A Statement from Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority Board Chair Brenda Johnson Regarding Board Expenses
Posted January 23rd, 2020 at Niagara At Large
NPCA’s new board Chair, Hamilton City Councillor Brenda Johnson
Niagara, Ontario – In a continued effort to be transparent regarding NPCA board member expenses, Chair Brenda Johnson would like to publicly disclose she has voluntarily donated her NPCA per diem to the Glanbrook Conservation Committee to support their volunteer work at Binbrook Conservation Area, in Hamilton.
The Glanbrook Conservation Committee is a group of volunteers working to improve the habitat for wildlife in what was previously Glanbrook Township, now the City of Hamilton.
The group includes, naturalists, environmentalists, bird watchers, hikers, canoeists, as well as fishermen and hunters. They have been active in the community for over 25 years, accomplishing many projects at Binbrook C.A. such as maintaining the Tyneside Trail, installing blue bird boxes, fish habitat cribs, invasive species identification and removal, the annual Spring Fishing Derby and many more conservation related initiatives.Continue reading →
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Greta Thunberg, at a 2019 climate action rally in Vancouver B.C. in
The Now 17-Year-Old Swedish Activist and Winner of the 2019 International Children’s Peace Prize, Who Last Year Triggered A Global Climate Action Movement, Laid It On The Line for International Leaders this January 21st at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland
“Planting trees is good, of course,” she said, “but it’s nowhere near enough. … Let’s be clear. We don’t need a ‘low carbon economy.’ We don’t need to ‘lower emissions.’ Our emissions have to stop if we are to have a chance to stay below the 1.5-degree target. … We must forget about net zero. We need real zero.”
“Our house is still on fire,” added the young climate activist, in conclusion. “Your inaction is fueling the flames by the hour. And we are telling you to act as if you loved your children above all else.”
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted January 22nd, 2020 in Niagara At Large
“We are telling you to act as if you loved your children above all else.”
Greta Thunberg made the cover of Time Magazine this December 2019 as its “Person of the Year’ during a year she played a leadership role in building a world-wide movement for climate action.
Those were among the final words that Greta Thunberg, who was named Time Magazine’s ‘Person of the Year’ this past December 2019, and who has emerged as a hero to countless millions around the world, including this veteran environment writer, for her clarion call for climate action, to an audience, generations older than her, at the World Economic Forum this January 2020 in Davos, Switzerland.
You will act, she told them, if you love your children above all else.
I have often whispered the same words as I have thought about so many people who are members of my Baby Boomer Generation, and about generations younger than older than mine, who have children and, in some cases, grandchildren of their own, yet continue wanting to delay action on addressing the climate crisis, or continue to deny that there is anything humans are doing that is driving us, ever more rapidly, to the point of no return.Continue reading →
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“I think much of the discussion concerning plastics in the environment has been focused on the oceans and we are quickly understanding that plastic pollution is also an important issue closer to home in the Great Lakes.” – Professor of Geography and Tourism Studies Michael Pisaric, Brock University
News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario
Posted January 22nd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A collection of plastics picked up on Sunset Beach in St. Catharines in October, 2019. Photo courtesy of Brock University
Niagara, Ontario – A day at the beach doesn’t often involve lab work, but for a group of Brock University fourth-year Geography students tasked with assessing plastic waste on the shores of Lake Ontario last fall, it was just that.
Back in October (2019), students from Professor of Geography and Tourism Studies Michael Pisaric’s GEOG 4P26 class visited Sunset Beach in north St. Catharines to measure the quantity of plastics turning up in the sand.
Students measured out plots on the beach and sifted through the sand to collect as many tiny pieces of plastic as they could. They compiled their findings in lab reports for the end of the Fall Term.
A Free Event in St. Catharines, Ontario, with Holocaust Survivor and Book Author Jack Veffer
On Monday, January 27th, 2020 at the Niagara Artists Centre on 354 St. Paul Street in Downtown St. Catharines
An Invite from St. Catharines/Niagara resident and community activist Desmond Sequeira
Posted January 22nd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Dear Fellow-Advocates for Systemic Social Justice and Everyone,
With the completely unacceptable rise of anti-Semitism in North America, I encourage you to attend this event.
Thanks, Des
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.
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“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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From Saturday, February 15th to Sunday, March 15th, 2020, at AIH Studios in Welland, Ontario
‘Many of (Sandy Fairbairn’s) images recall the industrial history of the region, and others chronicle the ebb and flow of the downtown urban life of Welland.’
News from Bart GGazzola for AIH Studies in Niagara, Ontario
Posted January 22nd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
AIH Studios in Niagara, Ontario is very pleased to present Sandy Fairbairn’s exhibition Welland: Times Present Times Past from February 15th to March 15th 2020.
Curated by Bart Gazzola, the opening reception for Welland: Times Present Times Past will be on Saturday, February 15th, from 2 to 5 PM.
Sandy Fairbairn has been taking photographs of Niagara for over forty years, focusing on the people and places around him. His images of Niagara stretch back to the 1970s, and some of the scenes presented in Welland: Time Present Time Past will be shown in the Rose City for the very first time.Continue reading →
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Poverty Reduction Network in Niagara Celebrates Griffiths Performance Physiotherapy
“We are pleased to pay a living wage to our staff and to show that we value them. We hope to inspire businesses around us to get on board with paying a living wage and to also give back to our community.” – Amanda Griffiths, Clinic Director and Co-owner of Griffiths Performance Physiotherapy.
News from the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network
Posted January 22nd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara Poverty Reduction Network’s past Chair Glen Walker (right) presents living wage certificate to Griffiths Performance Physiotherapy owners in Niagara Falls
The Niagara Poverty Reduction Network is pleased to announce that Griffiths Performance Physiotherapy has become a certified living wage employer at the Champion level.
Griffiths Performance Physiotherapy is a family-run business based in Niagara Falls and currently employs two full time staff, one part time staff and one contractor. They provide a variety of physiotherapy services for treatment of pain and injury recovery.
We are pleased to pay a living wage to our staff and to show that we value them. We hope to inspi“re businesses around us to get on board with paying a living wage and to also give back to our community” says Amanda Griffiths, Clinic Director and Co-owner of Griffiths Performance Physiotherapy.Continue reading →
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Some of the Trump Juggernaut’s Most Recent Attacks on Water Protection Rules Post Risks for 36 Million Americans and Canadians Living in the Great Lakes Basin
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted January 20th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Since the celebration of the first Earth Day 50 years ago this coming spring, Canadians and Americans have both had their share of weak federal, provincial and state governments when it comes to doing what is right to protect the water and air we collectively share and count on for our health and prosperity.
Yet none – I believe it is safe to say- come close to matching the current administration of U.S. President Donald Trump when it comes to the hyper level of abandon and psycho-like relish it employs as it eviscerates so many of environmental protections that generations of citizens, scientists and government agencies have worked so hard, with their counterparts in Canada and other regions of the world, to put in place.
Trump is moving to rip apart water protection rules that would protect wetlands like this one, which many citizens in Niaara and other regions of Ontario are fighting to save in Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls.
According to some of the latest reports in major American media outlets, Trump and his all-too-many supporters and followers are now hard at work – outside any consultation they should be doing with knowledgeable scientists in what is left of what was a world-class Environmental Protection Agency before they began hollowing out it – rolling back policies and programs for protecting wetlands and other critical bodies of water.Continue reading →
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Racism Remains a Cancer to Contend with in Both Countries
“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” – from the iconic address that the late American Civil Rights Leader Martin Luther King Jr. delivered during the Civil Rights Movement’s historic March on Washington in August of 1963
A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the United States
Posted January 20th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
When the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. became a leader of the American Civil Rights Movement in the 195os, many Black people in his own country were forced to endure segregated schools, washrooms and water fountains, had to sit at the back of the bus and had a difficult, if not impossible time exercising their right to vote in elections.
Today, more than 50 years after his assassination, much progress has been made in eliminating those and other racial barriers. Continue reading →
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“Thousands of our residents are in shelters or emergency hotel accommodations, unable to find affordable housing. We have heard stories of people in our community forced to sleep under bridges.”
News from Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch, St. Catharines MPP Jennie Stevens and Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates
Niagara MPPs Jeff Burch, Wayne Gates and Jennie Stevens
Posted January 20th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
QUEEN’S PARK – NDP Official Opposition MPPs Jeff Burch (Niagara Centre), Jennie Stevens (St. Catharines), and Wayne Gates (Niagara Falls) have issued an open letter to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing.
The letter, posted below, highlights the devastating impact of the unfair funding formula under the Community Homelessness Prevention Initiative (CHPI) that fails to provide the resources needed for Niagara.
The MPPs are calling for a new funding model that matches local demand for homelessness services and ensures equitable allocation.
Open Letter to Steve Clark, Ontario Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing –
Dear Minister Clark:
We are sending you this letter on behalf of the people of Niagara. Niagara is facing a critical issue of housing and homelessness.Continue reading →
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“All residents and visitors are invited to shape the Thorold Business Improvement Area’s vision because our Downtown is for everyone.” – Serge Carpino, Thorold Business Imrovement Area (BIA) Chair
News from Thorold’s Business Improvement Area
Posted January 20th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Thorold’s downtown, featured in national heritage magazines and winner of a prestigious Prince of Wales heritage prize.
