We Plan A Different Kind Of Garden Sharing For 2020
News from Garden Walk Buffalo, organizers of one of North America’s most popular urban garden tours
Posted May 6th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Buffalo, New York – Garden Walk Buffalo will not be held as a two-day walking tour this year. Gardens Buffalo Niagara and the Garden Walk Buffalo committee are planning a different kind of garden sharing – transforming the 2020 Garden Walk to adapt to these unprecedented times.
One of the countless great displays that may still be available at Garden Walk Buffalo 2020, with social distancing. Photo by Doug Draper
In light of current national and local social distancing restrictions, Garden Walk Buffalo will become Buffalo Garden Views: Sharing in July, a “virtual garden month.”Continue reading →
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Residential, farm and small business customers continue to benefit from temporary relief measure
Government has also decided to extend “Emergency Orders” for Playgrounds and a Host of Other Locations and Activities. See Details Below
A COVID-19 Update from the Office of the Ontario Premier
Posted May 6th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
TORONTO — The Ontario government is extending emergency electricity rate relief to families, farms and small businesses until May 31, 2020 during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Customers who pay time-of-use electricity rates will continue to be billed at the lowest price, known as the off-peak price, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
This electricity rate relief, initially provided for a 45-day period starting on March 24, 2020, has been extended by an emergency order under the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act. The rate relief is intended to be in place for an additional 24 days.
“During this extraordinary period, many people are struggling to pay the bills as they do the right thing by staying at home, as well as our farmers and those whose businesses have closed or suffered reduced customer traffic,” said Premier Doug Ford.Continue reading →
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Read On to Find Out More About Live-Streamed Events
A Message from Juliet Dunn, Executive Director / Artistic Producer of Niagara Jazz Festival
Posted May 6th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – I do hope that you are keeping well and staying safe during these uncertain times. As we are still in lockdown we are doing live-streamed events every Friday and Saturday from 7 pm – 8 pm.
We are also performing for the #NiagaraPerforms series presented by the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre. Please include in your listings and we’ll look forward to having public events and gatherings soon!
The BPO – in a “difficult decision” – has suspended its remaining 2019-2020 season concerts
The BPO at Kleinhain’s Music Hall . No concerts in the theater for now but see link below for info about the Orchetra and how you can watch performance broadcasts.
News from the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (BPO)
Posted May 6th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Buffalo, New York – The BPO has made the difficult decision to extend its previously announced suspension of concert activity at Kleinhans Music Hall through June 13, the end of the the regular 2019-2020 season.
The BPO musicians, staff and board are extremely disappointed that we will not be able to finish out the season.
We held hope that we would be able to return to the Kleinhans stage sooner rather than later, but we continue to follow governmental guidelines and it became clear last week that any return will take much longer than anyone had anticipated.Continue reading →
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“Earlier this morning (May 4th, 2020), I joined leaders from other countries, and from civil society and industry, to work together on accelerating the global development of COVID-19 vaccines, treatments, and testing. …We all share a common goal – ending this pandemic.” – Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
Meanwhile, United States So Far Gives the Finger to this Global Initiative, As It Prepares to Declare Itself “Open For Business”
A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper at Niagara At Large, followed by a News Release from the Government of Canada
Posted May 5th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A Commentary by Doug Draper –
As doctors, nurses and medical researchers around the world work frantically to save lives and develop treatments and ultimately a cure for the killer virus that continues to plague us, how positive and promising it is to see Canada join dozens of other countries in Europe and elsewhere in a global effort to combat COV ID-19, and to find a vaccine that may forever grant us immunity from it.
That is what the mission of the recently created and launched international initiative, Coronavirus Global Response that Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau discussed in the following news release is all about.
Not so surprisingly, Trump and the purveyors of an “America First” brand of xenophobia around him – just as they have abandoned the international movement to address climate change, and have insulted and threatened many of America’s long-time friends and allies – is so far not listed as one of the countries participating in the Coronavirus Global Response initiative.Continue reading →
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A Comment from Niagara resident Linda McKellar, on the 75th Anniversary of Canadian Forces Liberating the Netherlands
Posted May 5th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Children from Holland welcome back Canadian veterans during 70th anniversary, in 2015, of the liberation of the Netherlands
A dear late friend, Douglas Peeler from Welland, volunteered although he was under age and fought to liberate the Netherlands. He was a big, cheerful man and in his later years with his white hair and beard he looked like a jolly Santa Claus.
Decades after the war a citizen he met there located him, invited him back and he took part in a parade as the star attraction leading the parade in a Jeep. He was featured in newspapers there and his wife has the photos and clippings.
One evening I was hosting Doug, his wife and another couple for dinner and he said about that honor; “I must have done something good”.
Brock University in Niagara Creates COVID-19 Student Emergency Bursaries
A Call-Out from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario
Posted May 5th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
The unrelenting compassion we have witnessed from our Brock University community during the past several weeks has been nothing short of inspiring. We are incredibly proud of our community’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and cannot thank our essential service and healthcare workers enough for their sacrifices.
As an institution, Brock University has been dedicated to responding to the pandemic in positive ways, from forging new partnerships, swiftly implementing new ways of learning and providing financial aid to students through the creation of our COVID-19 Student Emergency Bursaries.Continue reading →
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A COVID-19 Update from Ontario’s NDP Official Opposition Party
Posted May 5th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
QUEEN’S PARK — The NDP Official Opposition says today’s shocking drop in COVID-19 testing shows the Ford government is failing to ramp up testing to meet its own new, lowered target for tomorrow May 6th), even while using testing data as a justification for re-opening parts of the Ontario economy.
* Ford’s initial target: 18,900 tests per day
* Ford’s downgraded target for this week: 16,000 tests per day by May 6
* Tests completed May 4: 14,555
* Tests complete May 5: 10,654
On Monday, the national average was 24,460 tested per million people, but Ontario was only testing at 22,715 per million. Alberta, by comparison, is testing 34,800 per million, or 42 per cent more tests.Continue reading →
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Canadians greeted with jubilation as Netherlands is liberated from Nazis 75 years ago this May 5th
“On this day 75 years ago today, Canadians accepted the surrender of German forces in the Netherlands, marking the end of the suffering of the Dutch people, who had endured years of unspeakable cruelty, misery, and hunger.” – Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
A Statement by the Canada’s Prime Minister on the 75th anniversary of the Liberation of the Netherlands
Posted May 5th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Ottawa, Ontario –The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, issued the following statement today on the 75th anniversary of the Liberation of the Netherlands:
“Today, on the 75th anniversary of the Liberation of the Netherlands, we honour the incredible courage and sacrifices of the Canadians and Newfoundlanders who fought, and those who gave their lives, to liberate the Netherlands from the tyranny of Nazi Germany.
“The campaign to liberate the Netherlands saw two Canadian army corps fighting together for the first time. Led by Lieutenant-General Charles Foulkes, members of the 1st Canadian Corps fought alongside members of the 2nd Canadian Corps, led by Lieutenant-General Guy Simonds.
Both groups battled through the country’s villages, cities, canals, and farmlands to drive out the occupying Nazi forces. Continue reading →
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Remembering the Shootings at Kent State University – 50 Years On
Find Out How You Can Virtually Attend the 50th Anniversary Commemoration at Kent State – this Monday, May 4th, 2020 at Noon – by clicking on a link in the Commentary below.
A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted May 4th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
The cover of an issue of Life Magazine, published May 15th, 1970.
“It’s still hard to believe I had to write this song,” said Neil Young in liner notes for ‘Decade’, a compilation of some of his best songs from the late 1960s and early 1970s.
“It’s ironic that I capitalized on the death of these American students,” he went on. “Probably the biggest lesson ever learned at an American place of learning.”
The song was ‘Ohio’, recorded 50 years ago this May, and still regarded by some of the best in the business of reviewing music as one of the more powerful protest songs ever recorded
The place of learning was Kent State University, located in verdant, rolling hill country south of Cleveland, Ohio, where on a Monday – May 4th, 1970 – four days of campus protest against the seemingly endless and pointless slaughter of human life that was the Vietnam War morphed in to ‘apocalypse now’ when soldiers from the Ohio National Guard trained their guns, loaded with steel-jacket bullets, on a large crowd of student protesters and opened fired.
