole bag of books. Continue reading

Niagara Area MPP Calls on Ford Conservatives to Keep Life-Saving Overdose Prevention Site Open in St. Catharines

“For people struggling with opioid addiction, their loved ones, and for St. Catharines as a community, this safe consumption site has been a literal lifeline. The Ford government needs to stop delaying and make sure it stays open and funded, immediately.” – St. Catharines NDP MPP Jennie Stevens

St. Catharines MPP Jennie Stevens

A News Release from Ontario’s New Democratic Party

Posted March 28th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario  – NDP MPP for St. Catharines Jennie Stevens is calling on the Ford government to confirm that the St. Catharines overdose prevention site will be permitted to stay open. With a deadline set for March 31, only a few days away — frontline health care providers are worried that their life-saving operations will be interrupted.

“The safe consumption site on Queenston Street in St. Catharines has seen hundreds of people using it on a regular basis,” said Stevens in a letter to Doug Ford’s Minister of Health and Long Term Care. “The site has recently reversed more than fifty overdoses since December.” Continue reading

Canadian Municipalities Should Sue Oil Industries for Climate Change Costs

Toronto City Councillor Mike Layton

“We could be on the hook for an enormous amount of money, into the billions as a city. …. I am a firm believer in the notion that polluters should pay.”                                                                                – Toronto City Councillor Mike Layton, who is tabling a motion at Toronto’s council to go after fossil fuel (oil and gas) industries for the costs of dealing with climate change.

A Commentary from Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

Posted March 27th, 2019

If our provincial and federal governments aren’t going to act aggressively enough to address climate change, municipalities will have to do it.

And one step they can take is to sue the industry’s most responsible for dumping climate-changing carbon into the atmosphere for the costs of the damage caused by the resulting severe weather.

That is a strategy the City of Toronto is reportedly now reviewing and debating in a motion which, if passed, would do just that – leave open the option of targeting oil corporations with lawsuits aimed at recovering the costs of damage caused by the severe weather outcomes of climate change. Continue reading

No Wizard Will Run Trump Out Of Office. Voters Will Have To Do That

There Is No Real Substitute for People Power, After All

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted March 26th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

“Oh, we’re off to see the Wizard

The wonderful Wizard of Oz.

We hear he is a whiz of a Wiz

If ever a Wiz there was….”

– From the 1939 movie classic, ‘The Wizard of Oz’

An awful lot of references to scenes from ‘The Godfather’ – a trilogy of movies first released between 1972 and 1990 about an American crime family – have been used by political pundits over the past three or four years to comment on Donald Trump’s campaign for the U.S. presidency and his subsequent two years in the Oval Office.

Given all of the shady and sleazy behaviour of Trump and his entourage, including members of his own family, references to Godfather movies make a lot of sense. But for all the news right now (this March 24th and 25th) around the report that U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has finally completed on Trump, the life lessons I have so often found in another classic movie, ‘The Wizard of Oz’, seem more fitting now, with Mueller playing the role of the “great and powerful Oz.”

I’m putting Robert Mueller in the role of the Wizard because so many of my friends in the U.S. have been hoping that Mueller – a Vietnam War hero and long-time federal prosecutor – would be the one who would finally uncover enough skulduggery committed by Trump and his clan to run him out of office and possibly even put him in jail. Continue reading

Calling Out Cases of Alleged Abuse in Ontario’s Training Schools for Children and Teens

Niagara Centre MPP Reminds Ontario Government of its responsibility ‘to keep province’s teenagers and children safe

A Statement from Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch

Posted March 25th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch

(Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch delivered the following statement about alleged abuses committed in Ontario’s training schools for children and teenagers, against two of his constituents and others, and about the continued pursuit of the alleged victims for justice from the Province of Ontario.

The statement was delivered this March 25th in the Ontario legislature.)

Mr. Jeff Burch: “I rise today (March 25th) to speak for my constituents John Parisee and Rick Brown, who are here with us today, and for countless others like them, who survived their time in Ontario’s training schools for children and teenagers. Continue reading

Hamilton Joins Municipalities Around World in Declaring a “Climate Emergency” that ‘Threatens Cities, Regions, Nations …. and all of Humanity’

Kingston is only other Ontario municipality that has so far joined hundreds of other cities and towns around the world in joining the declaration

 

 

 

 

 

 

News from the Hamilton-based citizens watchdog group, Citizens At City Hall

Posted March 25th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

City of Hamilton Mayor Fred Eisenberger authored the motion “that the City of Hamilton declare a climate emergency that threatens our city, region, province, nation, civilization, humanity and the natural world.”

At the urging of the Environment Hamilton citizens group, city councillors have declared a climate emergency joining hundreds of municipal governments in Europe and North America including Vancouver, Halifax and Kingston.

The local action was approved (Monday, March 18th), just days after the worst weather disaster in the southern hemisphere devastated a city almost exactly the same size as Hamilton.

At least hundreds and perhaps thousands are dead in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi in the wake of Typhoon Idai that created a new lake 125 km long and 25 km wide just west of the city of Biera. At least 600,000 people were displaced and a week later vast areas were still underwater.

The typhoon hit just before the global student climate strike on March 15 of 1.6 million including 150,000 who marched in Montreal. However both the strike and the typhoon got limited media attention because of the white supremacist mass murder in New Zealand. Continue reading

Brock University Partners with Niagara Agency in Research on Childhood Mental Health Issues

Bill Helmeczi, Pathstone Director of Strategic Planning, Standards and Practices

“By bringing clinical staff (at Pathstone’s Mental Health Centre in St. Catharines) together with researchers (at Brock University), I think we can build a dynamic research program that fosters a great deal of benefit as researchers become more aware of the specific challenges we face in dealing with children’s mental health in the region.” – Bill Helmeczi, Pathstone Director of Strategic Planning, Standards and Practices

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted March 25th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

A new partnership between two Niagara organizations will mean a direct connection between the people conducting leading-edge research on child mental health and the caregivers who work with families dealing with related issues.

Pathstone Mental Health and Brock University signed a Memorandum of Understanding Friday, March 22. Pictured front row from left: Bill Helmeczi, Pathstone Director of Strategic Planning, Standards, and Practices, Pathstone CEO Shaun Baylis, Brock President Gervan Fearon and Brock Professor Sid Segalowitz. Back row are Pathstone Board Chair Elco Drost, left, and Brock Board Chair Gary Comerford.

Pathstone Mental Health and Brock University signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on Friday, March 22 that solidifies a collaboration that will positively impact children suffering with mental health in Niagara and beyond. Continue reading

Beechwood Doughnuts is Niagara, Ontario’s Latest Certified Living Wage Employer

“A living wage reflects what earners need to be paid based on the actual costs of living and being included in the community.” – Glen Walker, Chair of the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network

A News Release from the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network

Posted March 25th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

The Niagara Poverty Reduction Network is pleased to announce that Beechwood Doughnuts has become a certified living wage employer.

Tayler Book, President, Beechwood Doughnuts and Glen Walker, Chair, Niagara Poverty Reduction Network with certificate

Beechwood Doughnuts is Niagara’s first and only 100% vegan doughnut shop. Located in the heart of Downtown St. Catharines, Beechwood Doughnuts has proven that plant-based foods can be just as delicious as they are compassionate. They currently employ 10 full time staff and 11 part time staff.

“Ever since we came to the realization that our little doughnut shop was becoming something much larger than we could have ever anticipated, becoming a certified living wage employer was at the forefront of our minds. No matter the industry, all working people deserve a liveable wage. Continue reading

Honouring a U.S. President Who Cared About People and the Environment

Jimmy Carter has made  a great  mark of his own on our region of the Great Lakes

Then U.S. President Jimmy Carter in Niagara Falls, New York  in 1980, with Lois Gibbs, president of the then Love Canal Homeowners’ Association, after signing a second emergency declaration, to help Gibbs’ family and hundreds of others evacuate their homes around the Love Canal toxic waste dump.

“There must never in this country be another Love Canal.”   – U.S. President Jimmy Carter, in the spring of 1980, after signing a second federal emergency declaration to assist hundreds of families leave their homes around the leaking Love Canal toxic waste dump in Niagara Falls, New York.

A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted March 22nd, 2019 on Niagara At Large

This Friday, March 22nd, Jimmy Carter, marked a milestone in the history of the U.S. presidency by becoming the longest living person, at age 94 and a half, and after the recently deceased George H. Bush, to have ever held the office.

