Author Archives: dougdraper

Ontario Works Payments Temporarily Available For Pick Up At Community Services Locations

Niagara Regional Headquarters

A Public Service Message from Niagara’s Regional Government

Posted November 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – ​Ontario Works clients will be able to pick up their social assistance payments at Niagara Region Community Services offices.

The decision not to mail the monthly payments was made earlier this week due to the current labour disruption at Canada Post, which could have delayed payments. Continue reading

Defeated NPCA Board Members Now Trying To Call Shots On New Board Appointments

“It’s an apparent attempt to not only delay and confuse the process of appointing a new board, but it also makes us ask what deals they are trying to get done behind the scenes, and how much more damage they want to do before they are finally heaved out the door.” – the citizens watchdog group, A Better Niagara

A Message to fellow Niagara residents from a Better Niagara

Posted November 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

NPCA board chair and defeated Fort Erie regional councillor Sandy Annunziata can’t seem to take the verdict of Niagara’s voters for an answer

Niagara, Ontario – Now we know at least a portion of what the board of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority has been up to since so many of their members were defeated in the municipal election.

On Friday, NPCA Board Chair Sandy Annunziata (an outgoing Fort Erie regional councillor defeated in the October 22nd municipal elections) sent a memo to all municipal governments in the region that, in effect, states the current NPCA board has decided a new process must be used to appoint an NPCA Board, and that process will be presided over by current chair Sandy Annunziata.

It’s an apparent attempt to not only delay and confuse the process of appointing a new board, but it also makes us ask what deals they are trying to get done behind the scenes, and how much more damage they want to do before they are finally heaved out the door. Continue reading

Okay, So What’s With The Mud Roads Cut Through Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls?

Citizens Raise More Concerns about Fate of these Biodiverse Lands in our Region

A photo taken of what citizens say is a mud road recently cut in to the Thundering Waters property in Niagara Falls

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted November 23rd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Calls and email were being fired back and forth rather furiously for the past few days leading up to this post – between citizens in the Niagara area, and between them and elected representatives, and municipal and provincial staffers – over what is happening to trees and other natural features inside Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls?

This close to 500 acres of trees, provincially significant wetlands and meadows hosting a diversity of wildlife in the Niagara River watershed – is now owned by a China-based corporation called GR (CAN) Investment Ltd. Inc. that is still waiting for final permits to build a massive, billion-dollar-plus, what it calls “Riverfront Community” on pieces of the land in the southwest end of the city.

Many citizens in Niagara Falls and other parts of the region and province and been pressing for more than three years now to save this rich green area from development while the mayor of the city, Jim Diodati, Niagara Region’s outgoing chair, Al Caslin, and others have been arguing for urban development to go in this place in the name of economic growth and jobs.

One of many citizen demonstrations over the last three years – this one in front of Niagara Falls City Hall – for saving Thundering Waters Forest from urban development. File photo by Doug Draper

On top of all that, there are recurring rumours that GR and its China-based investors are losing patience, so when citizens in the area hear or see any activity involving heavy machinery in Thundering Waters they grow very concerned. Continue reading

Streisand Aims a Powerful Song Right at the Hate and Hell of Trump-land

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted November 23rd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

As a life-long student of music, I have come to believe that a well-crafted song can be as mighty a force as any in the struggle against deception, corruption, social  injustice and tyranny.

I think that such a song, written, produced and performed by American singer Barbra Streisand, and released at the beginning of this November, along with an equally mighty video, on her latest album called Walls.

The song is called Don’t Lie to Me and Streisand has launched it, like a bunker-busting, multi-megaton, smoke-and-mirrors seeking missile, right at the monster in her country’s Oval Office,

I included the song and the video at the end of a plea I posted to our American neighbours on the eve of this November’s U.S. mid-term elections to vote for any candidates they could to resist Trump and his dangerous, hate-drenched agenda, and I also sent it in separate emails to a number of my American friends in New York State, New Jersey and Massachusetts.

I quickly got back notes from them, after they experienced the song and video, containing words like “wow”, “powerful”, and “I’m going to share this with as many people as I can.”

So before this November comes to an end, I thought I would post the song and the video on Niagara At Large again, higher up this time so it doesn’t possibly get lost above everything else.

Here it is. Play it and share it with your friends –

To read Doug Draper’s commentary, urging our American neighbours earlier this November, to vote for anyone who will resist Trump, click on – https://niagaraatlarge.com/2018/11/06/a-plea-to-our-american-neighbours/ 

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

Annual Poinsettia Display Returns to Ontario’s Niagara Parks Floral Showhouse

Popular seasonal display will take place from Saturday, November 24 to January 12, 2019

An Invite to All from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted November 22nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, OntarioA family tradition for over 70 years, the Niagara Parks Floral Showhouse continues to showcase the best of the holiday season, featuring vibrantly coloured arrangements, including poinsettias, cyclamen, blue spruce and many other Christmas surprises.

A visit to the Floral Showhouse would not be complete without a stroll through the Life on Display exhibit, located throughout the gardens outside. Explore the grounds, including traditional-themed holiday lighting displays as part of Niagara Parks’ Aura: Let it Glow celebrations, which have added several incredible illumination-themed events to the Ontario Power Generation Winter Festival of Lights. Continue reading

Government of Canada Provides Housing Support for Almost One Million Canadian Families including over 6,000 in Niagara

1,000,000 Reasons to Celebrate Housing in Canada

News from the Constituency Office of Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

Posted November 22nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

“With the investment of nearly $18 million in Niagara, we are ensuring families have a safe and affordable place to live and grow. I am proud to be a part of a government that is focused on helping all Canadians.” – Vance Badawey, Member of Parliament for Niagara Centre 

Niagara, Ontario – Every Canadian deserves a safe and affordable place to call home.  That is why, starting in Budget 2016, the Government of Canada made significant investments to build affordable housing and to make housing more affordable in general across Canada.

Since 2016, the Government of Canada has invested more than $5.7 billion across Canada. These investments have helped almost a million families, seniors, women and children fleeing domestic violence, Indigenous people, persons with disabilities, persons with mental health and addiction issues, veterans and young adults. Continue reading

National Housing Day Calls for Action on Affordable Housing in Niagara

​Key local stakeholders in Niagara gathered to discuss Affordable Housing Development Toolkit

News from Niagara Regional Housing (NRH)

Posted November 22nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Regional Housing board chair Henry D’Angela

“We all know that affordable housing is an essential building block in the foundation of healthy lives for individuals and families. Each year, National Housing Day is an opportunity to recognize all the work being done to provide affordable housing to those in need. It is also an opportunity to draw attention to the solutions that are possible here in Niagara. Today that is our focus, the tools that we can use to create appropriate and affordable housing to address our local need.” ~ Henry D’Angela, Board Chair, Niagara Regional Housing (NRH)

Niagara, Ontario – As the availability of affordable housing continues to be a challenge in Niagara, local stakeholders joined together on the 20th Anniversary of National Housing Day to share information and tools to support affordable housing development.

For the third year in a row, Niagara Regional Housing, Niagara Region and Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) partnered for this event, with the City of St. Catharines also sponsoring this year.  Continue reading

A Happy Thanksgiving to our American Friends and Readers

From Niagara At Large, on American Thanksgiving Day

Posted November 22nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

“Give thanks for unknown blessings already on their way.”           – Native American Saying

“As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter words, but to live by them.”     – John F. Kennedy, former President of the United States, assassinated in Dallas, Texas, 55 years ago this November 22nd

A replica of the Mayflower, the ship that transported the Pilgrims from England to America, 398 years ago in 1620. The Mayflower II, built in England from the original ship designs kept in archives, crossed the Atlantic as a gift to America in the 1950s and is docked in Plymouth Massachusetts where, we are told, the Pilgrims celebrated the first Thanksgiving. Photo by 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

Can You Believe This? The NPCA’s Outgoing Board Holds Dead Duck Meeting

And Let’s Hope It Is Their Last, Already!

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted November 21st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Someone in the region shot me off a quick email earlier this week asking if I was going to this November 21st meeting of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s (NCPA) board of directors.

I took one look at the note and said; “What? This board is holding another meeting? I find that hard to believe.”