Thorold, Ontario – People with ideas to improve business in Downtown Thorold can have a part in shaping the community by participating in a 2020 survey to help form a flourishing future in downtown Thorold.
The public survey sponsored by the Thorold Business Improvement Area along with other community stakeholders including Thorold Tourism and the Thorold Public Library will be open to all people in an online format. Continue reading →
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Niagara’s Conservation Authority Needs Leadership that Takes the Science of Climate Change Seriously
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted January 17th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
When West Lincoln Mayor Dave Bylsma made what turned out to be hisill-fated pitch to fellow members of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s board of directors this January 15th to serve for a second one-year term as the board’s Chair, he finished by motioning an arm in the direction of the entrance to the NPCA’s Ball’s Falls Conservation Centre.
Some of the protesters who greeted NPCA board members, including David Bylsma, outside the Conservation Authority’s Annual General Meeting this January 15th.
It was there, at the Conservation Centre’s entrance way, where a number of citizens staged a protest earlier on, urging him to step down.
Welland resident Robert Milenkoff joined in call for David Bylsma’s resignation from NPCA board’s Chair post. Photo by Doug Draper
“I have held every member of this board and every staff member in the highest respect,” said Bylsma as he was about to make his arm gesture.
“I do not deserve that,” he said, his voice slightly quivering. “I have been a good Chair.”
Talk that he should not be Chair, Byslma may or may not know, was always there, looming in the background, going back a full year ago, when a majority of fellow board embers first appointed him to that position.
It lingered with people who, rightly or wrongly, also wanted to give him a chance … give him the benefit of the doubt, , in spite of whatever off the rail views he may hold on the issue of climate change.
But the calls caught fire during the first week of this New Year when For Our KidsNiagara – a recently organized group made up mostly of young parents concerned about their children’s future – circulated an open letter highlighting one of Bylsma’s other roles as president of the Christian Heritage Party, a fringe political organization that characterizes climate change as a “phony crisis” and accuses United Nations science bodies and individuals like former U.S. vice-president Al Gore, who won a Nobel Prize for his part in raising public awareness about climate change, of engaging in dangerous propaganda.Continue reading →
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Ontario Environment Minister Jeff Yurek (left) with Premier Doug Ford at his back. File photo
“Ontario Helping to Build Healthier, Safer Communities Faster” – Claims Doug Ford Tories
“Reducing delays and duplication through proposed changes to Class Environmental Assessments”
News from the Ford Government’s Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks
Posted January 16th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A Brief Foreword by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper –
During a conference with mainstream media outlets in Niagara this January 16th, Ford’s Environment Minister Jeff Yurek announced that the government is now moving to make changes to Ontario’s Environmental Assessment process – to environmental protection legislation that took citizen groups have past governments many years to enact for the betterment of our air, waters and lands – in order to “exempt projects” from a thorough review.
The full range of projects the government has in mind, and how and who would do the exempting is not entirely clear, except to stress, as Ford’s Environment Minister did in his announcement, that “this is an example of how our government is looking at smarter, more modern ways of doing business to remove unnecessary costs and delays for important public services and infrastructure projects.”Continue reading →
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NPCA’s Board of Directors Holds Its 2020 Annual General Meeting at Balls Fall’s Conservation Centre
January 15th Meeting is First for Chandra Sharma as NPCA’s new CAO, and first for Board Members Brenda Johnson of Hamilton and Bruce Mackenzie of Grimsby in their new roles as Chair and Vice-Chair, Respectively
A News Release from the Niagara PeninsulaConservation Authority
Posted Jauary 15th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
The Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) held its Annual General Meeting of 2020 at its Ball’s Falls Centre for Conservation.
Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s new CAO Chandra Sharma, left), and the new Chair of the NPCA’s board of directors, at the table during the Conservaton Authority’s 2020 Annual General Meeting this January 15th. An NPCA photo
The Business portion of the meeting was called to order by CAO, Chandra Sharma, who conducted the election of officers for 2020. Ward 11 Councillor for the City of Hamilton, Brenda Johnson, was elected as Chair, and Board Member for Grimsby, Mr. Bruce Mackenzie was elected as Vice-Chair.Continue reading →
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Kennedy Will Be Niagara College’s Sixth President, Succeeding Long-Time President Dan Patterson
A News Release from Niagara College in Niagara, Ontario
Posted January 10th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – The Niagara College Board of Governors announced this January 10th that it has selected Sean Kennedy, an experienced post-secondary leader with 20 years of experience leading teams in several areas of higher education, as Niagara College’s sixth president.
Niagara College has a new President, the Sixth in its history- Sean Kennedy
Currently Niagara College’s senior vice president, International, Kennedy has been a part of the College’s senior leadership team since 2006.
“Sean is student-focused, and embodies the Niagara College DNA – the welcoming, passionate and trailblazing qualities that set Niagara College apart and form the foundation of its success,” said John F.T. Scott, chair of the Niagara College Board of Governors.Continue reading →
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If They Were Shot Down Deliberately or Accidentally, Then Someone South of the Border has Blood on his Hands
Trump plays the strong man this January 8th, 2020 in his showdown with Iran. Look at the holy man, Mike Pence, on the right who has been helping Trump lie his way through this. Is that what he learned in church?
A Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted January 9th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Three of the 63 Canadians, Bahareh Hajesfandiari, his wife Mehdi Sadeghi and their daughter Anisa, who perished when a Ukrainian jetliner went down in Iran.
There may be at least a few out there who look at this and ask why is he commenting on this mess in Iran again, when he should be focusing on issues closer to home.
Fair enough.
Yet when I was out and about in Niagara this January 8th, stopping off at a few stores, one of our public libraries and at an auto-care centre, getting a minor repair done to my car, just about everyone I crossed paths with had what has been going down with the U.S. Trump administration and Iran on the top of their minds.
Many went out of their way to express their concern and even some of the anger they were feeling about circumstances that a number of experts on foreign affairs fear could lead to a catastrophic war.
A field of burning debris, leftover from down jet that carried 176 people, including 63Canadians, to their death in Iran
And one part of this whole affair people I crossed paths with mentioned the most was the crash of the Ukrainian jetliner in the early morning hours (Middle East time) inside the borders of Iran that ended the lives of all 176 people aboard, including 63 Canadian men, women and children.Continue reading →
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‘Directly adjacent to downtown St Catharines, the former GM manufacturing site is an embarrassment to the city (and) a dangerous situation that must be cleaned up immediately.’ – Citizens Coalition Spokesperson Dennis Van Meer
The abandoned General Motors site off Ontario Street in St. Catharines, Niagara – a rotting eyesore near residential neighbourhoods and the city’s downtown
Sign the Petitiion and Attend a Public Meeting this coming Saturday, January 11th at 3 p.m. at the Mahtay Café in downtown St. Catharines
A Call-Out from the Coalition for a Better St. Catharines, a city-based citizens group in Niagara
Posted January 8th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A look inside the abandoned industrial mess near downtown St. Catharines
On Saturday, January 11, the Coalition for a Better St. Catharines (CBSC), an ad hoc group of concerned citizens, will hold a public meeting to provide community members with an update on the status of the former General Motors (GM) property on Ontario Street and efforts to make the site safe and secure.
The meeting will begin at 3:00 pm and will be held in the Community Room of the Mahtay Café (on 241 St. Paul Street in downtown St. Catharines).
Though demolition of the buildings on the GM site began more than four years ago, the demolition and clean-up plan was never completed.
In its current state, the site is a safety and health hazard. Broken fences and deteriorating sheets of plywood have allowed people to shelter in unsafe structures, exposing them and the surrounding neighbourhood to potential health hazards from mold and toxic materials such as asbestos.Continue reading →
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Ontario assistant deputy Health Minister Lynn Guerriero named President of Niagara Health
“There has been a lot of positive change at Niagara Health over the last several years, and Ms. Guerriero’s unique experiences and collaborative leadership style will be instrumental in building on this momentum,” – Dr. Tom Stewart, CEO of Niagara Health & President and CEO of St. Joseph’s Health System.
A News Release from Niagara Health, the amalgamated hospital system in Niagara, Ontario
Posted January 8th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Lynn Guerriero is Niagara Health’s new president
Lynn Guerriero, an accomplished executive leader in the Ontario health system, will assume the role of President of Niagara Health effective Tuesday, February 18, 2020. This appointment follows a national search that attracted strong candidates and led to Lynn’s unanimous selection due to her unique set of skills, passion and vision for high-quality healthcare in Niagara.
Ms. Guerriero comes to Niagara with more than 30 years of leadership, management and clinical experience within a variety of healthcare provider settings, including multi-site acute care, rehabilitation and community care. She also has extensive senior leadership experience providing hands-on implementation and oversight of provincial programs, agencies and sectors of the health system.Continue reading →
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“The cuts (that Ontario’s Ford government has) imposed and proposed will affect our students not just for one, but for generations and that’s why we’re standing up against it now.” – Shannon Smith, Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation (OSSTF/FEESO) District 22 T/OT President
A News Release from Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation (OSSTF/FEESO), District 22 in Niagara followed by a response from Niagara West MPP and Ontario Ford government representative Sam Oosterhoff
Posted January 8th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Fonthill, Ontario – Teachers and Education Workers represented by the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation (OSSTF/FEESO) at the District School Board of Niagara (DSBN) will participate in a one-day strike on Wednesday, January 8, 2020.