This iconic photo of a young person, in agony and disbelief, over the body of Jeffrey Miller, brought the horror of the whole thing home for millions around the world. Photo journalist John Filo won a Pulitzer Prize for this photo that will forever sum up the horror that unfolded that day.
Within a matter of seconds, four students (two of them onlookers who were not even involved in the protests) were dead, and nine others were injured – one of them paralyzed for life.
Shot dead and etched in some of our collective memories forever were; William Schroeder, 19, Allison Krause, 19, Jeffrey Miller, 20 and Sandra Scheuer, 20.
“This is a very unfortunate situation. We’re working to our fullest capacity to prevent further spread of this virus and protect the health and well-being of our patients, staff and physicians.” – Derek McNally, Niagara Health’s Executive Vice President Clinical Services and Chief Nursing Executive
A COVID-19 Update from Niagara Health, Niagara, Ontario’s amalgamated system of hospitals
Posted May 3rd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara Falls, Ontario – This weekend, on May 2nd, Niagara Health declared an outbreak of COVID-19 on Unit D, an inpatient unit at the Greater Niagara General Site in Niagara Falls.
This outbreak follows an outbreak declared ths past May 1st on the site’s Trillium Unit.
A total of 13 patients and four staff from the Trillium Unit and Unit D tested positive for COVID-19.Continue reading →
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More Than 100 Groups Urge Ford Government Not To “Reduce or Constrain” Conservation Authorities’ Mandate for Protecting our lands, waters and wildlife
We count on our Conservation Authorities to have the mandate they need to work with other parties to protect and preserve places like this – Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls, Ontario Photo courtesy of Lori Monroe
“Any effort to reduce or constrain the mandate of Conservation Authorities is contradictory to the interests of the people of Ontario who are facing enormous risks and costs as a result of climate change and ongoing biodiversity loss. The roles and responsibilities of Conservation Authorities are critical in protecting the lands, waters and wildlife which benefit businesses and communities across Ontario, and upon which our health and well-being ultimately depend.” – from a letter more than 100 environmental groups across Canada have sent to Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his Government
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug DraperPosted May 1st, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Here is some good news for Mother Earth, and hopefully for the watersheds, along with the wetlands, woodlands and meadows they host, across Ontario and our Niagara Region.
While so much focus has understandably been on the COVID-19 breakout over the past few months, more than 100 of Canada’s most renown environmental and environmentally-minded groups spent some of their time this April preparing and sending an urgent letter to Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his Tory government.
The groups that sent the letter include – just to name a few – the Canadian Environmental Law Association (CELA), Ontario Nature, Environmental Defence, David Suzuki Foundation, Ontario Society of Professional Engineers, World Wildlife Fund Canada the Sierra Club of Canada, Ontariogreenand Niagara, Ontario’s own Niagara Falls Nature Club, Bert Miller Nature Club and Preservation of Agricultural Lands Society(PALS).
The letter (a link for which is included below) calls on the Ford government not to compromise the Ontario Conservation Act in ways that weaken the ability of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NCPA) and the 35 other Conservation Authorities in the province to protect and preserve the health of vital watersheds in the regions the Authorities serve.
Good for all of these groups have come together at a difficult time like this to take this stand.
“There are no circumstances where this type of language is acceptable, and it only serves to denigrate a member of our community and degrade our public discourse.” – Jim Bradley, Chair of Niagara Regional Council in Niagara, Ontario
A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper, followed by a Statement from Niagara Regional Chair Jim Bradley
Posted May 1st, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A Commentary by Doug Draper, journalist, Niagara At Large –
St. Catharines Regional Councillor Laura Ip target of a repugnant verbal attack
I read about the totally out-of-line and disgusting words reportedly used by a member of the Niagara community in order to, in some sick way, humiliate and smear St. Catharines Regional Councillor Laura Ip in a story that was posted by The St. Catharines Standard this April 30th.
Niagara Regional Chair Jim Bradley is absolutely right to call the language, used by this person, who has run for political office in Niagara and, thankfully, has never won, “repugnant,” to say the least.
With so many other serious things going on in our lives and our world right now, my initial thought was not to post anything about this sewage here, much less possibly give the individual in question some perverse satisfaction by mentioning his name.
Yet, since Jim Bradley and his council were good enough to issue the following statement, I certainly want to put it on for the sake of Councillor Ip, and for another reason, which is this. Continue reading →
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A COVID-19 Update from Niagara Health, Niagara, Ontario’s amalgamated system of hospitals
Posted May 1st, 020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara Falls, Ontario – Niagara Health today (this Friday, May 1st) declared an outbreak of COVID-19 on the inpatient Trillium Unit at the Greater Niagara General Site in Niagara Falls.
This outbreak was declared as a result of a healthcare-associated case involving a healthcare worker on the unit.
Contact tracing by our Infection Prevention and Control & Occupational Health and Safety teams has determined that this case is linked to a healthcare worker previously identified as a community acquired COVID-19 case.Continue reading →
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“In the past 50 years or so, aquatic invasive species have expanded in the Great Lakes as a tremendous conservation concern, causing billions of dollars’ worth of damage. Both Canadian and American authorities are concerned about the potential impact of these species on the Great Lakes and are very interested in installing barrier technologies in the Niagara River that would slow or stop their spread.” – Nathan Lujan, lead author of the study and a Gerstner Scholar at the American Museum of Natural History
A Report from the American Museum of Natural History
Posted April 29th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
New research shows that fishes on either side of Niagara Falls—one of the most powerful waterfalls in the world—are unlikely to breed with one another.
The Horseshoe Falls on the Niagara River
Knowing how well the Falls serves as a barrier to fish movement is essential to conservation efforts to stop the spread of invasive aquatic species causing ecological destruction in the Great Lakes. The study has been published in the journal Molecular Ecology.
“In the past 50 years or so, aquatic invasive species have expanded in the Great Lakes as a tremendous conservation concern, causing billions of dollars’ worth of damage,” said Nathan Lujan, lead author of the study and a Gerstner Scholar at the American Museum of Natural History.
“Both Canadian and American authorities are concerned about the potential impact of these species on the Great Lakes and are very interested in installing barrier technologies in the Niagara River that would slow or stop their spread.”Continue reading →
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A Call-Out from the Ontario Health Coalition, a citizens organization advocating for quality public health care in Ontario
Posted May 1st, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Dear Fellow Ontarians
COVID-19 is spreading exponentially in Ontario’s long-term care homes. The homes already suffered critical staffing shortages and inadequate levels of care before COVID-19. Now the situation is an emergency.
The Ford government has made improvements to testing, and their recent announcement to improve wages for frontline workers was a huge step forward to improving long-term care for workers and residents. We need to make sure these wage increases become permanent and get Doug Ford to address other systemic issues in long-term care.Continue reading →
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51-Year-Old Arlene Reid was a Home and Community Care Services Worker in the Greater Toronto Area
Union Representing Personal Support Workers Demands More Protective Measures from Ford Government
A Statement from Ontario NDP Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath, followed by words from the Union representing Personal Support Workers
Posted April 29th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Arlene Reid, one of the many brave people who continued caring for people in Ontario during this pandemic crisis, Now she is gone too. Just calling them “heroes” isn’t enough.
QUEEN’S PARK — NDP Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath released the following statement in response to news of a COVID-19 death of a personal support worker (PSW):
“I am deeply saddened to learn about the death of another health care hero to COVID-19 in Ontario. My heartfelt sympathies go out to her family, friends, and union brothers and sisters as they grieve her loss. The sorrow of losing a loved one, friend and co-worker is even more painful during this pandemic, when people can’t gather to remember and console each other.