Yet believe it or not, the note writer’s news turned out to be true. There on the NPCA’s website, on the calendar for board meetings, was one scheduled for this Wednesday, November 21st at 9:30 a.m… And once again, I am thinking; “WHY?!!!”

We need a new NPCA board of directors ASAP. Here is a file photo of the outgoing board in session.

What is this outgoing board of directors doing holding another meeting now? This is seems well beyond what is often referred to as a “lame duck meeting” a public body holds in the weeks leading up to an election. It seems more like a “dead duck meeting.” Continue reading

You are Invited to a Public Meeting on Niagara Region’s Governance Review

Dr. Andrew Sancton Hosting Public Meeting to Seek Input on Niagara Region Governance

News from Niagara’s Regional Government

Posted November 21st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Regional Headquarters

(A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper– If you are one of the many residents across Niagara who have not been too pleased with the way we have been governed at the regional level in recent years – and the feedback NAL has been getting, especially over the past four years, says there are certainly many of you – you should come to this public meeting, armed with ideas on how to fix things up.

Thanks to the results of the October 22nd municipal elections, most of the faces on the next regional council, to be sworn in this December, will be new, and now may be the best time the public has had in the almost five decades long history of regional government in Niagara to press for a more open, accountable council that serves in the interest of all residents.

So please consider attending the following public meeting with your ideas.)

WHAT: 

As part of a Niagara Region Independent External Governance Audit approved by Regional Council, Dr. Andrew Sancton and Dr. Tim Cobban are hosting a public meeting to seek community input on Niagara Region Governance. This feedback will be used to assist Dr. Sancton in developing recommendations and advice to Niagara Region and Regional Council on how to improve and enhance organizational and governance practices. Continue reading

Canadian Environmental Law Association  Condemns Proposed Elimination of Environmental Commissioner of Ontario

“There is no public interest justification for this ill-conceived proposal,” said CELA lawyer Richard Lindgren of Ontario’s Ford government to shut this environmental watchdog body down. “For over 25 years, the ECO (Environmental Commissioner of Ontario) has helped hold successive provincial governments accountable for their environmental decision-making, and the ECO has assisted countless Ontarians in exercising their legal rights under the Environmental Bill of Rights.”

An Urgent Message from the Canadian Environmental Law Association

Posted November 20th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Toronto – The Canadian Environmental Law Association (CELA) reacted strongly to the Ontario government’s introduction of Bill 57, which proposes to wholly eliminate the independent Office of the Environmental Commissioner of Ontario (ECO), and to transfer the ECO’s existing duties to the Environment Minister and the Auditor General. Continue reading

Transgender Day of Remembrance – Tuesday, November 20th, 2018

Remembering Those Who Have Been Lost in Acts of Anti-Transgender Violence

A Message from Enzo De Divitiis and Pride Niagara in Niagara, Ontario

Posted November 20th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Transgender Awareness Week , a platform for LGBT+ advocates to raise awareness through education and advocacy, to educate about transgender and gender non-conforming issues.

Today, Tuesday November 20 is Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR) Transgender Day of Remembrance is  a day honouring  the memories of those whose lives were lost in acts of anti-transgender violence due to their gender identity and expression. Continue reading

Niagara Falls is Moving

“The rate of recession of The Falls has varied over time, with estimates of about an average of 1 meter per year and a current rate of recession of about 0.1 meter per year.”

By Derrick Beach, Canada/U.S. International Joint Commission

Posted November 20th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

The location of Niagara Falls has changed over time. About 12,500 years ago, “The Falls” was at the current lip of the Niagara Escarpment near current-day Lewiston, New York, and Queenston, Ontario, (Picture 1).

From the time of the end of the last North American ice age, when the Niagara River began taking its current day path from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario, the crest of The Falls has migrated about 11 kilometers (6.8 miles) from its original location near Queenston-Lewiston to today’s Horseshoe Falls crest location.Picture 1: Niagara Falls since the last ice age,with the top of the photo facing south. Credit: Google Earth, Niagara Board

The migration occurred because water flowing through the Niagara River slowly eroded away the rocks of the Niagara Escarpment to form the Great Gorge that the current Niagara River runs through. Continue reading

Canada’s New $10 Bill Featuring Civil Rights Icon Viola Desmond Now In Circulation

Canadian civil rights icon Viola Desmond

“In 1946, Viola Desmond took a courageous stand against injustice that helped inspire a movement for equality and social justice in Canada. … More than 70 years later, we honour her as the first Canadian woman to appear on a bank note, and hope her story inspires the next generation of Canadians to follow in her footsteps.” – Jennifer O’Connell, Parliamentary Secretary to Canada’s  Minister of Finance

News from the Bank of Canada
Posted November 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

The Bank of Canada today issued the new vertical $10 bank note featuring the portrait of social justice icon Viola Desmond, during a ceremony at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) in Winnipeg. Canadians will start to see this new note over the coming weeks and months as it gradually enters into circulation alongside existing $10 notes.

Bank of Canada Governor Stephen S. Poloz and Wanda Robson, Viola Desmond’s sister, spoke about Desmond’s legacy and the ongoing pursuit of human rights and social justice in Canada. They spent the first new bank notes at the CMHR, which itself is featured on the back of the new note. Continue reading

Are Some Ideas Too Dangerous to Teach?

Expert Panel to discuss the issue of Free Speech on Campus

Join the Discussion, Wednesday, November 21st at 7p.m at the St Catharines Public Library on James Street in the City’s downtown.

An Invite to All from Brock University
Posted November 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Are some ideas too dangerous to teach? That question is at the heart of a panel discussion taking place Wednesday, Nov. 21 at St. Catharines Public Library.

Brock University Political Science Professor Leah Bradshaw and Labour Studies Assistant Professor Paul Gray are part of a panel discussion on free speech being held at St. Catharines Library Nov. 21.

Titled “Dangerous Ideas, Dangerous Times: What, if any, are the limits to free speech on campus?” the event brings together a panel of Canadian experts, including Brock University Political Science Professor Leah Bradshaw and two professors from the University of Toronto. Brock Labour Studies Assistant Professor Paul Gray will moderate the discussion. Continue reading

The Climate Catastrophe And What You Can Do About It

We need solutions now – not decades from now.

Some Tips for Action from the Ontario Clean Air Alliance

Posted November 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

To many of us, the latest IPCC report on climate change was like a siren going off. Never before have the world’s climate scientists issued such a stark and alarming assessment of the disaster that we are racing toward and how little time we have left to change course.

Meanwhile, in Ontario the new government has yet to explain how it is going to achieve real reductions in climate damaging emissions after cancelling both our carbon cap-and-trade system and many renewable energy contracts. Right now, Ontario simply doesn’t have a plan to achieve the kind of immediate greenhouse gas pollution reductions the IPCC has told us are desperately needed. Continue reading

Wellspring Niagara Presents – This coming December 6th at the First Ontario Performing Arts Centre

An extraordinary evening of music in support of Wellspring Niagara Cancer Support Centre

THE MANTINI SISTERS:
LIVE AT THE PAC! 

PARTRIDGE HALL

News from Wellspring Niagara Cancer Support Centre

Posted on November 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

An extraordinary evening of music with Niagara’s own, The Mantini Sisters! Described as “Canada’s contribution to the great female trios”, The Mantini Sisters are joined by a phenomenal band led by Arranger/Director, Mark Camilleri (The Tenors, David Foster, The Priests). Continue reading

Brock U. Pop Culture prof says Stan Lee’s impact ‘almost indescribable’

Scott Henderson believes comic book icon Stan Lee will go down in history as a significant contributor to pop culture

A News Release from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted November 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The Brock University Associate Professor and Executive Director of the Pop Culture Association of Canada said Lee, the Marvel Comics writer, editor and publisher who died a week ago this Monday (November 12th) at the age of 95, transcended the industry he helped create.

“He altered comic books in the 1960s and made them so much more relevant than they had become,” said Henderson. “He really reinvented the comic book form. His impact is almost indescribable. It’s a separate level.” Continue reading

Join This Sunday’s Wake And March for Trees Being Marked for Destruction in Niagara

Meet at 12:30 p.m. this Sunday, November 18th at Charlotte and John Street in Niagara-on-the-Lake

Another Call-Out to Join the effort to save Niagara’s trees from Judith Patey, one of many concerned citizens in NOTL

Some of the grand old trees marked for destruction. This has got to stop here and elsewhere in our Niagara region.

