Author Archives: dougdraper

You Are Invited to a Public Forum on the Protection of Vulnerable Adults

On Wednesday, February 14th at 8 p.m., at St. Catharines’ Central Library in the City’s Downtown

A Call-Out from Niagara area MPP Cindy Forster

Posted February 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Join me and Neal Schoen on February 14 for a public forum hosted by the Niagara District Council of Women.

My proposed legislation, Bill 135, would put licensing rules in place for privately owned Supportive Living Homes. Join us next Wednesday to learn more.

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

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

 

 

 

Over Half Of All Ontario Post-Secondary School Graduates Face ‘Precarious Employment’

“Post-secondary institutions are well-positioned to take on a leadership role in pushing back against the rise of precarious, insecure employment in the province, rather than building a work model dependent on it.” – Erika Shaker, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives’ Director of Education and Outreach

News from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

Posted February 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ottawa, Ontario — Precarious employment is on the rise in Ontario’s post-secondary sector, a new study by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives has found. The report examines the prevalence of precarious work on campuses and finds that certain workers are becoming more vulnerable to precarity. Continue reading

Buffalo Area Congressman Higgins Pushes for Erie & Niagara Communities to be Nominated as Federal Opportunity Zones

Designation Would Encourage Investments in Distressed Areas

News from the Office of Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins

Posted February 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Buffalo, New York – Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) is advocating for Western New York neighborhoods to be nominated as federal Opportunity Zones, under a new program that provides tax incentives to encourage investment in designated economically distressed areas.

Congressman Brian Higgins in the Broadway Fillmore Historic Neighborhood ( 1021 Broadway ) at a building in Buffalo, New York under construction with representatives from local non-profits partnering in the Service Innovation and Impact Initiative

  “Western New York’s renaissance won’t be fully realized until it reaches into struggling neighborhoods,” said Congressman Higgins.  “The Opportunity Zone program can provide a new tool to draw needed attention into communities that would significantly benefit from investments and job creation.”   Continue reading

The Flying Monkeys Were Back This February 8th At Niagara’s Regional Council

This Time They Were After One Of Their Favorite Targets – Pelham’s Mayor & Town Council

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted February 9th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

“Gee Toto,” said Dorothy as she looked around, dazed and confused, at her new surroundings in OZ-land, “I don’t think we are in Kansas anymore.”

Maybe we were not at a meeting of Niagara’s regional council  either. It seemed more like a meeting of  the Town of Pelham’s council, given all of the discussion and material  in the agenda about the municipality’s finances,

Or maybe we were  somewhere over the rainbow in the haunted forest.

It most surely seemed so at this Thursday, February 8th’s regional council meeting because  there were those flying monkeys, swooping down through the gnarly trees, chasing after Pelham’s mayor, Dave Augustyn, and his town council again.

Last spring, some of those same flying monkeys, in the name of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s board of directors, swooped down on then fellow NPCA board member and Lincoln regional councillor Bill Hodgson, and ripped the stuffing out of him with a motion of censure for reasons that had something to do with wanting an independent, third party to audit the Conservation Authority’s books. Continue reading

Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey supports “Go North” campaign

Toronto’s bid for Amazon HQ2 means all hands on deck

“Niagara is well-positioned to contribute to the bid, which includes a strong supply chain that will benefit from such a large investment in the GTA.” – Vance Badawey

News from the Constituency Office of Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

Niagara Centre (Ontario) MP Vance Badawey

Posted February 9th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ottawa, Ontario – Vance Badawey, Member of Parliament for Niagara Centre, today emphasized the government’s commitment to putting Canada’s skilled, talented, and creative people at the heart of a more innovative future economy – one that will create middle class jobs today and tomorrow.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (has travelled)  to the U.S. on another trade and investment mission. He (met)  with Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon, (this  Thursday, February 8th. Continue reading

Ontario Building New GO Transit Station in Stoney Creek

Easing Congestion and Improving Travel Times for Families in Hamilton area

“This is the beginning of our government’s work to bring faster and more seamless transit to the area.” – St. Catharines Riding MPP Jim Bradley

News from the Constituency Office of St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley

Posted February 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario is bringing more convenient transit options to commuters and families in the Hamilton area with the construction of a new GO station in Stoney Creek.

Ted McMeekin, MPP for Ancaster-Dundas-Flamborough-Westdale, and Jim Bradley, MPP for St. Catharines, were at the future site of the new Confederation GO station today to unveil the new station sign and celebrate the station’s official ground breaking. Continue reading

Former Niagara Regional Chair To Be Honoured With Ontario Greenbelt Award

Debbie Zimmerman To Receive Award This March 2018 At Queen’s Park

A News Brief by Doug Draper

Posted February 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Debbie Zimmerman, a former chair of Niagara’s regional council who also once served as a regional council representative for Grimsby and continues to serve as CEO for the Grape Growers of Ontario, will be among five other Ontario citizens this March to receive a 2017 Friend of the Greenbelt Award at Queen’s Park,

Former Niagara regional chair Debbie Zimmerman speaking recently at a public meeting hosted by a group called A Better Niagara, which is working for positive change in the make-up of municipal government in Niagara this coming October’s municipal elections. Photo by Emily Beth

The award will be presented to Zimmerman and the others, including former Toronto mayor David Crombie, Keith Currie, Rae Horst, John MacKenzie and Leith Moore, on behalf of the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation by Ontario’s Lieutenant Governor Elizabeth Dowdeswell for their work as the Advisory Panel for the province’s 2015 Coordinated Land Use Planning Review. Continue reading

Niagara Regional Circus IS BACK! – This Thursday, February 8th at 6:30 p.m.

If You Are Afraid To Go To Regional Council Headquarters To Watch The Meeting, You Should Make Every Effort Watch It At Home.

Get Informed & Engaged In This Municipal Election Year.  And Get Ready To Vote.

Niagara’s Future – And Yours – Depends On It!

A  Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted February 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

It is circus time again in Niagara with the Al Caslin and company girding up for another one of those once-every-three-weeks full meeting of regional council this coming Thursday, February 8th at the Niagara regional headquarters off Schmon Parkway in Thorold.

It is also an important year in Niagara – possibly one of the most important years for municipal politics in decades in this region – because this coming October we have municipal elections, and we have an awful lot of work to do as voters, finding good candidates to run for our local and regional councils and sweeping a lot of bad actors out. Continue reading

Three Stooges, a Police Chief & 870,000 of Our Tax Dollars!

Come this October’s Municipal Elections, This Is But One More Reason For Sweeping Change

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted Again by POPULAR REQUEST  this February 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Curly: “Hey Moe, Larry! Here comes a cop.”                                           Moe: “Let’s hide in here. It’s a closed meeting.”                        Larry:”Hey look, it’s a computer and it’s running. “                              Moe: “It probably belongs to one of those sneaky reporters. He’s going to use it to record us and write some fake news.”                                                                                                                  Larry: “What do we do now?                                                                       Curly: “Let’s call the cop.”                                                                               Moe: “We can’t you numbskull. We just got rid of him.!”

The classic Three Stooges logo, altered with apologies to the real Curly, Larry and Moe.

The above skit might be funny if it were performed by the real Curly, Larry and Moe of Three Stooges fame.

Alas, it was not.

Retiring Niagara Police chief Jeff McGuire

We have our own stooges right here in Niagara – not least of which are our regional government’s chair Al Caslin, Port Colborne regional councillor David Barrick and Niagara Falls regional councillor Bob Gale – and what those knuckleheads have been up to both in and outside the role they are supposed to be playing as representatives for we, the people, on the Niagara Regional Police services board is not funny at all.