We must continue to keep health-care heroes in our thoughts as they take on incredible risks to continue to provide our loved ones with compassionate care in the middle of a pandemic, but the province also has to do more to keep them safe on the job by ensuring they have the personal protective equipment they need.”Continue reading →
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Here is How You Can Add Your Voice to the Call – No public funding for corporations that dodge taxes
“Canada loses at least $8 billion in revenues each year to international corporate tax dodging.” – Canadians for Tax Fairness
“More of Canada’s peers, including France, Denmark and Poland, announced recently they will restrict corporations that use tax havens from receiving COVID-19 financial aid. Canada should also take action to keep public funding from making tax-dodging corporations and their executives richer.” – Canadians for Tax Fairness
A Call-Out to All of Us from Canadian for Tax Fairness, citizens advocates for a fairer tax system in Canada
Posted April 29th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A number of countries including France, Denmark, and Poland recently announced they won’t provide COVID-19 financial aid to companies that use tax havens.
Canada should bring in similar rules to prevent our public money from padding the profits of corporations that abuse tax havens to hide their wealth and dodge Canadian taxes. Please tell Finance Minister Bill Morneau that public funding shouldn’t go to corporations that don’t contribute their fair share.Continue reading →
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COVID-19 is spreading exponentially in Ontario’s long-term care homes. The homes already suffered critical staffing shortages and inadequate levels of care before COVID-19. Now the situation is an emergency.
The Ford government has made improvements to testing, and their recent announcement to improve wages for frontline workers was a huge step forward to improving long-term care for workers and residents. We need to make sure these wage increases become permanent and get Doug Ford to address other systemic issues in long-term care.Continue reading →
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Now More Americans Have Died from this Plague than were Killed During More Than Ten Years of Vietnam War
A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted April 28th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Okay Folks, you may want to pour yourself a big tall glass of lemon-flavoured Lysol or Clorox bleach for this.
Remember when the self-described “stable genius” in the White House boasted that the United States only had about 15 confirmed cases of COVID19, and that “within a couple of days, (the cases of Coronavirus) is going to close to zero.”
It will be “a miracle” the man in the White House that so many right-wing, evangelical Christians who worship him as if he were the ‘Second Coming’ declared.Continue reading →
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One of the many feathered friends Marcie Jacklin and others are fighting to save a home for in the Waverly Woods in the Niagara, Ontario town of Fort Erie.
Long-time Field Naturalist Marcie Jacklin Receives Niagara Falls Nature Club’s Top Conservation Award
R. W. Sheppard Award for 2020 presented virtually to Marcie Jacklin
News from the Niagara Falls Nature Club in Niagara, Ontario
Posted April 27th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A Brief Congratulatory Foreword by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large –
Through the 1980s and 90s, back in the days when The St. Catharines Standard had a full-time environment reporter and I was fortunate enough to be it, one of the people across this Niagara region who I was fortunate to meet was Marcie Jacklin, a resident of Fort Erie and long-time member of the Niagara Falls Nature Club.
Niagara, Ontario field naturalist extraordinaire Marcie Jacklin is honoured with Niagara Falls Nature Club award
A super nice, intelligent, community-minded person with a passion for nature, Marcie was not only into birding or “bird watching” as some would call it, she was actively involved in chronicling information about pollutions of bird species and the state of their habitat in Niagara – information that remains critically important for measuring the health of the environment we all need to survive, and to prosper over the long term.Continue reading →
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“Even during the difficult pandemic recovery, we should prioritize environmental protection. …
“This Earth Day give Mother Earth the gift of individual commitment and urge your public officials to provide necessary funds to protect her. Maybe if we apply the lessons learned from the pandemic, we can save our children’s future — and countless lives of the species we share Earth.” – Fred Koontz, a retired conservation scientist living in the U.S. State of Washington
This Article was written and shared by Fred Koontz, a Retired wildlife conservation scientist from the State of Washington, U.S.A.
Posted April 28th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
(A Brief Foreword Note from Doug Draper at Niagara At Large –
The 50th anniversary, on April 22th, 2020, may have come and gone, but in the spirit of one wise adage; ‘Let’s make every day Earth Day,” Niagara At Large is posting this great article by a veteran conservation scientist on how we can come out of the terrible times this pandemic makes for by reshaping priorities in government, in community life and in our personal lives for a healthy and for the health of all who live on it.
So please give this article a read. The messages Fred Koontz shares in it are as valuable to Canadians as they are to people in his country.)
Now here is the Article from veteran conservationist Fred Koontz –
As we celebrate Earth Day, one positive outcome of the pandemic is that it might inspire some states to modernize their fish and wildlife departments, including in Washington State where I live.
Torres del Paine National Park, Chile (Photo: Fred Koontz, 2019
However, more likely is that by rushing to recover the economy, the pandemic will delay improvements. We have an opportunity to transform our state natural resource agencies’ historic environmental focus on recreation and the consumptive use of nature to a timelier goal that prioritizes protecting environmental integrity to sustain our economy, security, health and well-being.
Even during the difficult pandemic recovery, we should prioritize environmental protection.Continue reading →
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“On this Day of Mourning (for fallen workers), I’m launching the fight to ensure that all workers during this pandemic have presumptive WSIB (workplace safety insurance) coverage for COVID-19.”
A Message from NDP Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath
Posted April 28th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Ontario NDP and Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath
“Today (ths April 28th), I stand in Solidarity with workers across Ontario and Canada in marking and especially solemn and painful National Day of Mourning.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, we have essential workers in our hearts, including health care workers and public health staff, first responders, pharmacy and grocery store staff, farmers, truckers and supply chain workers. We are filled with sorrow for people who have been infected at work, and we mourn the loss of workers who have died from this terrible virus.Continue reading →
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“Ontario’s greenhouse gas pollution will rise sharply in the future – due in part to a return to business as usual post-COVID-19. … If we stick with Doug Ford’s plan, Ontario will not reach its 2030 climate target.” – Ontario Clean Air Alliance
A Call-Out from the Ontario Clean Air Alliance, a not-for-profit citizens group advocating for clean air and clean energy solutions
Posted April 28th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Ontario’s greenhouse gas pollution will rise sharply in the future – due in part to a return to business as usual post-COVID-19, but also because the Ford government plans to ramp up the use of polluting gas plants by more than 400% to replace the Pickering
If we stick with Doug Ford’s plan, Ontario will not reach its 2030 climate target and electricity costs for Ontario consumers will continue to rise as costly nuclear rebuild projects proceed.
Fortunately, our new report,Phasing-Out Ontario’s Gas-Fired Power Plants, outlines a better solution – an integrated combination of clean waterpower imports from Quebec, with strong energy efficiency efforts in Ontario and the development of cost-effective wind power in both provinces.
This combination can supply more than enough energy to keep our lights on while also allowing us to phase out the use of gas-fired electricity.Continue reading →
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Premier and Ministers Commit to New Phased Approach for a Safe Restart and Recovery
A COVID-19 News Update from the Office of Ontario’s Premier
Posted April 28th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
TORONTO —This April 27th, the Ontario government released A Framework for Reopening our Province, which outlines the criteria Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health and health experts will use to advise the government on the loosening of emergency measures, as well as guiding principles for the safe, gradual reopening of businesses, services and public spaces.
The framework also provides details of an outreach strategy, led by the Ontario Jobs and Recovery Committee, to help inform the restart of the provincial economy.Continue reading →
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Out of this Pandemic, Let’s Build a ‘New Normal’ that is Better for Our Lives and the Planet
A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted April 27th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
This Sunday, April 26 was the last day of Earth Week in Canada – a very special one that included the 50th anniversary of the very first Earth Day engaged in by tens of millions of people around the planet.
And I heard so many people say how depressing it is – thanks to this awful pandemic that has us shut in our homes – that we could not go out and participate in any rallies or marches, or tree-plantings or trash cleanups in observance of this milestone Earth Day, and in recognition of all the urgent environmental challenges we continue to face.
I have also heard many lament how much the crisis we are facing with COVID-19 has taken most or all the attention away from the climate emergency that was just beginning to receive the attention it deserves, thanks mostly to younger people like now 17-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg.
For many environmentalists, the year 2020 began on a high note with young climate activist Greta Thunberg on the cover of Time as the magazine’s Person of the Year
It wasn’t all that long ago, back in the final week of December, 2019, that Greta Thunberg and the great fight she and so many others are waging against climate-ravaging carbon pollution, made the cover of Time Magazine, as she was named ‘Person of the Year’. And yet, somehow, no thanks to this killer virus, it now seems so very long ago.