Niagara secondary school teachers participating in an earlier one-day strike action, this past December 2019. file photo by Doug Draper
This comes after other select school boards across Ontario participated in the same job actions on December 11 & December 18, 2019. Continue reading →
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The lower Great Lakes system – Lakes Erie and Ontario, connected by the Niagara River – from space
Buffalo Area Congressman Calls Rollback of EPA Clean Water Standards a Threat to the Environmental and Economic Health of Communities with the Potential to Destroy Years of Progress in Western New York
EPA’s Own Science Advisory Board Warns the Plans Lack Evidence and “Departs from Established Science”
A News Release from the Buffalo, New York Office of U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins
Posted January 7th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Buffalo, New York – US. Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) is sounding the alarm on U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) efforts to rollback safeguards for clean water. Higgins isn’t alone; the President’s own EPA Science Advisory Board is expressing concern.
From left, Buffalo Riverkeepers executive director Jill Jedlicka, U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins and Campaign for the Environment associate executive director Brian Smith sound alarm bells over possible impact of Trump administration gutting of clean water standards on Great Lakes watershed. Photo courtesy of Congressman Higgins’ Buffalo constituency office
In a letter to EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler, Rep. Higgins, a member of the Congressional Great Lakes Task Force, warned of the dire consequences of the EPA’s actions to communities like Western New York, writing “Rollback of these rules actively threatens efforts to revitalize waterways like the Buffalo River and endangers Western New York and other Great Lakes communities that depend on the health of their natural resources.”Continue reading →
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“The GNCC feels that this forward-thinking program will result in benefits for both local communities and immigrants. The former will be able to fill labour market gaps and grow their populations and their economies, while immigrants will be drawn to communities where their skills are in demand and where they will be welcomed.” – The Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce (GNCC)
A News Release from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce
Posted January 7th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – In his mandate letter, Prime Minister (Justin) Trudeau instructed Immigration Minister (Marcos) Mendicino to begin work on a program that would give local communities, chambers of commerce and labour councils a say in the selection of immigrants, helping them match newcomers with labour needs.
The GNCC has suggested such a program in the past, anticipating that allowing communities to target immigrants for skills and professions would help solve local labour shortages and allow businesses and local economies to grow.Continue reading →
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“Under pressure from rising prices for labour, energy, and other essentials, not to mention increased municipal tax burdens from local governments with substantial infrastructure backlogs, this cut offers relief to small businesses.” – the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce
A News Release from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce
Posted January 7th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Queen’s Park follows through with tax cut for province’s small businesses
Niagara,Ontario – In welcome news, the Government of Ontario has announced that, effective January 1st of this year, it will reduce the small business Corporate Income Tax by 8.7 per cent, to a new rate of 3.2 per cent.
Small businesses are the backbone of Ontario’s economy. Almost all of Niagara’s businesses are small- or medium-sized enterprises, and nearly four in five (33,947 out of a total of 42,692 registered businesses) employ fewer than five people.Continue reading →
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‘Why would Donald Trump want Canada to come to his side? After all, he called us a “national security threat” as an excuse to put tariffs on our goods, something that cost thousands of jobs.’
A Comment by Linda McKellar, Fort Erie, Ontario, with a Brief Foreword by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted January 6th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A Foreword by Doug Draper –
One of the wisest decisions that former Canadian prime minister Jean Chretien made during his 10 years in the office from 1993 to 2003 was not to join U.S. Bush-Cheney administration’s so-called “coalition of the willing” in a 2003 invasion of Iraq for a war that dragged on for years and cost thousnds of young Americans and countless thousands of Iraqis, including untold numbers of civilians, their lives.
Baghdad, Iraq lights up with thundering explosions as the Bush-Cheney administration launches its invasion of Iraq in March of 2003. One Iraqi woman told a British newspaper at the time that during the bombing; “My family would gather in one room, waiting for death.”
Everyone but a hopeless few, including major American media outlets that functioned like p.r. flaks for the Pentagon in the lead-up to that war, later admitted that the war was a costly mistake – based on false or fabricated information – that all sides are continuing to pay a heavy price for until this day.Continue reading →
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Wednesday, January 8th at 8 p.m. at the St. Catharines Central Library in downtown St. Catharines, Ontario
An Invite to All from the Niagara District Council of Women
Posted January 6th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
At 8 p.m. on Wednesday January 8th, the Niagara District Council of Women is holding an public forum on ‘ Youth and Mental Health Changing Perspectives-Providing Services’ at the St. Catharines Central Library .
Our panel includes the advocacy team, ‘Change the Perspective’, whose members experienced mental health challenges as youth, and as adults are successfully living with mental illness. Continue reading →
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Just What Trump and his Evangelical Followers Seem to Want
A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large
Posted January 4th, 2020
“We took action to stop war, not to start one.” – U.S. President Donald Trump
Really?
I’m already betting that this statement from Trump, made after he and what are left of the nutbars and sycophants in his administration took out Iran’s top general at an airport in Baghdad, Iraq this January 2nd, will go down in history alongside such infamous lines as former U.S. President George W. Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” only a few years in to a War in Iraq that is arguably dragging on to this day.
Then there is this one, stated by so many that no one seems to remember who said it first.
Laying dead in the muddy trenches of World War One. They were all “going to be home for Christmas.”
It was that oft-repeated line that reportedly comforted so many at the head of what turned out to be one of the most devastating wars in history, World War One – “The war will be over by Christmas.”
When I first heard a clip of Trump uttering the words; “We took action to stop war, not to start one,” I was immediately reminded of a scene in the 1964, satirical, anti-war film ‘Dr. Strangelove’ when Peter Sellers, playing the U.S. president, came across one of his generals involved in a fist-a-cuffs with a Russian ambassador in a military command centre – “Gentlemen, you can’t fight here. This is the war room.”
For sober-minded sanity, I turn to some words spoken this January 3rd by U.S. Senator and Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders who, in the early 2000s, was one of the few members of the U.S. Senate and Congress to oppose his country’s invasion of Iraq.
“That war (the one that the Bush-Cheney administration authored in Iraq) was the worst foreign-policy blunder in the modern history of the United States,” said Sanders. “I’m going to do everything I can to prevent a war with Iran, because if you think the war in Iraq was a disaster, my guess is that war in Iran would be even worse… So let’s work together and prevent that war, and if people want to criticize me for that, go for it, that’s OK, I don’t apologize to anybody.”
U.S. Senator and Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders
Amen!
And let’s pray that Canada is not foolish enough to get involved in any war ventures with a U.S. president who has clearly shown a lack of regard for past allies like Canada and other democratic countries as he cuddles up to totalitarian thugs in haunts like North Korea, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Russia.
The November, 2020 U.S. election cannot come soon enough.
For more on “Mission Accomplished” and by now former U.S. president George W. Bush’s later “regrets” after thousands of young Americans were already dead and wounded and countless tens-of-thousands, if not hundreds-0f-thousands Iraqi civilians had died, click on the screen below –
NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below.
A Reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.
For More News And Commentary From Niagara At Large – An independent, alternative voice for our greater bi-national Niagara Region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL athttp://www.niagaraatlarge.com .
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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“Until one has loved an animal, a part of one’s soul remains unawakened.” – the late French poet, journalist and novelist Anatole France
A Brief One for the Animals by Doug Draper
Posted January 3rd, 2020 onNiagara At Large
One of the first road signs that greets you wen you cross the border from upstate New York State to Massachusetts
If you drive due east from Niagara, Ontario and Buffalo, across the whole 300-some-odd- mile distance of the New York State Thruway, the first town you enter when you cross the border from New York to Massachusetts is West Stockbridge.
Nestled in the picture-perfect Berkshire Hills, this quaint little New England town hosts a population of about 1,600 people and up to March of 2017, one remarkable feline named Felix, known affectionately by town folk as “everyone’s pet cat.”
My wife Mary and I met Felix, or rather he met us, one sunny afternoon in June of 2016 after we stopped to take a short walk through the town before continuing our drive back home to Niagara after visiting friends on Cape Cod.
Felix, walking the sidewalks of his home town of West Stockbridge, Massachusetts in 2016, file photo, Doug Draper
We had just left a nice old bookstore and were about to cross a bridge spanning a river flowing through the town when we looked down and there, walking just a few feet in front of us and looking back from time to time, as if to see if we were still coming, was this yellow-haired cat with long, lanky legs and not much more than a stub for a tail
This photo of Felix, looking down the main street of his town of West Stockbridge was posted on social media. He was one remarkable cat.
He kept walking a few paces in front of us as if he was the town’s ambassador, proudly taking us on a tour, and if we stopped for a moment to look in a shop window, he would wait patiently until the three of us would walk on together again. That was the way it was until we arrived at a store on the main street to get some of those great sandwiches we heard they make there for our trip home.