Posted November 17th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A Reminder (to All across our Niagara region):

We will meet at Charlotte and John Street at12:30 p.m Sunday November 18th to collect black armbands and placards and then march up to the entrance of 588 Charlotte, then back down to John Street and along the front of the Rand Estate.

The march will end up in the park directly across from Marotta’s Two Sisters winery at approximately 1:30 p.m.where we would share eulogies and stories about what once was the greatest estate in Niagara on the Lake.

We did it before when we had six to eight hundred out at the town hall, lets do it again! Niagra Falls MPP Wayne Gates will also be in attendance showing his support.

Several hundred citizens gathered at a town hall meeting in Niagara-on-the-Lake earlier this year to show their support for saving trees on the Randwood Estate property

 What follows is a statement this past week from the Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake in response to growing citizens’ concerns over what is happening on the grounds of the historic Randwood Estate property.

The Town is aware of the recent activities which have taken place at the Randwood Estate property. Continue reading

It’s Party Time for Despoilers of the Environment in Ontario

Ford Moves to Kill Province’s Independent Environmental Watchdog. And Only Enough of Us, Standing Up in Opposition, Can Stop Him

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted November 17th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

This Ontario Premier has declared war on our province’s programs and institutions for protecting our environment.

Industries in Ontario that want to carry on polluting our air, water and soil, or developers who think they need to take out more of our wetlands or wooded areas, or anyone else who views despoiling the environment as a mere business practice, , must be feeling a little bit happier today.

Doug Ford, Ontario’s premier and boss hog of his self-described “Government for the People” who vows to make the province more “open for business,” apparently at any environmental cost, announced plans this November 15th to shut down the 24-year-old office of the Environmental Commissioner of Ontario. Continue reading

Join the Province-Wide Campaign to Save the Office of the Environmental Commissioner of Ontario

“We urgently need you to let the government know that the ECO’s (Environmental Commissioner of Ontario) vital and independent role enables public participation and government accountability for decisions that significantly impact the environment.”               –   Ontario Nature 

 

A Call Out to All of Us from Ontario Nature, a province-wide, non-partisan, citzens advocacy group

Posted November 17th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

The Government of Ontario announced plans on November 15, 2018 to eliminate the office of the Environmental Commissioner of Ontario (ECO) and transfer much of its responsibility to the jurisdiction of the Auditor General.

This misguided decision effectively undercuts the power and independence of Ontario’s environmental watchdog. Continue reading

Ford Government’s  “Plan For The People”

Ontario Releases the Government’s Fiscal Roadmap — Restoring Trust and Putting Money Back in the Pockets of Taxpayers

News from Ontario’s Ford Government and its Ministry of Finance

Posted November 17th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

After 15 years of the previous government’s mismanagement, Ontario’s Government for the People has kept its promises, and continues to take action to restore trust, transparency and accountability in Ontario’s finances, while making life more affordable for individuals, families and businesses.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford, left, and his Finance Minister, Vic Fedeli

This November 15th, Minister of Finance Vic Fedeli released the 2018 Ontario Economic Outlook and Fiscal Review, outlining the government’s plan to help people make ends meet — and get ahead — while making government more efficient. 

Ontario is now projecting a 2018-19 deficit of $14.5 billion — that’s already $0.5 billion less than the $15 billion deficit inherited from the previous government as reported by the Independent Financial Commission of Inquiry just 11 weeks ago. Continue reading

Walk and Wake for Randwood Forest in Niagara-on-the-Lake this Sunday – November 18th

Hundreds of Niagara Area Residents Expected to Gather to Mourn Massive Tree-Cutting by Developer

A Call-Out to All to Join the Walk and Wake from Irene Bader, one of many concerned citizens in Niagara-on-the-Lake

Posted November 16th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

“Today, as residents look over acres of barren earth and watch the heavy trucks loaded high with 200-year-old oaks and pines leave the site, they can only worry about what might come next.”

Niagara, Ontario – Hundreds of residents of Niagara-on-the-Lake will gather to mourn the loss of hundreds of majestic, mature trees that, until they were leveled by a developer’s heavy equipment earlier this week, graced the historic Randwood Estate.

Residents will meet at the corner of Charlotte and John Street at 12:30 p.m. on Sunday, November 18th to collect their black arm bands and will then engage in an hour-long walk tracing the exterior wall of the estate.

The march will end at the parkland across from the winery at 240 John Street where the official “Wake” for the departed trees will begin at 1:30 p.m. Continue reading

Greater Niagara Chamber honours Region’s Women in Business Leaders

Betty-Lou Souter, Chief Executive Officer, Community Care, St. Catharines & Thorold Receives                   Lifetime Achievement Award

“We honour these women in our awards, but we recognize the achievements of so many more. The contributions to Niagara’s prosperity and community made by women are overlooked too often. I hope that the achievements of these extraordinary community leaders will lead to recognition of the work of others.”
— Mishka Balsom, President & CEO, Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

News from the Greater Niagara Charmber of Commerce

Posted November 16th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Betty-Lou Souter receives Niagara Chamber’s 2018 Lifetime Achievement Award

Niagara, Ontario – “Women make incredible contributions to our business community every day.  We are thrilled to be able to celebrate and recognize these accomplishments through this annual event,” said Nicole Regehr, Chair of the Women in Niagara (WIN) Council. “The caliber of women in leadership roles in Niagara is no surprise to us, but it never ceases to encourage and inspire.”

The WIBAs are an annual event, honouring women from around Niagara whose contributions to the community go above and beyond the call of duty. The WIN council received over 160 nominations from around the region in many different sectors. Continue reading

Louis Riel – When I Grew Up, he was ‘a ‘dangerous traitor’. Now Canada’s Prime Minister issues a statement honouring him!

This November 16th, 2018 is Louis Riel Day in Canada

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted November 16th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Louis Riel, from dangerous rebel to hero

Louis Riel, the 19th century Metis leader and activist for his people who is now commonly regarded as the founder of the Manitoba, was certainly not held in very high regard in the history textbooks I grew up with in 1960s Ontario public schools.

Riel, who I happen to have a lot of regard for, was characterized as a dangerous rebel and traitor to the new confederation of Canada and as someone who deserved to be tried and hanged under the eyes of then Prime Minister John A. Macdonald.

Of course, that portrait of Louis Riel was taught to me and my teenage peers by older, mostly white Anglo-Saxon adults who felt just as badly about American civil rights leaders from the 1960s like Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael and Martin Luther King, and about hippies, the Rolling Stones, almost any Black singer who recorded on Chess or Stax Records, the cannabis that the likes of former prime minister Brian Mulroney, Bay Street stock brockers and  several Conservative Party MPs are now making a business investment in, and young people protesting the War in Vietnam on college campuses. Continue reading

Raw Sewage, Toxic Runoff Plague Ontario’s Lakes And Rivers

Continuing Loss Of Wetlands And Other Natural Areas That Filter Pollution Compounds The Problem

Ontario Environmental Commissioner Dianne Saxe

“Wetlands and woodlands continue to be destroyed by agriculture and development. These areas help filter pollutants from water, reduce flooding, protect against soil erosion, filter our air and provide critical habitat for many of Ontario’s species at risk.” – Ontario environmental Commissioner Dianne Saxe

A News Release from Ontario’s Environmental Commissioner

Posted November 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

(A Foreword Note from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper –

Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his so-called “Government for the People” are giving the province’s independent environmental watchdog the axe. He has announced he is closing down the whole office

As some of you may already have heard, Doug Ford’s described “Government for the People” announced this Novmenter 15th that it is shutting down the Office of Ontario’s Environmental Commissioner, which has functioned as an independent watchdog body in the province, much like the Ontario Ombudsman’s Office, on environmentally related issues since it was formed in 1994.

This move by Ontario’s four-and-a-month-old Ford government follows what now appears to be a pattern of cutting and gutting programs and institutions involved in environmental protection matters, and Niagara At Large will have more news and commentary of that latter.

In the meantime, the following news release from the Office of Ontario Environmental Commissioner Dianne Saxe, posted on the Office’s website this November 13th and speaking to a detailed new report the Office has just completed on environmental protection, may be its last or one of its last.