I have also heard many people say, even as they despair over the attention the virus has taken away from the climate fight, that they hope things will soon “go back to normal.” Some say they fear things will never go back to normal.
In some respects, I share these feelings. I wouldn’t mind enough normal coming back tore- open the doors of my favourite book and record stores, or to make it safe enough to open the border so I can go visit my friends on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.Continue reading →
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Government Recognizes the Dedication and Sacrifice of Province’s Frontline Workers
A COVID-19 News Release from he Office of Ontario’s Premier
Posted April 27th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Grocery store employees are among many still working at businesses considered essential by government. They risk their health serving the rest of us and deserve to be paid fairly for it. And how about tonting to pay them fairly when the worst of this pandemic is hopefully behind us?
(A Brief Foreword Note from Doug Draper at Niagara At Large – This news release came shortly after Niagara At Large posted a commentary this April 25th, praising curbside waste collectors and other frontline workers out there who are providing “essential services,” in some cases for compensation that is at or only slightly higher than a minimum wage that was capped not so long ago by the Ford government.
In our commentary, we argued that if these workers are providing services that are so essential to our lives, they should be treated more generously in the wage and benefit department for all time – and not just “temporarily” as the Ford government is planning to do here.)
Now here is the Ford government’s News Release –
TORONTO — In recognition of the dedication, long hours and increased risk of working to contain the COVID-19 outbreak, the Ontario government is providing frontline staff with a temporary pandemic payment.
This increase will provide four dollars per hour worked on top of existing hourly wages, regardless of the qualified employee’s hourly wage. In addition, employees working over 100 hours per month would receive lump sum payments of $250 per month for each of the next four months.Continue reading →
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Ford Government Extends Closure of Schools to Keep Students, Staff and Families Safe
Government Insists Students Will Still Be Able to Complete School Year
A COVID-19 Update from Ontario’s Government and Education Minister
Posted April 26th on Niagara At Large
TORONTO, Ontario — Today (April 26th), Education Minister Stephen Lecce announced that all publicly-funded schools will remain closed until at least May 31, 2020, as part of an effort to keep students, staff and families safe from COVID-19.
The extension was based on expert advice from the Chief Medical Officer of Health and health officials on the COVID-19 Command Table and is part of the government’s ongoing effort to stop the spread of the virus.
The advice was to extend school closures for an additional period of time to permit updated modelling and data to inform next steps, given the government’s absolute commitment to safety.Continue reading →
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In the Face of Global Challenges, Let’s All Make A Pledge Together to Remain as Committed as Ever
If You Missed this Wonderful Event, Or You Wish to Experience it Again, Click on the Screen Below
News from the Earth Network, organizers of this year’s virtual 50th anniversary digital celebration of our planet – Earth Day Live
Posted April 26th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
The 50th anniversary was an Earth Day like no other.
Though we couldn’t physically take to the streets, millions of people still took action for the first digital Earth Day. From adopting plant-based diets to participating in citizen science to pledging to vote, millions spoke up for the planet with 24 hours of action.
We also, spent the day as the #1 trending hashtag on Twitter. The global digital surge on all our social media platforms was a resounding success, and we couldn’t have done that without the power of your grassroots voices.
The Earth Day Live livestream drew millions of viewers from around the world. Over the 12-hour event, we heard from so many diverse voices and perspectives.
(To watch this global event, streamed live for the first time this April 22nd on the 50th Anniversary of the first Earth Day, click on the screen immediately below.)
We can’t cover them all here, but standouts included Reverend Yearwood of Hip Hop Caucus, Bill Nye, Sylvia Earle, Al Gore, Elizabeth Warren, Ziggy Marley and Ricky Kej. Speakers touched topics like voting, science, climate justice, policy, conservation and education. These voices, among so many others, helped educate and entertain us throughout Earth Day.Continue reading →
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Some ‘Good News’ from Craig Cantin, Green Party of Ontario
With an Afterword by Doug Draper at Niagara At Large on the ‘What Gives’ with ordering Community Gardens Shut Down while keeping Certain Other Places Open.
Posted April 26th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
From Craig Cantin for the Ontario Green Party –
I have exciting news for you.
The Ontario Government Has Declared Community Gardens To Be An Essential Service.
Even during these uncertain times, victories are possible with people powered change.
This Is Because So Many Of You Choose To Take Action.
As a small-scale farmer, I know how important this decision is for tens of thousands of ontarians who rely on this source of food.Continue reading →
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On this Earth Week, a Special Salute to Those Who Collect Our Waste at Curbside
A Brief Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted April 25th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – Before we get too far away from this 50th anniversary of Earth Day and this Earth Week in Canada, I want to say just a little about one group of front-line workers who I’m not sure are among the first to come to mind while we have been offering tributes to front-line workers in general through this terrible pandemic crisis.
The group of front-line workers I’m taking about makes up the people who man the trucks that roll up and down our roads every week – even while most of us stay safe in our homes – picking up our waste materials at curbside.
Even in the wake of COVID-19, they are rolling up my street in Niagara, doing a very essential job, every week. How much are they worth? Probably far more than what they are currently receiving in pay and benefits. Photos by Doug Draper
I was thinking about them again this week, during Earth Day, because we forget what an important role they play in protecting our environment by making sure our waste gets to the proper destinations, including to those who can recycle as much of it as possible.Continue reading →
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“It was shocking to see that, instead of backing the nurses, the Ford government took on intervenor status in this case to throw cold water on the nurses’ quest to have access to the PPE (Personal Protective Equipment ).” – Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath
A Statement from Andrea Horwath on ONA court victory on PPE and safety
Posted April 24th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
“The Attorney General agrees, of course, that the CMOH’s (Chief Medical Officer of Health) Directives are applicable to LTC (long-term care) homes across the province and must be adhered to. That said, the Attorney General views the Applicants as overreaching to the extent that the relief that they seek requires LTC (long-term care) facilities to provide them, on demand, with whatever PPE (personal protection equipment) they, in their sole discretion, deem necessary.”
— from the decision of the Superior Court of Justice for Ontario
QUEEN’S PARK —NDP Leader Andrea Horwath issued the following statement concerning the court ruling in favour of the Ontario Nurses Association, compelling long-term care homes to immediately fix health and safety issues for health care workers and residents during the COVID-19 pandemic:
“I want to thank Ontario nurses for taking on this fight for their own safety and the safety of patients. It’s shocking that in the midst of this crisis nurses have to go to court to protect patients and themselves.
Why should these people, who are now being recognized as front-line, essential service HEROES, have to fight Ontario’s Ford government and the private corporation sharks that own far too many long-term care facilities in Ontario, in the courts to get proper health and safety resources for these places where our seniors need their care?
The court ruling paints a picture of long-term care homes in which seniors are forced to share rooms with patients with COVID-positive residents, and front-line health workers have to fight daily to get the protective equipment they need to protect themselves and their patients.Continue reading →
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We Canadians have often watched on Cable news networks or read about mass shootings in the United States and have found ourselves and others among us saying; “Thank God that rarely ever happens in Canada.”
For what at least one newspaper headline called “a chilling 12 hours” on the second to last weekend of this April, it did happen in and around some normally peaceful neighbourhoods and communities in Nova Scotia, and the results could not have been more tragic for the many victims, their families and friends, and for a whole country already going through so much in the middle of the COVID-19 disaster.
It’s another one of those tragic moments in our country’s history that few of us will ever forget.
And the Prime Minister is right. Let’s remember the victims and their families, and let us not do anything, in any way, to lend infamy to the name of the shooter.
You can attend a virtual vigil this Friday, April 24th from Nova Scotia at 6 p.m Eastern Time or 7 p.m. Atlantic time by clicking on the screen below at the time the vigil is taking place live, or likely later to watch some other time –
The vigil will also be broadcast on CBC Television starting at 6 p.m. Eastern Time.