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter has left a very positive legacy in our Niagara region.

Maybe all of the good people don’t die young, after all.

Jimmy Carter, a former Georgia government who served as the 39th president of the United States from 1977 to 1981, certainly made his mark on Niagara and on this bi-national region of our Great Lakes during his all-to-short tenure in his nation’s highest office.

In August of 1978, Carter signed the first of two documents, declaring a federal emergency at a neighbourhood in Niagara Falls, New York called Love Canal where, decades earlier, a local chemical industry buried close to 20,000 tonnes of some of the most toxic chemicals known to science – chemicals that were leaking out of the dump and into the yards of surrounding homes, and were also reaching creeks draining to the Niagara River. Continue reading

Brock University Expert Provides Unique Look At Future Of Animal Cruelty Investigations With New Report

Calling it a critically important moment for animal welfare in Ontario, a Brock University professor released her latest findings Wednesday, March 20 that offer unique insight and perspective on the issue.

News from Brock University in St. Catharines

Posted March 22nd, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Brock University  expert on anti-animal cruelty enforcement Kendra Coulter

Niagara, Ontario – Kendra Coulter, Chair of Brock’s Labour Studies Department and Canada’s foremost academic expert on anti-cruelty enforcement, has released a much-anticipated public report entitled: A More Humane and Safer Ontario: The Future of Animal Cruelty Investigations.

For nearly a century, anti-cruelty investigations in Ontario have been handled by charitable organizations.

However, earlier this month, the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (OSPCA) announced it would cease its law enforcement work at the end of March.

 “Crimes against animals have been sidelined and de-prioritized by successive governments, and charities have filled in the gap,” says Coulter. “But the era of private enforcement is over and Ontario will finally have public animal cruelty investigations.” Continue reading

Ontario’s Niagara Parks has a new Chief Executive Officer

David Adames is Appointed 12th CEO in Niagara Parks 129-Year History

A News Release from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted March 21st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Parks new CEO, David Adames

Niagara Falls, Ontaio – David Adames, currently the Acting Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of The Niagara Parks Commission, was today appointed as the 12th CEO to serve the Commission since its inception in 1885, reporting to Niagara Parks Chair, Sandie Bellows.

David brings with him a wealth of business and tourism experience to this most important role. Joining Niagara Parks in 2013, David first served as Senior Director of Business Development, before transitioning into the roles of Chief Operating Officer in 2016 and Acting CEO in October 2018.

David’s background includes time spent as the President and CEO of the Hamilton Chamber of Commerce, and as the Executive Director at Tourism Hamilton. He currently serves on several tourism boards, including Niagara Falls Tourism, the Tourism Partnership of Niagara and he currently serves as the Chair of the Winter Festival of Lights Board. Continue reading

New Zealand Does What the U.S. Has Never Had The Guts to Do – Even After Mass Slaughters of Children in Schools

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted March 21st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern

Less than a week after a terrorist and white supremacist who found inspiration in Donald Trump’s words of hate shot to death 50 of New Zealand’s Muslim residents in their places of worship, the Prime Minister of New Zealand has done something Trump and none of his predecessors have had the moral fortitude or courage to do.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern stood at a podium this March 21st and announced a total ban on assault-style guns, high-capacity ammunition clips and other assorted killing equipment.

Click on the screen below and witness a profile in courage –

Now watch Mr. Tough-GuyTrump and his and flaunting Christian vice president Mike Pence grovelling and soaking up the applause at a National Rifle Association conference last year – just a few months after the slaughter of young people at the Parkland high school in Florida, and less than six years after five and six year old children were bullet-drilled to death at the Sandy Hook elementary school in Connecticut –

 And Trump claims he cares so much about homeland security and law and order, and originally said he would never take any money from a lobby group like the NRA. Not a drip of shame in this man, and what a coward at the end of the day.

Come to think of it, we have never had a Prime Minister in Canada that has had the courage to do what the PM of New Zealand has done, without compromise, in such a short period of time. Stephen Harper couldn’t even support a gun registry.

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater bi-national Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

“A politician thinks of the next election. A leader thinks of the next generation.” – Bernie Sanders

 

Figures Don’t Lie –  Budget 2019 Short-Changes The Fight Against Climate Change

“Why aren’t we seeing major investments in expanding renewable energy resources?”

From Elizabeth May, Leader of the Green Party of Canada

Posted March 21st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Canadian Green Party Leader Elizabeth May

Ottawa – Although the Trudeau government continues to insist that it’s committed to decisive action on the climate crisis, Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s 2019 federal budget tells a very different story.

“It just doesn’t add up,” said Green Party Leader Elizabeth May (MP, Saanich-Gulf Islands). “The budget’s total commitment to a suite of energy efficiency and clean economy initiatives is less than $1.5 billion over five years — $300 million a year. Under a year ago, this government spent $4.5 billion to buy a leaky 65-year-old oil pipeline and wants to spend another $10 billion to expand it.” Continue reading

Federal Government’s Budget 2019 delivers results for Niagara Centre

“Our budget works for Canadians at every stage of their lives.”    – Vance Badawey, Niagara Centre MP

A News Release from the Constituency Office of Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

Posted March 21st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

Niagara, Ontario – Our government today delivered a budget to build on our goal, since 2015, to strengthen and grow the middle class, and we want to restore confidence for all Canadians that we’re still on point to build an economy that works for everyone.

“Our budget works for Canadians at every stage of their lives,” said Vance Badawey, Niagara Centre MP.

“I’m especially pleased to see one of my recommendations come through: Budget 2019 proposes a one-time transfer of $2.2 billion to the gas tax fund. This results in additional gas tax money coming directly to Niagara Centre, bypassing red tape from the province, to help bolster direct investment in roads, bridges, and public transit right here in our local towns and cities, starting this summer.” Continue reading

Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce Reacts to 2019 Federal Budget

“Niagara, like many regions across Canada, has fallen into an affordable housing crisis. … While this (federal) government has invested significantly in affordable housing, a multi-pronged approach to the lack of housing stock is needed, including reducing red tape for developers and incentivizing the construction of more affordable units.”

A Budget Analysis from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Posted March 21st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The Government of Canada released (this past March 19th) the fourth and final budget for this term of office. While not a complete reaction, the GNCC has shared these preliminary thoughts on some key areas of the 2019 budget.

Debt and Deficit

While the 2018-2019 deficit projection has been reduced slightly, deficits are projected at $14.9-billion for 2018-2019 and $19.8-billion for 2019-2020, with a debt of $685.6-billion projected to rise to $761.7-billion by 2023-24. However, debt-to-GDP ratios will fall from 30.8% to 28.6% in the same time period. Continue reading

Welcome to the First Full Day of Spring in our Greater Niagara Region – March 21st, 2019

Celebrating a Time of Hope and Renewal for our Lives and for our Communities

A Brief One from Doug Draper, Niagara At Large

“Though I do not believe that a plant will spring up where no seed has been, I have great faith in a seed… Convince me that you have a seed there, and I am prepared to expect wonders.”
– Henry David Thoreau

We’ve been through a long, cold winter, often full of news in this Niagara region and elsewhere that has disheartened and angered us.

I don’t mind telling you that, more than a few times, what I was witnessing of some of the scoundrels, in this region alone, that had their grubby hands on the levers of power and were so abusing the trust we place in public agencies and institutions, had me feeling so depressed and discouraged, that I almost felt like giving up.

But we can’t give up or we lose everything about a civil society that matters.

And now spring is here – a time for renewal. Let’s all get engaged. Together, we can make better days for our lives and communities happen.

Here is one of my favourite spring time songs from one of my all-time favourite groups, The Rascals – “A Beautiful Morning” from the spring of 1968. To hear it, click on the screen below.  … Enjoy and join  together with your friends and neighbours in a campaign for positive, progressive renewal . 

And keep visiting and supporting alternative news and commentary sites like Niagara At Large.

By the way, we have beautiful green places like this in Niagara. Let’s fight against the stupidity and short-sighted greed of a few out there to save what is left of them. – Doug Draper

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below. 

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater bi-national Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

“A politician thinks of the next election. A leader thinks of the next generation.” – Bernie Sanders

 

After a Long, Cold Winter of Chaos, Spring Has Finally Arrived at the NPCA

New Interim CAO Gayle Wood Sets Problem-Plagued Agency on Path to Renewal

A Brief Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted March 20th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Veteran Conservationist Gayle Wood, appointed interim NPCA CAO only three weeks ago, already making a positive mark on the troubled agency

Spring did not officially begin until 5:58 p.m. this March 20th, but for member of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s (NPCA) board, its staff, and for members of the public who were there, it began more than six hours earlier at the board’s latest monthly meeting.