Here it is –

Toronto – The Ontario government continues to allow raw sewage to overflow into Ontario lakes and rivers at an alarming rate, says a new report by Dianne Saxe, Environmental Commissioner of Ontario.

Back to Basics, Saxe’s 2018 Environmental Protection Report, outlines how Ontario’s waters are being poisoned by raw sewage and harmful runoff laden with fertilizer and road salt. Continue reading

Janice Thomson’s Seven-Year Tenure as Chair at Ontario’s Niagara Parks is Over

Niagara Parks Commission Chair Janice Thomson

“It was indeed an honour to be given the responsibility of oversight of this important public agency and to work with a talented group of Commissioners and staff to move the organization from a $76 million operation to the current revenue of $120 million, over a seven year period.”                                          – Outgoing Niagara Parks Chair Janice Thomson

Thomson’s Term Ended This Thursday November 15th. Who Might Take Her Place Has Yet To Be Announced

A News Brief from Doug Draper

Posted November 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Janice Thomson, outlining Niagara Park’s accomplishments, at a public meeting this October.

Speculation has been out there for weeks that Janice Thomson’s tenure as Niagara Park’s Chair would draw to a close this November 15th, making way for a replacement to be appointed by a Doug Ford government in Ontario that has already been busy filling as many posts as possible with its friends and supporters.Ontario’s Ford government.

A possible replacement has yet to be announcement, but, when contacted by Niagara At Large, Thomson confirmed that her term as chair of the 133-year old Niagara Park Commission’s board came “to a natural end today,” this November 15th.

“I was advised in early September that I could apply for re-appointment, which I have done,” added Thomson, who has served in the part-time post for seven years and is also president of Niagara-on-the-Lake’s Chamber of Commerce and Visitors and Convention Bureau. “I was advised that the Government would be posting the position, to which I could also apply; however, to date I have not see the posting.” Continue reading

Brock University Panel On Demystifying Dementia Postponed Due To Weather

Panel was scheduled for this Thursday, November 15th evening

A Message from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted November 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Due to travel and weather advisories, Brock University has decided to postpone tonight’s panel Demystifying Dementia and will reschedule the event for a future date. Continue reading

Niagara’s Incoming Regional Council Should Choose a New Chair from among its Own Elected Members

Let’s Being The Process of Restoring Public Trust – No More Backrrom Deals. And No Appointments To The Chair’s Job From The Outside.

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted November 14th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

In one of Woody Allen’s earliest films ‘Sleeper’, his character wakes up after being in a deep-freeze coma for a number of years to surroundings that have completely changed save for one artefact that survived from his pre-coma days – a pair of MacDonald’s Golden Arches looming in the background.

Who should be Niagara next regional council chair, and how should he or she be chosen?

In the film, we watch the character searching around anxiously for some of the old haunts he used to go to for lunch or to enjoy a coffee with old friends, but they were no longer there.

He is a person out of place and time with his current surroundings.

Former Welland Mayor Damian Goulbourne, who did not run in this fall’s municipal elections, says he still has a passion to be regional chair

I thought of the character in that film, searching around for doorways to a place where everything from the people and furniture, right down to the carpeting on the floor have changed, after reading a report in the local media this November 13th – supporting rumours that have been circulating around now for week since the October 22nd municipal elections – t hat Damian Goulbourne still has his heart in a possible appointment to the position of Niagara regional chair if the Region’s new council, to be sworn in early this December, is willing to make that possible.

He is still “passionate about the job of being regional chair,” Goulbourne was quoted saying in one newspaper story. “Over the past three days, I’ve had some calls from people asking if I’m interested.”

Upon reading these words, I am thinking; ‘Who are these people, and how tone deaf can they and possibly Goulbourne be?’ Continue reading

Brock University Panel To Focus On Demystifying Dementia

The Event – to be held Thursday, Nov. 15 at 6:45 p.m. in Brock’s David S. Howes Theatre – Is Free And Open To The Public

An Invite to All from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted November 14th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – To help raise awareness about the increasing prevalence of dementia in Niagara, Brock University is hosting a free public talk focused on the disorder.

Brock University’s Centre for Lifespan Development Research and the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences have partnered to host “Demystifying Dementia,” which will be held Thursday, Nov. 15 at 6:45 p.m. in Brock’s David S. Howes Theatre.

“We shouldn’t assume that dementia is a normal part of aging,” says Lynn McCleary, Associate Professor of Nursing. “Dementia is an umbrella term for a number of disorders of the brain, where functioning decreases over time and it is important to break down the stigmas associated with them.” Continue reading

You Can Help Make Our Great Lakes Plastics Free

Check Out This Post For An ‘Advocacy Toolkit to Make   a Difference in Your Community’

From the Alliance for the Great Lakes, a citizen-based organization with members across the Great Lakes region

Posted November 14th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Researchers estimate that more than 22 million pounds of plastic pollution enter the Great Lakes every year. Beach cleanups and personal behaviour changes alone won’t solve this problem.

It’s going to take policy action at all levels to protect our lakes against plastic pollution — and it can start with you. Continue reading

City of St. Catharines Kicks Off  Its 21st Annual Tree of Little Angels’ for Local Children

The City is once again teaming up with Santa’s helpers throughout the city to spread some holiday joy

A News Release from the City of St. Catharines in Niagara, Ontario

Posted November 14th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

The City marked  the kickoff of its 21st annual Tree of Little Angels this past  Monday, Nov. 12.

The City is launching its annual toy and gift drive. Look for these cards at City Hall and City community centres.

As part of the campaign, the City collects new, unwrapped gifts for local children from the community at locations across St. Catharines. Last year more than 500 toys were donated to Community Care through the Little Angels campaign. Continue reading

After all the Outcry For and Against Niagara Region’s CAO leading a trade mission to China, the Punch Line is this. He Didn’t Go!

Niagara’s new Regional Council could not be sworn in soon enough

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher           Doug Draper

Posted November 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

What?!!!

The last meeting of the Al Caslin-led Niagara regional council – Thursday, November 1st, 2018, could not end without another in a series of debates over what’s up with the Region’s CAO, Carmen D’Angelo. Photo by Doug Draper

After another insufferable hour of Niagara regional council taken up over what to do with or about the Region’s controversial CAO Carmen D’Angelo – this time over whether or not this character should lead a trade mission to China while the legitimacy of his very hiring is now being investigated by the Ontario Ombudsman’s Office – D’Angelo did not jump aboard the plane China after all. Continue reading

Words of Truth and Warning from two Western Leaders – France’s Emmanual Macron and Canada’s Justin Trudeau

“Old demons are resurfacing. History sometimes threatens to take its tragic course again and compromise our hope of peace.” – French President Emmanual Macron

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, and French President Emmanual Macron

“There have always been tensions between those who would speak truth to power and those who like having their power, thank you very much, and don’t necessarily want to see it frittered away. … But we are now in a phase where that capacity to speak truth to power, the very capacity for a citizen to engage with truth, is under attack. And not just by the powerful, but by those who would see our institutions themselves weakened.”          – Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

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

Posted November 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A number of historical scholars are warning us that there are dark and dangerous forces at work these days, chipping away at the freedoms and rights, and the checks and balances and institutions that are so vital for constitutional democracies like ours to survive. 

Look no further than the conduct of the character now occupying the highest office in the United States, and we have arguably seen some manifestations of that Trump-like conduct in our province of Ontario and even in our region of Niagara. Continue reading

‘Let Us Never Forget’… And Let Us Rededicate Ourselves to Peace In Our Communities

“At this time, the 100th anniversary of the end of World War One, let us be thankful. Let us never forget. Let us reopen our hearts to the needs and the sufferings of others. And, as we reflect on the “Bells of Peace”, let us rededicate ourselves to justice and to peace in our community.”

A Commentary by Dave Augustyn, former Niagara Regional Councillor and Mayor of Pelham

Posted November 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Hundreds of Pelham residents took time to gather with local Veterans, members of the Royal Canadian Legion and the Ladies Auxiliary, the 613 Army Cadets, the Pelham Fire Service, and others at the Veteran’s Park at the Fonthill Legion to commemorate and remember the sacrifices of Pelham’s Veterans.