Let us all hope that terrible tragedies like this remain rare in Canada or better still, never happen in our country again.
NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post, along with your name (not a pseudonym), in the space immediately below the Bernie Sanders quote.
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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The Self-Described “Stable Genius” (aka Snake Oil Salesman) in the White House says it might just be the miracle cure we’re all waiting for
A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted April 24th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
I want start with a little apology to all of you Niagara At Large readers out there.
I was going to post this commentary earlier but I got up feeling a little bit dizzy and feverish this morning. And no, it’s not what you might think. It isn’t COVID-19 – the dreaded Coronavirus.
As soon as I stopped seeing double and felt strong enough this morning to get up and phone my doctor – you may have heard of him, Hugo Z. Hackenbush – he told me that the symptoms were probably caused by my swallowing a pen light and washing it down with a couple of glasses of Lysol before I went to bed last night.
I feel kind of stupid admitting this, but I decided to do that on a leap of faith after watching Donald Trump do his daily White House briefing this April 23rd and shocking the world with news of a possible breakthrough cure for this horrific pandemic we are suffering through.
Reminding us how “very smart” he is, Trump went on to announce to the world that he has reason to believe that a combination of putting some “light inside the body,” along with injecting or ingesting “disinfectant” may be the ticket that “knocks (the Coronavirus) out in a minute.”
I’m usually at least a little reluctant to take the Donald seriously, but let’s face, we’ve all been praying for news of a cure, so I went right for my closet full of household disinfectants – Windex, Vim, Mr. Clean, and I finally settled on a bottle of Lysol with a nice lemon scent. I thought the lemon-scented solution might mix well in a cocktail.
Wow, it looks like Dr. Trump tried some of his own medicine!
And let’s face, Trump sure sounded convincing when he was talking about this during his briefing, didn’t he? At least I and more than half the populations of Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida believed him.Continue reading →
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A Public Service Announcement from Niagara Health, Niagara, Ontario’s amalgamated system of hospitals
Posted April 23rd, 2020 on Niaara At Large
Thank you to our more than 850 volunteers at Niagara Health.
Their smiles and thoughtful gestures are missed, and we know that Niagara Health’s volunteers are with us in spirit during the COVID-19 pandemic.
During National Volunteer Week from April 19 to 25, Niagara Health is sending its virtual gratitude to its more than 850 volunteers for their dedication to providing patients and families with extraordinary care. As part of the organizational COVID-19 response, there are currently no volunteers at NH.Continue reading →
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“We are facing a wave of Conservative politicians who don’t seem to care about the planet they will be leaving for their children and grandchildren.”
Three of Canada’s leading laggards – all Conservatives – from left, federal Tory leader Andrew Scheer, Ontario’s Doug Ford and Alberta’s Jason Kenney
“They either don’t take climate change seriously enough or believe that it’s an outright hoax. If you add that to their belief that protecting our green spaces and endangered species is a barrier to business and development then we have a real environmental disaster brewing.”
An Earth Day (April 22nd) and Earth Week (April 28th-26th) Message from the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU)
Posted April 23rd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Earth Day has been celebrated for nearly 50 years and while it is always an important occasion to acknowledge, this year Earth Day comes with a greater sense of urgency.
We are facing a wave of Conservative politicians who don’t seem to care about the planet they will be leaving for their children and grandchildren. They only care about themselves and padding the pockets of their rich cronies.
They either don’t take climate change seriously enough or believe that it’s an outright hoax. If you add that to their belief that protecting our green spaces and endangered species is a barrier to business and development then we have a real environmental disaster brewing.Continue reading →
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There Very Well May Be A Silver Lining For Our Planet Coming Out Of This Pandemic. Let’s Embrace It!
A Commentary by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large publisher and former St. Catharines Standard environment reporter
Posted April 22, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Yes, that’s me – the one in the front, wearing the gas mask and waving the sign that reads; ‘If You Aren’t Part of the Solution, You Are Part of the Pollution.’
It was 50 years ago – April 22, 1970 – a day I will always remember where I was, as I imagine countless millions of others around the world still do who participated in the very first Earth Day or ‘Environmental Teach-In’ as some chose to call it.
As the old Bob Dylan song goes, I was so much younger then, as the men working in the air-polluting plant behind me and my classmates were quick to remind us. They hurled taunt after taunt while we were out there from; “Go back to school,” to; “What are you trying to do? Put us out of work?”Continue reading →
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“While this is some good news during this challenging time, we will continue to be vigilant and maintain best practices in infection control to keep our patients, staff and physicians safe and protected.” – Derek McNally, Niagara Health’s Executive Vice President Clinical Services and Chief Nursing Executive
A COVID-19 Update from Niagara Health, Niagara, Ontario’s amalgamated system of hospitals
Posted April 22nd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – An outbreak of COVID-19 on inpatient unit 3A at our St. Catharines Site is over.
Niagara Health’s St. Catharines Hospital site
Our Infection Prevention and Control Team declared the outbreak over after 14 days of enhanced monitoring of patients and staff showed there had been no evidence of further transmission and no new additional COVID-19 cases on the unit.
The outbreak was declared after one of our healthcare workers tested positive for the virus.Continue reading →
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“Climate change continues to present a long-term threat to our health and economy. …We remain committed to our climate plan, which includes ambitious actions to reduce emissions, promote clean technology and jobs, and put a price on pollution.” – Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
An Earth Day Statement by Canada’s Prime Minister, followed by an Earth Day Footnote from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted April 22nd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, during an Earth Week event in 2017, urging young school students in Niagara-on-the-Lake to get engaged in the environment movement because “it is your future.” With him to the left is then federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna. File photo by Doug Draper
Ottawa, Ontario – The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on Earth Day:
“Today, we join the international community to observe Earth Day
“As Canadians, we are fortunate to be surrounded by an abundance of nature. With this privilege comes a shared responsibility to safeguard our environment and the natural treasures we have inherited.
“We want our children and grandchildren to be able to enjoy our majestic forests, breathe clean air, and play by our beautiful oceans, lakes, rivers, and streams. That is why the Government of Canada has taken important steps to protect our environment, while growing the economy and making life more affordable for families across the country.
“This year, families are going to observe Earth Day in a different way, because our parks are closed and Canadians have to stay home. This does not mean we cannot all still appreciate and continue to share a resolve to protect our natural beauty and our environment.Continue reading →
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A Call-Out from Ken Kimmell, for the Union of Concerned Scientists
Posted April 21st, 2020 on Niagara At Large
The COVID-19 crisis has upended the world, threatening the health and lives of millions, shattering the global economy, and imposing an unprecedented physical isolation upon us. It has changed so much almost overnight, including how we advocate for action on an even bigger long-term threat — climate change.
For this upcoming 50th anniversary of Earth Day, youth and other climate activists had planned on holding a massive worldwide strike and thousands of public demonstrations to demand that leaders in the public and private spheres take action on climate change. Continue reading →
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“We are all seeing the devastating impacts of COVID-19 in long-term care and retirement homes across the country, and here in our region. It is increasingly important that we direct additional resources and efforts to protect this vulnerable population.” – Derek McNally, Executive Vice President & Chief Nursing Executive, Niagara Health
A News Release from Niagara Health, Niagara, Ontario’s amalgamated system of hospitals and related health care facilities
Posted April, 21st, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – Niagara Health (NH) is providing reinforcements in a number of ways to help protect our most vulnerable citizens from the spread of COVID-19 and support those working in long-term care and retirement homes in our region to safely manage positive cases of the virus in their facilities.
NH is working with our partners on an urgent basis, as follows:
Earth Day celebrates 50 years this Wednesday, April 22nd, 2020
Ending Enforcement Threatens Clean Air and Clean Water for Us All
A News Release from the Buffalo, New York Office of U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins
Posted April 21st, 2020 on Niagara At Large
(A Brief Foreword Note by Doug Draper at NAL –
We Canadians and Americans share these Great Lakes, and the health and welfare of our communities depend on people and governments in both countries working together to protect them.