In fact, in one of their latest episodes on that police board, revolving around an $870,000 “retirement settlement” for Niagara Regional Police Chief Jeff McGuire, who was on contract to stay on as Niagara’s police chief until 2020, has many tax-paying citizens across the region– to borrow a phrase now famously in the news – filled with ‘fire and fury’. Continue reading

Niagara’s Largest Municipality Offers Tax Relief to ‘Ethno-Cultural Goups’

 “Ethno-cultural organizations are those that celebrate cultural heritage and help newcomers and residents establish connections throughout the community.”  

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

Posted February 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Downtown St. Catharines in Niagara, Ontario

Niagara, Ontario – Charitable or non-profit ethno-cultural organizations that own their own property but are struggling with rising operating costs can apply for property tax relief from the City of St. Catharines.

The City’s new transitional grant program offers ethno-cultural organizations that own property in St. Catharines a grant equal to 50 per cent of the City’s portion of the organization’s property taxes. Continue reading

Licensed Marijuana Facilities in Pelham/Niagara – What You Need To Know

  “By connecting with the correct party (Health Canada), who has the appropriate jurisdiction, residents will hopefully have their concerns remedied in a timely manner.” – Town of Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn.

A Message from the Town of Pelham in Niagara, Ontario

Posted February 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Pelham, Ontario – If you smell one of the rural Ontario’s newest agricultural odours you are encouraged to contact Health Canada directly. You may also want to notify the Town and your Member of Parliament.

As licensed marijuana growing facilities begin or continue operation, it is important to remember that they are federally regulated – by Health Canada – despite being physically located in and around town. Continue reading

We All Need To Stand Up Against Assaults Of Racism In Our Communities

A Comment from Niagara resident and recent Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship recipient Gary Screaton Page

Posted February 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Signs like this have been showing up across the border in Buffalo, New York in response to the toxic, racist rhetoric coming out of the Trump White House. Research has been showing an uptick in racist conduct in recent times on both sides of the Canada/U.S. border. File photo taken by Doug Draper

The increasing incidence of racist talk and action coincides with the increasing amount of racist talk and behavior of the U.S. President, Donald Trump.

While Trump is not the cause, he most certainly sets a powerful example of what it means to be racist.

We are just as vulnerable to such conduct north of the border.

There is no place for racism in either country. Everyone who values civil liberties and understands how vulnerable they are to assault must take a stand against such behavior. If all of us aren’t treated equally, then none of us can be confident that our civil rights could not be lost to us. Continue reading

Massachusetts Gets A Great Power Deal From Quebec. What Is Ontario Waiting For?

Ontario’s Wynne Government  muddles forward with plans to rebuild aging nuclear reactors at tremendous expense

A Commentary from the Ontario Clean Air Alliance

Posted Februrary 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

On the heels of signing an agreement to supply Massachusetts with enough power to meet the needs of one million homes at the barn burner price of 3 to 5.3 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh), Hydro Quebec says it is still ready to make similar deals with Ontario and New York.

Meanwhile, Ontario muddles forward with plans to rebuild aging nuclear reactors at tremendous expense and is about to hold hearings on the safety of keeping the 47-year-old Pickering Nuclear Station (surrounded by 2.2 million people) running for up to another 10 years. As a result, Ontario Power Generation has told the Ontario Energy Board that it will need to raise its price of nuclear power to 16.5 cents per kWh. Continue reading

Ontario Health Minister’s Hospital Bed Announcement Welcome

But It Is Only A Temporary Band Aid. More Is Needed.

A Message from the Ontario Health Coalition, a provincewide citizens advocacy group for health care

Posted February 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Health Coalition executive director Natalie Mehra

Toronto, Ontario – “Although the Ontaroi Health Minister’s announcemen this  past February 2nd, promising to extend funding for 1,235 ‘temporary’ hospital beds for one year, is a positive step it is only a temporary band aid that will not solve the hospital overcrowding crisis,” said Natalie Mehra, Executive Director of the Ontario Health Coalition to news media today,  “More is needed.”

Despite the Minister’s welcome announcement of 1,200 temporary hospital beds last fall, Ontario’s hospital overcrowding crisis continues.  “Flu season is not the cause of the overcrowding crisis in hospitals,” Mehra said.  “This crisis has been building for over a decade as a result of the most extreme cuts to hospital funding in Canada, resulting in severe bed shortages and hospitals stacked with sick people in halls and emergency rooms.” Continue reading

Through Ice And Snow – Winter Shipping Supports Major Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Industries, Cities

“‘t. Catharines-based Algoma Central Corporation’s freighters are carrying road salt from Compass Minerals’ mine in Goderich, Ontario to U.S. cities such as Milwaukee, Green Bay, Chicago and Detroit. Algoma also plans to deliver salt from K+S Windsor’s mine in Windsor, Ontario to Detroit and Chicago.”

A News Release from the Chamber of Marine Commerce, a bi-national association  representing more than 130 Canadian and U.S. marine industry stakeholders

Posted February 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

It may be a little-known fact, but ships deliver vital supplies such as road salt, heating oil and construction materials in the winter to cities across the Great Lakes and in the lower St. Lawrence River on behalf of North American industries.

“Every winter, ships deliver products such as road salt to promote safe travel in cities hard-hit by winter conditions, and heating oil for homes,” says Bruce Burrows, President of the Chamber of Marine Commerce. “These deliveries allow mining and energy companies to run their operations in the most cost effective and efficient way, thus safeguarding jobs in their communities.” Continue reading

Plan a Romantic Valentine’s Day with Ontario’s Niagara Parks

‘Niagara Falls will be bathed in soft pink and red lights at the top of each hour for 15 minutes, throughout the evening                      on February 14, 2018’

An Invite to All from Ontario’s Niagara Parks  Commission
Posted February 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario – From the warm, lush paradise of the Spring Show at the Floral Showhouse, to the incredible sight of the illuminated Falls from the dining room of our signature Elements on the Falls restaurant, Niagara Parks offers something for everyone this Valentine’s Day.

Valentine’s Day Illumination

File photo of Niagara Falls illuminated for Valentines Day courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission

Niagara Falls will be bathed in soft pink and red lights at the top of each hour for 15 minutes, throughout the evening on February 14, 2018 beginning at 7 p.m., providing the ultimate backdrop for couples celebrating this romantic holiday. The Valentine’s Day illumination is in addition to the regular nightly illumination of the Falls, which takes place from 6:30 p.m. to midnight that evening. Continue reading

Three Stooges, a Police Chief & 870,000 of Our Tax Dollars!

Come this October’s Municipal Elections, This Is But One More Reason For Sweeping Change

A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Posted February 2nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Curly: “Hey Moe, Larry! Here comes a cop.”                                           Moe: “Let’s hide in here. It’s a closed meeting.”                        Larry:”Hey look, it’s a computer and it’s running. “                              Moe: “It probably belongs to one of those sneaky reporters. He’s going to use it to record us and write some fake news.”                                                                                                                  Larry: “What do we do now?                                                                       Curly: “Let’s call the cop.”                                                                               Moe: “We can’t you numbskull. We just got rid of him.!”

The classic Three Stooges logo, altered with apologies to the real Curly, Larry and Moe.

The above skit might be funny if it were performed by the real Curly, Larry and Moe of Three Stooges fame.

Alas, it was not.

Retiring Niagara Police chief Jeff McGuire

We have our own stooges right here in Niagara – not least of which are our regional government’s chair Al Caslin, Port Colborne regional councillor David Barrick and Niagara Falls regional councillor Bob Gates – and what those knuckleheads have been up to both in and outside the role they are supposed to be playing as representatives for we, the people, on the Niagara Regional Police services board is not funny at all.