Others also joined a nation-wide initiative called the “Bells of Peace” as they gathered at five Pelham churches – Holy Trinity, Fonthill United, Fenwick United, St. Ann Roman Catholic, and First Presbyterian. Each of these churches rang their bells 100 times at dusk to mark the 100th Anniversary of the end of the First World War.

This special year and each Remembrance Day it is right to remember those brave men and women who have served, and who continue to serve our country during times of war, conflict, and peace. Continue reading

In this 21st Century – on this Remembrance Day – Let’s Pledge To Define Canada’s Identity on the World Stage as an Uncompromising  Leader for Peace and for Fighting Climate Change

We Should Honour Those Who Fought For Our Rights And Freedoms by Using Them to fight for the Common Good

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted November 11th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A Remembrance Day column, written by retired general and former chief of the defence staff for the Canadian Forces Rick Hillier and published this November 10th in The Globe and Mail, carries the headline; “Canada was forged in the trenches of the First World War,” and begins as follows –

“Life is busy in Canada and for that reason, there seems to be only a fleeting moment in November when any of us pay attention to our history. Nevertheless, Canadians need to remember because in the mud and horror of the First World War, our nation was forged.”

Veterans “Lest We Forget” Memorial and Canadian Flag, St. Catherines, Ontario

In a statement he sent home from 100th year Remembrance and Armistice Day ceremonies in Europe this November 11th, Canada’s Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, echoed a similar sentiment. Continue reading

Just As We’re Getting Ready To Clean Up the Mess at the NPCA, We Don’t Need Another Mess At Niagara Parks

The Ford Government Would Do Well Not To Turn This Important Agency into just another  Gift Shop For                         Its Partisan Pals

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher            Doug Draper

Posted November 9th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Parks Commission Chair Janice Thomson

Toward the end of an address that the Niagara Park Commission’s current Chair, Janice Thomson delivered at a public meeting this past October, detailing robust state the NPC now finds itself in financially, and as a steward of the Niagara River corridor and a tourist draw, she had this to say

“These are not farewell remarks, but I did want to take this opportunity at a public meeting to comment on our current positive state and recognize the dedicated efforts of all staff and Commissioners that brought the organization to this point and will lead it to great heights in the future.”

I would love to believe that these are not Thomson’s farewell remarks as Niagara Parks chair, but I fear they will be.

Thomson, a resident of Niagara-on-the-Lake who also serves as executive director of the town’s Chamber of Commerce & Visitor and Convention Bureau, was first appointed Chair of the NPC’s board by the province’s former Liberal government in 2011, is now only days away from finding out if she will be re-appointed by Ontario’s current Fort government or replaced (this November 15th) by someone else.

Niagara Parks Commission headquarters in Niagara Falls, Ontario

And that is where my nightmare begins. Continue reading

Ontario’s NDP Says It’s Not Right That Ford Cut Province Out Of Low Carbon Economy Fund

 “The next generation — our children and grandchildren — deserve a stable climate, beautiful rivers and clean air. Doug Ford’s decision to let Ontario go without strong climate protection  threatens that future.”                                                          – Ontario NDP Energy and Climate Change critic Peter Tabuns

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

Posted November 9th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park – NDP Energy and Climate Change critic Peter Tabuns said it’s a sad state of affairs for Ottawa to have to bypass the Doug Ford government in order to make sure carbon-reduction dollars aren’t mis-spent on Ford’s pet projects.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The federal government has decided to cut the Ford Government out of a $420 million Low Carbon Economy Fund transfer to Ontario. Since they can’t trust Ford to spend the money on emissions reduction and creating green jobs, the federal government will decide how to spend Ontario’s money. Continue reading

St. Catharines MPP Tables Legislation To Help Veterans Across Ontario Access Long-Term Care

“We have a duty to care for those who have served. We can do better to give veterans the care and the home they deserve, when and where they need it.” – St. Catharines MPP and NDP Veterans, Legions and Military Affairs critic Jennie Stevens

News from the St. Catharines Constituency Office of St. Catharines MPP Jennie Stevens

Posted November 9th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines MPP Jennie Stevens

Niagara, Ontario — St. Catharines MPP and NDP Veterans, Legions and Military Affairs critic Jennie Stevens has tabled legislation that will give Ontario’s veterans priority access to long-term care beds right across the province, closing loopholes that are forcing those who served to languish on waiting lists.

 Veterans’ Priority Access Beds are designated long-term care spaces that veterans have priority access to over non-veteran applicants. But only some veterans qualify, and those who do have to relocate to designated beds in Toronto, London or Ottawa, often separating them from their families and support networks. Continue reading

Is Niagara Ready For Legal Cannabis? Don’t Miss This Timely & Important Discussion

A Public Forum Panel – Wednesday, November 14th,      8 p.m. in St. Catharines

An Invite to All from the Niagara District Council of Women

Re- Posted November 9th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

The Niagara District Council of Women will be hosting a Public Forum Panel, “Is Niagara Ready for Legal Cannabis” on Wednesday, November 14 at 8:00 pm in the Mills Room at the St. Catharines Central Library (54 Church Street). 

One of the guest speakers – Patrick Robson,  Professor of Environmental Management and Assessment, Niagara College

Our guest speakers will be: Patrick Robson,  Professor of Environmental Management and Assessment, Niagara College; Professor Bill MacDonald Coordinator of the Cannabis Production Program at Niagara College; Barbara Wiens, Director of Planning & Development for the Town of Pelham; and a representative from Niagara Region Public Health. 

Discussions will include regulatory issues; the need for qualified and trained professionals in the cannabis production industry; regulatory and trade requirements for the safe and legal production and packaging of cannabis; land use planning; the local perspective, community questions and concerns; and public health considerations. Continue reading

Chorus Niagara Presents – An Anthem For Our Times

EIN DEUTSCHES REQUIEM, featuring Johannes Brahms’ moving German Requiem – November 10, 2018, 7:30 pm Partridge Hall,                                           FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre, St.Catharines

Pre-concert chat for ticket holders at 6:30 pm

A Grand Opening Evening  with Chorus Niagara

Posted November 9th, 2018 on Niagara At Large.

Opening its 56th season, Chorus Niagara and Artistic Director Robert Cooper proudly present EIN DEUTSCHES REQUIEM, featuring Johannes Brahms’ moving German Requiem, plus contemporary composer Ola Gjeilo’s Dark Night Of The Soul.

A humanist Requiem, Brahms’ Ein Deutsches Requiem is both grand and intimate, meditative and dramatic, offering consolation to the living and soothing the universal need for comfort in times of profound loss. ‘ Continue reading

Niagara Falls to host all-Canadian musical line-up for New Year’s Eve celebration at Niagara Parks

Featuring Burton Cummings, the lead singer from one of Canada’s most legendary rock groups, The Guess Who

Canadian singer and songwriter Burton Cummings first came to fame in the 1960s and 70s with the hit rock band, The Guess Who

  • New Year’s Eve celebration to take place in Niagara Parks’ Queen Victoria Park
  • Featuring a diverse and talented musical line-up of Canadian artists, including rock icon Burton Cummings
  • Two spectacular firework displays planned from the Niagara Gorge and Skylon TowerNews from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

News from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted November 9th. 2018 on Niagara At Large

The triple Juno Award-winning band, The Sheepdogs

Niagara Falls, Ontario – The Niagara Parks Commission and the City of Niagara Falls, along with its Niagara Falls New Year’s Eve event partners, invite the public to join the celebrations and be part of one of Canada’s longest running New Year’s Eve festivities and concert series, taking place in Queen Victoria Park.

This year’s concert features an all-star line-up of Canadian talent and will open with Niagara Falls-based band and winner of band of the year at the Niagara Music Awards, Avenue Inn. Avenue Inn has carved a unique space in the Canadian music scene since their formation in 2012 and have carefully crafted their own alternative rock approach, with their brand-new album “Tonight”.

Taking the stage at 9 p.m. will be The Sheepdogs, the triple Juno Award-winning Saskatoon-based quintet. Continue reading

Fort Erie’s Waverly Woods Area Must Also Be Saved For Its Historic Significance

The Area is also the Site of a Key War of 1812 battle. “Do developers think they can just dig up a cemetery (to those who fought here) and plant houses?”