As residents on the Niagara, Ontario side of the border read U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins’ warning, and/or perhaps wonder why a Niagara, Ontario media outlet is posting it, keep in mind that to the extent that all of us – Canadians and Americans in the Great Lakes region – share and rely upon the same water and air for our health and welfare, the stripping away of programs and rules to protect the environment by the current Trump administration, threatens us all.
Unfortunately, very few politicians on the Ontario side of the border – municipal, provincial or federal – have raised their voice with Higgins to fight against it.)
Now here is the Buffalo Congressman’s News Release –
Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins
Buffalo, N.Y. – As the United States prepares to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Earth Day, Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) is deeply concerned that the Environmental Protection Agency’s lax policies are a threat to the incredible progress made to improve Western New York’s air and water quality.
On March 26, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a memo reporting it is ceasing all enforcement actions during the coronavirus pandemic. This is just the latest in nearly 100 environmental rule rollbacks by the current Administration.
In a letter to the EPA Administrator, Higgins writes –
“As a representative of a constituency which had experienced more than its share of the negative impacts of historically unchecked industrial pollution, including environmental, economic and public health impacts, it is outrageous to me that the administration would attempt to use one international public health emergency to pursue a dangerous, unwarranted and unlawful policy that, if sustained, could ultimately result in a cascade of new, local public health crises all across the nation.”Continue reading →
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Region’s Accommodation and Food Services, Tourism Sector Hit Especially Hard, Local Agricultural Sector Beginning to feel the Economic Squeeze
From Updates released by the Niagara Workforce Planning Board, a not-for-profit body serving Niagara’s regional government and local municipalities
Posted by Doug Draper, April 21, 2020 on Niagara At Large
The Covid-19 outbreak has caused most things to do with the economy, globally and here in the Niagara area, to take a nose dive, with no recovery expected overnight.,
“The COVID-19 pandemic is creating economic and employment disruption in ways that are not familiar to the vast majority of us in Niagara,” reads a statement the Niagara Workforce Planning Board (NWPB) circulated this April 20th with its latest workforce data for the Niagara region.
“As we move forward in these uncertain times,” the statement continues, “NWPB staff is collecting economic and employment information, aggregating facts and figures, and sharing them with our partners in the community.”
NWPB remains committed to offering our economic and employment insight at this challenging time.”Continue reading →
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Niagara Health & St. Joseph’s Health System launch new pilot surveillance project to provide protection for the most vulnerable in our health system
A News Release from Niagara Health, Niagara, Ontario’s amalgamated system of hospitals and related health care facilities, and from St. Joseph’s Health System in Hamilton
Posted April 20th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – COVID-19 has had a devastating effect within many congregate care facilities caring for vulnerable elderly residents, prompting the Ontario government to call for greater testing in long-term care and retirement homes.
With that in mind, St. Joseph’s Health System (SJHS) and Niagara Health are taking the vital step in testing all asymptomatic patients, residents and select staff within its long-term care, retirement home and congregate settings as part of a pilot surveillance project.Continue reading →
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‘Please stay home unless you absolutely must go out. Keep your distance. Save a life. Maybe your own.’
A Message from one of our regular readers, Gary Screaton Page, a resident of Fort Erie in Niagara, Ontario
Posted April 20th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
This Ad, from the late-1950s Asian Flu pandemic era, promotes a pain-relieving ointment parents could spread on their children’s chests for coughs, congestion and other symptoms related to the flu.
Unless you were born before 1952 you are not likely to remember the pandemic of 1957. I was 15 and in Grade 10 at the time.
The population in Canada then was only 16,561,263. Today. it is over 37 million: roughly double.
That year, the Asian Flu (aka “Oriental Flu”), thought to have originated in northern China in February, had by Fall arrived in Canada. As I went to school each day, I entered classrooms with only four or five other students in them. Over half the teachers in my high school were ill. Classes were combined because supply teachers were ill, too.Continue reading →
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Pundits Have Wrongly Predicted His Demise Before. But This Virus May Finally Bring Him Down
A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted April 20th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Way back in late February – what seems like a decade ago now – when the known cases of COVID-19 in Ontario and New York State were still very few, and yet when anyone who was paying attention knew that a pandemic that would spell serious suffering was coming was rapidly coming our way, a friend of mine in Buffalo, N.Y. said this –
“It is terrible to think that it might take a disaster like this to get rid of this monster.”
The “disaster” my friend in Buffalo was talking about was the coming of the COVID-19 (Coronavirus) outbreak, and “the monster” was, and still very much is Donald Trump.
In pockets of the United States, Trump supporters continue to protest protective restrictions governors and mayors have ordered to slow the spread of COVID-19
Sad to report (and it certainly doesn’t say very much for literally millions of Americans who have been okay with marching to the gates of hell with Trump over the past four or five years since he announced his reality show run for the presidency), it appears that my friend may be right.
Trump could lie up a storm about anything he wanted, say just about any degrading or disgusting thing he wanted about women, minority groups, the news media, political critics or just about any other individual group, praise autocrats and tyrants, abroad, insult and alienate long-time allies like Canada and France, tear children away from their moms and put them in cages, and on and on.
On his way way to another one of his daily live-for-TV daily campaign rallies/coronavirus briefings.
And yet, even with all of that, the the same hard-core tens-of-millions of Americans would continue to pack his rallies and cheer him on.
But this virus may finally have awakened enough Americans to the realization that Trump’s reality TV remake of Dante’s Inferno is not what you want for leadership when everything you ever worked for, including your life and those of your loved ones, is on the line.
That leads inevitably to a brand new campaign ad from the presumptive Democratic Party presidential candidate Joe Biden, and one of probably many others like it to come.
You can click on the screen immediately below to watch it –
If Joe Biden remains healthy and can just go on being a good, steady, sound-minded, plain-taking Joe, and enough Americans, including all of the Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders supports out there, get behind him and vote, he might very well rid his country and the world of this highly dangerous clown.
And to harken back to what my friend in Buffalo said, what a terrible shame that it takes something as destructive and deadly as a global pandemic to – most hopefully – finally do his reign of terror in.
For the sake of the whole world, the November U.S. federal elections cannot come soon enough.
NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below.
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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FACT CHECK: Before COVID-19 Outbreak, Ford cut $25 million from the Health System Research Fund
A News Release from Ontario’s NDP Official Opposition Party
Posted April 19th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
QUEEN’S P ARK, Ontario– The Ford government’s announcement of $20 million for health research to look for a COVID-19 vaccine follows Doug Ford’s $25 million cut to the Health System Research Fund one year ago.
That $25-million cut to the Health System Research Fund was part of the $51-million slash to Health Policy and Research, overall.Continue reading →
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“People are training as crisis responders for the Kids Help Phone, writing letters to isolated seniors, and spending hours in food banks to pack hampers with essential items for families in need. Let’s continue these acts of service because Canadians need to stick together during these tough times.” – Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
A Statement from the Office of Canada’s Prime Minister
Posted April 19th, 2020
The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on National Volunteer Week:
“Today is the first day of National Volunteer Week , when we recognize the Canadians who devote their time and skills to making our country a better place.
“This year’s theme, ‘It’s time to applaud this country’s volunteers’, underscores how volunteers work tirelessly and often behind the scenes. It highlights how our charities and non-profit organizations depend on their support to provide services to Canadians who need them most.
“Across Canada, countless volunteers look beyond their circumstances to be there for others. And that hasn’t changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. In these difficult times, Canadians are still taking care of each other.Continue reading →
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Lady Gaga, to her credit, was a driving force behind this world-wide event
Featuring Stevie Wonder, Lizzo, Paul McCartney, Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, The Rolling Stones, Taylor Swift, John Legend, Elton John and many, many more, this Saturday, April 18th, global concert and tribute to front-line workers, live streamed and broadcast on a number of cable channels, made for one nice shelter in the storm during these perilous times.
You Can Watch It Again on Youtube or by simply clicking on the screen below
This Post Will Also Have A Little to Say About Supporting Musicians and real brick-and-mortar Record Stores Thru this Crisis
A Brief Shout Out for this from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted April 19th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Before you might want to click on the screen to watch the concert and tributes to front-line workers, here is a brief promo for it which I have word-doctored just a little bit from future to past tense.