In fact, in one of their latest episodes on that police board, revolving around an $870,000 “retirement settlement” for Niagara Regional Police Chief Jeff McGuire, who was on contract to stay on as Niagara’s police chief until 2020, has many tax-paying citizens across the region– to borrow a phrase now famously in the news – filled with ‘fire and fury’. Continue reading

Celebrating Black History Month – This February, 2018 – Across Ontario and Canada

Statements from Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario’s NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Posted February 2nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ottawa, Ontario – The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on Black History Month:

“Today we begin Black History Month, a time to honour and celebrate the many achievements and contributions that Black Canadians have made to our country.

“The theme for this year’s Black History Month is ‘Black Canadian Women: Stories of Strength, Courage and Vision’. Jean Augustine, Viola Desmond, Michaëlle Jean, Jully Black, Afua Cooper – these are just a few women of African descent who have shaped Canada into the country it is today. Yet all too often their stories go untold. Continue reading

Hate in the Shape of a Swastika Finds Expression Near a Statue of Civil Rights Heroine Harriet Tubman in Niagara, Ontario

We Need More Community Leaders in this Region Standing Up for Decency & Respect of Others

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted February 1st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

It was two years ago this Black History Month – in February 2016 – that I joined many others in celebrating the unveiling of a statue of 19th Century heroine Harriet Tubman at an elementary school in St. Catharines, Niagara bearing her name.

On a nicer day in February two years ago, elementary school children admire a statue of 19th Century civil rights heroine Harriet Tubman, just unveiled at their St. Catharines elementary school. File photo by Doug Draper

The event was a wonderful opportunity for all of us, including the young students at the school, to learn and remember the courage and humanity of one of the most heroic standard bearers for freedom and civil rights on this continent in the last 200 years – a woman who was born into slavery and went on to guide many other fleeing slaves through what was known as the “underground railway,” even as she made her home base in St, Catharines, Ontario for most of the 1850s leading up to the American Civil War.

The unveiling of that statue of Harriet Tubman was also a proud day for its creators, former Niagara residents and artists Frank Rekrut and Laura Thompson, who had it shipped all the way from their art studio in Florence, Italy.

After I posted a story about the unveiling ceremony on Niagara At Large two years ago, I heard from friends in Massachusetts, New York and New Jersey who contacted me to say how much they– all admirers of Harriet Tubman – would like to visit school where the statue is located the next time they visit. Continue reading

You Are Invited to Public Panel Forum on the Protection Of Vulnerable Adults

 Wednesday, February 14th at 8 p.m. in St. Catharines, Ontario

An Invite from the Niagara District Council of Women

Posted January 31st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster to speak at forum

Niagara, OntarioThe Niagara District Council of Women  will be holding a February 14th  Public Forum concerning the Protection of Vulnerable Adults at 8 p.m. in the Mills Room of  the St. Catharines Centennial Library in the city’s downtown.  

Speakers are Welland (Niagara Centre) RidingMPP Cindy Forster and Neal Schoen of Justice Niagara, who will be speaking on Ms. Forster’s  proposed Bill 135, the Protecting Vulnerable Persons in Supportive Living Accommodation Act.  Continue reading

General Public Invited to University at Buffalo Faculty Jazz Quartet Concert

Thursday, February 15th at 7 p.m. in Buffalo, New York

Posted January 31th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Buffalo, New York  Since forming in 2017, the UB faculty jazz professors (aka Buffalo’s premiere jazz musicians) have been presenting clinics and concerts at high schools around town in Clarence, Williamsville, Amherst, and City Honors in Buffalo.

In February the Quartet – Bobby Militello, saxophone /flute; George Caldwell, Piano;  Sabu Adeyola, contra-bass; John Bacon, drums –  will play in concert for the general public.

Location: 836 Main Street – Scientology Building

Date: Thursday, February 15

Time: 7 pm

Admission:  $10. donation at door goes directly to the musicians

Buffalo Music Hall of Fame inductee, Militello and Grammy Award winning, pianists, ‘Best Large Jazz Ensemble Performance,’ Caldwell also serve as artistic directors for the Buffalo Jazz Collective .

For inquiries about the UB jazz concert program contact: George Caldwell –  gocaldwe@buffalo.edu / 917-318-6922

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

  Open House on Riverfront Community Planned for Thundering Waters Forest a Victory for Opposition

A Commentary by Niagara, Ontario conservationist John Bacher

Posted January 30th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

This past January 24th, 2018, the Memorial Room at the Gale Centre in the City of Niagara Falls, Ontario was packed with about 150 people. The purpose was an Open House regarding a proposed amendment to the City’s Official Plan.

This is Amendment 130, put forward by a private company, GR Canada Limited, and intended to promote a development the company and its supporters are calling “the Riverfront Community” to be built inside more than 480 acres of natural lands in the south west end of Niagara Falls known by many as Thundering Waters Forest.

Opponents of the development were more successful in getting their supporters out. A group of around twenty advocates of the development politely clapped when those who supported Riverfront did so on the basis of economic arguments such as job creation. One generated a few laughs when she said that such prosperity would allow her family to “walk in nature.” Continue reading

Ontario Government Bringing Improved Schools and More Child Care Spaces to Niagara

Province Supporting Students and Families with Major Additions To Two Schools in Thorold and One in Niagara Falls

“These additions are an important investment for the Niagara Region.” — Indira Naidoo-Harris, Minister of Education and Minister Responsible for Early Years and Child Care

News from the Ontario Government

Indira Naidoo-Harris, Minister of Education and Minister Responsible for Early Years and Child Care

Posted January 30th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The provincial government is supporting families in Niagara region with three school additions that will provide modern learning environments for students and more licensed child care spaces for families.

The expanded schools will help accommodate nearly 390 students and will include six new child care rooms with 98 new licensed child care spaces.

The new projects are: Continue reading

Fifty Years of ‘Born To Be Wild’ – Celebrating A Rebel Anthem

‘Get your motor runnin, head out on the highway.’

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted January 29th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

I was at a birthday party for one of my high school classmates in 1968 where we were each received a gift of thanks for attending.

I can’t remember what I was given but a friend of mine got a copy of record album with a five pretty wild and hairy looking guys on the cover.

The album was called ‘Steppenwolf’, which was also the name of the band  responsible for the 11 tracks of music inside, and of a very popular novel at the time by German author Hermann Hesse that this Canadian-based – previously known as ‘The Sparrows’ – renamed itself after. Continue reading

‘Islamophobia Has No Place In Canada’ – Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

It should have no place in our Greater Niagara Region either!

A Statement from Ontario’s NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Posted January 29th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Queen’s Park, Toronto – Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath issued the following statement on the one-year anniversary of the shooting at the Centre Culturel Islamique de Québec.

“One year ago today, the lives of six men were cut painfully short, and the lives of so many others were changed forever, in a cowardly act of Islamophobic violence.  Continue reading

On 1st Anniversary of Fatal Attack on Quebec Mosque, Canadians should strengthen resolve to NOT let hate win

“This was a terrorist attack against all Canadians, meant to test our resolve and weaken our values. It failed.” –  Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

From the Office of Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Posted January 29th, v2018 on Niagara At Large

Statement by the Prime Minister on the first anniversary of the fatal shooting at the Centre culturel islamique de Québec

The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today (Monday, January 29th) issued the following statement on the first anniversary of the fatal shooting at the Centre culturel islamique de Québec:

Mourners fill streets of Quebec City for vigil following fatal Mosque attack.