Inside the store, I asked about the cat, and someone said with a big smile; “Oh, you just met our town cat Felix. He loves to show people around.”Continue reading →
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Payrolls for chief corporate officers are so massive they account for at least 40% of some companies’ losses
A Special Report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
Posted January 2nd, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Ottawa, Ontario — Canada’s 100 highest paid CEOs made 227 times more than the average worker made in 2018, surpassing all previous records, according to a new report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA). That’s up from 197 times average worker pay in 2017.
“Put another way, by 10:09 a.m. on January 2, the average top CEOs will have made as much money as the average Canadian worker will make all year. That’s the earliest time on record in the 13 years we’ve been tracking these numbers,” said report author and CCPA Senior Economist David Macdonald. Continue reading →
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In this New Year 0f 2020 and this New Decade, Let’s All Resolve to be ‘Doves with Claws’
A New Year Message from Doug Draper
Posted January 1st, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Looking back at the decade that has just past, I think it is fair to say that it was a mixed bag of good people doing, or at least trying to do good things, and of bullies and creeps working around the clock to force feed the rest of us on whatever they had stewing in their cauldrons of poison.
There have been all too many bullies and creeps – what I have sometimes likened to the flying monkeys in the haunted forests of Oz Land – working their black magic on the international and national stage, and yes, even right here in our Niagara region.
There is one of those flying monkeys now, taking away poor Toto
Thanks to just enough Niagara residents going to the polls in the October 2018 municipal elections, and thanks to the emergency of a new region-wide citizens watchdog group called A Better Niagara that helped galvanize fellow citizens to vote), a critical mass of bullies and creeps were swept from elected office at the local and regional levels of municipal government.
Yet not all of the bullies and creeps are gone, and courtesy of a system of crass partisan appointments that is begging for reform, some of these bullies and creeps have already popped up in other positions, on boards and commissions and so on, so we have to remain vigilant.Continue reading →
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(Here’s a Plan. When You’ve Sunk to Subterranean Depths in Public Approval, Just Continue Doing More of the Same.)
A New Year’s Day Message from Ontario’s Premier, Doug Ford
Posted January 1s, 2020 on Niagara At Large
Ontario’s “For the People” Premier Doug Ford promises to continue building on what he has been doing for us (or to us) already.
Today (this January 1st, 2020), Ontario Premier Doug Ford issued the following statement marking New Year’s Day:
“A new year offers us a fresh opportunity to build on our previous successes, set new goals, and embrace a bright and hopeful future for ourselves and our loved ones. We look ahead with hope to the months and days ahead where we can make new memories and focus on the things that matter.
As we head into 2020, our government will continue to work for the people of Ontario by delivering on our Plan to Build Ontario Together. We are committed to making life more affordable, preparing people for jobs, creating a more competitive business environment, connecting people to places, building healthier and safer communities, and making government smarter.
From my family to yours, I want to wish everyone a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year!”
The Ford government’s cratering public approval ratings across Ontario, as depicted this past year (201) by non-other than the politically conservative Toronto Sun
NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below.
A Reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.
For More News And Commentary From Niagara At Large – An independent, alternative voice for our greater bi-national Niagara Region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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Cindy Forster Was A Leader in Fighting to Get to the Bottom of What Cabal Members were up to at the old NPCA
Now retired Niagara Centre MPP Cindy Forster
“It’s unfortunate that you overlook my responsibility as an elected Member of Provincial Parliament to ensure the voices in my community are heard.” – from a January 2017 open letter from then Niagara Centre MPP Cindy Forster to then-Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority board of directors chair Sandy Annunziata, responding to a statement he issued that, in part, criticized Forster for raising the concerns of her constituents about the NPCA board of the day going soft on conservation and environmental protection
A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 31st, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Earlier this passing December, following the release of the explosive report by Ontario’s Ombudsman Paul Dube, detailing all of the nefarious conduct around what Dube called the “inside job” that won Carmen D’Angelo Niagara Region’s chief administrative job in October, 2016, I wrote and posted a commentary of thanks to the only eight regional councillors who demonstrated the care and courage to vote against D’Angelo’s hiring.
The screen in Niagara Region’s council chambers, showing the only eight councillors who voted “No” to hiring Carmen D’Angelo to the Region’s CAO post in October 2016
That commentary received thousands of hits (more than I will ever know because it was cast out over other peoples’ Facebook pages) and that was heartening to me given that tracking records on the dashboard of this NAL site confirm what I have often heard from fellow journalists – that negative news and commentary about politicians usually gets more traffic than news and commentary of a more positive nature.
My December 14th commentary about the eight regional councillors who cast that brave vote against hiring D’Angelo (and just four the record, those councillors were Pelham’s Dave Augustyn, Thorold’s Henry D’Angela and Ted Luciani, St. Catharines Kelly Edgar, Brian Heit and Debbie MacGregor, Welland’s George Marshall and Lincoln’s Bill Hodgson) also received quite a bit of positive feedback from readers, including one I wish to give a little special attention to here.
Cindy Forster with Jeff Burch who she supported to fill her seat for the Ontario NDP, as he has, in the Niagara Centre riding
That reader was Cindy Forster who wrote of the December 14th commentary – “Thanks Doug. Always good to refresh the memories of the voting public. Unfortunately we lost a few good regional councillors who voted no (but were later) caught up in the election sweep (in the fall of 2018) to clean house!”
After Cindy Forster posted her comment on NAL’s Facebook page (which, by the way, I don’t go to that often because, truth be known, I have a lot of problems with culture of Facebook), it occurred to me that it would be a good idea to refresh peoples’ memories about the principled leadership and courage she demonstrated in all of this too, before she retired as Niagara Centre’s NDP MPP in the spring of 2018.Continue reading →
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Watch ‘Linda Ronstadt – The Sound of My Voice’ on Cable TV, this Saturday, January 4th at 9 p.m. (updated)
“Linda was like the queen. She was like what Beyoncé is now.”~ Bonnie Raitt, another legendary singer and musician, and a good friend of Linda Ronstadt
By Doug Draper, an incurable Linda Ronstadt fan
Posted December 31st, 2019 on Niagara At Large
If you are as much of a fan of legendary pop singer Linda Ronstadt as I am, and you have access to cable television on New Year’s Day, here is something I am sure you would enjoy.
This Saturday January 4st, at 9 p.m. on CNN, the network will be broadcasting on TV screens for one of the first times (the first broadcast was this past January 1st) a full-length film documentary it produced this outgoing year called “Linda Ronstadt – The Sound of My Voice.”
I was fortunate enough to see this documentary on the big screen, at a repertory theatre on Cape Cod, Massachusetts last September, with a full house of film goers who broke out in spontaneous applause as the final credits began to roll.Continue reading →
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“The reality is a thermometer is not conservative or liberal and it’s certainly not NDP or Green either. It doesn’t give us a different answer depending on how we vote. The climate system is changing. Humans are responsible. The impacts are increasingly serious and even dangerous, no matter who we vote for or where we fall in the political spectrum.” – Scientist Katherine Hayhoe, Director of the Climate Science Centre at Texas Tech University
A Brief Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper followed by links to must-hear CBC Radio interview with climate scientist Katherine Hayhoe
Posted December 30th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
As we begin the third decade of the 21st Century, we are facing what thousands of scientists around the world are now calling a “climate emergency” that may determine whether, decades from now, there will even be people left to record who among us showed the wisdom and courage to address this existential threat to life on our planet, and who did not.
Now is the time for us to decide which side of history we want to be on and how future generations will remember us.
Will we want to be remembered as someone who cared enough to stand up for the future or as someone who chose to do little or nothing?
Do we want to be remembered among those who continued to claim that climate change is a hoax or that it has little or nothing to do with anything we humans do – even when the weight of scientific evidence that the climate crisis we are already experiencing is largely human induced, and when we are already experiencing a higher frequency of damage and destruction related to violent swings in weather.
Severe climate-related disasters, like the one shown happening to Lake Erie shoreline residents in the CBC report (broadcast this past November 2019) below, are becoming ever more frequent, whether we are talking about destructive floods, winds, fires, droughts and food crop failures, crashes in plant, animal andfish populations, and on and on. To watch the CBC report, click on the arrow in the middle of the screen –
When we look at the costly damage climate change is already doing, and at the very real possibility of the larger-scale destruction that lies ahead, we can no longer afford the lack of serious leadership we are seeing in politicians and consider the lack of serious leadership like Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and in too many others now serving at the federal, provincial and municipal level in Canada, and in other countries around the world.Continue reading →
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The Days of Aging Boomers like Donald Trump and Doug Ford Ravaging the World are Rapidly Fading
A Brief Commentary by Niagara at Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 28th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
As Bob Dylan once sang to a then youthful generation of Baby Boomers that since has gone so sour – “The times they are a changin’.”
As the song goes in a message to the Boomer’s parents – “Your old road is rapidly aging. Please get outta’ the new one if you can’t lend a hand.”
Today these ‘get-out-of-the-way’ lyrics are suited, not to their parents, but to the same generation of aging Boomers – to the likes of Doug Ford and Donald Trump, and to all of the mostly white members of the Boomer population who support them.