“The International advocacy organization Global Citizen is pulled together a massive global broadcast special in support of the response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Canada and the United States have agreed to extend by another 30 days the border measures that are currently in place. …This is an important decision and one that will keep people on both sides of the border safe.” – Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
A Brief News Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted April 18th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
In his daily COVID-19 briefing this April 18th, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that the closing of Canada-U.S. border crossings to all but essential travel will be extended another 30 days, through at least the third week in May.
Except for transport trucks full of commercial goods and those crossing the border to perform services considered “essential,” the Peace Bridge and other border crossings between Canada and the U.S. will remain closed to the rest of us, for at least through to the last week of May.
That offers at least some relief since, as I stated in a commentary on NAL this April 17th, and I know other Canadians have said it, there is reason to be concerned about opening border crossings wide up at a time when Trump and so many of his supporters continue to pooh-pooh the need to continue taking protective measures to tamp down such a highly infections and deadly virus that has been ravaging our lives.
Frankly, the idea of the Peace Bridge and other crossings in Niagara, and border crossings in other regions of Canada and the United States opening to regular traffic this April 21st, which was the original end date set for this crossing restrictions in March, is troubling.Continue reading →
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If the Trumpies Want to Play Chicken with this Killer Virus, Let Them Do It In Their Own Country. We Don’t Need Them Bringing That Dangerous Game Across the Border to Canada
We can’t let Trump export his Coronavirus cases to Canada
A Commentary by Doug Draper of Niagara At Large, followed by a demand to keep the Canada-U.S. border closed, issued in a news release from Niagara Falls, Ontario MPP Wayne Gates
Posted April 17th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
The Peace Bridge, a major Canada-U.S. border crossing at Niagara, Ontario and Buffalo, New York. If Trump wants to continue playing a game of chicken with COVID-19, then keep the border crossings closed, please
Before Niagara Falls NDP MPP Wayne Gates circulated the following news release this April 17th, urging Ontario’s Premier Doug Ford to pressure Canada’s Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, to keep the Canada-U.S. border closed, I was preparing to post a commentary on this matter on Niagara At Large.
And before my commentary gets started, let me be up front about this.
What I have to say is probably going to come across a lot less diplomatically than the way the Niagara Falls MPP is putting it in his news release, and Wayne Gates should certainly not be blamed in any way for my remarks.
I think it is good of Wayne Gates to say what he has, as diplomatically as he has, about the need to continue keeping the Canada-U.S. border crossings closed to everyone and everything but absolutely essential traffic.Continue reading →
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The Legendary Artist Died from Complications of COVID-19 this past April 7th. He was 73
“Please don’t bury me Down in that cold cold ground No, I’d druther have “em” cut me up And pass me all around Throw my brain in a hurricane And the blind can have my eyes And the deaf can take both of my ears If they don’t mind the size.”
– From John Prine’s 1973 song, ‘Please Don’t Bury Me’
A Brief Tribute by Doug Draper at Niagara At Large, followed by a great John Prine in performance video, and some beautiful words written about the man from his friend, Arlo Guthrie
A young John Prine from the 1970s, during some of the peak years of the singer/songwriter era.
Posted April 17th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
“John’s talent and spirit was a gift to the world. We were lucky to have seen and heard him.” – Bob Dylan, in a statement he released shortly after learning of John Prine’s death this past April 7th
Dylan is right.
In or around the early 1990s, my wife Mary and I were lucky enough to see and hear John Prine on the stage at Artpark in Lewiston, New York, on a double bill with his friend and fellow singer/songwriter extraordinaire Arlo Guthrie.Continue reading →
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Ontario’s Official Opposition NDP Party Does A Little Fact Checking On A Ford Government Coronavirus Testing Pledge
A News Release form Ontario’s NDP Official Opposition Party
Posted April 16th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Fact Check: COVID-19 testing is less than half of Premier Ford’s promised 20,000.
QUEEN’S PARK – Premier Ford said his government had completed 9,000 COVID-19 tests yesterday, but that is less than half of the 20,000 tests he promised by mid-April.
The above slide, dated April 3rd, was produced for and released by Ontario’s Ford Government at the beginning of this April
Moving the goalpost to imply that the government has contained this virus misleads the public and puts lives at risk. Instead of making up numbers, the government must be transparent with Ontarians about the current testing capacity and why Ontario is still not yet testing 20,000 people per day.
NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post, along with your name (not a pseudonym), in the space immediately below the Bernie Sanders quote.
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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Ford government must match rhetoric with stronger, concrete measures to protect residents and staff
“We are inundated with calls and emails from families with loved ones in long-term care and staff in the homes, crying, afraid, furious about the lack of testing, even in homes with outbreaks.” – Natalie Mehra, Executive Director, Ontario Health Coalition
‘Since the Ford government was elected, annual unannounced inspections of long-term care homes have ceased. The Coalition is calling for the government to reinstate annual unannounced inspections.’
A Call-Out from the Ontario Health Coalition, a citizens group advocating for quality public health care
Posted April 16th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Natalie Mehre, Executive Director, Ontario Health Coalition
Toronto – The Ford government’s Action Plan to address COVID-19 outbreaks in Ontario’s long-term care homes is still less than what is needed stop the spread of the virus and stabilize the workforce, warned the Ontario Health Coalition today (this April 16th), and is inconsistent with the “iron ring” rhetoric and promises for widespread testing from the Premier.
“We are increasingly frustrated with the disconnect between the statements of the Premier and what is actually being put into the regulations, directives and guidance issued by his own government,” said Natalie Mehra, executive director.
“Yesterday’s announcement was mostly a rehash of measures already announced, many of them less than what has been stated in daily press conferences by the Premier. More importantly, the measures that are being taken are too little and too slow, and the Ontario government appears to be relying too much upon isolation to contain the spread of the virus, which is not practically possible in many long-term care homes.”Continue reading →
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Province Needs a Plan to Manage Residential Care Homes in Dire Situations
A News Release from the Ontario New Democratic Party
Posted April 16th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
QUEEN’S PARK – After weeks of COVID-19 sweeping through vulnerable group living facilities, the Ford government is choosing to build dangerous gaps into its new protective orders, leaving seniors and adults with disabilities at greater risk.
Andrea Horwath, Leader of the Official Opposition New Democrats, wants those problems fixed today – alongside a plan to take over management of facilities where residents aren’t protected.Continue reading →
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Regulatory Changes Open the Door for Auto Insurance Rebates
“My message to insurance companies has been clear: they should provide relief that reflects the financial hardships their dedicated customers are facing due to the COVID-19 outbreak.” – Ontario Finance Minister Rod Phillips
News from Ontario’s Ministry of Finance
Posted April 16th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
TORONTO — The Ontario government is enabling auto insurance companies to provide temporary insurance premium rebates to drivers during the COVID-19 pandemic. The province has amended a regulation under the Insurance Act to help ease the financial pressure on working people and families during this public health crisis.
By amending this regulation insurance companies would be able to provide auto insurance premium rebates to consumers for up to 12 months after the declared emergency has ended.Continue reading →
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Here’s Your Chance to Get Inspiration from the Consummate Masters of isolation
The Film House in St. Catharines is Inviting ies Us All to Support Local Arthouse Cinema Thru These Perilous Times. Read On to Find Out How We All Can Do It and How We Can All Have Some Fun at Home at the Same Time
Posted April 16th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
“Watching silly cat videos is good for you.” – The Wall Street Journal
Some do better in isolation than others, it’s true.
The Film House has been seeking out expertise in this matter and are happy to relay that we’ve uncovered some. There’s probably no other living creature (other than goldfish in bowls) better adapted to our new lifestyle than the consummate house-bound life form, the domestic cat.
(CVF). This isn’t a pedestrian wandering of the YouTube wasteland, these videos are curated!
CatVideoFest gathers the, “latest and best cat videos culled from countless hours of unique submissions and sourced animations, music videos, and, of course, classic internet powerhouses.”Continue reading →
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University President Salutes All Brock Alumni Now Working On the Front Lines in this Pandemic
A Message from Brock University in St. Catharines, Niagara
Posted April 15th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – We hope you are keeping well during these difficult days.
