Author Archives: dougdraper

Public Invited To Review GO Station Area Plans For Niagara At Open Houses

A News Release from Niagara’s Regional Government

Posted October 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

​Niagara, Ontario – Niagara Region is holding a series of Open Houses to give residents the opportunity to review and ask questions about land use plans (Secondary Plans) that will guide development for the areas surrounding Niagara’s four proposed GO Train station sites.

The draft Secondary Plans were developed with resident input and provide a planning framework to guide future transit-oriented development and redevelopment in and around GO Station areas. The plans provide policy direction on land use, scale of development, and improvements to infrastructure required to accommodate future growth within the station areas. Continue reading

New Citizen Science Project Asks Canadians To Track Milkweed As Part Of Monarch Butterfly Habitat

“Milkweed plants are key to the future survival of the monarch butterfly,” says Robert McLeman, associate professor in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies at Laurier University in Ontario. “Milkweed is becoming increasingly scarce (and) we need the public’s help in tracking and preserving milkweed wherever it is found, and MilkweedWatch provides a simple way of doing so.”

News from Ontario Nature, a charitable organization representing more than 30,000 members and supporters, and more than 150 member groups from across Ontario

Posted October 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Waterloo, Ontario  – MilkweedWatch, an online platform to track the presence of milkweed throughout Canada, launched Monday Oct. 9 by a team of researchers at Wilfrid Laurier University and the University of Ottawa.

The citizen science program will help Canadian scientists track milkweed, a plant that provides critical habitat for the endangered monarch butterfly. Laurier researchers are asking Canadians to enter their observations of milkweed plants using the mobile friendly website milkweedwatch.ca. Continue reading

Mr. Trudeau Goes Back to Washington

Trouble is, that nut bar named Trump is still there

A Commentary by Doug Draper, followed with a News Release from the Office of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Posted October 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“There is no relationship in the world quite like the Canada-U.S. relationship,” said Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in a statement following his two-day visit to Washington, D.C. this October 10th and 11th.

Canada’s Prime Minister back in Washington

That’s for sure.

It is a relationship that, from the Canadian perspective at least, has had more than a few bad moments, including the War of 1812 and the Fenian Raids, including one crossing in to Niagara, Ontario that saw two battles in the Fort Erie and Ridgeway areas between British sponsored militia defenders and veterans gone rogue from the U.S. army at the end of the American Civil War. Continue reading

Buffalo Area Congressman, U.S. House Committee Meet Canada’s PM to Discuss Trade, Continued Binational Collaboration

“We share a series of values with Canada – high wages, rigorous environmental standards, individual freedoms, and a commitment to shared prosperity – trade agreements provide an opportunity to promote these principles.” – U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins, representing Buffalo  and other areas of     Western New York

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

Posted October 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins

Washington, D.C. – This October 11th, Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) joined his colleagues on the House Ways and Means Committee for a bipartisan meeting with Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to discuss binational collaboration as conversations continue related to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). 

“We share a series of values with Canada – high wages, rigorous environmental standards, individual freedoms, and a commitment to shared prosperity – trade agreements provide an opportunity to promote these principles,” said Higgins.   “Previous trade agreements have failed to adequately protect American workers.  New or revised negotiated trade agreements should have standards that are explicit and enforceable with regular rigorous consultation.”  Continue reading

Alliance for the Great Lakes Releases New Report on ‘Rescuing Lake Erie’

Great Lakes Citizens Alliance calls on all of us to press our provincial/state governments for action

A Message from the Alliance for the Great Lakes

Posted October 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

This past Tuesday, October 10th, we released our new report, Rescuing Lake Erie: An Assessment of Progress.

What is washing up along some of the shores of Lake Erie

We asked the question: what is being done to clean up Lake Erie? I just presented our findings in a national webinar, and it’s not good. The governments of Ohio, Michigan, and Ontario have been slow to address the toxic algae problem plaguing Lake Erie. This is unacceptable.

With a thick, slimy layer of bright green algae covering the shores of western Lake Erie and putting people’s health at risk, we need you to tell your governor: the Lake Erie crisis is an urgent problem, and it requires urgent action. Continue reading

Pollution from New York plant swamps waters of Niagara River … AGAIN!

“Sewage system overflows are typically not black in colour.” … but overflows from this plant certainly are, and they are        highly odorous too. When are they going to stop?

A Brief News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted October 11th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

An aerial view of the massive July 29th discharge that darkened the waters of the Niagara River just downstream from the Horseshoe and American Falls.

Niagara Falls, Ontario/New York – A Niagara Falls, New York wastewater treatment plant – the source of a massive discharge waste that made international news this past summer when countless thousands of tourists watched the waters below the Falls turn inky black – has allowed let another discharge of waste reach the Niagara River, according to a recent report in The Buffalo News.

According to The Buffalo News  report, the latest discharge from the city’s aging wastewater plant occurred this past Monday, October 9th when heavy rains hitting the region caused an overflow of pollution to enter the Niagara River immediately downstream from the Horseshoe and American Falls, and darken the waters for any residents and visitors in the area to see. Continue reading

Join a Free Community Forum – This October 12th – On Newcomeers and Refugees in Niagara, Ontario

From the Niagara Folk Arts and Multi-Cultural Centre

Posted October 11th, 2017 on Niagara At LargeNIAGARA 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 binational 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

Here Is A Must-Watch for All of Us – See the PBS Frontline documentary ‘ War on the EPA’ – this Wednesday, October 11th at 10 p.m.

A Call-Out from Doug Draper, journalist/publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted October 11, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Anyone living in Niagara, Ontario or any other region of Canada who believes that what Trump is doing to environmental programs in his country is no concern of ours is nursing a very wrong and dangerous assumption.

I have had some Niagara At Large readers say to me since the Trump presidency began last January with, among other things, promises by the orange hair monster to gut environmental programs and rip up the 2015 Paris climate summit accord, that this news and commentary site should not busy itself with any of that stuff because it is of little or no relevance to people living here.

To the contrary, the threat made by Trump and the God-awful choice of the person he picked to head up the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)– Oklahoma lawyer and Republican climate denying, neo-con Scott Pruitt – to virtually cancel federal funding for restoration projects for the Great Lakes could have a profound, negative impact on literally tens-of-millions of Americans and Canadians, including people in this region, who have a direct stake in the these fresh waters for their health and economic survival. Continue reading

You Are Invited to Official Unveiling of Welland Canal Fallen Workers Memorial

Unveiling to take place Sunday, November 12th at 2 p.m.

 News from the City of St. Catharines and the Welland Canal Fallen Workers Memorial Task Force

Niagara, Ontario  – After years of research, planning and fundraising, a memorial to honour 137 workers who lost their lives during construction of the Welland Canal will finally be unveiled on Sunday, Nov. 12, 2017.

The Welland Canal Fallen Workers Memorial Task Force invites family members and descendants of the fallen workers and the entire Niagara community to be a part of the special unveiling ceremony at the site of the memorial, which is located just north of the St. Catharines Museum and Welland Canals Centre. Continue reading

Niagara Construction Icon To Receive Honorary Degree At Brock U.’s Fall Convocation

 “I’m going to tell (students at the October 13th Convocation ceremonies) that they have to get more involved today in politics. They can’t just sit back and leave it to others.” – Tom Rankin, owner of Rankin Construction

News from Brock University

Posted October 11th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Brock University honours Tom Rankin

Niagara, Ontario – Take a drive around Niagara and it’s easy to see the impact Tom Rankin has had on the region.

From parking lots to bridges, from the Meridian Centre to components of the Welland Canal, Rankin’s construction company has built much of the infrastructure Niagara residents rely on.

But as much as Rankin Construction is synonymous with major civil projects, the man behind the brand has had just as much of an impact on the community. The annual cancer run bearing his name, for example, draws around 13,000 people each year and has raised $7.5 million for local cancer care facilities.  Continue reading

Ontario & Rest of Canada Miss Crucial Deadline for Protecting Endangered Caribou Herds

National and international stakeholders call for immediate interim action given Canada’s failure to act

Please Find Out At The Bottom of this News Advisory about how you can send an email to Canada’s Minister of Environment and Climate Change and demand action on this

A News Advisory from Ontario Nature

Posted October 11th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

This past October, 5th, 2017, Canadian provinces failed to meet a key deadline for protecting threatened boreal caribou habitat. Provinces had five years to develop habitat protection plans under Canada’s Species At Risk Act, and no plan has been published at the time of this release.