An aging white Republican congressman holds up a smowball on the floor of Congress during an unusually cold day in Washington, D.C. to make a joke about climate change
They are aimed squarely in the direction of that aging Boomer and to all who laugh with him as he stands there making joke about “global warming” while holding a snowball during a freak late-spring snowfall, even in the face of a climate emergency that threatens to wipe out life as we know it on this planet if we don’t act to turn it around now.
There is real cause for hope though.
Fortunately, Greta Thunberg, the 16-year-old climate activist from Sweden, who was chosen Time Magazine’s 2019 ‘Person of the Year’, and countless millions of her young supporters around the world are stepping up to do what older generations are failing or refusing to do.
There is the hope for the future.
And here is a screen you can click on to view a few highlights from 2019 and Greta Thunberg’s ongoing campaign for her generation’s future –
NIAGARA ATLARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie Sanders quote below.
A Reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.
For More News And Commentary From Niagara At Large – An independent, alternative voice for our greater bi-national Niagara Region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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Parents and children are looking at larger classes, fewer course offerings for older students, and mandatory online learning.
More than 200 students join at Holy Cross Secondary School join in an April 4th, 2019 province-wide walkout to protest cuts the Ford government is making to their education.
A Message from Ricardo Tranjan, Senior Researcher, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (Ontario)
Posted December 27th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Over the past year, the Ontario government has announced a number of budget changes affecting schools and school boards across the province.
Parents are increasingly concerned about how the resulting cuts — both current and future — will harm their children’s education. This is understandable. Parents and children are looking at larger classes, fewer course offerings for older students, and mandatory online learning. The end result, according to the Financial Accountability Office, will be the elimination of 10,000 teaching positions across the province by 2023-24.
Teachers in St. Catharines, engaged in one of some of the one-day walk-outs teachers across Ontario participated in this fall, as Ford cuts to schools loom. Photos by Doug Draper
These changes have been met with significant and sustained opposition, and for good reason: parents and educators want accessible, high-quality public education that meets the needs of all students.Continue reading →
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In its 14 years, the event has raised more than $9.5 million, which all stays in Niagara.
News from Niagara Health (formerly known as the Niagara Health System)
Posted December 27th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario –On May 25, 2019, more than 14,000 people participated in the 14th Annual Rankin Cancer Run, raising more than $1 million for cancer care in Niagara. This inspiring community event fundraises for our local cancer support organizations, including the Walker Family Cancer Centre.
From let to right, Janice Giesbrecht (Chief of Oncology at Niagara Health, Louise Rivett (Rankin Cancer Run Volunteer Committee Member), Roger Ali (Niagara Health Foundation President & CEO) and Chris Green (Niagara Health Foundation).
In its 14 years, the event has raised more than $9.5 million, which all stays in Niagara. This year Rankin Cancer Run has donated $650,000 to Niagara Health Foundation bringing the event’s total contributions to over $6 million.Continue reading →
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We’ll be back in a few days – following the all-to- usual Boxing Day madness – with more News and Commentary for anyone who cares
A Holiday Season Message from Doug Draper
Posted December 24th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
One of my favourite off-beat X-Mass trees,made out of lobster traps, and displayed each year near the wharf in Provincetown, Massachusetts in Cape Cod. The Pilgrim’s Monument towers in the background here to mark the 1620 landing of the Mayflower.
I will be taking a few days off now to spend time with members of my families and friends, and to remember all those beloved ones, including some of my family’s furry feline friends, who are no longer here.
I hope you have time to do the same and are trying to do your best to stay free of so much of the stress and depression that can overcome people at this time of the year.
If you have a job where you have to work on key days of the Holiday season, I wish you the very best to and for some downtime that you can spend with members of your family and friends.Continue reading →
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Niagara’s Pamela Minns, a long-time heritage activist, is a model of good citizenship
Pamela Minns is Celebrated this December for her many years of Leadership in efforts to Preserve Niagara’s Heritage and for the Role she has played in the Revitalization of Thorold’s Award-Winning Downtown
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 23rd, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Read a paper or turn on the radio or television to the news these days, and it is so often filled with reports about nefarious individuals doing nefarious things in our country, our province, our region, and in the world beyond.
Thorold Mayor Terry Ugulini with a plaque expressing appreciation from the city, was one of many who gathered this December to celebrate Pamela Minns’ decades of work to protect and preserve Niagara’s heritage. hoto by Doug Draper
As the late American playwright and author of books Lillian Hellman once put it of Cold War era blacklisting of almost anyone who criticized the government in her country during the 1950s; “We are living in scoundrel times.”
So much so these days, that it can often get depressing reading or turning on the news, and so much so that I’ve heard many people say they’re feeling on the verge of turning off completely.
When I am feeling that way, one of the things I do to keep from turning off (because that’s what the scoundrels dearly want) is to turn my attention to at least some of the many good people out there, working every day and often without any great monetary rewards, to make life better in our communities.
And for me and for so many others who know her, one of those people is Pamela Minns, a Thorold resident and long-time community activist who has devoted her passion and intelligence to protecting, preserving and revitalizing what is left of our rich architectural and cultural heritage in this Niagara region and beyond.Continue reading →
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Ford Tories Ongoing War Against Green, Renewable Sources of Energy is Costing Ontario’s Taxpayers Hundreds of Millions, if not Billions of Dollars
We know which side Ontario’s Ford government supports. What side do you support?
Ford & Company Prove Once Again that they Care More About Pandering to Climate Deniers in their Base than Doing What’s Right for Future Generations
News from Ontario’s Official Opposition New Democratic Party, with a Foreword by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 23rd, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Foreword by Doug Draper –
Ontario’s Environment Minister Jeff Yurek, arguably already the worst environment minister the province has ever had (on the right, with his puppetmaster, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who says he “proud” of killing wind energy projects
Since I began my journalism career covering environmental issues at the St. Catharines Standard 40 years ago, no Ontario government, with the possible exception of that run by Mike Harris and his Tories in the late 1990s and early 2000s, has shown more ignorance of science and more contempt for policies and programs necessary to protect our environment than that of Doug Ford and his so-called Progressive Conservatives.
Whether it has been the need for managing potentially destructive floods and protecting and planting trees or the need to save what is left of endangered species, our provincially significant wetlands or place a price on climate-raving carbon pollution, this Ford government is second to none in Ontario and possibly the country in de-funding and dismantling green programs that have often been decades in the making.Continue reading →
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A Few Words of Remembrance from Doug Draper, and from Mary and Sarah Draper too
Posted December 20th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Some three hundred kilometres (or roughly 175 miles) due east of Niagara, Ontario and Buffalo, in the rolling hills of Oneida County in Upstate New York, is a community called Rome that was, according to at least some historical accounts, founded along an ancient Native American portage path.
Located off the New York State Thruway, between the cities of Syracuse and Utica, Rome is home to Fort Stanwix that goes back to the French and Indian Wars in the 1760s, and to the site of the groundbreaking on July 4th, 1817 for the Erie Canal that ran between Buffalo and the Hudson River and opened the Great Lakes and mid-western regions of the continent to the Atlantic Coast, and ultimately setting the stage for the northeastern United States to become an industrial and economic powerhouse.
Ed, at right, with one of his grandchildren Jenna and my wife Mary at the Old Sea Pines in 2009, during one of our annual Thanksgiving gatherings
For my wife Mary, daughter Sarah and I Rome, New York is also home to a number of very good friends of ours, who we first met close to 30 years ago at annual Thanksgiving gatherings at a classic Cape Cod inn called Old Sea Pines, whose owners and innkeepers also hale from the Rome area.
One of those very good friends, Ed Lanigan, slipped away this past December 15 at age 83 and we will miss him dearly.Continue reading →
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A Partnership In The Making: Trout Unlimited Canada And The Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority Sign Memorandum of Understanding
Some of the headwaters of Twelve Mile Creek, running through the Fonthill Kame, northward toward Lake Ontario, are vital habitat for freshwater trout. File photo by Doug Draper
“This partnership will improve aquatic habitat, protect properties from floods and erosion and help“ mitigate the effects of climate change.” – NPCA CAO/Secretary-Treasurer, Gayle Wood
News from the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority
Posted December 20th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
The Niagara Chapter of Trout Unlimited Canada (TUC) and Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) signed a historical Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) yesterday at the Regional headquarters. The MOA solidifies a partnership that has been in the works over the past year, as the NPCA revitalized their restoration program and TUC Niagara launched their Healthy Twelve Mile Creek pilot project. Continue reading →
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St. Catharines, Ontario – This December 18th at Niagara Health’s St. Catharines site, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health Christine Elliott announced a government investment of $175 million to help hospitals across Ontario maintain infrastructure to ensure safe and comfortable environments for patients, their families, medical professionals and administrators.
This afternoon MPP Sam Oosterhoff of the Niagara West riding was proud to announce that Niagara’s Hotel Dieu Shaver Health and Rehabilitation Centre will receive over $1.15 million of that funding envelope – $1,154,712 to be exact.Continue reading →
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Wood Has Played a Herculean Role in Restoring NPCA as a Body that puts Conservation First
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 18th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Gayle Wood, the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s outgoing interim CAO, returned to the NPCA, where she began her career in conservation years ago, when it desperatley needed someone like her to get the body back on track
I’m sure most of us can point to organizations that are in such a bad state of disarray, we wonder who on earth would want the job of cleaning them up.