“One year ago tonight, a senseless attack at the Centre culturel islamique de Québec in Ste-Foy claimed the lives of six worshippers and seriously injured nineteen more. Continue reading

In the NPCA Twilight Zone, apparently a report clearing it of “any criminal wrongdoing” is cause for celebration, and for dumping – YET AGAIN – on Ed Smith

“Once again, the NPCA leadership has used language in a fashion that tends to obfuscate the truth.  The OPP found “no criminal wrongdoing”, that is not the same as finding “no wrongdoing” as the NPCA headline states.  The two are very different issues.” – Niagara, Ontario resident, retired Canadian Armed Forces Officer and fearless community activist Ed Smith

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted January 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Court Judge dismissed NPCA lawsuits against Niagara citizen Ed Smith last November. But in the alternative universe the NPCA operates in, it  is almost  like  you would  never know it.

Niagara, Ontario – It took weeks for the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) to finally disclose how much of our tax money it spent on its failed lawsuits against Niagara citizen Ed Smith, but it certainly didn’t waste any time posting a statement on its website about the fact that a yearlong investigation of the agency by the Ontario Provincial Police did not uncover anything rising to a level of criminality that it has done wrong.

Well, there’s some cause for celebration around the NPCA board table. And all the more so since the investigation was launched after police were approached by Ed Smith – a citizen in Niagara it has battled both in and outside the courts – with some questions and concerns about the Conservation Authority he believed worthy of a police probe.

“The OPP was approached by Niagara Regional Police (NRP) Chief Maguire to investigate claims brought forward by Mr. Ed Smith of St. Catharines, who claimed there was illegal activity occurring at NPCA,” says the statement the NPCA posted this January 25th on its website.

“Upon completing a yearlong investigation,” the statement says, “the OPP found no basis for the claims brought forward.” Continue reading

Act Now for a Green Tomorrow: Save Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara, Ontario!

A Free Educational Event – Wed., January 31, 2018     from 6:45 PM – 9:00 PM

A Call-Out from the Niagara Greens

A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper –

For those who may be wondering what this public meeting is about, it is about a plan driven by a China-based corporation, GR Canada, and Niagara Falls Mayor Jim Diodati and his political allies at the city and regional government level, and possibly event at the Ontario government level, to move forward with an urban development project inside more than 480 acres of woodlands, wetlands and savannah grasses known as Thundering Waters on the Ontario side of a Niagara River watershed vital to the health of the Great Lakes.

That is what it is about and is what is at stake here right now and for a healthy, sustainable future. Don’t let these short-sighted politicos and their special interest vandalize it.

Raise your voice and cast your vote in the coming provincial and municipal elections for Thundering Waters!

Continue reading

Niagara College Panel Discussion Explores Cannabis Industry in Region

“Up Cannabis is excited to be a part of the Niagara community, and we look forward to being a leading employer in the region, both now and in the years to come.”                                                   – Jennifer Maccarone, Chief Quality Officer at Up Cannabis.

News from Niagara College in Niagara, Ontario

Posted January 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – A rapidly expanding cannabis industry is set to bring positive changes to Niagara’s economic and educational landscapes.

ncTakeOff Project Manager Madison Fuller, Bill MacDonald, Coordinator of NC’s Commercial Cannabis Production program, Jennifer Maccarone, Chief Quality Officer at Up Cannabis, Chris Bittle, Member of Parliament for St. Catharines, Blake Landry of Niagara Economic Development

That was the focus of a panel discussion at Niagara College in a packed Yerich Auditorium Thursday evening. The event, hosted by ncTakeOff, the college’s entrepreneurship hub, featured a lively discussion on the future of the cannabis industry in Niagara, and how government, education and business can work together to position Niagara for success. Continue reading

Sign a Petition to give Green Party Leader a chance to Participate in 2019 Federal Election Debates

‘Any party with a seat in the House of Commons – and Canada’d Green Party Leader Elizabeth May has one – deserves a place in the debate.’

A Call-Out from the Green Party of Canada

Posted January 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Canada’s Green Party Leader Elizabeth May

Friend —

If you’ve ever seen Elizabeth May speak you’ll understand why some of the other parties want her shut out from the televised leaders’ debates. Elizabeth eloquently champions a sensible and refreshing approach to politics, and she’s not afraid to speak truth to power.

Don’t let them silence our voice — we must make sure that Elizabeth gets a fair chance to present our vision and policies to a national television audience during the 2019 campaign! Continue reading

Concerned Citizens Hold Open-House To Discuss Proposed Development Of Waverly Woods in Fort Erie

 Woods home to Red-Headed Woodpeckers, Bats, Pollinators, and other threatened species.

Liz Benneian, Executive Director and Manager of Environmental Education for Ontariogreen to speak.

A Call-Out from a Group of Concerned Ctiziens in Fort Erie/Niagara

Posted January 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A lot of the local citizens have become attached to this red fox and her kits in Waverly Woods in Fort Erie – an oasis for nature that is home to a diversity of life that citizens in the area are fighting to save from sprawling development that could go some place less damaging to what is left of Niagara’s green places. Photo courtesy of Marcie Jacklin

Fort Erie, Ontario  – Wednesday, January 24, 2018 –  A group of concerned citizens is holding an open-house, on Sunday, January 28th at Royal Canadian Legion, 130 Garrison Road, Fort Erie, to discuss the application, currently before the Fort Erie Town Council, to allow for the development of a subdivision that will result in the clearance of Waverly Woods.

If allowed, this development, known as Harbourtown Village at Erie Beach, will decimate a habitat that is one of the few remaining spring migratory stop-overs for birds in the Niagara Region, as well as a known habitat of Red-Headed Woodpeckers, which are protected under the provincial government’s Species at Risk in Ontario List. Continue reading

Statement from Ontario’s Premier in the Wake of Patrick Brown’s Resignation from the Leadership of the PC Party over Charges of Sexual Harassment

Posted January 25th,  2018 on Niagara At Large

Premier Kathleen Wynne made the following statement this January 25th:

“I first want to say that the young women who have shared their experiences are very brave. It was very courageous for them to step forward.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, now ex PC Party leader Patrick Brown

In my heart, I hope that they are finding the supports that they need now. They did a very difficult thing, and they’ve been carrying this for years. There’s an impact to them. I hope they are safe. I hope they are surrounded by loved ones today.

When I heard these allegations, I was shocked. And when I came to work this morning, I wanted to talk to people around the province who are reading this news and wondering what is going on. Continue reading

NPCA’s Failed Attempt To Sue Citizen Cost Niagara Area Tax Payers More Than A Quarter Of A Million Dollars

 “How many jobs could they have preserved with that money? How much of our environment could they have preserved with that money?” – Niagara Citizen Ed Smith

A News Commentary by Doug Draper, reporter/publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted January 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Court Judge dismissed NPCA lawsuits against Niagara citizen Ed Smith last November. The failed lawsuits have proven costly for area tax payers.

Niagara, OntarioAfter weeks of pressure from Niagara area citizens, municipal councillors and area MPPs to release the figures, the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s board of directors finally voted this January 24th to disclose how much it spent in its attempt to sue St. Catharines/Niagara resident Ed Smith.

The figure the NPCA disclosed is $146,757 – money that comes large from a pool of tax dollars the Conservation Authority gets from Niagara’s 12 local municipalities, and taxpayers in the City of Hamilton and the Haldimand County area.

That amount is in addition to another $130,000 Ontario Judge James Ramsay recently ordered the NPCA to pay Smith to cover his costs in the court case. Continue reading

Ontario PCs ‘Moving Forward’ In Wake of Leader’s Resignation

‘It Was Appropriate that Patrick Brown Resigned’ – PC Party Deputy Leaders

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE from the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party

Posted January 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A Statement from PC Deputy Leaders Sylvia Jones and Steve Clark

Patrick Brown Resigns as Ontario PC Leader

“Like everyone, we were shocked to learn of yesterday’s serious allegations.