In response, a broad array of stakeholders including an Indigenous voice, a conservation biologist, a former northern Ontario MP and caribou biologist, and national and international environmental groups called today for immediate interim steps to ensure the boreal caribou’s long-term survival. Continue reading

Ontario’s Niagara Escarpment Commission Sought – Some 50 Years Ago – To Protect Thundering Waters Forest Lands

“The dramatic sit-in at Thundering Waters this summer was an urgent plea that the remaining wildlife refuge at Thundering Waters be saved.”

By John Bacher

Niagara, Ontario – The current struggle to rescue the threatened Thundering Waters Forest is one that stretches back to 1968.

It was then – almost 50 years ago – that the Niagara Escarpment Commission (NEC) was founded with a mandate to develop a plan to protect the landscape stretching from Lake Ontario in our region to the northern shores of the Welland River.

A weeklong, sit-in, organized by Niagara citizens, sought to raise public awareness about the need to save Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls, Ontario from urban development. File photo courtesy of Owen Bjorgan

It took a decade of work for the NEC to prepare a preliminary proposal for public discussion. Then on February 14, 1978, its Preliminary Proposals were put forward. One of its most important recommendations was to protect the large area of forest and savannah, which has recently become known as Thundering Waters. Continue reading

Niagara Falls MPP In Partnership With Niagara Health System Announce New MRI Funding for medical scans

“I’m so pleased to see additional funding to ensure we can deliver quality healthcare to people in our community.”  – Wayne Gates, MPP for the Niagara, Ontario riding of Niagara Falls

News from the Constituency Office of Niagara Falls Riding MPP Wayne Gates

Posted October 10th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates

Niagara, Ontario — After passing a Private Member’s Motion in the Ontario legislature last year, MPP Wayne Gates is pleased to announce, alongside Suzanne Johnston President of Niagara Health, additional funding for MRI services in Niagara for the second year.

“Our motion called on the government to take action—to address the horrendous wait times for MRIs in Niagara and we’re happy that last year we saw increased funding,” said Gates. “Now this year, it is great to see additional funding from the LHIN so that MRI wait times can remain closer to the provincial average.” Continue reading

Please Join Us – Your Input Is Wanted On How To Protect & Improve Our Public Hospital In Niagara, Ontario

Bring your stories and your ideas to Public Consultation sessions in Welland and St. Catharines – October 14th, 2017

A Call-Out from the Niagara Health Coalition, a regional chapter of the Ontario Health Coalition

Posted October 10th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Support the citizens campaign to keep quality health services at the Welland hospital in south Niagara

What are the positives in your local hospitals?

Positive practices, experiences and observations about hospital care, planning, governance and management.

Your experiences accessing care or providing care.

What services are needed in your hospitals? What services have been cut? Have you tried to access care and had problems?  Continue reading

Join a Great Lakes-Wide Webinar Discussion on ‘Lake Erie in Crisis’ – Register Now!

With the Alliance for the Great Lakes – Tuesday, October 10th at 11 a.m. EST, 12 p.m CST

A Call-Out from the Alliance for the Great Lakes, a citizens network across the Great Lakes Basin

Posted October 10th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Lake Erie is in crisis. Green slime is covering the shores of western Lake Erie, miles of algae span the lake and waters in downtown Toledo are under an official recreational public health advisory. This problem is not new, but it is preventable.

Remember, when you read the above image, that the Webinar is at 11 a.m., Eastern Standard Time.

Runoff pollution, primarily from agriculture, combined with warm temperatures causes these massive, harmful algal blooms. Continue reading

NO THANKS to NPCA’s Ball’s Falls Thanksgiving Festival

I Won’t Be Buying A Ticket To It – Not This Year. I’m Not Giving This Bunch a Penny More of My Money!

A Commentary by Doug Draper, journalist/publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted October 6th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

It is bad enough that the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority – or the ‘Niagara Peninsula Development Authority’,  or whatever others have taken to calling this rogue body now – is getting some of the money I pay in property taxes each year .

It fills me with even more anger to note that we have laws on the book in Ontario that forces some of my municipal and provincial tax dollars to go to this rancid excuse for a Conservation Authority, yet our provincial government won’t do one damn thing  – it won’t do an audit or take any other action – to address concerns expressed by every day citizens, by area MPPs and by local municipalities representing some one million people across Niagara and Hamilton about how these dollars are being spent.

One of many public protests held earlier this year, at the same Ball’s Falls conservation area where the Thanksgiving Festival is taking place. File photo by Doug Draper

So to that extent, and thanks to an Ontario government that claims they have no say over how Conservation Authorities across the province are run, except to make damn sure some of my municipal and provincial tax dollars go to them, there is not much I can do to keep the NPCA in our region away from the money trough – except for one thing. Continue reading

 Niagara Region’s Council approves third-party audit on Pelham development project

A  News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted October 6th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Niagara’s regional councillors have ok’d a plan  put forward by Pelham’s town council to have a third party audit done on all  documentation to do with the development of a new community centre and arena just east of Pelham’s Fonthill downtown.

Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn

The audit was first called for by David Barrick, Port Colborne regional councillor and chairman of the regional government’s corporate services committee, in a blistering motion he tabled earlier this year that accused Pelham’s mayor, Dave Augustyn and his council of operating in such a reckless way that they are imperilling their town town’s financial health and placing the regional government’s credit rating at risk.

Augustyn repeated at a regional council meeting this October 5th, what he has said before – that he and the town council welcome such an audit if it will clear the air and convince at least  some critics that his council has invested tax dollars responsibly. Continue reading

Council of Canadians Celebrates End of Energy East Pipeline

“For all of our sakes, Kinder Morgan, Line 3, Line 10 and Keystone XL (tar sand pipelines) must face the same fate.” – Maude Barlow, Honorary Chairperson, Council of Canadians

Posted October 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

The Council of Canadians is celebrating the cancellation of the Energy East pipeline project and is available for comment.

“The end of Energy East shows that extreme energy projects are part of our past not our future,” says Maude Barlow, Honorary Chairperson with the Council of Canadians. “For all of our sakes, Kinder Morgan, Line 3, Line 10 and Keystone XL must face the same fate.” Continue reading

Join A Talk on Canada’s Indian Act and ‘working toward a vision of equity, justice and fairness’

Wednesday, October 11th in St. Catharines/Niagara

An Invite from the Niagara District Council of Women

Posted October 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines/Niagara – Join the Niagara District Council of Women for an evening of discussion on the following topic – The Indian Act -“the intent, its role in the settlement process of Canada, and how and why we must collectively as Indigenous and Allied peoples work toward a vision of equity, justice and fairness in Canada.”

Darren Thomas

Guest Speaker – DARREN THOMAS, Lecturer on Indigenous  Studies Sir Wilfred Laurier University

Darren Thomas is a member of the Seneca Nation; he is a Bear Clan, currently residing at the Grand River Territory of the Haudenosaunee. His research has focused on First Nations community development, Indigenous research methodologies, suicide prevention and colonial trauma. Continue reading

Experience Chorus Niagara’s  Premiere of “Last Light Above The World”

News from CHORUS NIAGARA, the Niagara region’s premier 100-voice symphonic ensemble.

Posted October 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Last Light Above the World: A War Litany
Honour the immense courage of individuals on all sides of war with the premiere of this deeply moving new commission by Ontario composer Allan Bevan. The power, passion and poignancy of human conflict are illuminated by chorus, soloists, narrators and orchestra. 
Chorus Niagara presents this dramatic musical work set on the battlefields and the home-front.  Captivating lyrics, drawn from the art of the day and sensitive musical expression explore the psychological and emotional devastation of the ordinary people caught up in the Great War.
London, Ontario composer Allan Bevan is widely recognized for the beauty, intensity, and craftsmanship of his choral music. His work has garnered many awards and have been performed and commissioned by many noteworthy choruses including Chorus Niagara, the Vancouver Chamber Choir, and Pro Coro Canada. He holds graduate degrees in music from the University of Alberta, and the University of Calgary, and he is an Associate Composer of the Canadian Music Centre. Dr. Bevan has approximately sixty compositions in print primarily in the catalogues of the Vancouver-area publishers Cypress Choral Music, and Classica Music Publishers. Learn more about Allan Bevan HERE

Continue reading

Ontario’s Wynne Government must take decisive stand and bar Trump’s Education Secretary from future classroom visits in the province

‘Betsy DeVos serves as Education Secretary under U.S. President Donald Trump and is unapologetic in her advocacy for “school choice” voucher programs that take public dollars away from public schools.’