For the first time in at least six years, there were smiles on the faces of almost each and every person around the big room at the Ball’s Falls Centre for Conservation where the board meetings are routinely held.

For the first time in just as many years there was a feeling in the air  that everyone, including members of the public and the media who, in recent years, have felt the need to say and to write things critical of the Conservation Authority’s senior staff and board, were welcome to attend.

And much of the reason for the end of what has been a very long and cold winter, and the arrival of spring with a real promise of renewal for this bruised and battered agency can be summed up in two words – Gayle Wood. Continue reading

Ford Government’s New Health Care Act Needs Public Consultation

“The Ford government must hit “pause,” engage in proper public consultation and make a new priority of actually improving access to public health care services for the people of our province.”

An Analysis by Natalie Mehra, Exective Director of the Ongtario Health Coaltion
Posted March 20th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

It is called “The People’s Health Care Act.”

Ontario Health Coalition Executive Director Natalie Mehra

But the new health care omnibus bill, being rushed at breakneck speed through Ontario’s Legislature by Doug Ford’s majority caucus, does not reflect his promises to “the people” in the election. It does not open a single operating room to speed up surgical wait times, though lack of operating funds means that there are closed ORs in every major hospital in Ontario.

It doesn’t add a single new nursing home space, nor one more nurse, health professional, or doctor. It doesn’t open any of the dozens of hospital wards, closed down as real-dollar funding has been tightened year after year. Yet Ontario has the fewest hospital beds left of any province in the country.

The evidence is abundant that Ontario has a serious health care capacity problem. Cuts and rationing have gone too far. Health funding in this province has dropped to dead last in Canada. In fact, during the election, Ford traversed the province promising an expansion — not a wholesale dismembering — of the health system.

But what is in Ford’s health care omnibus bill is a new “super agency” forged out of 20 existing agencies with widely disparate mandates, histories, levels of effectiveness, and cultures. That alone is a mega-merger which carries a great deal of risk for vital patient care services.

But that’s not all. Written in the new law are vast powers that the Ford government has given itself and its political appointees in the new “super agency” to effect a wholesale restructuring of our local hospitals, long-term care, home care, community care, mental health and so on.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is not listening enough to public concerns about health care reform

Restructuring powers are defined in the legislation as not only “service coordination” but also more ominously, mergers, amalgamations, transfers of all or part of a service, closures of service, and shutdowns of entire service providers. These are not simply voluntary. They can be ordered by decree of the minister or the government’s appointees in the super agency and they also can be coerced through use of the Agency’s funding powers.

Already the attention of every CEO and manager in the health system has turned to restructuring. The reality is that the large and ambitious will seek to expand their “market share” and profits using the new opportunities afforded in this legislation. They were the prime beneficiaries of the hospital mergers and restructuring under the Harris government in the late 1990s. Today, largely as a result of that round of health restructuring, public hospital services were transferred to for-profit long-term care and home care.

The majority of long-term care is privatized and that sector is dominated by the large for-profit chain companies. The Victorian Order of Nurses (VON), a non-profit health organization that provides home nursing care, and local non-profit home care has been decimated.

Large hospital CEOs, having taken over smaller hospitals in forced mergers, have seen their power (and salaries) balloon even while hospital beds and services are cut and privatized. Smaller towns have seen their services gutted. Patient advocates have faced an uphill battle trying to tighten regulatory regimes and improve care levels against the powerful for-profit lobby that pushes, often successfully, for ever more money for profit and deregulation of patient protections and care standards under the guise of “eliminating red tape.”

Concern continues to grow over what will happen to levels of care at hospitals like this one, already possibly on the chopping block in Welland/Niagara

The Provincial Auditor reported in 1999 that the last hospital restructuring that occurred under Premier Mike Harris from 1996 to 2000 cost $3.9 billion to lay off nurses and staff, close down local services, then rebuild them elsewhere. The final “savings” was $800 million. Yes, that is correct: they spent $3.9 billion to cut $800 million.

In Doug Ford’s new round of health care restructuring, years of mergers and takeovers and partnerships and so on are supposed to result, according to the current minister, in 30 to 50 giant health-care conglomerates running virtually all services for up to 15 million Ontarians.

Each conglomerate would be made up of hundreds of mergers, service transfers and takeovers, but also some separate entities: 1,800 service providers are to be pushed into these groupings. Each conglomerate will need a new tier of administration to run the relationship between its various parts. That equals 30 to 50 new administrations plus the mothership “super agency.” The administration of the conglomerates will be owned by the providers themselves in their interest, not public oversight in the public interests. This is worse than what already exists.

Virtually all the democratic protections, paltry as they were in previous legislation, have been stripped out of the new omnibus law.

There are no principles at all to guide restructuring, no mention of equity, no open board meetings for the super agency, no appeals of restructuring decisions, no requirement for public input or democratic process. There is no evaluation system for the vast new restructuring. There was no public consultation prior to this Bill. In fact, the first job of a public health care system is to measure and plan to meet the population’s need for care. But the Ford government’s new health care omnibus bill does not require the super agency (or anyone else) to actually do this.

Given how opaque the whole process has been, it is hard to know whether the Ford government realizes the full scope and implications of what it is doing.

In the coming weeks, we will learn whether they will hold any public hearings at all on the new law. Not only because we have a longstanding process of legislative democracy that should be respected, but also because it is essential to sound policy making, the Ford government must hit “pause,” engage in proper public consultation and make a new priority of actually improving access to public health care services for the people of our province.

~ Protecting Public Medicare for All ~

The Ontario Health Coalition represents more than 400 member organizations and a network of Local Health Coalitions and individual members. Our members include: seniors’ groups; patients’ organizations; unions; nurses and health professionals’ organizations; physicians and physician organizations that support the public health system; non-profit community agencies; student groups; ethnic and cultural organizations; residents’ and family councils; retirees; poverty and equality-seeking groups; women’s organizations, and others.

For more information on the Ontario Health Coaltion and its advocacy work, click on – https://www.ontariohealthcoalition.ca/ .

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater bi-national Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

“A politician thinks of the next election. A leader thinks of the next generation.” – Bernie Sanders

 

Area MPP Presses Ontario’s Ford Government for a Timeline on Building a new Niagara Falls Hospital

“There have been two billboard unveilings to promote a hospital (in the southwest end of Niagara Falls) that doesn’t have a clear time-line or construction date. This project is too important to the region for it to be a publicity stunt.” – Niagara Falls NDP MPP Wayne Gates

A News Release from the Constituency Office of Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates

Posted March 19th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates

Queen’s Park—On Tuesday (March 19th), Niagara Falls NDP MPP Wayne Gates released the following statement calling on the Ford government to commit to a clear and expedited timeline for a new Niagara Falls hospital:

“Niagara families have waited long enough for a new hospital in Niagara Falls. When the mental health and the maternity wards were taken out of the current Niagara Falls Hospital, families were told that they would be replaced in a the new, state-of-the-art hospital. That hasn’t happened — years later and families are still forced to drive across the region for these services.

There have been two billboard unveilings to promote a hospital that doesn’t have a clear time-line or construction date. This project is too important to the region for it to be a publicity stunt. Niagara families deserve to know, once and for all, when a new hospital is coming to Niagara.” Continue reading

The Hits and Misses in the Federal Government’s – Canada’s – Latest Budget

“Today’s (March 19th’s federal budget) measures don’t fulfill the bold promises of national pharmacare.”

“Budget 2019 continues the federal government’s modest efforts to move forward on greening the economy.”

Much More on what may be Trudeau government’s last budget before the federal election below.

A Critical Analysis  from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, a non-profit body for advancing policy ideas

Posted March 19th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Budget 2019 identifies important targets, but falls short of substantial change

This could be the last budget Canada’s Trudeau government tables before it goes to the polls later this year.

Ottawa—Budget 2019, tabled today in the House of Commons, takes steps forward on municipal infrastructure, support for seniors and capping the regressive stock option deduction, but missed the mark on delivering housing affordability and the significant cost-savings that can only be achieved through a universal, single-payer pharmacare system, according to experts from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

“Budget 2019 identifies the right targets, but holds off on making necessary investments: climate change, unaffordable housing and the lack of wage raises are issues that can’t afford to wait,” says CCPA Senior Economist David Macdonald.