“Harassment has no place in our society, period.

“Allegations of sexual misconduct must be taken seriously. These voices deserve to be heard.

“It was appropriate that Mr. Brown resigned as Ontario PC Leader.

“Now it’s time for the Ontario PCs to move forward together to elect a new parliamentary leader. Continue reading

Ontario’s NDP Leader  Demands Government Action On Hospital Overcrowding  

A News Release from the Office of Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Posted  January 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Hamilton, Ontario – News reports this past January 24th reveal that a number of doctors, nurses and administrators are speaking out about dangerous hospital overcrowding in the Greater Toronto Area.

Andrea Horwath, who has been raising alarm bells about growing hospital overcrowding concerns for over a year, released the following statement in response:

“Doctors and front-line health care workers are speaking out about the dangerous situations in overcrowded hospitals, and it’s time for leadership that listens to them, and takes action. Continue reading

NPCA Spent More Than $146,000 Of Our Public Tax Dollars In Its Failed Court Action Against Private Citizen Ed Smith

BREAKING NEWS from Doug Draper, reporter/publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted January 24th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara citizen Ed Smith finally saw the lawsuits the NPCA and its former CAO Carmen D’Angelo filed against him dismissed by an Ontario court judge this past November. St. Catharines city council was among parties wanting to know how much those failed lawsuits cost area tax payers.

After weeks of pressure from Niagara area citizens, municipal councillors and area MPPs to release the figures, the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s board of directors finally voted this January 24th to disclose how much it spent in its attempt to sue St. Catharines/Niagara resident Ed Smith.

The figure the NPCA disclosed is $146,757 – an amount that comes from a budget largely funded by  municipal tax dollars the Conservation Authority gets from Niagara’s 12 local municipalities, and taxpayers in the City of Hamilton and the Haldimand County area.

That amount – most of it ultimately coming from the pockets of municipal taxpayers – is in addition to another $130,000 Ontario Judge James Ramsay recently ordered the NPCA to pay Smith to cover his costs in the court case. Continue reading

Brock University Researchers Create Groundbreaking DNA Reader For Disease Detection

“The results are beautiful; there’s no doubt that the system works.”                                                                                   – Brock U. Professor of Health Sciences Ana Sanchez

 News from Brock University in St. Catharines/Niagara

Posted January 22nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario A chemist and a parasite expert at Brock University have teamed up to produce and test out a simple device that can detect diseases from DNA samples.

It’s a scaled-down version of what is normally an expensive and complicated DNA laboratory technique, yet it’s fast, inexpensive and accurate, making it ideal for use in developing countries.

From left, Brock University master’s student Tianyu Dong with Feng Li, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, and Ana Sanchez, Professor of Health Sciences.

Brock University Assistant Professor of Chemistry Feng Li’s device consists of a strip of paper attached onto a glass slide. The paper contains several rows of what look like thermometers, lines with markings projecting out of bulb-like circles. Continue reading

Ontario’s Nuclear Dreams No Match For The Reality Of Falling Electricity Demand

“Oddly, the (province’s  Premier Kathleen Wynne and her Liberal) government shows no signs of recognizing the growing mismatch between its plans to spend billions of dollars on re-building aging nuclear reactors and the ever-decreasing need for the power they would produce.” – Ontario Clean Air Alliance 

A Message from the Ontario Clean Air Alliance, a province-wide citizens group based in Toronto

Posted January 22nd, 2018 on  Niagara At Large

Since 2005, demand for electricity in Ontario has been steadily falling.  In 2017, it fell a further 3.6% meaning that demand has dropped by 16% since 2005.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne would spend billions of dollars on nuclear plants like this Pickering facility on Lake Ontario when energy demand is dropping and there are other safer, greener energy alternatives.

That is the equivalent of taking 2.5 million homes off the grid –  like unplugging all the houses and apartments in the City of Toronto twice over.

Ontario is not alone in seeing a sustained drop in demand. This is a trend that has taken hold in many countries and provinces thanks to new technologies such as super-efficient LED lighting and smart controls, cost-effective energy efficiency programs, and economic changes.

In fact, reducing the need to generate electricity in the first place has become Ontario’s lowest cost way of addressing our energy needs – the province paid on average just 2.2 cents to save a kilowatt-hour of electricity in 2016. Continue reading

Have Your Say on Planning the Future of East Fenwick in Pelham

You Are Invited to An Information Session – on Saturday, January 27th, 10 a.m. to noon – on East Fenwick Secondary Plan

News from Town of Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn

Posted January 22nd, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn

Niagara, Ontario – Town of Pelham Staff recently issued a notice about an upcoming information session regarding the East Fenwick Secondary Plan this coming Saturday, January 27, from 10:00 AM to noon at Pelham Fire Station #2. (For those unable to make the session, I will ask Staff to post materials on the Town’s website.)

This will be the third time that Town staff and planning consultants will provide information and updates of the study’s process, objectives, and the input received to date.

East Fenwick’s Secondary Plan has been explored by staff, consultants, and residents since last June, beginning with a visioning workshop followed by a design workshop. During these workshops residents had an opportunity to have their say in the plan. Town Council also received a progress report in late-November. (Please check out my “on-line journal” for a link to this presentation.) Continue reading

All Fired Up To Rally, Resist & Impeach – More Signs Of Our Times

Million of Americans are Standing Up to the Trump Destruction Machine. They Very Much Deserve and Need Our Support

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted January 21st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Signs of Our Times – Carried across the border in New York and other states this January 20-21st weekend by millions resisting the dangerous policies of Trump

I have continued to hear many of my fellow Canadians over the past 12 months since Trump was sworn in as Twitter-in-Chief in the country across the border make sweeping statements about Americans because of Trump.

“How can they be so stupid,” is one of the lines I so often hear Canadians say of Americans.

It is as if to say that most, if not   all Americans are ignorant and are racist.

It is as if to say that they are  filled with as much contempt for press, the judiciary and other democratic institutions, and as much fear and hate for people of colour as Trump and a base of supporters, largely made up of  white supremacists, evangelical Christians who are so far out that they view the Pope of the Catholic Church as the anti-Christ, and billionaire bagmen who would total the planet to drill for the last drop of oil. Continue reading

Niagara Regional Police Chaplain – Fort Erie/Niagara Resident Gary Screaton Page – Awarded “Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship”

When Times Are Bad, It’s  Important To Remember There Are Good People Doing Good Things In Our Communities

News from the Niagara Regional Police Service with a A Brief Foreword from Niagara At Large

Posted January 21st, 2018 on Niagara At Large

A Foreword from NAL reporter and publisher Doug Draper – At a time when there are a lot of bad things happening in this region, this country and this world that we ignore at our peril – at a time like this past Saturday, January 20th, when we open up local newspapers to news that those who are supposed to be our municipal leaders in Niagara are once again, through some of their own objectionable conduct and through the complicity of their own standoffishness and silence, are allowing our regional headquarters to be repeatedly used as a venue for bullying, harassment and hate speech – it is just as important to remember that there are good people among us, doing good things in our communities.