A Message from Ontario’s New Deomcratic Party

Posted October 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Devos shares a warm moment with Trump at an event in Washington, D.C. last spring

Queen’s Park, Ontario —Amid mounting pressure, a plan to have U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos visit Ontario schools was cancelled this October 4th, but Ontario New Democrats say that the Wynne government’s plan to welcome her to visit at a more convenient time is not sending the appropriate message.

“We don’t know why this trip was cancelled at the last minute,” said Ontario NDP Education critic Peggy Sattler. “But for a government spokesperson to say she’ll be invited back when it suits her is not sending our kids the right message.”

“Families need their government to take a decisive stance against trans exclusion and gender-based violence and make it clear that’s not welcome in our schools. They need to hear that anyone seeking to divert public education dollars to private schools won’t get an audience with decision makers in this province.”

DeVos serves as Education Secretary under U.S. President Donald Trump and is unapologetic in her advocacy for “school choice” voucher programs that take public dollars away from public schools and give them to private schools, instead.”

“Since her appointment as education secretary, DeVos has repealed Obama-era guidelines allowing gender-neutral washrooms in schools and gutted policies on handling sexual assault cases at colleges.

“New Democrats will continue to stand with families and education advocates in speaking out against anyone who threatens strong publicly-funded education,” added Sattler.

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 binational 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

 

Niagara Region Top Upper-Tier Municipality In Canada On Open City Index

News from Niagara’s Regional Governmenst

Posted October 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario’s regional government headquarters in Thorold

Niagara, Ontario – This week, Niagara Region is plea​sed to be recognized as the top upper-tier municipality in Canada on Public Sector Digest’s 2017 Open City Index.

The Index, now in its third year, is Canada’s first study to benchmark the open data initiatives of Canadian municipalities, and examines the readiness, implementation, and impact of municipal data sets that Canadian municipalities make public and easily accessible to residents, businesses and community organizations. Continue reading

Ontario Public Sector Union Vows To Fight NPCA To The End Over Staff Cuts

“You might think you have deep pockets,” OPSEU President Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomas warns Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority managers, “but I am telling you right now that we have deeper pockets than you and we will not let up until justice is served.”

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted Ocober 4th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – If those now managing the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority think they can continue getting away with laying off front-line employees and “destroying” the NPCA as an environmental protection body in the Niagara-Hamilton region, they have more than met their match, said Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomas, President of the Ontario Public Services Employees Union, during a news conference in St. Catharines this Wednesday, October 4th.

OPSEU President Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomas

“I have dealt with some bad bosses across this province and this one ranks right up there,” said the OPSEU president during the news conference.

“You might think you have deep pockets,” Thomas added in a message aimed directly at the NPCA’s top administrators and a board of directors made up mostly of municipal politicians appointed an Al Caslin administration now running Niagara’s regional government. “But I am telling you right now that we have deeper pockets than you and we will not let up until justice is served.”

Thomas said his union , which represents a number of the NPCA’s employees, including ones from the Conservation Authority’s watershed management program who were recently let go, and which is one of the largest unions for public sector workers in the province and country, “did not pick this fight (with the NPCA). … But we will finish it,” he vowed. Continue reading

St. Catharines, Niagara offers some Thanksgiving  Weekend things to do

 An Invite to All from the City of St. Catharines in Niagara, Ontario

Posted October 3rd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

 Thanksgiving weekend offers one last long weekend to take a spin on the carousel at Lakeside Park or explore the historic grist mill at Decew Falls.

The iconic Lakeside Park Carousel has been enchanting all kids at heart for generations

Residents can enjoy the Lakeside Park Carousel from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. this weekend. The carousel closes for the season at 6 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 9. Visit http://www.stcatharines.ca/Carousel for more information. Continue reading

Celebrate Thanksgiving Weekend with Ontario’s Niagara Parks

An Invite to All from the Niagara Parks Commission

Posted October 4rth, 2017 on Niagara At Large

  • Enjoy vibrant fall foliage on full display throughout Niagara Parks, including the spectacular Niagara Glen
  • Rogers Hometown Hockey to kick off season with live broadcast in Queen Victoria Park
  • Holiday Menu and Thanksgiving Brunch at Niagara Parks restaurants
  • Special fall promotions at Niagara Parks Golf Courses

Niagara Falls, Ontario  – Niagara Parks will be offering something for everyone this Thanksgiving weekend, including a two-day celebration of Canada’s national game as the Rogers Hometown Hockey Tour launches their season in Queen Victoria Park on Saturday, October 7 and Sunday, October 8.

Countless visitors take in the Autumn colours in Niagara Parks’ Dufferin Islands above the Falls. Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission

Vibrant Fall Colours Transform Niagara Parks
Celebrate the transition to fall in Niagara as you tour the Niagara River Recreation Trail along the Niagara River and enjoy breathtaking views complemented by the bold red, orange and gold hues and fall chrysanthemums that surround you. Plan a hike throughout the over four kilometres of trails that comprise the Niagara Glen, which will offer the perfect fall scene of changing leaves overlooking the incredible Niagara River and Whirlpool below. Visit the Niagara Glen Nature Centre or the Whirlpool Aero Car for an unforgettable, panoramic view of the fall colours within the Niagara Gorge. Please visit http://www.niagaraparks.com for more information.
Continue reading

Niagara Chapter of Trout Unlimited Canada  ‘Blindsided” by Front-Line Staff Cuts at Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

NPCA Board Decision Shocks Environmental Group

“We are shocked by this action considering we had recently been in contact with (NPCA) Chair (Sandy) Annunziata who assured us of the importance of eco restoration to NPCA.” – Dennis Edell, Chair of Trout Unlimited Canada, Niagara Chapter

 A News Release from the Niagara Chapter of Trout Unlimited Canada

 Posted October 2nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The Niagara Chapter of Trout Unlimited Canada was blindsided by the uexpected decision by the NPCA (Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority) Board to close down its eco restoration program. At the time of this announcement, both organizations were working as partners on implementing a five year plan to protect and restore Niagara’s primary watershed: Twelve Mile Creek. 

“Since the formation of the Chapter, we have had a productive partnership with the eco restoration group at NPCA,” says Dennis Edell Chair of TUC Niagara Chapter. “We are shocked by this action considering we had recently been in contact with Chair Annunziata who assured us of the importance of eco restoration to NPCA.” Continue reading

Respected Voice in Niagara’s Environmental Community No Longer Has Seat On One Of  Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s Key Committees

NPCA board’s decision not to reappoint Alberta Garofalo to community liaison committee comes in same week  more front-line environmental staffers being fired out the door                       by NPCA’s management

“Now the NPCA is moving further away from what should be its mandate of environmental protection.  Those in Niagara who love natural spaces and want to preserve habitat for our wildlife species are left without a voice.  The NPCA board could have learned a great deal from Albert Garofalo if only it had listened.” – Joyce Sankey, conservation director, Niagara Falls Nature Club

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

Albert Garofalo

The purge of individuals, including more front-line staff and others, continues at a Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority that has, for all intents and purposes, gone rogue with millions of dollars of our tax money.

Albert Garofalo, a well-known and respected citizen conservation and the kind of person walking in the spirit of the late Doug Elliott and Mel Swart, people who helped found a Conservation Authority in this region more than five decades ago, learned on the last week of this past September that he will not be re-appointed to a committee that is supposed to offer some input and advice from the larger community to the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority. Continue reading

Another Condo Tower Proposal in the Niagara communtiy of Port Dalhousie?  

Sounds kind of like that fantasy of a wall Donald Trump keeps yammering about

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted October 2nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

An earlier computer rendering of a high-rise condo plan for Port Dalhousie

What if yet another development firm floats yet  another proposal  to build a high-rise condo tower in the Niagara, Ontario lakeside community of Port Dalhousie, and few Niagara residents outside of those living in Port Dalhousie itself,  pay much attention to it.