A Commentary by Linda McKellar, a citizen activist and resident of Fort Erie, Ontario

Posted November 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

While citizens continue their efforts to save the Waverly Woods area for its significance as a green space and a home to wildlife, it is important to focus on the areas historic significant as well.

This Painting by E.C Watmough depicts the British storming the Northeast Bastion of Fort Erie, during their failed night assault on August 14, 1814.

The Waverly Woods area was the site of the bloodiest battle on Canadian soil in our history, the Siege of Fort Erie, in 1814. Sure the fort remains but more died here than at Lundy’s Lane, Queenston or Chippewa.

Some casualties from the 1814 battle were discovered in the area, at a place called Snake Hill in the late 1980s.

How many people, even locals, are aware of that fact?

Will the monument to these brave men from both sides of the border, now nameless and whose many graves are yet to be found, be a condo? These men – human beings – sons, husbands, and brothers – are very likely interred on this very spot according to historical documentation and previous finds.

Do developers think they can just dig up a cemetery and plant houses? Continue reading

If You Are Down On Your Luck in Doug Ford’s Ontario, Forget About Assistance from the Government. Get A Job! (If You Can Find One With A Living Wage)

Cabinet Minister Lisa MacLeod Let’s Us In On What A “Compassionate And Caring Society”  Means                    In Doug Ford’s Ontario

A Satement by Lisa MacLeod , Ontario Minister of Children, Community and Social Services, on Ford Government’s Social Assistance Plan

Posted November 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A Brief Foreword from Doug Draper, reporter and publisher, Niagara At Large –

Lisa MacLeod, Ontario’s Minister of Children, Community and Social Services and a member of Doug Ford’s ‘Government for the People’, looking very self-satisfied in her seat in the provincial  legislature

I’m old enough to remember and report on the suffering so many people in Niagara and other regions in the province went through in the mid- to late-1990s and early 2000s when the then Ontario government of Mike Harris took a meat axe to social assistance program – all with a view to paying for more tax cuts for their affluent friends.

So here we go again, with more cuts to assistance services for the most vulnerable among us, in the name of “compassion” and coming from a premier and a Conservative Party that claim they run a “Government for the People”.

As for the individual Ontario Premier Doug Ford has picked to be Minister of (of all portfolios) Children, Community and Social Services, you don’t have to watch Lisa MacLeod performing on the parliamentary channel for too long to see a smugness, arrogance and a sense of her own entitlement dripping from her.

Take a look at MacLeod’s resume and see that she graduated from university in the 1990s with a degree in political science and has been working as an assistant for politicians before becoming one herself ever since. In other words, she has been feeding from the public trough – living off public welfare, if you like – most or all of her adult life.

Perhaps MacLeod should go out and get a real job, if she can find one.

  • Doug Draper

Now here is MacLeod’s Statement on Social Assitance –  

When I was sworn into Cabinet 138 days ago, Premier Ford made two things clear. Not only does Ontario’s social assistance system need to be fixed, it must be both responsive and accountable to the people it’s meant to serve. Continue reading

Calculating a Living Wage for Niagara Region

“Paying a living wage and providing group health benefits are two key ways to attract quality employees and to reduce on-going costs related to turnover, recruitment, and training.” – Glen Walker, Chair of the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network

A Report from the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network

Posted November 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

With the annual cost of household living expenses for a Niagara region family of four conservatively pegged at over $71,000, the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network has calculated the hourly wage necessary for families to meet these expenses, otherwise known as a living wage, to be $17.99 for 2018.

As part of National Living Wage Week, the Network has released two new reports, ‘Calculating the Cost of Living for Niagara Region, 2018’ and ‘Calculating the Living Wage for Niagara Region, 2018’, which outlines the full methodology used. Continue reading

Brock University Researchers Focuses On Helping Grape Growers And Wineries Tackle Climate Change Challenges

“I think the growers in this area are very lucky that CCOVI (Brock University’s Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute) has taken up the challenge of trying to do what is best for the industry,”                                                                                        – Niagara, Ontario grape grower and winemaker Bill Schenck

News from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario

Posted November 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

With the help of two new research vineyards, Brock University’s Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute (CCOVI) is looking to aid Canada’s grape growers and wineries.

Grapevines have been planted in two new CCOVI research vineyards for a clone and rootstock evaluation program.

CCOVI partnered with two commercial grape growers to plant the St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake vineyards that will be used for a clone and rootstock evaluation program of the main VQA grapevine varieties in Ontario.

 Jim Willwerth, CCOVI Senior Scientist, said the program takes a proactive approach that will help the industry grow and adapt to challenges expected with climate change. Continue reading

St. Catharines Museum Wrapping Up First World War Commemorations With Pair Of Special Events

An Invitation to All from the City of St. Catharines

Posted November 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario  – The St. Catharines Museum and Welland Canals Centre will hold a pair of community events as it prepares to close its exhibit highlighting the war-time experiences of St. Catharines residents on the front lines and at home.

The St. Catharines Museum is closing the Doing Our Bit: World War One from St. Catharines to the Western Front exhibition with some special events, including a 1918-themed Victory Party on Nov. 30, and the original dramatic production, Stories from the Front, on Saturday, Nov. 10. Dressed in 1918 character are, from left, museum volunteers Des Corran,  Ian Ashman and museum public programmer Lauren Curtas.

Doing Our Bit: World War One from St. Catharines to the Western Front, closes Friday, Nov. 30.

The closing of the exhibition will be celebrated with a themed Victory Party on Nov. 30, and the museum is also presenting Stories from the Front, an original dramatic production featuring stories and music from the First World War, on Saturday, Nov. 10. Continue reading

Canada’s Prime Minister Delivers Apology Regarding The Fate Of The Passengers Of The MS St. Louis

‘After Jewish refugees on board were denied entry to Cuba, the United States, and Canada, they were forced to return to Europe, where the United Kingdom, Belgium, France, and the Netherlands agreed to take them in. When the Nazis conquered Belgium, France, and the Netherlands in 1940, 254 MS St. Louis passengers were murdered in the Holocaust.’

From the Office of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Posted November 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, this Wednesday, November 7th  delivered a formal apology in the House of Commons regarding the fate of the MS St. Louis and its passengers. The Prime Minister apologized to the passengers, their families, and Jewish communities in Canada and around the world.

These people, aboard the MS-St. Louis, came to Canada in 1939, hoping that our country would welcome them and save them from possible death in Hitler’s Holocaust, and Canada turned them away. We all have to work to make sure something like this never happens again.

In May 1939, the MS St. Louis departed Germany with close to a thousand passengers, including over 900 German Jews, who were desperate for safety and refuge from persecution at the hands of the Nazis. Continue reading

Sending Out An SOS … They Are Cutting Trees At Waverly Woods in Fort Erie – Now!

A Call-Out from Marcie Jacklin from Community Voices of  Fort Erie, a Niagara-based citizens organization

Posted  November 7th, 2018  on Niagara At Large

Inside Waverly Woods – in an area of Fort Erie now targeted for urban development.

I’m sorry to report that there is more tree cutting at Waverly Woods in the north east corner. This is the third site where tree cutting has occurred on this property within the last few months.

Please email or call the Mayor, Town Councillors (see below) and Rick Brady. This shouldn’t be happening because:

  1. a) the Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Sports has informed us that tree cutting disturbs the archaeological site
  2. b) this violates conditions 54 and 56 of the Notice of Approval of Draft Plan of Subdivision Harbourtown Village.

Continue reading

Making a Case for Restoring Native Species & Ecosystems in Niagara

Take the Case of Malcolmson Eco-Park in St. Catharines

A Special to our Niagara At Large readers from Claire Theijsmeijer, a member of the volunteer advisory committee for the group, Friends of Malcomson Eco-Park

Posted November 7th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

 “Greenspace” — is it enough? 

In Niagara, we have a significant amount of what is termed  greenspace or “open space reserve, protected areas of undeveloped landscape.”

In reality?

Urban greenspace includes parks, cemeteries, vacant lots and golf courses … all “developed” in some way, so that native species of plants, birds and insects are mostly absent. In efforts to improve on this reality, many urban volunteer groups are now working to restore native ecosystems. So why is this important?