One of those good people is Gary Screaton Page, resident in the Niagara, Ontario community of Fort Erie and a long-time Chaplain for the Niagara Regional Police who, through his dedication to community, and his own sense of humanity and generosity, has spent years working with others to welcome newcomers to this region of Canada, and serve the common good in many other ways. Continue reading

Joining the Global March for Women’s Equal Place in Society

“Our work is far from done. We need to continue to show up. We need to take up our space as women, because we rightfully belong here. We need to elect women. We need to believe women. … Change is happening.” – Andrea Horwath

A Message from Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Posted January 20th,. 2018 on Niagara At Large

Statement from Andrea Horwath, Leader of Ontario’s NDP

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Sudbury, Ontario  — This morning, (Saturday, January 20th) millions of people around the globe marched for women’s rights, and I was proud to do the same, marching alongside Ontario women in Sudbury.

I marched because there are women who still make about 70 cents on the dollar for doing the same job as a man. Because it’s 2018 and there are elected folks who still don’t respect women’s equal place in society. Continue reading

A Spot-On Tweet for These Times of Super Bad Governance in Niagara, Ontario

This One on Niagara, Ontario’s Regional Government and the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

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

Posted January 20th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

I am not a big fan of Twitter or Facebook, even though I have little choice but to link Niagara At Large up with these two social media venues to reach more readers.

The texting and tweeting culture of our times, depicted in a mural painted on a wall in downtown St. Catharines/Niagara. Photo by Doug Draper

As much as some of the photos of pet dogs and cats that people post on these venues are kind of cute, I find most of what I read on Twitter and Facebook to be rather shallow and mind-numbing. And it doesn’t help the case for Twitter to have the continual bombardment of insanity coming from the Tweeter-in-Chief in the White House either.

Yet every once in a while there is a Tweet that comes my way that pins the tail on the donkey when it comes to some of the really objectionable nonsense going on out there. Continue reading

NAFTA Lawsuits Cost Canada Almost $100 Million More Than Previously Estimated: Report

“The Trudeau government has more than enough reasons to remove the undemocratic investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) process from NAFTA during the current renegotiations.”  – Scott Sinclair, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

A Report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

Posted January 20th,  2018 on Niagara At Large

Ottawa, Ontario— Canada’s  federal government has spent more than $95 million in unrecoverable legal fees defending the ballooning number of investor-state lawsuits filed against Canada under NAFTA’s controversial investment chapter, according to new data obtained by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives via an access to information request.

This newly uncovered amount is on top of the $219 million Canada has paid out in awards and settlements resulting from investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) cases filed under NAFTA. Continue reading

Ontario’s Wynne Government Accused Of Ignoring Peoples’ Bread & Butter Concerns

Niagara Area MPP Sam Oosterhoff hears of Liberal neglect at Pre-Budget Hearings 

Posted January 20th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara West-Glanbrook MPP Sam Oosterhoff

Queen’s Park, Toronto  – Sam Oosterhoff has been hearing a familiar story across the province this week. 

The (Ontario PC Party) MPP for Niagara West-Glanbrook has been visiting different cities with MPP Vic Fedeli and other colleagues as part of the annual pre-budget hearings organized by the Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs. 

Rocco Rossi of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce told the committee that job loss is already occurring from Ontario’s “increased input costs that include much higher tax levels than anywhere else in North America.” Liberal policies are taking a toll on the owners and employees of the small to medium-sized businesses which provide more than 70% of private sector jobs.  Continue reading

In Letter to Ontario Premier, Niagara Falls MPP Lashes Out At Her Government’s Record of Privatizing Hospitals & Other Vital Services

‘Where are Province’s Contingency Plans Following Liquidation of Carillion Canada – A Corporation Ontario Gvoernment Has Allowed to Buy Up Public Services’

An Open Letter from Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates to Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

Niagara Falls, Ontario MPP Wayne Gates in provincial legislature. File photo

Posted January 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Dear Premier,    

I’m writing to you … regarding the recent news that Carillion, the parent company of Carillion Canada, has filed for liquidation.

This company holds the contracts to maintain hospitals across the province and clear our roads of snow this winter. 

In short, you have sold them the contracts to keep our families safe when they travel the roads of our province in our winters. Continue reading

Wetland Downrating is a Defeat in Ongoing Effort to Save Thundering Waters Forest

Is Kathleen Wynne’s Ontario Government selling us out on protecting  Key Ecosystems in Niagara , Ontario’s Watershed?

A Commentary by John Bacher

Posted January 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara conservationist John Bacher in Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara, Ontario watershed. File photo

November 29, 2017 can go down as a dark day in the struggle to save the Thundering Waters Forest from ill-conceived development schemes.

It marks the first time in a decade of vigilance by conservationists that the extent of the protected area with the 484-acre Carolinian ecological complex in Niagara Falls, Ontario was reduced.

There have been two dramatic successes in increasing the protected area in Thundering Waters. One took place in 2010. It created the provincially significant Niagara Falls Slough Forest.  This was followed by a second in October 2017.

The second victory, denounced widely by Niagara municipal politicians, followed the recommendations of additional study of wetlands by a Peer Review of the Dougan Associates Environmental Impact Study. (EIS).  This report was only released through an access to Information request made by Ed Smith.  Continue reading

Keeping the Flame – Join a Gathering for  Peace and Solidarity in Niagara, Ontario on 1st Anniversary of Quebec Mosque Massacre

Posted January 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

On the anniversary of the  Mass Killings and Injuries inflicted on                 Praying Muslims in Quebec City on 29 January 2017

THE UNITARIAN CONGREGATION OF NIAGARA DECLARES ITS

 SOLIDARITY WITH OUR MUSLIM SISTERS AND BROTHERS OF GOODWILL EVERYWHERE

AND

 CELEBRATES THEIR CONTRIBUTION TO CANADA AND THE WORLD

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

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

 

 

 

 

 

Sign a Petition to Protect Tens-Of-Thousands of Animals from Deadly Barn Fires

A Call-Out from Niagara Action For Animals, an animal advocacy group in the greater Niagara region

Posted January 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Dear friends of animals

Following is a link to a petition asking our government to protect farmed animals from barn fires:

https://petitions.ourcommons.ca/en/Petition/Details?Petition=e-1452 

More than 470,000 farmed animals have died in barn fires in Canada between January 2015 and November 2017.  Continue reading

Canada’s Prime Minister to travel to the United States

Trudeau’s Visit To Chicago, San Francisco and L.A. – So Far, At Least – Includes No Direct Encounter With Trump

Justin Trudeau makes the cover of a 2017 issue of Rolling Stone magazine, with a caption reading – ‘Why can’t he be our president?’

News from the Office of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Posted January 19th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today announced that he will travel to the United States from February 7 to 10, 2018.

This visit – which includes stops in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Chicago – will provide an opportunity for the Prime Minister to further strengthen the deep bonds that unite Canada and the United States. Continue reading

Ontario Enhancing Enforcement Of New Minimum Wage Rules

Increased Enforcement, Penalties and Education Will Increase Compliance

“We are hiring more employment standards officers to improve enforcement. … We want to ensure everyone who works hard has the chance to reach their full potential and share in Ontario’s prosperity.” — Kevin Flynn, Ontario Minister of Labour

News from the Government of Ontario

Posted January 17th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Some Tim Hortons franchises are among some businesses in the province that have moved to cut workers’ benefits since minimum wage was hiked to $14 an hour on January 1st.

Ontario is enhancing workplace enforcement, penalties and education to ensure all new worker rights under its plan for Fair Workplaces and Better Jobs are followed. This plan includes raising the minimum wage, ensuring part-time workers are paid the same hourly wage as full-time workers, introducing paid sick days for every worker, and providing at least three weeks’ vacation after five years with the same employer. Continue reading

Teens Who Bully Will Use Those Traits To Get Sex, Brock U. Study Shows

New research by Brock University shows adolescent bullies have a higher number of sexual partners than their non-bullying peers.