That pretty much sums up the way this Niagara residents, who got swept up some 13 or 14 years ago in the first proposal for a condo tower condo in Port Dalhousie,  feels about the latest condo proposal that was the subject of a recent public meeting I chose not to attend  in the Port town.

I mean, let’s face it. For people like me and for many heritage buffs across the Niagara region who were concerned about the fate of an officially designated ‘Heritage District’ in Port Dalhousie if a huge condo complex – assaulting a previous height restriction bylaw of about two and a half storeys by rising more than 20 storeys in the air – was constructed inside it, the horses left the barn on this issue. Continue reading

Celebrating a New Book on Early History of Beaverdams and Decew Falls areas in Thorold, Niagara

Book will be officially launched Tuesday, October 3rd, 2017 at Thorold City Council following the council meeting’s 6:30 p.m. commencement

 Here is a summary of the book – ‘Where the Beavers Built Their Dams (Heritage Thorold, 2017)’ – by Sarah King Head

 Posted October 2nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

 As a historian over the past 30-odd years, I’ve developed a pretty good sense for unearthing and giving voice to historical narratives that lie hidden – often within plain sight.

Take for example the Beaverdams area in Thorold. Everyone knows the quaint little island community has got a lot of history – especially with 185-year old Beaverdams Church as its backdrop – but aspects of its deeper history have been obscured by profound transformations to the landscape over the past two centuries. Continue reading

‘Hate, Violence And Prejudice Have No Place In Canada’

A Statement from Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath On Terrorist Attacks

Posted October 2nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Queen’s Park, Ontario  – “This morning (Monday, October 2nd), Ontario’s Members of Provincial Parliament will observe(d) a moment of silence for victims of terrorism. I’m heading into the Assembly with a heavy heart, and my mind on those in Edmonton and Las Vegas who came under attack while they were simply going about their lives.

Hate, violence and prejudice have no place in Canada, or anywhere in the world. I hope we commit, together, not to allow our communities to be torn apart by these attacks.

As Ontarians, Canadians, and citizens of the world, we must stand united against hate. Ontario’s New Democrats extend our deepest sympathies to the victims, families and communities that have been rocked by these vicious acts of terrorism.”

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 binational 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

 

Municipal Councillors across Niagara and Hamilton Can and Should Move to Dissolve the  Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

NPCA costs taxpayers millions, while falling further and further away from serving as a voice for conservation and environmental protection

Time to close the doors – For Good – on the NPCA!

A Commentary by Niagara At Larger reporter/publisher Doug Draper

Posted September 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomson, president of the 180,000-member Ontario Public Service Employees Union, summed it up well after learning this last week of September that the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority let go more of its front-line workers – this time eight employees, most, if not all of whom were involved in the NPCA’s watershed protection programs.

“This organization is putting itself out of existence,” said Thomson after the latest firings or layoffs, or whatever, the flying monkeys now running this organization want to call the culling of ever more of the employees that, at least those of us in the public that want a Conservation Authority firmly dedicated to conservation and environmental protection, had a good deal of respect for.

One of many public demonstrations fueled by concerns and questions over the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority does business with millions of our municipal tax dollars – this one last year in front of the NPCA offices in Welland.

“We are not an environmental protection agency,” Sandy Annunziata, a Fort Erie regional councillor and chair of the NPCA’s board of directors, declared himself this past June during a presentation he made on behalf of the body to the Town of Lincoln’s local council. Continue reading

Great Lakes Citizens Alliance calling on Ontario Premier, Michigan/Ohio Governors to take action on Toxic Algae in Lake Erie

Keep our water safe

An Action Alert from the Alliance for the Great Lakes

Posted September 29th,  2017 on Niagara At Large

The images are striking.

Right now, green slime is covering the shores of western Lake Erie. The harmful algal bloom plaguing Toledo and the western basin of the lake is avoidable ― but we need to act now.

Three years ago, the Governors of Ohio and Michigan and the Premier of Ontario pledged action to cut back runoff pollution that feeds the toxic algae. But progress has been painfully slow. Continue reading

Extending Minimum Wage Implementation  in Ontario Will Reduce Risk of Job Losses by 74% – Economic Analysis

 Final analysis of Bill 148 reveals $12 billion economic problem that the Ontario Government must resolve

A News Release from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Posted September 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – This September 28th, , the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce, in partnership with the Ontario Chamber of Commerce (OCC) and the Keep Ontario Working (KOW) Coalition released two major reports that broadly capture the challenges associated with Bill 148 and the concerns of the employer community.

The first report is the final economic impact analysis of Bill 148 by the Canadian Centre for Economic Analysis’ (CANCEA), which was peer-reviewed by Professor Morley Gunderson of the University of Toronto.

CANCEA’s analysis reveals that if Government were to do nothing other than implement the minimum wage increase over five years instead of in the next 15 months, jobs at risk would decrease by 74 per cent in the first two years.   Continue reading

Annual Minimum Wage Increase to Coming into Effect in Ontario October 1st

A News Release from the Government of Ontario

Posted September 29th, 2017 in Niagara At Large

Ontario is increasing the general minimum wage for the fourth consecutive year, which will bring the wage up to $11.60 on October 1, 2017.

As a part of Ontario’s plan for Fair Workplaces and Better Jobs, the general minimum wage would again increase to $14 on January 1, 2018, and to $15 on January 1, 2019, which would be followed by annual increases at the rate of inflation. Continue reading

Join a Celebration of Diversity and Welcome in Niagara Falls, Ontario

Be There for a Peaceful Gathering – Saturday, September 30th , 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. – at the Niagara Falls, Ontario end of the Rainbow Bridge

A Call-Out from the citizen-based Niagara Antiracism Coalition
Posted September 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The people of Niagara continue to welcome refugees and celebrate diversity in the face of hate.

The Niagara Antiracism Coalition (N-ARC) has organized a celebration of diversity and welcome to counter an anti-immigration demonstration planned by a hate group this weekend.

More than 500 people are expected at the celebration that will take place at the end of the Rainbow Bridge between 10AM and 2PM on Saturday, 30 September. 

The event is supported by the Unitarian Congregation of Niagara, The Niagara Regional Native Centre, Quakers in Niagara and OPIRG-Brock. It has the full endorsement of The Niagara Regional Labour Council that represents thousands of unionized workers across Niagara including Unifor, CUPE, OPSEU, CUPW, OSSTF, OECTA, Teamsters, ATU, BUFA, PSAC, and ETFO. Continue reading

Ontario’s Wynne Government Sits  On The Sidelines As Conservation Authority Layoffs Threaten The Niagara Watershed

 “The Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority is mandated to protect Niagara and parts of Hamilton’s environment for nearly a million residents. But instead of doing that, it’s been too busy firing environmental specialists and suing private citizens who dare to speak up for accountability.” – Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

News from the Constituency Office of Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

Posted September 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Welland Rding MPP Cindy Forster

QUEEN’S PARK, Ontario – Welland NDP MPP Cindy Forster says the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s (NPCA) recent move to cut staff in its watershed department in half is an assault on workers, as well as its own mandate. While this is just the latest decision from the chaotic NPCA board, the Liberal government continues to turn its back, doing nothing to ensure accountability and transparency are restored to the organization.

“The NPCA is mandated to protect Niagara and parts of Hamilton’s environment for nearly a million residents,” said Forster. “But instead of doing that, it’s been too busy firing environmental specialists and suing private citizens who dare to speak up for accountability. Continue reading

Ontario Public Sector Union Leader  Slams Niagara’s Conservation Authority for gutting watershed department

 “The Niagara watershed is too precious an asset to be auctioned off to hungry developers. Let’s get to the bottom of this right now.” – Ontario Public Service Employees Union President Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomas

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

Posted September 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – In an interview with Niagara At Large and a media release below, Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomas, President of Ontario Public Services Employees Union (OPSEU), said his union – one of the largest public sector unions in the country – will be pressing the Ontario to take action in the wake of the axing of eight more front-line jobs at the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority.

OPSEU President Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomas (right) confronts NPCA administrator (also a Port Colborne regional councilor), before one of the Conservation Authority’s board meetings this past spring. Photo by Doug Draper

“The provincial government owns this now. They can’t turn a blind eye and we are not going to let it off the hook. How can they say they care about the environment if they don’t do something about this,” said Thomas in an interview this September 29th, as news circulated that the NPCA – a publicly funded water body that was created more than six decades ago to safeguard the health of Niagara’s watersheds – has virtually wiped out front-line jobs in its watershed department.