While many of us may feel uncertainty at this time, we also find comfort in one unaltered truth: Our alumni community is strong. We encourage you to (virtually) lean on one another for support and friendship.
We have heard many stories about alumni making differences in their communities, and for every story that we hear we know there are countless others that go untold.
Today, our President, Gervan Fearon, has a message to share. Click on the screen below to listen to it here –
To all of our alumni serving in the health care system, working as first responders and those keeping our essential services running, we thank you. Thank you for your dedication, your empathy, your commitment and the sacrifices you make each day.
All sectors in Niagara have been negatively affected, …. However the arts, entertainment, recreation; accommodation and food service; and retail trade sectors have seen a more pronounced effect.
“These preliminary results illustrate the gravity of the situation Niagara is facing. … They also provide crucial insights that will allow Niagara to be nimble and responsive in supporting our businesses throughout this crisis.” – Valerie Kuhns, Acting Director, Niagara Economic Development for Niagara, Ontario’s Regional government
News from Niagara’s Regional Government and 12 Local Municipalities
Posted April 15th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Economic Rapid Response Team completes first survey of Niagara businesses
Niagara, Ontario –This April 14th, Niagara’s Economic Rapid Response Team (ERRT) released the results of a region-wide survey of Niagara businesses that gives an early picture of the local impact of COVID-19 on Niagara’s business community.
This almost empty parking lot at the normally busy Pen Centre shopping mall in St. Catharines just about says it all. Stores and other businesses closed for weeks and countless people now out of work here, and across the Niagara region.
Over 2,600 businesses from all of Niagara’s municipalities completed the online survey, administered between March 20 and 30. The results represent over 66,000 employees from all sectors of Niagara’s economy, and provides a snapshot of the immediate effects of the first few weeks of the pandemic.Continue reading →
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Province’s NDP Leader says Commitment Needs to Come with Better Job Conditions, Wage Boost
A Statement by Ontario NDP Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath
Another hearse leaves a nursing home in Bobcaygeon, Ontario where more than 25 senior residents have reportedly died from COVID-19 related complications
NDP Leader’s Statement followed by an Afterword by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper, anda disturbing CBC News report on the lack of government oversight of long-term care homes in Ontario
Posted April 15th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Ontario’s NDP Leader Andrea Horwath has been speaking out for better conditions in the province’s long-term care homes for years.
QUEEN’S PARK – NDP Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath released the following statement in response to the government’s announcement about long-term care staffing:
“The NDP has been calling for an end to the practice of staff working in multiple long-term care homes for some time, so we are relieved to see the government finally take this step. It shouldn’t have taken weeks to put a stop to something that put vulnerable seniors in the crosshairs of COVID-19, and I am heartbroken knowing that this announcement is simply too late for some families.
We look forward to seeing the order to ensure there are no exceptions, because the stakes are too high to get this wrong. And it won’t be enough for the government to simply say staff can’t work in multiple long-term care homes – we need to address the reasons why they had to do this in the first place.Continue reading →
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Sustained Measures Necessary to Stop the Spread and Protect Public Health
Ontario government decides to extend ‘state of emergency’
“During these unprecedented times, we cannot let our guard down. The actions being taken by everyone to stay home and practice physical distancing are making a difference, but we are not out of the woods yet.” – Ontario Premier Doug Ford
A COVID-19 Update from the Office of Ontario’s Premier
Posted April 15th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
TORONTO ― On the advice of the Chief Medical Officer of Health and with the approval of the Ontario legislature, the Ontario government is extending the Declaration of Emergency under the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act for a further 28 days.
This will allow the government to continue to use every tool at its disposal to protect the health and safety of the people of Ontario during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Passed during a special sitting of the Ontario legislature and with the full cooperation of all parties, the Declaration of Emergency has been extended until May 12.Continue reading →
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Another Niagara, Ontario Healthcare worker tests positive for COVID-19
“The unit in question will continue to admit patients with COVID-19 and has a number of enhanced safety measures already in place.” – Derek McNally, Vice President Clinical Services and Chief Nursing Executive for Niagara Health
A COVID-19 Update from from Niagara Health, Niagara, Ontario’s amalgamated system of hospitals
Posted April 14th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara Health’s St. Catharines Hospital site where a second COVID-19 outbreak has been declared within a matter of days of the first.
Niagara, Ontario – (This Tuesday, April 14th) Niagara Health has declared an outbreak of COVID-19 on inpatient Unit 4A at the St. Catharines Site after one of our healthcare workers tested positive for the virus.
The outbreak, which is on the unit that is dedicated to caring for COVID-19 patients, was declared because our investigation determined the case was healthcare-associated. The staff member is at home and self-isolating.Continue reading →
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‘Record-breaking levels on Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River … have taken a toll on homeowners, businesses and shoreline communities, demonstrating the need for governments to take a proactive approach to potential future flooding.’
A Report from Chrissy Chiasson, a policy analyst for the Canadian section of the Canada/U.S. International Joint Commission
Posted April 14, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Record-breaking levels on Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River in 2017 and 2019 have taken a toll on homeowners, businesses and shoreline communities, demonstrating the need for governments to take a proactive approach to potential future flooding.
Lake Ontario from space, with the east end of Lake Erie in lower left corner
In March, Quebecreleasedits 2020-2021 budget which included several details about the province’s proposed strategy to reduce its flood risk.
The strategy includes CDN$473 million (from the Quebeci government) to implement solutions, in collaboration with municipalities and the scientific community, to mitigate the impact of flooding on communities.
Recently, Quebec also launcheda new websitewhich allows users to view updated floodplain data for more than 730 municipalities in Quebec, including many in greater Montreal. Continue reading →
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Voting Opens Friday, April 17th for Lakeside Park Pavilion Naming. Find Link for Online Voting in News Release Below.
The pavilion at Lakeside Park in the community of Port Dalhousie in St. Catharines. Will it have Neil Peart’s name attached to it? Have your say in online voting that begins this Friday, April 17th. The link for voting is included in News Release below.
“After staff review, and consultations with the Peart family, the City (of St. Catharines) has settled ontwo possible names for the public to vote on – ‘Neil Peart Pavilion’ and ‘Lakeside Park Pavilion.’”
A News Release from the City of St. Catharines in Niagara, Ontario
Posted April 14th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – It’s come down to two names, and now it’s time for residents to cast their ballots.
Legendary Rush drummer Neil Peart, who spent some of his young years growing up in St. Catharines, died this past January 7th, 2020 at age 67
After hundreds of submissions for naming of the pavilion at Lakeside Park, City staff have whittled down suggestions to a list of two names for the structure. Earlier this year, following the death of famed Rush drummer and one-time St. Catharines resident Neil Peart, City Council engaged the City’s naming policy, responding to broad support from the community for a means of memorializing Peart.
The initial two-week round of submissions in March echoed that community support, with a deluge of suggestions recognizing the Peart name in some fashion. Continue reading →
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The church in the Town of Banff, Alberta and the local eacher, Heather Jean Jordan, who plays ‘Amazing Grace’ each day on the bells in the steeple
This past Monday, April 13th, Niagara At Large posted a video of the great Italian singer Andrea Bocelli, standing alone on the steps of a cathedral in Milan, performing a beautiful version of the ‘Amazing Grace’ to a world of people who sure can use the inspirational words of a song like that now.
Shortly after we posted that video, one of our readers, Gail Benjafield of St. Catharines, was kind enough to share a video she received from her sister Karen, who lives in Alberta.
The video features a school teacher in the Town of Banff named Heather Jean Jordan, who has been climbing the steeple of a local place of worship, St. George’s-in-the-Pines Anglican Church, each day since the Coronavirus outbreak shut so much down and playing ‘Amazing Grace’ on the bells for anyone within ear range to hear.
It’s a very nice video so I thought I would post it here. So with thanks to Gail for sharing it, you can hear and watch by clicking on the screen below –
NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post, along with your name (not a pseudonym), in the space immediately below the Bernie Sanders quote.
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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