“Experience over the past four years has shown that progressive promises during an election year do not always translate into action, adequate funding and truly transformational federal policies.” Continue reading

A Call-Out from Ontario Nature to Protect Our Lands and Inland Water

Show your support by signing the “Protected Places Declaration” Below

From Ontario Nature, a province-wide advocacy group for protecting our natural places

Posted March 19th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

For the past year, we have been campaigning to get the governments of Ontario and Canada to meet an international commitment to protect at least 17 percent of our lands and inland waters by 2020.

This is in accordance with a target set under the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. So far, 140 organizationsbig and small – have endorsed the Protected Places Declaration. Continue reading

Brock University to Screen Award-Winning Film ‘Moose River Crossing’ – Friday, March 22nd   

Film, produced by Brock Chancellor Shirley Cheechoo, examines Residential School system in Canada. Admission is Free

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted March 19th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Brock University Chancellor and Moose River Crossing filmmaker Shirley Cheechoo

A special screening of the award-winning film, Moose River Crossing, by Brock University Chancellor Shirley Cheechoo will take place on campus Friday, March 22.

Cheechoo, who was appointed to a second term in her role with the University last June, will begin the evening by reading a passage from her play about residential schools, and will follow the film screening with a question-and-answer session with the audience. Drummers from the Niagara Women’s Drum Group will also perform.

Moose River Crossing examines the residential school system through the eyes of six fictional former students who meet at a train station to head to a reunion. They flash back to the troubling times they experienced at the residential school and aim to answer the question of whether or not time heals all wounds. Continue reading

A Timely Message from Niagara’s Lord Mayor on Bullies and Bullying

“Bullies use fear as a tool. They feed off of people’s insecurities and manipulate others to believe they are good.”

“Bullies may use a variety of threats, particularly when they themselves are feeling threatened: they will openly suggest that anyone who stands up to them will have to pay dearly for opposing their wishes.”

“Bullies don’t care about the common good, or a greater good, they care about one thing: themselves and their own personal interests.”

“The good news is, we don’t have to put up with bullies. And a first step to combating them is to recognize their tactics, and call out the strategies they use to intimidate, undermine and fear monger.”                                                                                                      – Betty Disero, Lord Mayor of Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario

Early in the last term of Niagara Regional Council, the Region’s then-chair, Al Caslin, appears in a photo op after a community group came to the council to promote a public campaign against bullying. The group’s message didn’t appear to get through to many members of that council.

(A Brief Foreword from Doug Draper, journalist and publisher, Niagara At Large – March 18th, 2019

I wish to thank a resident in Niagara-on-the-Lake for bringing what I consider to be this very timely and important message from one of Niagara’s political leaders to my attention because I may have missed it.

I say timely because, unfortunately, in the age we now live in, there is far too much of this bad behaviour around. And there are individuals in high places, like the current U.S. president Donald Trump, who personify bullying and embolden others to behave the same way.

As a journalist who covered the last term of Niagara Regional Council under the helm of then-chair Al Caslin, I had a regular front-row seat to this kind of behaviour and, fortunately, most of those on that council who engaged in it were defeated in last October’s municipal elections, or they did us a favour and decided not to run again.

The good news is that the current Regional Council with Jim Bradley sitting in the Chair’s seat and individuals like Betty Disero (who is serving her first term as NOTL’s Lord Mayor and Regional Council member) sitting around the horseshoe, any and all signs of that ugly behaviour is virtually gone. And let’s hope it stays that way.

What a difference an election can make. The new Niagara Regional Council, sworn in last December, and chaired by Jim Bradley (with NOTL Lord Mayor Betty Disero as one of its members), seems a world away from the bad conduct so frequently witnessed on the Caslin council.

That is not to say that there aren’t still many bullies out there among us, in public office, in places of employment, out there on the school yard and, most certainly, on social media where many of us who cared to share our views on a topic have become targets of cyber bullies at one time or another. Continue reading

Ontario’s Ford Government Putting Local Health Care Services across province at “Unprecedented Risk”

Doug Ford’s “Government for the People” is Steamrolling Health Restructuring Law Through in “Outrageously Undemocratic” Process

A Message from the Ontario Health Coaltion, a province-wide citizens group advocating for quality, public health services

Posted March 18th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Are Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his health minister, Christine Elliott (left in photo) now working to deconstruct the system of public health care generations of Canadians fought for and supported going back to Canada’s “father of medicare for all”, Tommy Douglas? Is gutting our health services worth more tax cuts for Ford and Elliott’s rich business friends?

Toronto, Ontario The Ontario Health Coalition is expresing outrage at the process by which the Ford government is rushing their new sweeping health care restructuring legislation through and is demanding public hearings across Ontario.

In the new law, the Ford government has given itself new powers to order the privatization of health care services, along with mega-mergers, transfers, and closures of local health care services including hospitals, long-term care, home care, community care, mental health and addictions services, community health centres and non-profit family health teams and others, says the OHC.

One of many rallies the Ontario Health Coalition has organized in support of quality, public health care

In context, the planned restructuring covers 1,800 health care service providers and health care services for approximately 15 million Ontarians, according to the Health Minister’s own comments. Continue reading

Brock U. Forum to Focus on Marine Mammal Captitivy, Animal Advocacy and Environmentalism

Animal rights at centre of upcoming Brock talk – Free to All on Thursday, March 21st from 4 to 7 p.m.

A Brock News Release by Jeannie Mackintosh, from Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted March 18th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Renowned neuroscientist Lori Marino will speak at Brock on Thursday, March 21.

Niagara, Ontario – Two renowned scholars will be on campus next week to get the Brock and wider Niagara community thinking — and talking — about animals.

Acclaimed neuroscientist Lori Marino and Canadian academic Amy Fitzgerald will speak about marine mammal captivity, and animal advocacy and environmentalism, respectively.

Presented by Brock’s Department of Sociology, the free Thinking About Animals event takes place Thursday, March 21 from 4 to 7 p.m. at Pond Inlet. Everyone is welcome to attend. Continue reading

A Song or Two for the Irish on St. Patrick’s Day

Make it a Day of Celebration and of Paying a Bit of Homage to the Hardships that People of all Races, Colours and Creeds Have Been Through – And to the Love we should Share with and for Each Other

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted March 17th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

As a veteran of quite a few St. Patrick’s Day parades and the wild parties that fill the pubs and pour out onto to the streets after the parades, one of thought that has often occurred to me during the height of it all is this.

Celebarting in the streets of Buffalo, New York on the day of a St. Patrick’s Day parade. File photo by Doug Draper

That kind of partying – as joyous as it so obviously seems – can often be a product of a long history of hardship and persecution.

The last few decades have arguably been relatively good ones for the Irish and for North Americans of Irish descent compared to many decades over the past couple of hundreds of years.

For a 50 or 60-year-old Canadian or American of Irish decent, the Irish Rising (also known as the Irish Rebellion) of April, 1916, is only a few generations in the past, and the potato famine of the mid-1800s which reportedly killed more than a million people through disease and starvation, is only four or five generations in the past.

Stories, along with so many of the hard feelings from those and other nightmare times in the history of the Irish people, have been passed on from generation to generation. Continue reading

A Response to Mosque Massacre from Canada’s Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA)

CIJA Horrified by Heinous Act of Terror Targeting the Muslim Community In Christchurch, New Zealand

“This is a very dark day for those of us who care about the rule of law, plurality, acceptance, and religious freedom.” – Jeffrey Rosenthal, Co-Chair of the Canadian-based Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs Board

From the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs in Toronto

Posted March 16, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Women mourn for loved ones in wake of mass shootings.

Toronto, Ontario – Yesterday (March 14th), forty-nine Muslims were murdered while at prayer at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. Upon learning this, Joel Reitman and Jeffrey Rosenthal, Co-Chairs of the National Board of Directors of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA), issued the following:

“We condemn this vile act of terrorism targeting the Muslim community in the strongest possible terms and trust those responsible for this crime will be subject to the full force of the law,” said Joel Reitman, Co-Chair of the CIJA Board. Continue reading

When Are We Going To Stop Imperilling the Future of Our Children?

There is No Time Left for Delay and Denial. Our Last Chance to Address the Climate Crisis is Here and Now!

Greta Thunberg, speaking at a United Nations climate conference in Europe last December

“We can no longer save the world by playing by the rules,” says 16-year-old Greta Thunberg, a climate activist from Sweden, “because the rules have to be changed.”