“I don’t see how the provincial government can get around this. This is absolutely egregious,” added Thomas, whose union represents a number of what’s left of front-line employees at the NPCA and whose OPSEU health and safety representative Terri Aversa was recently refused an opportunity to speak to NPCA’s board of directors about a union-sponsored survey that alleges numerous cases of workplace at the Conservation Authority. Continue reading

URGENT NEWS – Two Niagara MPPS make case in Ontario Legislature for total overhaul of NPCA managers

Veteran Liberal MPP Jim Bradley joins the NDP’s Cindy Forster in raising serious concerns about  current state of Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority

Posted September 27th, 2017 on Niagara At Large, with a few introductory comments from NAL reporter and publisher Doug Draper

Veteran Ontario Liberal Party MPP for St. Catharines, Jim Bradley

“We saw environmentally-inclined employees being fired out the door and replaced with those who, no doubt, are less inclined to be protective of the environment … You won’t find a nicer individual than Bill Hodgson, who used to be the mayor of the town of Lincoln and is now a regional councillor from Lincoln (and who publicly demanded an independent, third party audit of NPCA operations). …. . So what happens? He gets bullied, he gets criticized and, unfortunately, he made a decision to withdraw from the board, to resign from the board. … The Mayor of Pelham, Dave Augustyn, has people after him now. He had been critical of the way the conservation authority was being run. So one of the councillor says, “Well, we’re going to have an audit of your municipality.”  , “ –  St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley

Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster in Ontario Legislature. File Photo

“I have some more news hot off the press. As of 4:30 today (September 26th), the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority continues to gut the workforce. They are now laying off eight front-line workers, perhaps nine: three in restoration, two planners, two ecological technicians and one event coordinator, as well as one vacant management position. … What a tragedy for the Niagara region. These people are the people who review development proposals. They manage the watershed program and they issue the permits around development and around building. … . I think the Ministry of Labour should be stepping in and appointing a supervisor to this workplace.” – Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster, from her address this September 27th, 2017 in the Ontario Legislature

An Introductory Commentary by Doug Draper

When it comes to this disastrous nightmare of a Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority, with a board of directors and senior administrative staff from the BOWELS OF HELL, when are more of our local and regional council members, when is the Ontario government, when is Niagara’s business community, and when are even more every days citizens across this region going to stand up and scream out –  Enough Is Enough! Continue reading

You Can Help Make Sure a Federal Bill for Protecting Heritage and Historic Sites across Niagara and Canada is Passed

Read the following Call to Action from a respected heritage activist in Niagara, Ontario and find out what you can do to help

A Guest Column by veteran Niagara heritage advocate Pamela Minns

Posted September 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large                                                                                                   

In their pre-election message October, 2015 to the heritage sector, the Liberal Party of Canada expressed their willingness to consider financial incentives for historic places.

The revitalization of downtown Thorold has received national attention and has been a project done in partnership with local heritage advocates like Pamela Minns, local businesses, Thorold’s city council and the provincial and federal governments.

 

It was understood from Anna Gainey, President of the Liberal Party, that the government would work in collaboration with the heritage sector and other stakeholders, to examine measures that promote the preservation and rehabilitation of Canada’s heritage buildings.  “We are open to measures that use the tax system that stimulate private investments in heritage buildings”. Continue reading

Deadly Houston Floods Reveal Significance of Ontario Government’s Reaffirmation of Wetland Protection

‘Wetlands (like those in Niagara’s Thundering Waters Forest) are an excellent carbon sink and a way to reduce the impact of flooding caused by climate change.’

A Guest Column by John Bacher

Posted September 27th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

The recent devastating floods in Houston, Texas caused this past August by Hurricane Harvey reveal the significance of the Ontario’s government recent refusal to give into development lobbyists to undermine wetland protections.

Destructive flooding of Houston urban areas where wetlands used to be

These protections were upheld by public pressure, largely from the Niagara region, to defend Provincially Protected Wetlands (PSWs)  located on 483 acres of natural lands in Niagara Falls, known as Thundering Waters Forest.

The Texas disaster resulted in sixty deaths and an estimated $10 billion in property damage. Its impact was intensified by the earlier destruction of wetlands, which had served as natural sponges to absorb flood waters.  The economic damage may skyrocket to the global economy since the wreckage impacts 300,000 home mortgages.

The core of Ontario’s wetland policy is the strength of the provisions to restrict development. Continue reading

Ontario Auditor’s Office Confirms It Has No Plans Now To Audit NPCA

Multiple Calls across Niagara/Hamilton  for Audit of Conservation Authority left up in the air

A News Update from Doug Draper, reporter/publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted September 25th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

A spokesperson for Ontario’s Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk confirmed this September 25th that it has turned down a request to do an independent audit of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s operations.

Citizen demonstrators at recent meeting of Niagara Penninsula Conservation Auhtoriy’s board.

The Auditor’s Office is not able to audit the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) “at this point in time because we are focused on other audits,” Christine Pedias, the Office’s manager of corporate communications, confirmed during a call from Niagara At Large this September 25th, adding that the Office is now consumed with getting its annual report on provincial operations completed for released later this Fall. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario area MP Vance Badawey consults local stakeholders on Trade and the Economy

“Niagara has a strategic advantage built within its geography when it comes to trade and transportation … for strong economic growth well into the future.” – Vance Badawey, Member of Parliament for  Niagara Centre    

News from the Office of Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

Posted September 25th, 2017 on Niagara At Large   

Niagara Centre (Ontario) MP Vance Badawey

Welland, Ontario  – Vance Badawey, Member of Parliament for Niagara Centre, met with local businesses, industry associations, post-secondary institutions, and local municipalities in order to discuss trade, transportation and the overall economic landscape in the Niagara region.

The discussion focused on the Niagara Economic Gateway corridor strategy and how the Federal government can assist local municipalities, the Region, and the Province in alleviating trade corridor bottlenecks in the Niagara region.

These discussions stem from Niagara’s designation as a Gateway Economic Zone and Centre by the Ontario Government in 2010, and subsequently being named an Economic Cluster, as well as its designation as Ontario’s first Foreign Trade Zone by the Government of Canada in 2016. MP Badawey is looking forward to working with all relevant stakeholders to capitalize on Niagara’s strengths. Continue reading

Pelham’s Mayor Welcomes Audit on Town to Clear Air, Does Not Want to take Developer’s Money

“I believe it is ethically inappropriate to accept the $50,000 because it sets an unacceptable precedent of granting wealth great influence and privilege in municipal decision-making.”

A Guest Column by Town of Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn

Posted September 25th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Niagara Regional politics got even stranger last week when a Niagara developer offered a lot of money – $50,000 – to the Niagara Region Audit Committee.

Town of Pelham Mayor and Niagara regional councilor Dave Augustyn

The proposal by the developer (Rainer Hummel of Niagara-on-the-Lake) was to get the Committee to recommend that Regional Council ask Pelham Council to audit two Town matters – a parkland over-dedication transaction and development charge credit agreement.

You may recall that some Regional Councillors started questioning Town issues on March 30, 2017 when Regional Councillors David Barrick of Port Colborne and Bob Gale of Niagara Falls put forward a motion that included 13 accusations about Pelham’s debt, finances, and property taxes.

Why at the Region?

They said the Region could talk about Pelham because the Town’s debt might impact the Region’s Standard & Poor’s AA Credit Rating. This was later disproved since the 2017 Standard & Poor’s report shows that the Region could borrow an additional $282 million before risking a credit rating downgrade. Continue reading

One WONDER-FUL Moment in Trumpland – Stevie Wonder Takes to His Knees for His Own Country, For Social Justice, and For the World!

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted September 24th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

When I finally had the great experience of seeing Stevie Wonder in concert with his then great band Wonderlove in1983, he lived up to every feeling I ever had for him as a living, breathing spirit for love, peace and justice for all.