Take the case of Malcolmson Eco-Park in St. Catharines.

It’s a city park – with a difference. Given to the City in 1976 by then Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, this former plant nursery for the Seaway, was named for Mary Malcolmson, who started the first Girl Guide group in Canada, and  was the first President of the St. Catharines and District Council of Women (now the Niagara District Council of Women, NDCW).

Continue reading

Happy Birthday Joni – One of Canada’s Great Gifts to the World!

Joni Mitchell, singer/songwriter and painter extraordinaire, turns 75 this November 7th, 2018

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

Posted November, 7th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

“They took all the trees
And put ’em in a tree museum
And they charged the people
A dollar and a half to seem ’em

Don’t it always seem to go,
That you don’t know what you’ve got
Til its gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot.”

  • From Joni Mitchell’s 1970 song ‘Big Yellow Taxi

The lyrics to Joni Mitchell’s song Big Yellow Taxi , either by coincidence or design, were penned and released to the world in the same year as the first Earth Day, and was listed a decade ago members of the global music community as “the most performed song” of at least the past 50 years.

Jonii Mitchell, near the beginning, writing songs that worked as soundtracks during the ”flower power’ years of the 1960s

Over my many years as a reporter covering environmental stories, I have the lyrics of this song quoted countless times by citizens across this and other regions, fighting to stop low-density urban sprawl from paving over ever more of our farmlands, woodlands and wetlands. Continue reading

Brock University Student Heads To Belgium To Mark 100 Years Of Remembrance – End of First World War

News from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario

Posted November 7th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Shortly after the armistice was signed at 11:11 a.m. on Nov. 11, 1918 to end the First World War, the Canadian Pipes and Drums’ 42nd Battalion Royal Highlanders marched into Mons, Belgium announcing to the citizens that they had been liberated from four and a half years of German occupation.

At left, Brock University Sport Management student and Drum Major Kieran Boyle, Black Watch Association Pipes and Drums, marches in the 2018 St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Montreal. At right, drummer David Balfour is pictured after the First World War 42nd Battalion Royal Highlanders of Canada Pipes and Drums marched into Mons, Belgium as the first group after the armistice was signed on Nov. 11, 1918.

On the 100th anniversary of that historic event this Sunday, a Brock University student and retired Canadian Forces member will be part of a re-enactment matching the exact route marched by Canadians a century earlier. Continue reading

Ford’s Cut To Math Supports For Ontario’s Schools Doesn’t Add Up

“This latest cut comes after it became public that the Parents Reaching Out grants had been scrapped for 2018-19. Those grants allowed parent councils to hold programming on a range of subjects – including supporting children in mathematics at home.”

A News Release from Ontario’s New Democratic Party

Posted November 7th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

He may have dropped out of college after two months, but that won’t stop Ontario’s premier from doing his own slash-and-burn restructuring or de-construction job on the province’s school system.

Queen’s Park – Just days after Education Minister Lisa Thompson introduced legislation to impose a new math test on Ontario teachers, Doug Ford’s government is poised to cut funding that helps teachers improve their math skills.

NDP Education Critic Marit Stiles raised the issue in question period this past October 31st.

 “By introducing a new test at the front end of a teacher’s career but taking away opportunities to build on those skills and keep them sharp down the line it is clear that this government is more interested in playing politics than actually improving outcomes for students,” Stiles said.

 “How can the Minister justify imposing a new math test for teachers with one hand while cutting the funding meant to strengthen those skills on the other?” Continue reading

This Is the Reckoning!

‘Trump had to know this day would come. That a TSUNAMI of women & young people & people of color would show up in record numbers at the polls.’

Michael Moore

By Michael Moore, from American activist and film-maker Michael Moore’s Facebook Page

November 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

THIS IS THE RECKONING!

Trump had to know this day would come. That a TSUNAMI of women & young people & people of color would show up in record numbers at the polls.

Millions showed up in DC twice – women & students – to warn him what today would look like. Now add in all the older white dudes who “get it”. In 12 hours we’ll know. Continue reading

A Plea To Our American Neighbours

For the Sake of Peace, Love, Justice, Democracy and the Future of our Planet, Vote this Tuesday, November 6th!

Vote for the Beginning of the End of Rage, Hate, Greed, Climate Denial and Trumpism!

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

Posted November 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A sign I have seen on the front lawns of a number of people’s homes in Buffalo, New York

As a Canadian who has lived most of his life near the border of his country and the United States, I have made many good friends in the United States over my 60-some-odd years and have grown to love the places I visit, including the coastal town of Massachusetts and the classic old neighbourhoods and Olmstead parks of nearby Buffalo.

So to see all of that growing less welcoming and darker over the past few years with that vile, hate-filled monster now occupying the White House is heartbreaking.

To see and hear Trump and his band of psychos declare Canada, for some incomprehensible reason, a “national security risk” and declare that there is “a special corner in hell” waiting for our prime minister – even while Trump boasts about having wonderful relationships and exchanging “love letters” with some of the world’s most brutal dictators – seems like such a betrayal of a long, peaceful relationship between our two countries. Continue reading

Join the Citizens’ Campaign for a Plastics-Free Great Lakes

Register Below for a Free Webinar Conservation With Experts and Advocates across the Great Lakes – Thursday, November 8th, 1 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, 12 P.M. Central Time

An Invite from the Alliance for the Great Lakes, a Lakes-wide citizens advocacy group

Posted November 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Want to make a difference in the fight against plastic pollution in the Great Lakes? Tune in on Thursday, November 8th at 12pm CT to learn how you can take action in your community. Continue reading

There Is A Lot At Stake For Our Shared Great Lakes Environment In These U.S. Elections

The Sierra Club’s List of Candidates that People who Care about Environmental Protection Should Vote For 

From Representatives of the Sierra Club in Western New York

Posted November 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Trump has gutted environmental programs in ways that can impact lives and degrade the quality of the environment for tens-of- millions of people on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border. These U.S. elections could stop his war on the environment if the right candidates win.

(A Brief Foreword by NAL reporter and publisher Doug Draper – Anyone in the United States or Canada or anywhere else in the world who cares about the protecting the environment and the health of our planet, may already know that few other leaders in the Western world have done as much to trash environmental regulations and programs as Donald Trump.

Trump’s war on the environment is one of numerous reasons why it is so important to see people elected to key positions in this Tuesday, November 6th, mid-term elections in the United States who work to stop him before there is nothing healthy to save or pass on to future generations.

So if you are one of our American readers and you are eligible to vote in this Tuesday’s elections, please give consideration to the following list of candidates endorsed by one of North American’s oldest and most respected environmental organizations, the Sierra Club.)

Dear Friends of the Environment

We urge you to vote on Tuesday, November 6th.

Before voting, we invite you to watch short videos below of candidates the Sierra Club has endorsed who may be running in your area.

You can find out which Assembly, Senate or Congressional District you live in by clicking here

To watch a short video just click on the name of the candidate below.

If you’d like – feel free to spread these videos far and wide to your friends and networks.  The videos were shot at the Sierra Club’s Candidate Meet & Greet held October 12th at the UAW Region 9 Headquarters. Continue reading

Who Will Be Appointed Niagara’s Next Regional Chair?

Will The Ford Government Take Steps That Have An Impact On Who Gets Niagara’s Highest Political Job?

“If (the Ford Government doesn’t) like the option(s) for Chair from Council – like odds-on favorite Jim Bradley, for instance – they could open it up for someone else to run. … It could go one step further and actually appoint the next Regional Chair.”

A Commentary by Dave Augustyn, outgoing Mayor of Pelham and Niagara Regional Councillor

Posted November 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

And, so it begins.

How much of a role will Doug Ford play in picking Niagara’s next regional chair?

We are hearing rumblings of at least one – Niagara Falls Councillor Bob Gale – testing the waters in an attempt to become the 2018-22 Regional Chair.

While the new term of Council officially begins December 1st, Regional Council cannot convene until the indirectly-elected Councillors – the 12 Mayors – are officially sworn in at the local Councils.