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Niagara, Ontario

Posted January 17th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Brock Associate Professor of Child and Youth Studies Tony Volk

Building on previous studies on the issue, Brock Associate Professor of Child and Youth Studies Tony Volk looked at what makes teens willing and able to use bullying as a strategy to meet their sexual needs.

 “Is it being really angry? Is it being really reckless? Is it being really low in empathy? These are all common ideas to explain this behaviour,” says Volk, whose research was published last month in the journal Evolutionary Psychology Science. Continue reading

Young People In Ontario Already Benefitting from “OHIP+” and New Youth Pharmacare Program

More Than 4 Million Children and Youth Now Have Access to Over 4,400 Prescription Drugs for Free

News from the Government of Ontario

Posted January 17h, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Only 11 days into the new year, more than 220,000 young people age 24 years and under have had their prescriptions filled at no cost through OHIP+: Children and Youth Pharmacare.

On January 1, Ontario made the biggest expansion to medicare in a generation by providing drug coverage to over four million children and youth. More than 350,000 prescriptions have been filled to date under OHIP+ and the numbers continue to grow, making a real difference in the lives of people and families across the province.

Under OHIP+, more than 4,400 medications are covered, including asthma inhalers, drugs to treat depression, anxiety, epilepsy and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, antibiotics, epinephrine auto-injectors like EpiPens, insulin, diabetes test strips, oral contraceptives, some medications to treat childhood cancers and other rare conditions, and many others. Continue reading

New York State Congressmembers Denounce Preliminary Decision to Impose Duties on Canadian Paper

“The proposed duties would cause undue burden, destabilizing the (newspaper and rest of the print) industry, forcing increases in subscription rates for consumers and reducing jobs in an area already stretched thin.” – Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins

A News Release from the Buffalo, New York office of U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins

Posted January 17th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Buffalo, New York area Democratic Party Congressman Brian Higgins fights to save net neutrality rules that will impact U.S. internet users and may also hit Canadian users in the pocketbook.

Congressmembers Brian Higgins (NY-26) and Elise Stefanik (NY-21) announced opposition to the January 9, 2018 preliminary decision by the U.S. Department of Commerce to impose tariffs on paper commonly used in the print industry. 

Higgins and Stefanik are particularly concerned the measure will lead to added costs for consumers and potential job cuts for employees of large and small newspaper and book publishers across New York State and the nation. 

On August 9, 2017, North Pacific Paper Company brought a petition before the Commerce Department’s International Trade Administration (ITA) alleging paper manufactured in Canada is priced in a way that cuts into their business. Continue reading

Niagara Citizen Calls On Region’s Council For Rules To Unseat Any Elected Officials Expressing Hateful Views Toward Others

Same Citizen – Just Before Urging Crackdown On “Hate Speech” – Found Himself Smeared As A “Terrorist” By Another             Area Citizen Inside Regional Headquarters

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

Posted January 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Mohamad Al Jumaily, a young Niagara citizen, found himself being called a “terrorist” by another citizen in Niagara’s regional headquarters, before making a presentation to the regional council, asking for something to be done to curb hate speech.

Niagara, Ontario – The following scenario went down at the December 14th, 2017 special meeting of Niagara regional council – exactly one week after St. Catharines Standard reporter – wrongly accused a using his computer to record a closed door session of regional council – had his computer and notebook seized, and was ordered to leave the regional headquarters building.

A young man named Mohamad Al Jumaily – a 23-year-old Niagara resident and university student, and a Canadian citizen who was born in Iraq and who also happens to be a Muslim and a volunteer on community bodies advocating for peace and understanding – was getting ready to deliver a short presentation to members of Niagara’s regional council over concerns he and others have about some relatively recent incidents of divisive words communicated by at least one member of that council. Continue reading

Buffalo’s Citizens For Regional Transit Hosting Annual Meeting With Speaker Hal Morse, Greater Buffalo Niagara Regional Transportation Council

 Annual Meeting is Free and Open To All this Tuesday, January 16th – 5:30 to 7 p.m. – at  United Way of Buffalo & Erie County742 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY.                                Doors Open  at 5:00 p.m.

An Invite from Buffalo New York’s Citizens For Regional Transit

Posted January 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Buffalo, New York – On Tuesday, January 16, 2018 at 5:30 p.m., Citizens for Regional Transit (CRT) hosts its annual business meeting to elect 2018 officers and present the organization’s 2017 annual report. In addition, CRT President Doug Funke will lay out the organization’s vision and priorities for the upcoming year, and Hal Morse, Executive Director of the Greater Buffalo Niagara Regional Transportation Council (GBNRTC), will present a preview of the Buffalo-Niagara 2050 Metropolitan Transportation Plan. Continue reading

In Today’s World – In This Year of 2018 – We Need Dreamers Like Martin Luther King More Than Ever

A Time For Reflection on Martin Luther King Day – Monday, January 15th, 2018

“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” – Martin Luther King, Jr., from his historic ‘I Have A Dream” speech, delivered at the March on Washington, August 28th, 1963.

“A nation that continues, year after year, to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.” – from a speech Martin Luther King delivered at Riverside Church in New York City on April 4th, 2017, exactly one year to the day before his assassination – on his reasons for opposing American involvement in the War in Vietnam.

A  Brief Comment from NAL publisher Doug Draper on Martin Luther King Day

Posted January 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

If the great American civil rights icon and Nobel Peace Prize recipient Martin Luther King were alive today, he would be celebrating his 89th birthday this January 15th and one can only imagine what he would have to say about the state of his country and too much of the rest of the world 50 years later.

How could he ever dream that after more than 50 years since he and millions of his fellow Americans marched and were frequently beaten and jailed for such fundamentals as the right to vote or to use a public washroom or to sit where ever they want on a bus, there would be an individual now sitting in the White House whose every racial slur is cheered on by millions of Americans that made up his base.

How could he ever dream that more than 50 years after a Cuban Missile Crisis that brought the world to the brink of nuclear war during a nerve-rattling showdown between the United States and the then-Soviet Union, that his country would have a president who plays fast and loose with grade-school name calling with an equally volatile madman with a button in North Korea.

Here we are in 2018, when many who recall the civil rights moment and nuclear standoffs of Martin Luther King’s time, would hope humanity would have advanced far beyond that, and there are millions of people in the United States and countless millions of us in other nations around the world filled with a sense of depression and fear over how far we seem to have fallen on these fronts again.

We could certainly use a Martin Luther King today or, at the very least, we need many more of the rest of us standing up for the values he marched and died for.

Here, in partial answer to the question; ‘What would Martin Luther King be doing today,” is the cover of a January 2018 issue of the New York magazine –

In the pages of the New York magazine, the creator of this front page had this to say about the reasons behind his drawing – “I asked myself, What would King be doing if he were around today?” the San Francisco-based artist Mark Ulriksen says, about the civil-rights leader, the inspiration for this week’s cover.”

“This is 49er country, and my mom and I have been going back and forth—she’s upset that players have brought politics into sports, but I say, How would you feel if you had to show up at work every day and salute a country that treats black people like second-class citizens? I’m glad that Colin Kaepernick and Michael Bennett are making it political. I’m sure that if King were around today, he’d be disappointed at the slow pace of progress: two steps forward, twenty steps back. Or ten yards back, as the metaphor may be.”

To listen to and watch Martin Luther King deliver his “I Have A Dream” speech – a speech that should be on the curriculum in every school around the world – click on the screen immediately below –

.Something you can do close to home on Martin Luther King Day –

  • Buffalo Museum of Science celebrates Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
    10:00am – 5:00pm
    Free Admission
    For more information, call 716-896-5200 or visit www.buffalomuseumofscience.org

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

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

Warming Centres Available In Town of Lincoln During Extreme Cold

A Public Advisory from the Town of Lincoln in Niagara, Ontario

Posted January 13th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Temperatures expanded to plunge and stay very cold over weekend and well into week ahead.