Stevie Wonder lived up to that feeling again this past Saturday, September 23rd when, before his performance at a ‘Global Citizens Concert’ in New York City’s Central Park, he got down on his knees in solidary with National Football players who have done the same during pre-game singings of the national anthem, all in protest of disproportionate numbers of police shootings and arrests of people of colour – NFL players who America’s hater-in-chief, Donald Trump used a recent rally in racist State of Alabama as ‘sons of bitches’ who show no respect for their country’s flag, and should be fired!

“Tonight, I’m taking a knee for America,” said Stevie as countless hundreds of thousands watched the televised concert. “Not just one knee. I’m taking both knees. … Both knees in prayer for our planet, our future, our leaders of our world, and our globe. Amen.” Continue reading

Breaking News – Niagara’s Conservation Authority Claims Ontario’s Auditor General has turned down calls to audit NPCA operations

 From Doug Draper, reporter/publisher Niagara At Large

Posted September 22nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Following months of calls from growing numbers of Niagara area citizens, and a majority of local municipal councils and Provincial Members of Parliament across the Region, the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority is claiming in a media release it posted late this Friday, September 22nd that Ontario Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk’s office has informed it that it “will not be conducting a value-for-money audit of the NPCA.”

One of a number of citizen demonstration over the past several months, calling for an independent audit of NPCA’s operations. Photo by Doug Draper

According to the NPCA media release – which might be seen as a classic case of what is called a “Friday afternoon news dump” done to make it hard for others to contact appropriate parties for confirmation until the following week due to government offices being closed through the weekend – the Conservation Authority’s board “will now turn its attention to conducting additional audits beyond their annual financial audits.” Continue reading

Welcoming Wellspring Home, To Pelham!

‘For individuals and families impacted by cancer, Wellspring Niagara stands as a beacon of light and a rainbow of hope.’

A Guest Column from Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn

Posted September 22nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – On behalf of Pelham Town Council, it was my honour and privilege to participate in the special groundbreaking for a new home for Wellspring Niagara earlier this September.

Groundbreaking ceremony for Wellspring’s new home in Pelham/Niagara. Photo courtesy of Town of Pelham

Wellspring Niagara’s exceptional services are well known across the Peninsula. For more than 16 years their dedicated volunteers and staff have provided free social, emotional, psychological and informational support to people coping with cancer. Continue reading

On First Day of Fall, High Heat alert issued for Niagara Area

A News Advisory from Niagara, Ontario’s Public Health Department

Posted September 22nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword Note from NAL publisher Doug Draper – After finding ourselves digging out our long pants and fall jackets to deal with the unseasonal cold temperatures earlier this September, and now this – what could be record-setting high temperatures forecast this weekend for much of the Greater Golden Horseshoe, including Niagara, and for much of Western New York.

Pack it in with unprecedented weather events of a far more dangerous sort in the Carribean and southern United States and in parts of western Canada and the U.S., where extended periods of drought and wildfires have dominated much of the spring and summer just past.

So enjoy however bonus days of July-like weather we get knowing, as many of you who have been following the climate issue closely do, that in the long-run there may be a cost, and it probably won’t be cheap. The rest can relax as they are assured by Tories, Republicans and their corporate masters, that the whole thing is a hoax.

Now here is the Niagara Public Health Department’s heat advisory – )

​An Excessive Heat Alert has been issued today, Sept. 22, 2017, by Niagara Region Public Health as the humidex is expected to approach 40​°C over the weekend. Continue reading

Ontario, Quebec and California Join Forces to Fight Climate Change

“Climate change, if left unchecked, will profoundly disrupt the economies of the world and cause untold human suffering. That’s the reason why California and Québec are joining with Ontario to create an expanded and dynamic carbon market, which will drive down greenhouse gas emissions.” — Jerry Brown, Governor of California

News from the Office of Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

Posted September 22, 2017 on Niagara At Large

This Friday, September 22nd, Québec Premier Philippe Couillard, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne and California Governor Edmund G. (Jerry) Brown further strengthened their cooperation in the global fight against climate change.

From left, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, Québec Premier Philippe Couillard and California Governor Jerry Brown sign climate pact. Photo courtesy of Ontario Premier’s Office

Premier Couillard hosted Premier Wynne and Governor Brown in Québec City to sign an agreement linking the carbon markets of Québec, Ontario and California.

By signing this agreement to integrate and harmonize emissions cap programs, Ontario will now formally enter the Québec-California carbon market, effective January 1, 2018. This will allow all three governments to hold joint auctions of greenhouse gas emission allowances and to harmonize regulations and reporting. Continue reading

A Call from Canada’s Green Party leader for more action on climate change

“We are sleepwalking to cataclysmic planetary disaster.” – Federal Green Party leader Elizabeth May

A Message from the Green Party of Canada

Posted September 22nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – I am not a member of any political party and I do not want to be, but I am posting the following message from federal Green Party leader Elizabeth May  – even though it includes a request for donations to the party and its public interest campaigns – because I believe it is very important.

Canada’s Green Party leader Elizabeth May

It is a message that is coming from the only federal party in Canada that, during the 2015 national election, took a clear and unequivocal stance for leaving what is left in the tar sands buried in the ground and not building any more pipelines for transporting this tar to shipping docks on the coasts.

For that reason alone – given the magnitude of the climate challenges facing the planet and every form of life inhabiting it – NAL is pleased to give Elizabeth May’s continued efforts for more progressive change and action a little exposure here.

Now back to May’s message.)

Dear Friend,

“Hope is a verb with its sleeves rolled up.” – David Orr

On September 5th, we held a press conference in Vancouver with Dr. David Suzuki and Grand Chief Stewart Phillip.

The Green Party was hoping to get media attention to the imminent risk of the Liberals abandoning promises to repair environmental assessment law and the damage done by Harper. Almost no one from the media attended.

Dr. David Suzuki (left), Green Party leader Elizabeth May and Grand Chief Stewart Phillip press need for more action on climate change.

Out the windows, Vancouver Harbour was bathed in a sickly orange haze, choking in smoke from the BC forest fires. Continue reading

Buffalo Humanities Festival features acclaimed environmentalist  Bill McKibben speaking on “The Desperate Climate Fight: Ordinary People in an Extraordinary Moment”

Friday, September 29th , 8 PM (with a 7 PM VIP reception) at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery overlooking Buffalo, New York’s Delaware Park

Posted September 22nd, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Buffalo, New York  – The America/New York Buffalo Humanities Festival features environmentalist Bill McKibben speaking on “The Desperate Climate Fight: Ordinary People in an Extraordinary Moment.”

American environmentalist Bill McKibben speaks on climate crisis

The critically acclaimed environmentalist and author will speak at the Albright-Knox on issues of environmental justice and economic sustainability, local and regional activism and planning, and the global climate change crisis. Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins will introduce  him.

$20 general admission
$15 Students

Buy Tickets Online

Learn More about the Festival
Learn More about Bill McKibben

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

 

Another Dispatch from the NPCA Twilight Zone

One of the lessons from in the zone – If you don’t say anything about workplace harassment, apparently it doesn’t exist

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted September 21st, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“We have a positive and high-performing workplace, and that’s what I work at every day.”

Some protest signs outside a board meeting of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority this past April

That is what Mark Brickell, the most recently installed CAO of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority, told a reporter for one of region’s daily newspapers following the release of a report alleging a “toxic” environment and repeated harassment of employees in the NPCA workplace.

So if the Chief Administrative Officer for Niagara’s publicly funded Conservation Authority  says that, where do you go from there? Continue reading

Niagara Falls MPP presses Ontario’s Wynne government to stand up for auto industry

 News from the Office of Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates

Niagara Falls Riding MPP Wayne Gages in Ontario legislature. File photo

Queen’s Park, Toronto  – During question period this September 21st, NDP Transportation critic and Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates questioned the Liberal government regarding the ongoing strike at the Ingersoll CAMI automotive plant, which has raised concerns about automotive jobs leaving the province for production sites in Mexico.

“There are close to 3,000 CAMI auto workers who have been on strike in Ingersoll since last week. I visited them last night,” said Gates. “It’s obvious this province has no auto strategy, which means companies across Ontario can close and move production to Mexico, simply to maximize their profits. This hurts workers and the communities they live in.” Continue reading

Niagara College to offer Canada’s first-ever postsecondary program in Commercial Cannabis Production

News from Niagara College

Posted September 20th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Responding to a need for skilled graduates who are knowledgeable in the complex regulations and requirements of an emerging industry, Niagara College will launch a Graduate Certificate program in Commercial Cannabis Production in 2018 – Canada’s first postsecondary credential in the production of commercial cannabis.