Yet when it is an organization as important as the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NCPA) – one that citizens from across this Niagara region and from eastern parts of Hamilton and Haldimand County count on to look after our precious conservations lands and the health of our watersheds – we certainly hope that someone is willing to take on the job and try.
Over the past 10 months, after literally years of the NPCA being mismanaged and , in this journalist’s view, being largely hijacked by a number of now-mercifully-out-of-our-hair miscreants who seemed to have just about anything other than conservation or protecting our environment on their minds, someone was.
Her name is Gayle Wood, a resident of Niagara-on-the-Lake and a seasoned conservationist with a solid resume in her field and a gold-plated reputation for building and bringing out the best in other Conservation Authorities in the province.Continue reading →
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“High water level conditions caused tremendous challenges, still ongoing in certain areas, for people living and working along the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River shoreline, including damage to homes and property.”
Mike Shantz And Melissa Kropfreiter, Canada-U.S. International Joint Commission
Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Adaptive Management (GLAM) Committee
Posted December 17th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Wet conditions throughout the Great Lakes- St. Lawrence River basin in the spring of 2019 resulted in record or near-record high water levels this past summer on all of the Great Lakes.
High water levels and shoreline flooding on Lake Ontario on June 1, 2019. Credit: Environment and Climate Change Canada.
These high water level conditions caused tremendous challenges, still ongoing in certain areas, for people living and working along the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River shoreline, including damage to homes and property.
The IJC’s Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Adaptive Management (GLAM) Committee seeks to document and better understand the impacts associated with these high water levels.Continue reading →
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“These donations, made by the community, will make such a difference for kids in the city over the holidays, no child should go without a gift.” – City of St. Catharines’ Community and Events Supervisor Brianne Wilson
News from the City of St. Catharines in Niagara, Ontario
Posted December 17th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
With any luck there won’t be a stocking left unstuffed for children across the city after the community once again stepped up in support of the Tree of Little Angels.
The 22nd annual run of the campaign wrapped up on Friday (December 13th) with Community Care of St. Catharines and Thorold stopping by the St. Catharines Kiwanis Aquatics Centre on Monday to pick up the hundreds of donated toys generated by the effort.Continue reading →
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“Imagine if when I had asked (Canada’s Prime Minister Justin)Trudeau to go to COP25 (the international climate conference that just ended in Spain), to bring a clear statement based in science, he had needed Green votes to hang on to government.” – Elizabeth May, Green Party of Canada
Elizabeth May, Green Party of Canada
A Note from Elizabeth May, the Green Party of Canada’s Parliamentary Leader
Posted December 16th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
I just wanted to send a quick note recounting my recent experience as part of the COP25 international climate conference in Madrid (Spain).
Those of you who know me, know that I am committed to honesty so I won’t sugarcoat this for you.
COP25 was a brutal experience. The last several days of it I hardly slept at all, but neither did anyone trying hard to get to agreement.
We are blocked at this meeting by the negotiators representing Donald Trump’s America, Bolsonaro’s Brazil and Morrison’s Australia. Canada is no longer the worst, but we still won a few Fossils of the Day.Continue reading →
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Another Shot by the Ford Government in its Ongoing War on Environmental Protection and on Building a Greener, Cleaner Province of Ontario
“This will result in more cars on the road and more gridlock, along with fewer opportunities for urban renewal and growth. Cancelling the LRT will leave Hamilton with more carbon pollution and other toxic air pollution proven to make people sick.” – from a statement by Environmental Defence, a leading public advocacy group in Canada
A Statement by Sarah Buchanan, Clean Economy Program Manager, Environmental Defence, on the cancellation of the Hamilton LRT
Posted December 16th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
A green way of getting around in the Hamilton area sees its funding scrapped by Ford’s Tories who have shown their preference over and over again for carbon polluting trucks and cars.
Toronto, Ontario – Today (this December 16th), Hamilton residents learned that instead of getting desperately needed clean, comfortable rapid public transit, their long awaited LRT project’s funding was pulled by the Provincial government.
This will result in more cars on the road and more gridlock, along with fewer opportunities for urban renewal and growth. Cancelling the LRT will leave Hamilton with more carbon pollution and other toxic air pollution proven to make people sick. Continue reading →
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All Proceeds from Tigger’s Calendar – Available Now and While Quantities Last at Pet Valu in Thorold – Go to Animal Assistance Programs in Niagara
A Call-Out to All Animal Lovers form Niagara At Large
Posted December 16, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Tigger’s new calendar for 2020 is available now. Photo by Tigger’s friend and Pet Valu colleague
He is a feline celebrity in Niagara, and he may have more recognition than most of the region’s elected representatives in municipal, provincial and federal office.
You walk in the doors of Pet Valu – a retail store for pet food and other pet accessories at the Pine Plaza at 9 Pine Street North in Thorold – and who are almost certain to find at least a few shoppers there who are also there to say Hi to Tigger, a big orange and beige tabby who, along with his feline sidekick Gus, is looking like he’s in charge of the place.
Tigger’s fan base has grown so much that at least two or three years ago his human colleagues at the store began producing a calendar featuring beautifully shot photos placing him at the centre of scenery capturing the spirit of all 12 months of the year.Continue reading →
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Two former Record Theatre employees keep the Fun and Magic of Record Stores Alive in the Buffalo, New York Area
A Shout Out from One Record Store Lover to All Others
From Doug Draper
Posted December 16th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Former Record Theatre employees Andrew Mallon (left) and Joe Igielinski, at work in Joe’s new record store, Hi-Fi Hits in Williamsville, New York
Let me get this out of the way, right here at the top.
The following is by no means a paid ad and there is nothing in the way of compensation I am getting for writing and posting this other than whatever little I can do to help real brick and mortar record stores survive a vacuous era of online shopping that takes all of the heart and soul out of buying recorded music.
Those who have been loyal followers of Niagara At Large know that along with news and commentary about the climate emergency and about a whole host of other issues affecting our lives, I like to take time every once in a while to raise a voice of support for people and places I believe add to the richness of life in our communities.Continue reading →
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On Monday, October 31st, 2016 – A Day That Will Live In Infamy in the Annals of Regional Government in Niagara – Only Eight Regional Councillors Showed the Care and the Courage to Stand Up for What Was Right
On That Day, At That Time in the Region’s History, They Were the Only Real Heroes on That Council
So Thank You to Pelham’s Dave Augustyn, Thorold’s Henry D’Angela and Ted Luciani, St. Catharines Kelly Edgar, Brian Heit and Debbie MacGregor, Welland’s George Marshall and Lincoln’s Bill Hodgson
A Niagara regional council meeting in session, with then-regional chair Al Caslin at the helm. File photo by Doug Draper
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 13th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
The 71 page Ontario Ombudsman’s report, titled “Inside Job,” that continues to rock Niagara Region
In my 40 years as a news journalist in Niagara, few reports I know of have received as volcanic a response from residents across the region than the one released by Ontario Ombudsman Paul Dube this past November 29th; titled “Inside Job.”
Anger, outrage, betrayal and a loss of trust in Niagara Region as an institution were among the many responses I heard and had forwarded to me on Facebook and email to a report that described in detail an ongoing series of behind-the-scenes manoeuvres made by a cabal of now departed senior staffers and members of a regional council then chaired by Al Caslin.
They were manoeuvres that, according to the Ombudsman, compromised institutional processes at the Region in ways that were “unfair,” “wrong,” and “unjust” – to get Carmen D’Angelo, then CAO of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA), hired to the CAO job at the Region in October 2016, then keep D’Angelo there for another three years past his first three-year contract.Continue reading →
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“Regional Council was faced with some challenging decisions on the 2020 budget.” – Niagara Region’s Chair, Jim Bradley
News from Niagara’s Regional Government
Posted December 13th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Niagara Regional Council Approves 2020 Budget
Niagara Regional Council has approved a budget for 2020 that balances the need to maintain core services, deliver critical infrastructure and protect the community.
Niagara Region’s current council in session. File photo by Doug Draper
Challenged with costs downloaded from the province, required capital investments, as well as facing a need to support growth in population and employment, the budget plan is sustainable, transparent and service-focused.
Three components make up Niagara Region’s budget: the levy operating budget, the rate operating budgets and the capital budget.Continue reading →
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News from the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority
Posted December 13th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
A Brief Foreword from Doug Draper at NAL –
The following news was circulated to the news media and posted on Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s website shortly after 9 a.m. this Friday, December 13th, 2019.
NPCA’s current board, with interim CAO Gayle Wood, a veteran conservation administrator, seated to the left of board Chair Dave Bylsma at back. In her short time there, Wood has done a great deal to get the embattled Conservation Authority back on track to focusing on a conservation mission and restoring public trust. File photo by Doug Draper
The appointed of a new Chief Administrative Officer (CAO)) to a publicly funded body that is responsible for important conservation and environmental protection work in Niagara area watersheds and is still recovering from the turmoil and ill management of the past six or seven years is an important development in and of itself.
Given that, Niagara At Large will certainly have more to say about this appointment and the efforts of NPCA’s new CAO and her management team, and the body’s current board of directors’ efforts to get the NPCA back on a conservation track in the days, weeks and months ahead.