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted March 15th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

At a United Nations conference on climate change last December, a remarkable 16-year-old girl from Sweden named Greta Thunberg, rose to the podium in front of an audience of greying adults and said the following –

“In the year 2078, I will celebrate my 75th birthday,” she said. “If I have children maybe they will spend that day with me. Maybe they will ask me about you. Maybe they will ask why you didn’t do anything while there still was time to act. You say you love your children above all else, and yet you are stealing their future in front of their very eyes.”

The year 2078 may be way too late for Greta’s children to ask that question about us, if they are around to ask any questions at all. Continue reading

Ontario’s self-described “Government for the People” Plans Cellphone Ban in Classrooms, Larger Class Sizes & Less Sexual Health Education

‘Back-to-Basics’ Math Curriculum, Renewed Focus on Skilled Trades and Cellphone Ban in the Classroom Coming Soon to Ontario

News from Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s ‘Government for the People’

Posted March 15th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Minister of Education Lisa Thompson Unveils Government’s Vision for ‘Education that Works for You’

Toronto – Students and parents in Ontario can look forward to the implementation of stronger math, STEM, and financial literacy curricula, improved skilled trades opportunities, and a province-wide ban on cellphones in the classroom as part of the Government of Ontario’s sweeping new vision for ‘Education that Works for You,’ Lisa Thompson, Minister of Education, announced today.

“This is our plan to protect a sustainable world-class education system for the students of today and the future,” said Thompson.

“We will make sure our students are leaving school with the skills they need to build good lives, families and careers right here in Ontario, while ensuring the system is both fiscally sustainable and respectful of parents.”

The government’s plan, Education that Works for You,will modernize curriculum, modernize classrooms and empower educators to better prepare students for the realities of today’s modern world.

“Shortly after we came to office we did what the previous government had been afraid to do – and threw the doors open to real, meaningful public and parental input into our education system,” said Thompson. Continue reading

A Timely Message from Niagara’s Lord Mayor on Bullies and Bullying

Niagara-on-the-Lake Lord Mayor Betty Disero

“Bullies use fear as a tool. They feed off of people’s insecurities and manipulate others to believe they are good.”

“Bullies may use a variety of threats, particularly when they themselves are feeling threatened: they will openly suggest that anyone who stands up to them will have to pay dearly for opposing their wishes.”

“Bullies don’t care about the common good, or a greater good, they care about one thing: themselves and their own personal interests.”

“The good news is, we don’t have to put up with bullies. And a first step to combating them is to recognize their tactics, and call out the strategies they use to intimidate, undermine and fear monger.”                                                                                                      – Betty Disero, Lord Mayor of Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario

Early in the last term of Niagara Regional Council, the Region’s then-chair, Al Caslin, appears in a photo op after a community group came to the council to promote a public campaign against bullying. The group’s message didn’t appear to get through to many members of that council.

(A Brief Foreword from Doug Draper, journalist and publisher, Niagara At Large – March 15th, 2019

I wish to thank a resident in Niagara-on-the-Lake for bringing what I consider to be this very timely and important message from one of Niagara’s political leaders to my attention because I may have missed it.

I say timely because, unfortunately, in the age we now live in, there is far too much of this bad behaviour around. And there are individuals in high places, like the current U.S. president Donald Trump, who personify bullying and embolden others to behave the same way.

As a journalist who covered the last term of Niagara Regional Council under the helm of then-chair Al Caslin, I had a regular front-row seat to this kind of behaviour and, fortunately, most of those on that council who engaged in it were defeated in last October’s municipal elections, or they did us a favour and decided not to run again.

The good news is that the current Regional Council with Jim Bradley sitting in the Chair’s seat and individuals like Betty Disero (who is serving her first term as NOTL’s Lord Mayor and Regional Council member) sitting around the horseshoe, any and all signs of that ugly behaviour is virtually gone. And let’s hope it stays that way.

What a difference an election can make. The new Niagara Regional Council, sworn in last December, and chaired by Jim Bradley (with NOTL Lord Mayor Betty Disero as one of its members), seems a world away from the bad conduct so frequently witnessed on the Caslin council.

That is not to say that there aren’t still many bullies out there among us, in public office, in places of employment, out there on the school yard and, most certainly, on social media where many of us who cared to share our views on a topic have become targets of cyber bullies at one time or another. Continue reading

A Call-Out for Working Together  to Restore and Protect Great Lakes Coastal Wetlands

Niagara residents gather at one of many rallies in recent years to save wetlands in Niagara Falls’ Thundering Waters Forest from sprawling development

“Wetlands in the Great Lakes basin improve water quality in a variety of capacities (such as nutrient and sediment sequestration, flood retention, regulation of water temperatures) and provide many social, cultural and economic benefits to society. Yet they continue to face threats and stressors and a significant amount of wetlands have been degraded or lost throughout the region.”                                          –     – an excerpt from the International Joint Commission article   below

By John Wilson, for the Canada/U.S. International Joint Commission’s newsletter, Great Lakes Connection

Posted March 15th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Wetlands provide vital benefits to lakes and other waterways.

They serve as the home for a wide diversity of plants, insects, reptiles, animals and aquatic species, reduce erosion, trap and filter sediment and pollutants, and absorb nutrients that otherwise would flow directly into lakes, rivers and streams.

One of the provincially significant wetlands in the Niagara watershed of the Great Lakes, now at risk due to plans for urban development in the Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls, Ontario

A recent webinar explored challenges and opportunities to achieving a “net habitat gain” for Great Lakes coastal wetlands.

Wetlands in the Great Lakes basin improve water quality in a variety of capacities (such as nutrient and sediment sequestration, flood retention, regulation of water temperatures) and provide many social, cultural and economic benefits to society. Continue reading

Federal Funding for Brock Research on Brain Function and Health in Aging

“The current increase in life expectancy and our ever-expanding waistline goes hand in hand with the emergence of common age-related chronic diseases.” – Rebecca MacPherson, Assistant Professor of Health Sciences, Brock University

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted March 15th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Assistant Professor of Health Sciences Rebecca MacPherson was awarded a grant from the Canada Foundation for Innovation’s John R. Evans Leaders Fund (JELF) to purchase equipment for her research on the interactions between metabolism, diet and exercise.

It’s a common notion that people seem to become more forgetful as they get older, leading many to conclude that memory declines with age.

But Brock University Assistant Professor of Psychology Karen Campbell aims to counteract that view by showing that something else is happening in the brain that mimics memory loss.

Meanwhile, Assistant Professor of Health Sciences Rebecca MacPherson is concerned about rising rates of obesity and how diet and exercise — or lack thereof — affects people as they age.

To aid in their investigations, MacPherson and Campbell will be purchasing state-of-the-art equipment thanks to funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation’s John R. Evans Leaders Fund (JELF). Continue reading

Ontario’s Self-Described “Government for the People” a ‘Strong Advocate’ for Women

“Ontario Shows Leadership on Women’s Issues At the United Nations

Minister Lisa MacLeod joined the Canadian delegation at the Commission on the Status of Women

A News Release from Ontario’s “Government for the People”

Posted March 15th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

The Honourable Lisa MacLeod, Ontario’s Minister of Children, Community and Social Services and Minister Responsible for Women’s Issues

New York City — Ontario’s Government for the People is strongly advocating for gender equality with a commitment to end violence against women and sex trafficking.

The Honourable Lisa MacLeod, Minister of Children, Community and Social Services and Minister Responsible for Women’s Issues, joined the Canadian delegation in New York City this week at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women to highlight the inequities faced by women and girls at home and abroad.

“I was proud to speak up for equality with my fellow Ministers,” said MacLeod. “We need strong women to support vulnerable women but just as importantly we need strong men to support vulnerable women.” Continue reading

Niagara Parks’ Police Chief – Hired On a High Note Barely Two Years Ago – Is Suddenly Gone

Top Cop’s departure is just the latest in recent rush of high-office exits in a Niagara where a little less chaos and a little more stability would be nice

A News Commentary from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted March 14th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Mark McMullen, whose hiring as Niagara Parks Police Chief was celebrated when it was announced in May of 2017, was suddenly out of the job this past Monday, March 11th.

As if the heads of Niagara residents aren’t already spinning from four months of sudden departures and firings – not to mention some pretty hefty lawsuits – involving top administrators at Niagara Region and the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA), now we learn through a report this March 12th in local newspapers that Mark McMullen, Niagara Park’s Chief of Police, is suddenly gone.