Shown in the Niagara College Greenhouse are Al Unwin, associate dean of Niagara College’s School of Environmental and Horticultural Studies, and Denzil Rose, a student in Niagara College’s Greenhouse Technician program. Photo courtesy of Niagara College

The program, which was approved by the Ministry of Advanced Education and Skills Development over the summer, would prepare graduates to work in the licensed production of Cannabis, which is used as a therapeutic drug (Marijuana); fiber (Hemp) and as a source for seed oil  (Hempseed). Continue reading

Niagara Area MP Chris Bittle named new Deputy Leader of the Government in the House of Commons

 A Statement from the Office of Canada’s Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau

Posted September 20th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Canada’s Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, issued the following statement this September 19th on the appointment of Member of Parliament Chris Bittle – MPP for the Niagara area riding of St. Catharines, as the new Deputy Leader of the Government in the House of Commons:

St. Catharines Riding MPP Chris Bittle promoted to Deputy Leader post

“I am very pleased that Member of Parliament for St. Catharines, Chris Bittle, has been appointed as the new Deputy Leader of the Government in the House of Commons.

“Working closely with the Honourable Bardish Chagger, the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, Chris Bittle will encourage close collaboration and meaningful engagement with House of Commons colleagues, Parliamentary Committees, the Public Service, stakeholders, and Canadians. He will also play an instrumental role as we work to modernize the House of Commons and make it more accountable, predictable, efficient, and transparent. Continue reading

A Statement from Ontario’s Health  Minister on Province’s Opoid Strategy

In response to a deadly opoid crisis that is growing across the province and country

From  the Government of Ontario

Posted September 20th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

The following statement was issued this September 19th by Dr. Eric Hoskins, Minister of Health and Long-Term Care:

Dr. Eric Hoskins, Minister of Health and Long-Term Care

“The opioid crisis in Ontario is a tragic and growing issue, one we are continuing to work diligently to combat. As part of our government’s commitment to openness, transparency and evidence-based decision-making, we are continuing to make relevant data widely available, including to health care providers and planners working on the front lines, as well as to the public. 

Today, we have updated the Interactive Opioid Tracker with data from April 1 – June 30, 2017. As part of the $222 million announced last month to fight the opioid crisis, Ontario is making $21 million immediately available to help community-based addiction organizations in their response to this crisis.  Continue reading

We’ve Gotta Get Out Of This Place

When are the next municipal elections? Bring them on!

A Brief Message from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted September 19th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“We’ve gotta get out of this place, if it’s the last thing we ever do.”

Some of you may remember the words to that old song by Eric Burdon and The Animals, and after a whole evening this past Thursday, September 14th  of live streaming Niagara’s regional council meeting and spending this past Monday morning feeling like I had crossed over into the twilight zone at a meeting of the same government’s so-called Audit Committee, I gotta get out of this region for a day and decompress.

Port Colborne regional councilor David Barrick and Niagara’s superhero for open democracy and fiscal accountability wins his month’s long bid for an “independent, third-party audit of the Town of Pelham’s books.

Sitting at that audit committee meeting, watching Port Colborne regional councillor David Barrick (also a senior manager at the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority), scolding someone else (in this case a lawyer for the Town of Pelham) and  declaring outrage at the lawyer’s refusal to answer his questions about the town’s financial business, then declare that  he was plowing ahead with his inquiry as a way of standing up for  open democracy, was too much  magic bus and purple haze.

It was like – get me the hell out of this asylum.

Sometimes it is  best not o post the words that immediately come to mind after such alternative reality episodes.

So I will have more to say about this and about the growing number of  Niagara At Larger  readers and citizens in this region who are just plain saying; “Let’s get rid of regional government,” when I return from my retreat this September 21st.

In the meantime, this day of escape is kind of like that old line about banging  your head against a concrete block. “It feels so good when you stop.”

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 binational 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

 

Ontario’s Niagara Parks celebrates  80th Anniversary of Oakes Garden Theatre

Rededication event celebrates the extensive rehabilitation work undertaken at Oakes Garden Theatre

80th Anniversary celebrations include special Canadian citizenship ceremony

News from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted September 19th on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, OntarioIn a ceremony held today, The Niagara Parks Commission was pleased to rededicate the awe-inspiring amphitheatre, Oakes Garden Theatre, in celebration of the venue’s 80th anniversary.

Oakes Garden Theatre near the Falls. Photos courtesy of Niagara Parks

Oakes Garden Theatre and its associated Rainbow Gardens are outstanding examples of design and architecture created to specifically act as a dramatic gateway to Canada. Influenced by the City Beautiful architectural movement of the mid-20th century, the venue was first opened to the public with an original dedication ceremony held on September 18, 1937. Continue reading

Ontario College Faculty Vote To Fight Precarious Work

Strike Looming  at Ontario Colleges As Full-Time Faculty Jobs Disappear, Part-Time Faculty Numbers Soar.

“It is a shame that so many students have enrolled in post-secondary education only to find a strike looming that might cost them their semester. The provincial government has thought to provide financial assistance to students but neither the government nor college management seem to have considered those                   who teach them..”

A News Commentary by Melissa McGlashan, a citizen activist in Niagara, Ontario and member of the South Niagara chapter of the Council of Canadians

Posted September 18th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

On September 13th, 2017 Niagara At Large reported that “more than one-third of all full-time college and university students in Ontario are receiving free tuition thanks to the new Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP).”

Niagara College alone is reporting a record high enrolment of over 10,000 students. It is a shame that there may not be any faculty at Ontario’s colleges to teach these students.

The current contract for faculty at Niagara College and Ontario’s 23 other provincial colleges expires on September 30, 2017. At a vote held September 14, Ontario’s 12,000 college faculty gave their bargaining team a strike mandate.  

One of the major issues that the union wants addressed is precarious work. Continue reading

You are Invited to a Talk on Coping with the Loss of an Animal Companion

An Invite from Niagara Action For Animals, an animal advocacy & assistance group for animals in Niagara, Ontario

Posted September 18th, 2018 on Niagara At Large

Dear Friends of Animals –

Niagara Action for Animals (NAFA) is hosting an evening with Aleisha Murray on Monday September 25th from 7 – 9 p.m. at the NAfA house – 94 Welland Avenue, St. Catharines.

Amongst other things, Aleisha will discuss how one can honour the passing of their companion animals. Please RSVP if you are coming, so that we can arrange sufficient refreshments and also if we have a great deal of interest, we may have to arrange a 2nd evening or afternoon. Continue reading

Take Heart Niagara, We had Buffy here for the Celebration of Nations!

A nod to something REALLY GOOD that happened in Niagara this past week

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted September 15th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

With all of the crap that rained down on our heads this past week around the God-awful Niagara Peninsula Development Authority (or was that once the Conservation Authority?) and regional council, it does one’ body and soul well to recall that we had legendary Canadian singer/songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie, in our midst, if only for a few precious days.

Buffy Sainte-Marie injected some welcome words of wisdom, strength and inspiration into the Niagara scene this last September 8-10 weekend, and we sure needed them.

Here all the way from her haven of a home in Hawaii, Buffy was at Niagara’s FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre in downtown St. Catharines this past September 8th and 9th for the weekend-long ‘Celebration of Nations’ with friends and neighbours from this great continent’s Indigenous communities.

On the opening night of the Celebration, the Juno, Golden Globe and Academy Award-winning artist performed in concern at the Arts Centre and the following afternoon she joined a panel discussion with Canadian dancer Santee Smith,   Allison Fisher, executive director of Ottawa’s Wabano Centre for Aboriginal Health, and artist Denise Bolduc, recipient of the 2017 Ontario Arts Council Indigenous Award, in a ‘Moccasins Talk’ on activism, resistance and resilience. Continue reading

New York Governor Slams Niagara Falls, N.Y. Water Board while State  slaps it with $50,000 Fine for July weekend waste discharge to Niagara River

“Read damage was done here,” says Governor Andrew Cuomo of discharge incident

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted September 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo has always seemed like the type of non-sense guy you wouldn’t want to do something that gets him upset with you.

The dark, oily, foul-smelling blob can be seen surrounding Maid of the Mist boat and dock area near American side of Niagara River on July 29th.