For now, here is the NPCA’s news release –
NPCA Welcomes Ms. Chandra Sharma As New CAO
Chandra Sharma is NPCA’s new CAO, effective January 1st
The Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) is pleased to welcome Ms. Chandra Sharma to the position of Chief Administrative Office/Secretary-Treasurer. After an extensive search, the Board of Directors selected Ms. Sharma for the position, and she will commence on January 1, 2020.
“Our new CAO brings to the role more than 20 years of progressive leadership experience in strategy, governance, operations, and program development,” says NPCA Board Chair, Dave Bylsma. “We are excited to have her join the amazing team we already have in place and continuing to move the NPCA forward.”Continue reading →
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Chris Bittle’s Appointment to the Position Comes at a Time when transportation improvements in Niagara are long overdue.
Just Please Don’t Resurrect the Two-Decade-Old Idea of a ‘Mid-Peninsula Highway’
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 12th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
St. Catharines MP Chris Bittle receives key federal transport appointment
St. Catharines’ Liberal MP Chris Bittle, elected to a second term in this past October’s federal election, is one of several MPs Prime Minister Justin Trudeau named this December 12th to his government’s new team of parliamentary secretaries.
According to a news release from the Prime Minister’s office, Bittle has been appointed Parliamentary Secretary to federal Transportation Minister Mark Garneau.
“Our team of parliamentary secretaries will be an important link between ministers and Parliament, working closely with their colleagues to deliver real, positive results for all Canadians,” states the Prime Minister in the release.
“They will help advance government legislation, engage directly with Canadians on key government initiatives, and represent the government in Canada and internationally.”
Bittle’s appointment is obviously good new for him and will hopefully benefit residents in Niagara as well on issues of transportation, including marine, rail, highway and public transit services that are highly important to the region.Continue reading →
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Younger, More Progressive-Minded Canadians – Especially – Know this Party doesn’t care about Climate Change and Many other Issues of Concern to Them
A News Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted December 12th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Andrew Scheer, laying the good ol’ cowboy out west in Alberta where he also plays up his support for the tar sands.
If you are a regular follower of the news, you probably already know that Andrew Scheer made the announcement this December 12th to resign his leadership of Canada’s Conservative Party to spend more time with his family.
That’s right. We can now count Andrew Scheer among the latest to fight tooth and nail to keep his leadership right up to the moment he threw himself on an ever growing pile of political carcasses to spend more time with his family.
Isn’t it way past time these people came up with something better than saying they want to spend more time with their family? How about something like; “I’ve decided to resign so I can spend more time learning how to play the piano.”
At least that would be a little refreshing and it might even have some of us feeling a bit puzzled. There is nothing puzzling any more about a politician saying they are quitting to spend more time with their family.Continue reading →
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“The provincial government used to fund 50 % of the operating costs of transit. Then the Harris Conservatives scrapped that contribution, and the Liberals refused to reinstate it.” – Ontario NDP Transit Critic Jessica Bell
News from Ontario’s NDP/Official Opposition Party
Posted December 12th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
QUEEN’S PARK – Jessica Bell, Ontario NDP Transit critic, called on the provincial government to match municipal funding for public transit operations and maintenance at a press conference this morning.
Bell’s private member’s motion, Better Transit Now, would commit the government to doing just that. The motion will be debated and up for a vote in the legislature on Thursday (December 12th) afternoon.Continue reading →
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Greta Thunberg, speaking at a climate rally in Vancouver, B.C. earlier this 2019
“I don’t want your hope. I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic and act as if the house is on fire.” – 16-year-old climate activist Greta Thunberg
“People are dying! And all you can talk about is money & fairy tales of economic growth. How dare you!” – Greta Thunberg, to a large delegation of world leaders at climate summit hosted by the United Nations in New York City earlier this year
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 11th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
OK Boomers.
OK all of you mostly older conservative-minded people out there who vote for the likes of climate deniers and laggards of the likes of Doug Ford, Andrew Scheer and Jason Kenney in Canada and Donald Trump and his ilk in the United States, and who grumble about paying a few more pennies on a litre of gasoline to drive down the emissions of climate-ravaging carbon pollution.
It took an intelligent, passionate, highly articulate 16-year-old girl from Sweden – Greta Thunberg – to finally mobilize multi-millions of people her age and older around the world to cry out for action on possibly the number one threat to life on this planet in the 21st century.Continue reading →
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News from Community Voices of Fort Erie, a citizens group dedicated to protecting and preserving the Waverly shoreline area
Posted December 1oth, 2019 on Niagara At Large
A Brief Foreword from NAL’s Doug Draper –
Join the citizens effort to protect and preserve the Waverly Beach area from wrongly placed urban development.
This nice book has been published just in time for the Holiday Season and also comes at a time when the Fort Erie-based citizens group, Voices of Fort Erie, continues its effort to protect a Waverly Beach and Woods area that is full of history and natural beauty from urban development that can and should go somewhere else.
Consider buying a copy of this book and do what you can to support the efforts of this group of citizens and others across Niagara to save what is left of our region’s most precious green places from the word kind of urban sprawl.
We can grow and prosper in smart ways that don’t destroy forever what we have left of our region’s natural heritage.
Now here is the news about this new book from Community Voices of Fort Erie –
The “Bumpity Bump”, the old Waverly Hotel, and the “Brickplace” – these are a few of the memories shared by local residents in a new book entitled, MOMENTS IN TIME: STORIES OF WAVERLY AND ERIE BEACH. Continue reading →
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Measure Introduced by Buffalo, New York-Area Congressman Brian Higgins Addresses Algal Blooms in the Great Lakes
Flooding along the American shores of Lake Erie. Scenes like this on both sides of the border have become more commonplace.in recent years.
News from the Buffalo, New York Office of U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins
Posted December 10th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Buffalo, New York-area Congressman Brian Higgins
Buffalo, New York – Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) announced the House of Representatives approved the Coastal and Great Lakes Communities Enhancement Act (H.R. 729), a bipartisan package of legislation protecting Great Lakes and Coastal communities from the impacts of climate change.
The bundled legislation included an amendment submitted by Congressman Higgins directing United States Geological Survey research to include the impacts of harmful algal blooms, nutrient pollution, and dead zones on Great Lakes fisheries.
Congressman Higgins, a member of the Congressional Great Lakes Task Force said, “The Great Lakes are one of this country’s most overlooked and underappreciated natural assets, representing the largest source of fresh water in the world. Climate change is impacting the health of our lakes and will continue to impact the health of our communities if we don’t act with urgency.”Continue reading →
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“As part of our Corporate Values, we have worked with and paid a living wage to Artisans in Developing Countries for seven years so becoming a Certified Living Wage Employer at home is in many ways a dream come true for our company.” – Terri-Lynn Woodhouse, Co-Owner of One Earth
News from the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network
Posted December 10th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – The Niagara Poverty Reduction Network is pleased to announce that One Earth has become a certified living wage employer at the Champion level.
Niagara Poverty Reduction Network director Glen Walker (left) and Niagara-on-the-Lake Lord Mayor Betty Disero with representatives of One Earth, another in a growing number of businesses in the region paying their employess a living wage.
Niagara-on-the-Lake-based One Earth designs and sells an inspired collection of beauty and wellness products, clothing, jewellery, and homewares made by Artisans around the world. For over seven years they have fostered the power of people helping people and have shown that creating a more flourishing world is possible. They currently employ two full time and two part time staff.Continue reading →
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“Residents of supportive living homes are some of the most vulnerable people in our province, and deserve to be protected. …(and yet) the sector remains unregulated with no minimum standards of care.” – – Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch
News from the Niagara Centre Constituency Office of NDP MPP Jeff Burch
Posted December 10th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch
QUEEN’S PARK – NDP MPP Jeff Burch (Niagara Centre) has announced a new private member’s bill to regulate supportive living homes.
The Protecting Vulnerable Persons in Supportive Living Accommodation Bill provides a framework for operators and sets minimum standards that must be met so that tenants are no longer at risk.
“Residents of supportive living homes are some of the most vulnerable people in our province, and deserve to be protected.
“The sector remains unregulated with no minimum standards of care. We’ve heard too many shocking stories of high-risk adults and seniors being mistreated, neglected and left to live in deplorable conditions,” said Burch on Tuesday during a press conference at the Ontario legislature.Continue reading →
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“I am sitting here in this chair because during (October, 2018 municipal) election, people were asking me why do you want to run for the position. … I said it was about restoring honesty, integrity and bringing good faith back to government in the Region of Niagara.” – Niagara-on-the-Lake Regional Councillor Gary Zalepo before the Region’s council voted, this December 5th, to call on police to investigate the circumstances around the 2016 hiring of the Region’s former CAO Carmen D’Angelo
At this special meeting of Niagara Regional Council, councillors voted to call for police investigation into circumstances around CAO hiring affair. Photo by Doug Draper
A News Commentary by Doug Draper, reporter and publisher of Niagara At Large
Posted December 6th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
A year ago this December 6th, Al Caslin, standing at back and at left, performs his final act as Niagara’s regional chair and hands the chain of office over to Niagara Region’s new Chair, Jim Bradley, and the culture in the regional council chambers turned from black to white, just like that. File photo by Doug Draper
Niagara, Ontario – It was a year ago on this day – December 6th, 2018 – that Niagara’s new regional council was sworn in, and Jim Bradley, the former veteran MPP for St. Catharines, was elected by a majority on that newly sworn-in council to serve as Niagara Region’s new Chair.