It was only 22 months ago, that Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission circulated a news release, announcing McMullen’s hiring to the top cop job at the Parks Police, one of the oldest (circa 1887) and most respected police forces in all of Canada. Continue reading

Visit Two of Niagara, Ontario’s Great Used Book Stores & Help Keep Great Stores Like Them Alive

 – Hannelore Headley Old and Fine Books & The Write Bookshop in St. Catharines –

Both Stores Are Bursting With Books, Now on Sale for 50 Per Cent Off for the Whole Month of March

A call of support for some of the Best Independent Stores in our Greater Niagara Region by Doug Draper

Posted March 14th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

“Books are everywhere; and always the same sense of adventure fills us. Second-hand books are wild books, homeless books; they have come together in vast flocks of variegated feather, and have a charm which the domesticated volumes of the library lack –  from Street Haunting, a book of essays by Virginia Woolf

Hannelore Headley Old and Fine Books on 71 Queen Street in St. Catharines near Lake Street and Montebello Park

In an age when online shopping threatens the survival of brick and mortar stores, I hope the day never comes when we are sorry that they are all gone.

Call me out of step with the brave new world of eBay and Amazon, if you like, but I think our towns and cities would be pretty deadening places to live in if there were no more brick and mortar stores.

And that would be especially true, in my view, if we lost every last independent book and record store, where a person can go and experience a real sense of community with others who share their passion for good books and music.

In that spirit, I am going to make a habit on Niagara At Large of devoting a little more space to drawing attention to and encouraging all of us to support what are left of the independent book and music stores on both sides of the border in our Niagara and Erie county regions, lest we lose these great places.

The Write Bookshop on 285 St. Paul Street in downtown St. Catharines

So I begin with two of the very best used book stores in all of Niagara, Ontario, and they are both having store-wide 50 per cent off sales all this month, right through to end of Saturday, March 30th. Continue reading

Ontario’s Ford Government Already Cutting Front-Line Jobs In Health Care And Other Services

Front-Line Cuts happening in Defiance of Ford’s pledge that only management-level jobs will disappear

A News Release from Ontario’s Official Opposition and New Democratic Party

Posted March 14th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is making service cuts, he claims, to “put more money in (our) pocket.” Ontario residents may have to use some of that pocket money to pay for private health care and other public services that may be lost.

Queen’s Park — With another month to go before Doug Ford’s first budget, which is widely expected to include deep cuts, the NDP says the jobs that have already been cut include front-line staff that deliver health care and critical services.

Doug Ford revealed Wednesday in Cambridge that there will be job losses when he overhauls the health care system and creates his SuperAgency.

Ford’s tall tales indicate that only management-level people will be fired — but the job cuts resulting from a lack of funding from the province have already included: Continue reading

Niagara Falls to be Illuminated in Green for St. Patrick’s Day – Sunday, March 17th

Niagara Falls Illumination Board to take part in the annual “Global Greening” campaign

An Invite to the Falls from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted March 14th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario – In partnership with Tourism Ireland’s “Global Greening” campaign, the Niagara Falls Illumination Board will once again light up Niagara Falls in green on Sunday, March 17 in celebration of all things Irish on St. Patrick’s Day.

Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission

Both the American and Canadian Horseshoe Falls will be bathed with vibrant green light for 15-minute intervals at the top of the hour from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m., joining numerous prominent world icons such as the Sydney Opera House, Empire State Building, the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, the London Eye, the Colosseum in Rome and the Leaning Tower of Pisa, to name but a few. Continue reading

Niagara West MPP Seeks Public Feedback on Regional Government Review in Niagara

Ontario Launches Online Consultation for Residents, Businesses and Stakeholders

A News Release from the Constituency Office of Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff

Posted March 14th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff

Niagara, Ontario — Sam Oosterhoff, MPP for Niagara West, is seeking local input on how to improve governance, decision-making and service delivery for regional governments in the Niagara Region.

All people who live or work in the region are invited to share their thoughts through the online consultation. The deadline to submit comments is April 23, 2019.

“We promised the people of Ontario that all levels of government would work harder, smarter and more efficiently,” said Steve Clark, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing.

“Our government is putting people first by seeking local input on how to improve governance, decision-making and service delivery for regional governments and their member municipalities.” Continue reading

Niagara At Large is Taking a Short Break to Refuel & Retool

We Will Be Back With Renewed Vigor In A Matter of Days (and possibly sooner if there is breaking news we can’t ignore)

Read A Little About Our Plans For The Future Below

A Brief Message from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher    Doug Draper

Posted March 6th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Maybe it is the dog days of winter or maybe it is just that quite a few of us out there are slow walking into the March break week, but I am not getting anywhere near the hundred or two media releases and other messages that fill my inbox each day.

That is not unusual this time of year and it tells me that this may be a good time for this reporter to take a little time to  break from posting news and think about where we want to go with Niagara At Large in the weeks and months ahead. Continue reading

Join the Fight to Save Public Health Care in Ontario

Attend one of the upcoming Town Halls in or near your Community

Protect our local health care services from mega-mergers and privatization. Protect and improve our public health care! NO to cuts & privatization!

Town Hall Meetings brought to you by the Ontario Health Coalition and in Niagara, by its sister group, the Niagara Health Coalition

Posted March 6th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Ontario’s Ford government is proposing massive restructuring to hospitals, long-term care, home care, community care, mental health, etc. 

The new legislation, which has been forged with no public consultation whatsoever, will take away local control of health care services.

A Brief Call-Out from Niagara At Large –

Attend the following Town Hall meetings, hosted by the Ontario Health Coaltion and its local chapters, in Niagara and other communities across the province for a public discussion on what can be done to stop any and all moves by the Ford government to cut and privatize our public health care services.

Here is a list of locations, dates and times for a Town Hall meetings near you. For the sake of saving quality, public health care in Ontario, try to make it your business to show up –  Continue reading

Ontario Government Invites Public Input on Reducing Litter and Waste

Ontario Environment Minister Rod Phillips

“Litter-reduction efforts will hinge on fostering a greater sense of personal responsibility for the people of Ontario and, in particular, our youth. … It begins with recognizing that real environmentalism involves more than just the social media of activists and celebrities but is instead founded on the personal decisions each of us make in our day-to-day lives.”                           – Rod Phillips, Ontario Minister of the Environment, Conservation and Parks

A Call-Out from Ontario’s Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks

Posted March 6th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Ontario’s government is working for the people to keep our province clean and beautiful for generations to come by taking steps to reduce litter and waste in our communities and increase and improve household recycling, as committed to in our environment plan.

The province is inviting public feedback on proposals to reduce plastic litter and waste in our neighbourhoods and parks, divert and reduce food and organic waste from households and businesses, and increase opportunities for the people of Ontario to participate in waste reduction efforts.

A discussion paper has been posted on the Environment Registry for a 45-day period.

Continue reading

Citizens Coalitions Host Town Halls in Niagara on Health Care Service Concerns in Doug Ford’s Ontario

You are Invited to Town Hall Meetings this March          in St. Catharines, Welland and Grimsby

See Dates, Times and Locations for a Meeting in your area below

Hosted by the Niagara  and Ontario Health Coalitions

Posted March 5th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Join us as we learn more about the People’s Health Act . Discuss what we can do to protect our local health services and to make health care decisions more accountable to us – the people.

Ontario’s Ford government is proposing massive restructuring to hospitals, long-term care, community care, mental health etc. It calls for mega-mergers of health systems, privatization of health services and gives new powers to the Cabinet and the Minister of Health to make changes to the Act on their own. Continue reading

Make Ontario’s Niagara Parks Your March Break Destination

Visit the Art of Nature exhibit at the Butterfly Conservatory

Take part in Birds in Flight photography sessions

Enjoy interactive heritage programming at Table Rock Centre

Niagara Parks goes Green for St. Patrick’s Day with special Falls illumination and Irish-themed menu at Queen Victoria Place Restaurant

Plan a full day and save on Niagara Parks attractions with the Wonder Pass

An Invite to All from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted March 5th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Inside Niagara Park’s Butterfly Observatory

Niagara Falls, Ontario  – Niagara Parks will be presenting an exciting lineup of March Break events and activities all along the Niagara River corridor from March 9 through to March 17.