Lincoln, Ontario  – The Town of Lincoln is reminding residents and agencies that Town facilities are available for warming centres during the extreme cold.

The following locations are available:

  • Fleming Centre – open daily from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. (general concourse/lobby)
  • ·        Amenities onsite include: Library (visit lincoln.library.on.ca for hours), Rinkside Café, free WiFi, uLinc transit hub
  • Town of Lincoln Town Hall lobby – open daily from 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
  • ·        Amenities include: free WiFi
  • Jordan Arena – open daily from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. (general lobby or upstairs lobby)
  • ·        Amenities include: free WiFi, concession stand (hours vary)

If you require assistance with paying your electricity, gas, oil or water bills, assistance may be available through Community Care of West Niagara or Village of Hope.

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

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

 

 

Trump Is ‘Unwelcome’ In England. He Should Be ‘Unwelcome’ In Canada Too

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted January 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

No, Donald Trump hasn’t included Canada on his list of “shithole countries” – at least not yet because maybe, just maybe, we Canadians still live in a country that is white enough.

A cover of the British tabloid The Daily Mirror sends a message out to Trump this past December

But that is no reason we shouldn’t do what our friends and allies in the United Kingdom have done and unwelcome this dangerous wing nut with his racist, homophobic, misogynous views and his ‘big button that works’ to our country.

It was reported on American cable news networks earlier this January 12th that a trip Trump was planning to take to London, England  later this year has been cancelled in the wake of  an outpouring of protests from Brits who don’t want this clown setting one foot on their soil, let alone possibly standing anywhere near their beloved  Queen for any kind of official ceremony.

Following some of his most vile comments to date – ones that involve referring to nations populated mostly by people of colour as “shithole countries” – we Canadians should follow the British lead and rev up an unwelcoming campaign for Trump’s planned visit to a G7 summit in Quebec this June.

By the way, here – immediately below – is how the front page of the New York Daily News, a popular tabloid newspaper out of New York City portrayed the Tweeter-in-Chief this January 18th.

I don’t know about you, but the thought of any of our tax money being spent on extra security for this bozo when it could be used – just as one example – to to improve water treatment facilities for Indigenous communities in our country is enough to have me throwing up in one of his ‘Make America White Again’ hats. Continue reading

Métis Scholar To Speak At Brock U. in Niagara, Ontario – Monday, January 15th

The Power Of Photovoice Research Method The Focus Of Métis Scholar Robert Henry’s Talk At Brock

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Niagara, Ontario

Posted January 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Robert Henry, a Métis scholar from the University of Calgary, is speaking at Brock University Monday, Jan. 15.

A picture is worth a thousand words — especially if it gives a voice to someone who might not be heard otherwise.

Robert Henry, Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Calgary, is speaking at Brock University Monday, Jan. 15 to share his experience of how photography and photovoice methods have shaped his research on Indigenous street gangs.

Photovoice is becoming a frequently used research method that engages research participants by having them document their experiences from their own perspectives through photographs. Continue reading

Warming Centres Open  City of St. Catharines This Weekend  – Friday thru Sunday, January 12th, 13th, 14th

The City will monitor weather forecasts and extend the availability of warming centres as needed.

News from the City of St. Catharines, Niagara, Ontario

Posted January 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Seeking a warm place from the cold

Niagara, Ontario – The City of St. Catharines’ warming centres at Market Square and the Russell Avenue Community Centre will be available this weekend for anyone who needs a place to keep warm and escape the exceptionally cold temperatures and winter weather elements.

Market Square – 91 King St. Friday, Jan. 12 open until 6 p.m. Saturday, Jan 13 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 14 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Russell Avenue Community Centre – 108 Russell Ave. Friday, Jan. 12     Open until 6 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 13 and Sunday, Jan. 14  8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Continue reading

Plenty Of Oscar Buzz In Brock U. Film Series Lineup

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Niagara, Ontario

Posted January 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Scott Henderson is equal parts movie buff and Oscar prognosticator.

As a film professor at Brock University, Henderson is one of the faces behind the Brock University Film Series, which kicks off its 2018 season at the Pen Centre’s Landmark Cinemas on Wednesday, Jan. 17.

For more than 40 years, Brock’s Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film has hosted the film series to bring some of the best in international, independent and Canadian cinema to St. Catharines.

Now part of the Toronto International Film Festival’s Film Circuit, the selection committee of professors Henderson, Anthony Kinik, Liz Clarke and Peter Lester has access to many of the most hyped films during award season. Continue reading

New Emergency Warming Centre in Niagara Falls, Ontario

A Call-Out from St. Andrew’s United Church in Niagara Falls

Temperatures expanded to plunge and stay very cold over weekend and well into week ahead.

Posted January 12th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario  – St. Andrew’s United Church in Niagara Falls will be hosting an emergency warming centre as temperatures are expected to drop this weekend. Continue reading

Niagara Area MPP Pushing For Provincial Powers To Clean House At Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

“Nobody has oversight authority over the NPCA and they should. It’s disappointing that the Wynne Liberals (Premier Kathleen Wynne and other members of the current governing party in Ontario) continue to allow the actions of the NPCA to go unchecked.”  – Welland NDP MPP Cindy Forster

Forster To Introduce Legislation To Bring Transparency And Accountability To The NPCA

Niagara MPP Cindy Forster in Ontario Legislature. File Photo

A News Release from the Office of Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

Posted January 11th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto  — Welland NDP MPP Cindy Forster says she will table legislation to bring accountability to regional conservation authorities and ensure board members have the environmental expertise necessary to perform their role, starting with the embattled Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA).

Forster’s announcement follows the Wynne Liberals voting down NDP amendments to Bill 139, Building Better Communities and Conserving Watersheds Act. Continue reading

New Book Chronicles a Niagara Resident’s Challenges and Achievements, and  Extraordinary Work as a Community Activist

Linda Crabtree’s Inspiring Autobiography is Available Now!

Posted January 11th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Linda Crabtree writes inspiring autobiography

(A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – Just as we are too often reminded that we have more than our fair share of problem issues and problem people to contend with across this greater Niagara region, it is also important to know that there are also a good number of extraordinary people out there working selflessly to make life in our communities better.

One of those extraordinary people is Linda Crabtree, a St. Catharines/Niagara resident and Order of Canada recipient who has overcome personal obstacles to fulfill goals that have helped enrich the lives of countless others.

For the purpose of full disclosure, I have known Linda Crabtree since I was hired to my first job in journalism almost 40 years ago at the St. Catharines Standard where  she was already working as a key member of the paper’s newsroom.. From the beginning, I could not help but be impressed with her decency as a person and her passion for doing things that benefited the lives of others around her.

So for everyone out there who may be looking for ways to restore your faith in humanity, or even if you are just looking for a reminder that there are good people out there, doing good things for the community, there is Linda Crabtree’s autobiography – CMT and Me – and the following outline and information on how you can get a copy.)

Linda Crabtree grew up in the Niagara, Ontario community of St. Catharines in the early 1940s when the future for a little kid with a disability wasn’t too promising.

Seventy-five years in, her autobiography – CMT and Me – chronicles her forays into education, journalism, running a charity, art, antiques, designing a home, her travels and becoming a member of the Order of Canada.  She also writes candidly about the emotional undercurrents of love, marriage, alcoholism, divorce and great loss as well as her love of dogs. Continue reading