It was an inauguration day like no other in Niagara Region’s 50-year history, if for nothing more than the sheer number of new faces taking the oath of office.
Only nine of the 32 of the individuals sworn in that day had served on regional council during the last term, and with the exception of Niagara Falls’ Barbara Greenwood, who had sat on the council a few terms ago, 22 had never served on council at the regional level before.
It made for an unprecedented number of newcomers at the regional level following October 2018 municipal election that saw an equally unprecedented drive by citizens across Niagara for sweeping change on the Region’s council after four years of a council, dominated by then regional chair Al Caslin and what came to be known as a “cabal” of a dozen or more councillors, that felt like a trip through Dante’s inferno for many people.Continue reading →
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Council’s Move Follows Release of Ontario Ombudsman’s Report calling process around hiring of former CAO Carmen D’Angelo “compromised,” “unjust,” and “wrong.”
“We value the thoughtful advice of the Ombudsman and we are confident that the implementation of his recommendations will serve to ensure that these activities should not occur again.” – Niagara Regional Chair Jim Bradley
A News Brief by Doug Draper with Updates to Come
Posted December 5th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
At a special meeting of Niagara’s Regional Council, councillors vote unanimously this December 5th to refer the findings in an Ontario Ombudsman’s report on the circumstances around the hiring of the Region’s former CAO Carmen D’Angelo to police for investigation.
Niagara’s Regional Council votes to bring police in to investigate circumstances around hiring of the Region’s former CAO Carmen D’Angelo
Councillors’ support for a police investigation came after a lengthy closed door session with legal counsel and was followed by a spontaneous round of applause and calls of “thank you” from citizens filling the gallery in the council chambers.
The passage of that motion to pass the investigation request on to the Niagara Regional Police Service which, in the case of matters involving possible wronging at the municipal government level, will likely to referred it onward to the Ontario Provincial Police, was followed by the passage of another motion to turn contracts the Region signed with certain former senior administrators over to the Region’s external legal counsel “to investigate all options of legal recourse.”Continue reading →
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Never Mind Saying that the Key Players in Niagara Region’s CAO Hiring Scandal Have Suffered and Been Embarrassed Enough
Regional Councillors Should Remember the Real Victims of this Dark, Demoralizing and Costly Affair – The People Who Pay Their Hard-Earned Money for Good Governance in this Region
A Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted December 4th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
There is a growing call for a police investigation into the circumstances around the hiring of this man – Carmen D’Angelo – to Niagara Region’s top administrative job in 2016. Will Niagara’s regional council heed that call.
Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch, the municipal affairs critic for the Official Opposition Party of Ontario, did the right thing this December 4th when he wrote a letter to the province’s Police Commission, Thomas Carrique, urging him to launch an OPP investigation into the sordid circumstances around the hiring more than three years ago of Niagara Region’s now former CAO Carmen D’Angelo.
Indeed, the findings that Ontario Ombudsman Paul Dube spent more than a year investigating and detailed in a lengthy report, appropriately titled “Inside Job” and released by his office his this past November 29th, are disturbing and disheartening enough to cause even the most positive-thinking people among us turn cynical about politicians, and about politics and government in general
I have hardly talked to a single person in the days since the Ombudsman’s report was released – people who I have met in a grocery store cash line, the parking lot of a local library … people I don’t even know – who are unaware of the findings in this report and who do not want the police called in to investigate any possibility of criminal conduct here.Continue reading →
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Deadline for Public Comments on Climate Plan is December 31st, 2019
A Link for a Copy of Niagara Region’s Climate Plan Discussion Paper is Available Below
A Call-Out from Macie Jacklin and Community Voices of Fort Erie, a citizens group now fighting to keep urban development from despoiling one of Niagara, Ontario’s beloved natural heritage sites, Waverly Woods
Posted December 4th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Hello everyone,
Niagara residents, there is an opportunity for you to provide feedback on the Niagara Region’s climate change report. This report was prepared as part of the review of the Niagara Region Official Plan.
This is a great opportunity for the public to show their support for climate change adaptation and mitigation.
For the second time in three years, walls of sandbags were used to protect St. Catharines’ popular Lakeside Beach and park, and the historic carousel in it from near record-high waters in the lower Great Lakes. File photo by Doug Draper
I draw your attention to section 5.4 page 29. This may be an opportunity to increase pollution controls, create a fact based Natural Heritage System; stronger protection for endangered species and habitats such as wetlands and an enforceable Tree By-law.Continue reading →
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Rather than putting together a real plan for addressing the climate emergency, Ontario Premier Doug Ford has spent millons of tax dollars on a p.r. campaign and court battle against federal government efforts to put a price on carbon pollution
“The current Ontario government isn’t just a dragging their heels when it comes to fighting climate change. They are blocking real action.” – Sarah Buchanan, program manager, Environmental Defence
A News Release from Environmental Defence, a Canada-based advocacy group for environmental protection
Posted Decembert 4th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
A Statement from Sarah Buchanan, Clean Economy Program Manager at Environmental Defence, on the Auditor General’s Annual Report which slams Ontario’s climate change plan –
The Auditor General’s Annual Report, released (this December 4th), confirms that Ontario’s climate change plan falls apart under serious scrutiny.
There is no credible evidence to support, and little reason to believe, that the plan will reduce greenhouse gas emissions enough to meet Ontario’s 2030 target, which was significantly weakened last year. A failing climate change plan is terrible news for Ontarians and also jeopardizes Canada’s ability to meets its climate targets.Continue reading →
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Niagara At Large reporter Doug Draper with ome Breaking News
Posted December 4th, 2019 on Niagara At Large
Niagara Centre NDP MPP Jeff Burch
Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch – a member of Ontario’s Official Opposition/NDP Party has sent a letter to the province’s Police Commissioner, Thomas Carrique, asking the Ontario Provincial Police to follow-up on a released Ombudsman report on the circumstances around the October 2016 hiring of Niagara Region’s now former CAO Carmen D’Angelo.
The Ontario Ombudsman’s report, titled “Inside Job” and released this past November 28th, concluded, following an investigation that last well over a year, that the process used to hire D’Angelo under the watch of the former regional council of Al Calsin, was “compromised,” “unjust,” and “wrong.”
In the days since the release of Ombudsman Paul Dube’s report, at least two members of Niagara Region’s current council – Wainfleet Mayor and Regional Councillor Kevin Gibson and Fort Erie Regional Councillor Tom Insinna, both veteran RCMP officers – have concluded that the involvement of police in a “criminal investigation” of what went on around D’Angelo’s hiring to the top administrative job at the Region is “warranted.”
Now former Niagara regonal chair Al Caslin and the Region’s former CAO Carmen D’Angelo, still running the show two years ago. Calls are growing for a police investigation into the circumstances around D’Angelo’s October 2016 hiring. file photo by Doug Draper
In his open letter to Ontario’s Police Commissioner, circulated earlier this December 4th, Niagara Centre MPP Jeff Burch said, in part –
“Mr. Paul Dubé’s report (enclosed) titled Inside Job, found that the hiring of Carmen D’Angelo was orchestrated from the office of former Regional Chair Alan Caslin and involved other politicians and bureaucratic staff. …
“I am urging the OPP to review the report in detail and to open an investigation. I hope the OPP can ensure that those who engage in wrongdoing and exploit our democratic institutions for their own personal gain can and will be held accountable.”Continue reading →
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“There is no time and no reason to delay. We have the tools, we have the science, we have the resources. Let us show we also have the political will that people demand from us. To do anything less will be a betrayal of our entire human family and all the generations to come.”
U.N. Secretary-General Antonneo Guterras
–U.N. Secretary-General Antoneo Guterras, in an address to representatives of nations around the world, this December 2nd, at the 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Madrid, Spain
News from the United Nations
Posted December 3rd, 2019 on Niagara At Large
A Brief Foreword from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper –
The U.N. Secretary-General at a Climate Action Summit earlier this 2019 with young climate activist Greta Thunberg.
I am posting some of the key lines in this address by the U.N. Secretary-General Antoneo Guterras because I think that these are words we all need to hear from one of the strongest voices for climate action in a position of leadership on the world stage today.
I think we especially need to hear them in Canada where we have a Prime Minister in Justin Trudeau who looks like he may be on the verge of using our tax money to throw subsidies at those filthy Alberta tar pits, in a pathetic effort to keep his minority government in power by appeasing that premier’s loud-mouth populist premier Jason Kenny.
Trudeau runs up against young climate activists at a town hall meeting in British Columbia last year, after his government invested billions of dollars on a tar sands pipeline.
It’s bad enough that Trudeau spent more than five billion of our tax dollars on a pipeline for that tar during his last term of office. Watch out for him throwing even more of our money away on a source of energy that has no future in the 21st Century place – so much so that financial institutions in Europe and other parts of the world no longer want to invest in it.Continue reading →
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