Visitors of all ages will enjoy the majesty of Niagara Falls alongside awe-inspiring natural attractions, special exhibits and programming, as well as locally sourced Feast On certified culinary experiences. Continue reading

Join the Fight to Protect Public Health Care in Canada

Stop Private Clinics and Unlawful User Fees and Extra Billing of Patients

A Call-Out from the Ontario Health Coalition, a province-wide citizens group advocating for quality, public health care

Posted March 5th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

The Ontario Health Coalition in partnership with the Provincial Health Coalitions and Canada Health Coalition have been working tirelessly to bring an end to the unlawful extra-billing of patients by private health clinics and stop the privatization of health care services.

Private clinics undermine public health care and equal, universal health care for all Canadians.

We have written an Open Letter to all provincial and federal Health Ministers in Canada calling upon them to uphold the Canada Health Act, stop two-tier user fees, extra billing of patients and stop privatization. Continue reading

Ontario’s NPD Leader Calls for a Full Public Inquiry into Ford’s OPP Meddling

‘Firing of deputy OPP commissioner Brad Blair is latest mess in a cesspool of political interference.’ – Ontario Official Opposition and NPD Leader Andrea Horwath

“His (Brad Blair’s) actions were instrumental in uncovering the extent of Doug Ford’s meddling in the hiring process of the new OPP commissioner, and shining a light on the cesspool of political interference into the OPP.”

News from Ontario’s New Democratic Party

Posted March 5th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Long-time OPP officer Brad Blair’s firing raises call for public inquiry

Queen’s Park — In light of the extremely disturbing news that the government has fired whistleblower and Deputy Director of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP), Brad Blair, NDP Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath is calling for a full public inquiry into Doug Ford’s meddling in the OPP, and the firing of Blair. 

“Brad Blair is both a whistleblower and a distinguished officer with decades of exemplary service,” said Horwath.

“His actions were instrumental in uncovering the extent of Doug Ford’s meddling in the hiring process of the new OPP commissioner, and shining a light on the cesspool of political interference into the OPP — including Blair’s revelation of Ford’s disgusting, possibly illegal, attempts to procure a luxury super-van off the books, secretly using public money.” Continue reading

Brock U. Expert Says OSPCA’s Decision To No Longer Enforce Animal Cruelty Laws Will Have ‘Unprecedented Impact’

“Enforcement could get better or it could get worse, depending on how the provincial government responds.” – Brock Professor Kendra Coulter

News from Brock University in St. Catharines/Niagara

Posted March 4th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Brock University animal welfare expert Kendra Coulter and friend. file photo courtesy of Brock University in Niagara, Ontario.

Niagara, Ontario – A Brock University Labour Studies professor and internationally recognized researcher on animal welfare issues said a Monday (March 4th, 2019) announcement leaves the handling of animal-related investigations at a crossroads.

The Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals sent a letter to Ontario Community Safety Minister Sylvia Jones Monday saying it would not renew its contract to provide animal welfare investigation and enforcement services in the province. Continue reading

Campaign to Persuade Premier Ford to Lower Hydro Costs across Ontario Starts this March 4th

Find Out Below How You Can Help Put the Pressure On

A Call-out to all of us from the Ontario Clean Air Alliance

Posted March 4th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Today (this March 4th) we are launching our Etobicoke Campaign to persuade Premier Ford to keep his promise to lower your hydro bills by 12%. He can do it by signing a deal with Quebec.

Quebec has a huge surplus off low-cost water power which can keep your lights on at less than 1/3rd the cost of re-building the Darlington Nuclear Station.

We’re taking the message about these huge potential savings to Premier Ford’s backyard in Etobicoke. We’ve already posted a billboard on Kipling Ave, south of Bethridge Road, and will soon be distributing our Cut My Bill pamphlets there as well. Continue reading

Town Of Lincoln Awarded Grant To Take Action On Climate Change Adaption Project

“Climate adaptation is a critical element of sustainability and developing an action plan to guide staff and Council, is a step towards success. We are grateful for the funding to support this initiative funded by the Government of Canada.”                              – Lincoln CAO Michael Kirkopoulos

A News Release from the Town of Lincoln in Niagara, Ontario

Posted March 4th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Lincoln, Ontario – The Town of Lincoln has been granted $125,000 in funding from the Federation of Canadian Municipalities’ (FCM) Climate change staff grants initiative to help address staffing gaps and increase our capacity to adapt to the effects of climate change or reduce greenhouse (GHG) emissions.

Lincoln is among 59 communities across Canada benefitting from this initiative.

Lincoln will use the funding to dedicate staff to activities such as the research and development of climate adaptation plan. Continue reading

Urgent – Bad News for Citizens Fighting To Save Thundering Waters, Waverly Woods and other Natural Riches in Niagara from Urban Sprawl

Niagara At Large Will Have More on the Following Notice Later, and  on What it May Mean for Protecting Niagara’s Natural Heritage

Posted March 3rd, 2019 on Niagara At Large

The Following  Notice is now being circulated – 

To the past and current clients of LPASC,

The citizens battle is still on to save this great green place in Niagara Falls from urban development

I am writing to let you know that the Government of Ontario has made a decision to close the Local Planning Appeal Support Centre (LPASC), effective June 30, 2019.

As LPASC winds down its operation, we will continue to serve, to the best of our ability, clients who have previously retained our services.  We are now limited in the range of professional legal and planning services we are able to provide.   Continue reading

Ontario Public Must Protest Any Move to Privatize More of Our Health Care Services Before It’s Too Late

‘Universal health care is our baby and we must care for and nurture it’

A Commentary by Linda McKellar, a Niagara, Ontario resident and retired hospital nurse

Posted March 1st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

(The following commentary by retired nurse Linda McKellar has been shared with Niagara At Large in the wake of news late this February that Ontario’s Ford government is moving forward with plans to merge health services in the province under one umbrella where some health experts fear publicly funded services will give way to an array of privately funded services already up and operating in Ontario.

The end result of such a mega merger, critics fear, is ever more privatization and a possible end to publicly funded, universal health care as we known it in Ontario and Canada for more than half a century.)

The attempt to privatize health care services in Ontario has been going on for years, primarily by Conservative governments which have always been pro-business and privatization, but contributed to by both ruling parties to some degree.

It has had lousy results.

Outsourcing food supplies – horrible meals, petrified sandwiches, all pre-packaged and sent from someplace – from China for all we know. Maybe surplus airplane meals. Continue reading

NDP Bill To Create 27,000 Paid Co-Ops And Internships For Ontario’s Young People Gets Government Approval

 “I’m pleased that the government recognized the importance of creating new, paid work opportunities for young people across the province. …  The Ontario NDP will be watching closely to see that the government makes good on this commitment.” NDP MPP and Official Opposition critic Faisal Hassan

A News Release from Ontario’s New Democratic Party

Posted March 1st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

QUEEN’S PARK — Faisal Hassan, NDP MPP for York-South Weston and Official Opposition critic, said young people are one step closer to seeing new work opportunities after his motion calling on the government to create 27,000 paid co-ops and internships passed this February 28th.

If implemented, the motion would unlock opportunities in the public and private sector, as well as the trades, for students, recent graduates and unemployed youth. The motion aims to help young people gain the real-world experience that is increasingly becoming a prerequisite to entry-level positions. Continue reading

Chorus Niagara premieres a new musical work by Niagara composer James Moffett

Saturday, March 2 , 2019, 7:30 pm Partridge Hall, FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre, St.Catharines.

Also featuring seldom-heard unique work KING DAVID from French/Swiss composer Arthur Honegger

A News Release from Chorus Niagara in Niagara, Ontario

Posted March 1st, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Chorus Niagara and Artistic Director Robert Cooper proudly present Arthur Honegger’s KING DAVID. Accompanied by new music by Niagara composer James Moffett, LEGACY.

Artistic Director Robert Cooper says, “If you enjoy the drama of a great Handel oratorio, like Messiah or the magnificence of a Bach masterpiece like the St Matthew Passion, then this concert is for you.  Continue reading

Niagara’s Taxpayers Have Right to Know Cost of “Mutual Separation Agreement” NPCA cut with Barrick

We’ve Had More Than Enough Secrecy at the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted February 27th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

NPCAs former “acting CAO” David Barrick. Public has a right to know terms of “mutual separation agreement” Conservation Authority reached with him. r

“What I can tell you is that the community will be well served by the settlement,” one interim member of the NPCA’s board, Welland Regional Councillor Pat Chiocchio was quoted telling a local newspaper recently about a “mutual separation agreement” the Conservation Authority negotiated with  alleged “interim CAO” David Barrick on his way out the door.