So, on Thursday, December 6 at 10:00 AM, the Regional Clerk will officially convene the inaugural meeting. She will first administer the “Declaration of Office” for the 19 directly and 12 indirectly elected members. Continue reading

Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff Tables Petition calling on Government to expedite Rebuild of the West Lincoln Memorial Hospital

The Niagara West Community came together with more than 18,000 constituents signing the petition to save WLMH

News from the Constituency Office of Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff

Posted November 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large 

Queen’s Park –Sam Oosterhoff, MPP for Niagara West tabled a petition this past Wednesday, October 31st that called on the Government of Ontario to engage in community consultations with respect to hospital service delivery in the Niagara West region, and expedite the process of rebuilding the West Lincoln Memorial Hospital.

Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff tabling petitions on West Lincoln Memorial Hospital issue in Ontario Legislature

The petition came in response to Hamilton Health Sciences’ recent announcement of the temporary move of some important services from WLMH.

“The recent decision of Hamilton Health Sciences to potentially remove services from the hospital has caused deep concern and disappointment in my riding, and across Niagara,” said Oosterhoff,

“But I’m very grateful for the thousands of community members who have come together to fight for our Hospital.”

He noted that over 18,000 of his constituents signed the petition.  In a statement made earlier the same day, Oosterhoff assured his constituents that the PC Government was on their side.

“I know our Minister of Health is working with HHS and doing everything she can to keep the services at West Lincoln my constituents need and deserve,” adding, “I am so proud of Premier Doug Ford for coming to Niagara, hearing from local leadership about the importance of these services, and committing to work on a positive solution to the situation.”

The former Liberal government called redevelopment of WLMH a priority, promising that construction would begin by 2009 and after subsequent broken promises, the government’s 2012 budget cancelled the project entirely.

MPP Oosterhoff, on the other hand, is dedicated to turning the page on broken promises.

“I’ve said it time and time again: I will not stop fighting for the West Lincoln Memorial Hospital until the doors open on a new build.

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

 

 

Can New York State Afford Healthcare for All?

‘The belief that universal, public funded health insurance necessarily requires huge tax increases is not confirmed.’

A Commentary by Rick Clements, an outreach volunteer, based in the Buffalo/Western New York area, for the Campaign for New York Health

Posted November 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – I found out about Capaign for New York Health when I met members of the group at an information booth they set up at the Elmwood Avenue Festival of the Arts in Buffalo, New York this past August.

I reached out to them at the time with an invitation post commentary on Niagara At Large, which has a readership in the Buffalo area.

With what many U.S. commentators are calling one of the most important elections in the country’s history coming up this Tuesday, November 6th, and with the need for a health care system that is fair and affordable polling as a priority issue for many Americans, I decided to put one of the group’s commentaries on now.

Here it is, and here is hoping that Tuesday’s election ushers in a new, more positive dawn for our American neighbours, when it comes to health care and a host of other issues.)

There is nearly universal agreement that we all should be able to get necessary medical treatment when needed.  Most even believe that healthcare shouldn’t be a privilege just for those who can afford it. 

For healthcare, Americans pay about double per capita what other countries pay, while our results still fall short, leaving millions unprotected and in jeopardy of bankruptcy due to medical costs. There is clearly a need for improvement.    Continue reading

China Bound – Niagara Region’s Carmen D’Angelo to follow in the steps of Marco Polo

Wouldn’t you know the CAO would get enough votes from this outgoing Caslin-led regional council to go

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted November 2nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Region’s CAO Carmen d’Angelo is heading off to China on a trade mission for the region, even while his hiring to the CAO’s job two years ago is being investigated by the Ontario Ombudsman’s Office.

Poor Carmen D’Angelo. Should the beleaguered Niagara regional CAO keep his travel bags packed and ready to go, or not?

First we learned, through information leaked to the news media, that D’Angelo would be leading a trade mission to China this month – even while the very legitimacy of the process that got him hired to the Region’s chief administrative job in the first place is now the subject of an ongoing Ontario Ombudsman’s Office probe.

Then, this November 1st – at what was the last meeting of a regional council under the occupation of Al Caslin and his cabal before a new council of what we hope will be liberators rides in – D’Angelo announced that he has decided not go to what has been described as an “International Import Expo” in Shanghai from this November 6th through 10th because of what he called “the distraction that occurred” around news that he was going.

The last meeting of the Al Caslin-led Niagara regional council – Thursday, November 1st, 2018. Photo by Doug Draper

D’Angelo did not make clear the source of “the distraction.”

Was it the news that he – a controversial figure going back to his days as CAO at the problem-plagued Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority – was going? Or was it the tsunami of public protest that followed? Continue reading

You are Invited to Attend a Vigil in St. Catharines in Memory of Victims of Shooting at Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh

  • To Take Place on Sunday, November 4th at 6 p.m. in front of St. Catharines City Hall in downtown St. Catharines, Ontario

  • Everyone Welcome

An Invitation to All of Us, circulated by Karrie Porter, St. Catharines resident and newly elected member of St. Catharines city council

Re-Posted November 2nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario  – A candlelight vigil to remember the victims of the shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsbburgh will take place in front of St. Catharines City Hall on Sunday, November 4 at 6pm.

The vigil will also present an opportunity to stand with the Jewish community of St. Catharines in the face of a rising tide of anti-Semitism sweeping Canada, the United States and the rest of the world and affirm that the people of this city will not tolerate hate and bigotry.   Continue reading

World Wildlife Fund Report Reveals Staggering Extent of Human Impact on Planet

Humanity has wiped out 60% of animal populations since 1970, report finds

Some Urgent News from the World Wildlife Fund, one of the world’s leading organizations for fighting to save what is left of the wildlife on this planet

Posted November 1st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper’

Sue Corcoran, one of the many Niagara residents who has campaigned to save provincial significant wetlands in Thundering Waters Forest

I would like to thank Sue Corcoran, a Niagara, Ontario resident and community activist who has often been there, at public meetings and rallies, to fight for green places in our region like Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls, for being the first person to draw my attention to this very important and disturbing World Wildlife Fund (WWF)report.

In a brief note to me this October 30th, Sue Corcoran said the information in this WWF report amplifies “the importance of taking a stand” to protect what is left of our forests, wetlands and other natural places in Niagara before it is too late.

Read the WWF news release for the report below, and click on the link embedded in the release to the read the report itself. Then promise yourself that you will join the ranks of people who stand up for the protection and preservation of what is left of our life-sustaining natural heritage.

Our future and that of future generations depend on it. – Doug Draper).

Now here is the World Wildlife Fund news release –

  • Populations of mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, and amphibians have, on average, declined in size by 60 percent in just over 40 years.
  • The biggest drivers of current biodiversity loss are overexploitation and agriculture, both linked to continually increasing human consumption.
  • Given the interconnectivity between the health of nature, the well-being of people and the future of our planet, World Wildlife Fund (WWF) urges the global community to unite for a global deal for nature and people to reverse the trend of biodiversity loss.

Humanity and the way we feed, fuel and finance our societies and economies is pushing nature and the services that power and sustain us to the brink, according to WWF’s Living Planet Report 2018. Continue reading

Here Are Four Greenhouse Gas Emission Reduction Options Ontario Could Adopt

“The Ford Government has made it clear that it does not support the federal carbon pricing plan. The simplest way to break free of the federal plan is to develop a Made-in-Ontario plan that will achieve the same level of greenhouse gas reductions.”

A Message from the Ontario Clean Air Alliance, a non-partisan public interest group

Posted November 1st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Environment Minister Rod Phillips is seeking suggestions from the public on how Ontario can reduce its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

Specifically, Minister Phillips wants to create “a balanced solution that puts people first, makes life more affordable for families and takes Ontario’s role in fighting climate change seriously.” Continue reading

New Art Exhibit at St. Catharines City Hall offers ‘Abstract’ Look

Everyone is invited to the opening reception of the exhibit, Friday, Nov. 2nd, from 4-5 p.m. at St. Catharines City Hall, 50 Church Street

News from the City of St. Catharines
Posted November 1st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario – A new art exhibit completed by members of the Willow Arts Community has added a splash of colour to St. Catharines City Hall.

‘Abstract City Hall’ is currently on display on the second floor. The work, a series of colourful paintings by different artists merged together to form an abstract look at St. Catharines City Hall, was created during a Willow Arts Community workshop which was delivered by instructor Mark Roe. Continue reading