And he certainly proved that to be the case this September 14th when he made a trip to Niagara Falls, N.Y. to let those responsible for operating that city’s wastewater treatment plant how he feels about what a shabby job he feels they did on the last Saturday of this past July when a large, inky looking and foul-smelling blob of pollution entered the Niagara River from their plant, just downstream from the American and Horseshoe Falls were countless thousands of tourists could see and smell it.

For that discharge and other recent ones the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation has records of entering the river from the city’s plant, Cuomo, as The Buffalo News reported in a story published this September 15th, cited the Niagara Falls, N.Y. Water Board for a “’lack of training, lack of systems, lack of processes’, and he called the board’s operational violations ‘inexcusable’.” Continue reading

On ‘Day of Democracy’, Prime Minister urges us to ‘talk about what democracy means in our communities’

“I call on all Canadians to get informed and involved. By using our voices as forces for positive change, we can strengthen democratic norms and institutions.”

Niagara At Large urges you to read this statement and think about the disgusting mess we have at the regional government level, right here in Niagara, Ontario

A Statement by Canada’s  Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, on International Day of Democracy

Posted September 15th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement to mark the International Day of Democracy:

“Today, we join our partners in the United Nations to celebrate the International Day of Democracy. We take the opportunity to recognize the freedoms that democracy affords us – and remind ourselves of the responsibility we all share to keep our democracy strong.

“This year’s theme – Democracy and Conflict Prevention – highlights the indivisible links between peace and democracy. Canada recognizes the critical need to strengthen democratic norms and institutions around the world to promote peace and stability. Continue reading

Flunking Communications 101 – A Case Study in how not to engage the Community in a Public Meeting

Just one more in what seems like a never-ending series of NPCA hoof-in-mouth-disease debacles

A Brief Commentary from Linda Babb

Posted September 15th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

‘When you find yourself in a hole – stop digging’ could be the advice the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s communications specialist Michael Reles and Chair Sandy Annunziata should heed.  

Giving twelve days’ notice, on Thursday, August 31, 2017, the NPCA placed a full page ad in a weekly newspaper, Niagara This Week, with a heading for the ad reading;  “Conservation & Community Strategic Plan Review.”

Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority board chair and Fort Erie regional councilor Sandy Annunziata, seated in the middle, appears to be making some sort of weird gesture while then-acting CAO Peter Graham, seated to the left and now reportedly no longer with the NPCA, and administrative assistant Lisa Conte, seated to the  right and now reportedly gone or a about to go to another job in the regional government, flank him at an NPCA board meeting last March.

“The NPCA Strategic Plan set forth goals for an organizational transformation.  Now, the 2014 – 2017 Strategic Plan is nearing completion,” the ad went on to say.  “The NPCA needs to hear from our partners, stakeholders, and community.  Have your voice heard by registering to participate in specialized feedback sessions.  Register now to attend.”

In light of consistently negative comments and media coverage regarding the NPCA, lack of information about whether or not they have actually requested the Ontario Auditor General to conduct the full fiscal audit demanded for months, questionable expense claims by Chair Annunziata, allegations of bullying a member of the public and an OPSEU report the NPCA being a “toxic workplace, it is perfectly understandable that the NPCA might wish to improve the image of the organization. 

It would seem a good idea to hold a public meeting to invite their “partners, stakeholders and community” to attend a meeting to “have their voices heard”. 

Interested individuals immediately went to the website to “register to attend” – what a great opportunity to express concerns and make recommendations! 

And yet – on September 8th I received acknowledgement of my interest in attending as follows – “Thank you for your interest in the NPCA Strategic Plan Review.  Due to the overwhelming response, I regret to inform you that the review session is full and we could not reserve a space for you.  Again, thank you for your interest. Should you wish to provide feedback on the 2014-2017 Strategic Plan, you may submit your comments in writing to me. I have attached the outline of how we wish to receive feedback on the Plan should you choose to do so.”

Eager to participate, I then asked for confirmation of the venue – on September 11 the response I received was -“Attendance is limited to only those that have been confirmed.”  I look forward to your written submission.”

Then, at 3.22 pm on September 12, I received, along with many others, an email that read – “On behalf of Sandy Annunziata, Chair of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority Board of Directors, and aligning with his position that all voices should be heard, we have made accommodations to increase the number of attendees at tonight’s Strategic Plan Review meeting.  All those who have registered to attend the meeting will be granted entry and will be able to participate fully in tonight’s discussion. Please be prepared to provide your input on the execution of the 2014-2017 Strategic Plan.”

Within ONE day – the “overwhelming response”, which precluded all others who “registered”, was no longer an impediment!!  How marvellous and how magnanimous of Chair Annunziata! Those who had been denied could now be “granted entry” and how magnanimous of Chair Annunziata!!

One could interpret or respond to this in different ways, but the most glaring observation is that on Monday September 12, MPP Cindy Forster delivered a strong speech at Queens Park in which she roundly condemned the practices of the NPCA. 

Is anyone else making the connection here?  Can anyone else see ‘extreme damage control’ going into effect?  How well did that work? 

A total of about seven people were in attendance!  Unarguably an “overwhelming response.”

As I said initially, when you find yourself in a hole – stop digging.

About Linda Babb – After over ten years in the political arena in the British Columbia Legislature and twenty more in Public Relations, Linda Babb, now a resident of Niagara, is committed to demanding and restoring accountability at all levels of government.

A little late-breaking news on this one from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper –

One of the signs that welcomed members of the public outside a meeting of the NPCA board this past spring. What message was being communicated here?

In the wake of all the clamour from Niagara area residents who registered for the September 12th meeting referred to above, only to be told there was no room for them, then later told something else, there are now reports that whoever the flying monkeys are in charge of the NPCA a, have  decided to hold another meeting on or around September, possibly as a way of offering more proof to the old axiom that two wrongs don’t make a right.

As someone who got suckered in to wasting numerous precious volunteer hours some three or four years ago sitting on a committee that made recommendations for the NPCA’s strategic plan on how to better communicate with and engage the public in the Conservation Authority’s work, guess who won’t waste one more precious minute of his going to another one of this body’s meetings? ….

Unless, I get some advance word that the province is finally going to come in and fire the whole upper management and board. I will certainly show up for that one!

         Doug Draper

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

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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

Significant Wildlife Declines revealed across Canada in new World Wildlife Fund study|  

Read this report and think Thundering Waters

One of the actions we need to take to stop the decimation of wildlife, according to the study – “Expanding Canada’s network of protected areas” – not gut or reduce them!

We have to quit focusing on writing these obituaries for nature,” she added. “Because what we really need is to start problem solving.” – Julia Baum, a marine biologist at the University of Victoria in British Columbia

An Alarming Report from World Wildlife Fund – Canada

Posted September 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword to this report from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – While you are reading through the findings and recommendations in this disturbing report, think about natural places like Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara – a sanctuary, now under assault, for some of the last remaining wetlands, forests and savannah grasses, and one to a diversity of birds, amphibians and other wildlife in our region of Ontario – and think about the all too many elected leaders in Niagara who are prepared to gut this area in the name of growth and prosperity.

One of the many frogs those camping in and visiting Thundering Waters Forest earlier this August spotted in the wetlands. Photo courtesy of Owen Bjorgan

Think about the fact that we can and should elect leaders that have the will and vision to bring growth and prosperity to our Niagara region without gutting what is left of our precious places for nature and wildlife.

One of the recommendations in this World Wildlife Fund-Canada report speaks to the need across Ontario and the rest of the country for more “citizen-based conservation,” and goes on to read – “By helping to monitor wildlife as citizen scientists and protect and restore habitats, individuals taking action collectively will help reverse the decline of wildlife.” Continue reading

Niagara Falls Greens gearing up for next year’s provincial election

Join a meeting of the Niagara Green Party on September 23rd

News from the Niagara Falls Green Party

Posted September 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – September is Democracy Month for the Niagara Greens!

With less than a year to go before the next provincial election, the Niagara Falls Green Party is kicking into gear and taking action NOW!

Do you know what local democratic action looks like? Do you know how local ridings are founded and what being a member means? Ready to get involved?

The Niagara Falls Green Party members are coming together to educate, act and grow on Saturday September 23rd. Continue reading