What Chiochio and other members of the board have not told us since news of this so-called mutual separation agreement was made public this February 21st is how much it is costing the public with respect to any buyout package Barrick received.

West Lincoln Mayor Dave Bylsma, who serves as the board’s interim chair, was quoted telling a media outlet, The Hamilton News, that the agreement was approved by the entire board, made up of hime and eleven other Niagara mayors and regional councillors, along with representatives from neighbouring Hamilton and Haldimand County.

And, added Bylsma, it “is not tainted. It’s responsible (and) it’s poetic.” Continue reading

Kids Ride Free on GO Transit

Ontario Saving Families Money with Free Travel for Kids 12 and Under on GO Transit

Starting March 9, 2019, children 12 and under can ride for free on all GO Transit trains and buses without a PRESTO card or paper ticket

A News Release from the Constituency Office of Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff

Posted February 28th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario —Today, Sam Oosterhoff, MPP for Niagara West welcomed news that Ontario’s Transportation Minister Jeff Yurek announced all children 12 and under will travel for free on GO Transit trains and buses starting March 9, 2019 – just in time for March Break. Continue reading

Ontario’s Ford Government Setting the Stage for Privatizing Province’s Health Care Services

Ford government introduces health restructuring/privatization omnibus bill 

An Analysis from Natalie Mehra, executive director of the Ontario Health Coalition, a province-wide advocacy group for quality public health care

Posted February 27th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Health Coalition Director Natalie Mehra

Under the guise of “service coordination” the Ford government is introducing its new health care legislation today.

 Despite the rosy sounding rhetoric of the Health Minister that has focused entirely on positive-sounding words like “coordination” and “teams”, the draft legislation that was leaked a few weeks ago by a concerned civil servant to the NDP who made it public, was very clearly written to give the new “Super Agency” powers to order — with the stroke of a pen — the privatization of anything deemed a “support service” in almost all of the health care system.

Similarly, the “Super Agency” has the power to order the privatization of any procurement (not limited by definition). The Minister and the Super Agency together have powers to order transfers, closures, mega-mergers of virtually all health care providers.  Continue reading

Ontario’s NDP Tables Motion to Create 27,000 Paid Co-op and Internships for Province’s Young People

“Young people should expect more from their government, not less, and an opportunity to build their best life in Ontario.” – NDP Official Opposition Youth Engagement critic Faisal Hassan

A News Release from Ontario’s Official Opposition and New Democratic Party

Posted February 27th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park—NDP Official Opposition Youth Engagement critic Faisal Hassan (York South-Weston) said that too many young people are still finding it difficult to land their first paid job and get the experience that they need to build a career.

This Wednesday, February 27th  Hassan announced a motion calling on the government to create 27,000 new paid work opportunities for students, recent graduates or unemployed youth to get the real life work opportunities that they need to build a good life in Ontario.

“Imagine a province where students and youth that work hard actually get a shot to build their best life in Ontario,” said Hassan. “Years of Conservatives and Liberals robbed young people of this chance, and created an environment where there are just too few entry level jobs to go around. Continue reading

Ontario’s Government for the People  to Break Down Barriers to Better Patient Care

Renewed, connected and sustainable health care system will reduce hallway health care by focusing resources on patient needs

“Our government is taking a comprehensive, pragmatic approach to addressing the public health care system.” –  Sam Oosterhoff, Ford Government rep. and MPP for Niagara West

News from the Constituency Office of Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff

Posted February 27th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff

Niagara, Ontario — Christine Elliott, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health and Long Term Care, has announced the Government of Ontario’s long-term plan to fix and strengthen the public health care system by focusing directly on the needs of Ontario’s patients and families.

“The people of Ontario deserve a connected health care system that puts their needs first,” said Elliott. “At the same time the people of Ontario deserve peace of mind that this system is sustainable and accessible for all patients and their families, regardless of where you live, how much you make, or the kind of care you require.”

“Our government is taking a comprehensive, pragmatic approach to addressing the public health care system,” said Sam Oosterhoff, MPP for Niagara West. Continue reading

Ontario’s Niagara Parks Presents Art of Nature Series Including New Exhibit at the Butterfly Conservatory

Exhibit to showcase 30 visually stunning nature photographs, winners from the Canadian Geographic Wildlife Photography Contest

Interactive programming and workshops inspired by Canadian nature and wildlife

Overlooking the lower Niagara River from Niagara Glen along the Parkway in Ontario

A News Release from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted February 27th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario – In support of its mandate as the environmental and cultural stewards of the Niagara River corridor, Niagara Parks will be hosting the upcoming Art of Nature Series, including a travelling exhibit at the Butterfly Conservatory, along with specialty programming and hands-on workshops from February 16 through to April 28.

Inside the Niagara Glen Nature Centre overlooking the lower Niagara River

The exhibit will showcase 30 winning photographs from the Canadian Geographic Wildlife Photography Contest, as coordinated by the Canadian Museum of Nature and Canada Post, offering guests a closer look at incredible moments in Canadian nature, which have been captured on film. Continue reading

Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority Welcomes Interim CAO Gayle Wood

Gayle Wood has performed executive roles in other Conservation Authorities across Ontario, and has worked for the Ontario ministries of Environment and Natural Resources

News from the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

Posted February 26th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Veteran Conservationist Gayle Wood appointed interim CAO of a Niagara Peninsula Conservation in need of her kind of leadership

The Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) is pleased to welcome Ms. Gayle Wood to the position of Interim Chief Administrative Officer/Secretary-Treasurer.

Ms. Wood will commence her position on March 1, 2019. She was appointed by the Board of Directors for a term of 5 months, while the Board undergoes a permanent CAO search currently underway with the help of an external hiring firm.

“Ms. Wood brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise in conservation leadership as a senior executive to a number of Conservation Authorities across Ontario,” says NPCA Board Chair, Dave Bylsma. Continue reading

Niagara Citizen Ed Smith – A Fearless Critic of Past NPCA Practices – Receives St. Catharines City Councilllors’ Support to Sit on NPCA’s Board

We Need Several More Citizen Board Members Like Him To Finally Clean Up the Monumental Mess at the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority 

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted February 26th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Citizen activist Ed Smith is on his way to a seat on the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s board of directors

Less than a week after the chair of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s current board of directors cast the sole vote against allowing Ed Smith and another Niagara citizen speak at one of the board’s meetings, Smith may now only be weeks away from taking a seat around the board table.

The community activist, who has been among the most vocal critics across the region of the way the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) has been doing business in recent years, received the support of St. Catharines’ city council this February 25th to sit on the Conservation Authority’s board.

Smith, a retired Canadian Armed Forces officer who, more than a year ago, defeated an attempt by the NPCA’s senior administrators and old board to sue him after he circulated a list of questions and concerns about the way the public agency is spending millions of Niagara tax dollars, was one of more than 30 St. Catharines residents who applied for the one and only seat the city can have on a board that currently allows one seat to be filled by each of Niagara’s 12 municipalities.

In 2016, at a meeting of Niagara’s Regional Council, Ed Smith argues against NPCA’s plan to use something called biodiversity offsetting to gut provincially significant wetlands to make way for urban development.

He was selected for St. Catharines seat by a three-person nominating committee made up of city councillors Bruce Williamson, Carlos Garcia and Greg Miller. The committee was assembled after the city’s new council was sworn in last December and began advertising publicly for interested citizens to apply for the board seat. Continue reading

One Way Canada Can Save Its Auto Sector Is By Becoming A World Leader In Green Cars

Targeted Investments Needed To Future-Proof Canada’s Automotive Sector

Thousands of Auto Sector-Related Jobs At Stake In Niagara Alone

A Report on Canada’s Auto Industry from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

Posted February 26th, 2019 on Niagara At Large

Ottawa, Canada —A new report out today from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives finds that maintaining the competitiveness of Canada’s important automotive sector in a rapidly changing industry requires decisive action and collaboration by provincial and federal governments, targeted investment and new policies designed for the new automobility.

“We do not accept automotive plant closures as a foregone conclusion,” says report co-author Charlotte Yates, Provost and Vice-President Academic at the University of Guelph. “While Canada’s most recent free trade agreements have left our automotive sector more vulnerable to tariff-free foreign competition, the solutions proposed in this report could promote a revitalization of Canada’s the auto industry.”

The report, by two researchers affiliated with the Automotive Policy Research Centre (APRC), assesses the sector’s current landscape and outlines a multi-pronged policy plan to boost competitiveness and avoid plant closures within the Great Lakes Region. Continue reading