“We have a very fine CAO in Carmen ‘D’Angelo. … We could not have found better and we tried very hard.” – Niagara Falls regional councillor Selina Volpatti
A News Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted July 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – The verdict is in from a lawyer Niagara Region hired this April investigate charges swirling around the 2016 hiring of the Region’s chief administrative officer (CAO) Carmen D’Angelo.
Niagara Region’s CAO Carmen D’Angelo, hired in 2016 with questions lingering about the process that led to him being awarded the Region’s top $230,000-a-year administrative job
Marvin Huberman, a Toronto lawyer who apparently had the powers of the Ontario Omdudsman’s Office, including the power to subpoena for evidence, stood before Niagara’s regional council this July 5th with a 43-page report that councillors were forced absorb on the fly because it had just been disclosed, while he outlines his findings, conclusions and recommendations.
In a nutshell, Huberman – retained by the Region to do the probe in the wake of an April 6th St. Catharines Standard story outlining what the newspaper described as a 2016 hiring process for the CAO job “tainted by backroom dealing and the violation of critical confidentiality rules – came to the conclusion that there was nothing wrong or tainted about the job selection process at all and that D’Angelo’s hiring was fair and square.Continue reading →
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Controversial Regional Councillor Remains On ‘Medical Leave’
By Doug Draper
Posted July 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
St. Catharines regional councillor Andy Petrowski
Andy Petrowski’s regional council seat has been empty now for the better part of a year, but the errant St. Catharines regional councillor has not stopped being a topic of discussion in the council chambers.
Over the year since close to 100 Niagara regional government officials and others received an image of a nude woman from Petrowski’s government email account – a porno pic he initially insisted must have been sent from his device by somebody else – he has been mostly on paid leave from the council and there have been calls from at least some of his constituents that he be docked his pay or resign.Continue reading →
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A Brief One from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted July 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Lincoln regional councilor Bill Hodgson quit NPCA board last year after fellow board members censured him for allegedly committing improprieties while he was pushing for an independent audit of the Conservation Authority’s multi-million-dollar operations.
Those of you who have been regular visitors to Niagara At Large and have been following our posts on the ongoing saga of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA), may already know the story about Bill Hodgson, the Lincoln regional councillor and former NPCA board member.
You may also remember reports on Niagara At Large and other media outlets about how Hodgson quit the NPCA a year ago last May after other board members censured him for the way he went about trying to get independent auditors to comb over the Conservation Authority’s books and manner of doing business with millions of dollars of our tax money – something that is going on right now, by the way, with investigators from the Ontario Auditor General’s Office spending the past four or more interviewing NPCA staff and going through the files.Continue reading →
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“This study highlights that our lifestyle choices matter and can potentially be putting us at risk of developing or progressing neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s.” – Brock University Master’s student Bradley Baranowski
News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Niagara
Posted July 6th, 2017 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – New research from Brock University has shown the food decisions you make today could contribute to the development of Alzheimer’s disease later in life.
Assistant Professor of Health Sciences Rebecca MacPherson and master’s student Bradley Baranowski were among a Brock University research team that found a diet high in saturated fats and sucrose can contribute to the development of Alzheimer’s disease when paired with the normal aging process.
Brock research published recently in the journal Physiological Reports says a diet high in saturated fats and sucrose can lead to Alzheimer’s disease when paired with the normal aging process.
Alzheimer’s is a type of dementia that causes problems with memory, thinking and behaviour, with symptoms worsening over time. Associated with aging, previous research has also linked the development of Alzheimer’s disease to diet-related obesity.Continue reading →
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“Rail safety and the safe transportation of dangerous goods in Canada remain top priorities for the Government of Canada, and we will continue to take steps to prevent another tragedy like this from ever happening again.” – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
A Statement from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on a tragedy that shook public confidence in rail transportation across the nation
Posted July 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on the fifth anniversary of the Lac‑Mégantic tragedy:
Fire balls and explosions abound following a catastrophic train accident in Lac Mégantic, Quebec, five years ago this July
“Five years ago, a terrible tragedy took place in Lac-Mégantic. During the night, a runaway train carrying a shipment of crude oil derailed and caught fire in the heart of the community. The explosion that followed destroyed close to half of the downtown area and took the lives of 47 people, in the deadliest rail disaster in our country’s modern history.
“Today, we remember the victims, and our thoughts go out to all those whose lives were forever changed. The tragedy left scars that cannot be erased – but in the weeks, months, and years that followed, Lac‑Mégantic became a symbol of hope, determination, and solidarity. Today, the people of Lac‑Mégantic continue to show resilience and courage as they rebuild their community.Continue reading →
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Maybe We Don’t Deserve Good People Like Bill Hodgson in Municipal Politics. Do We?
A News Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted July 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Bill Hodgson, on his way into an NPCA board meeting in April, 2017, where he was censured behind closed doors. Soon after, he would resign from the board. File photo by Doug Draper
“My whole spirit of community service is crushed. I just feel discouraged. I don’t see an end to the nasty, self-serving people.”
Those were among the words Lincoln regional councillor Bill Hodgson shared with a local newspaper this July 4th to explain why, after 25 years of public service, he has decided not to run for another term of regional council in Niagara.
Crushed. Discouraged. Those two feelings have shaken his spirit, to say the least.
This decent, honest and caring man – three of the qualities that have always glowed from the only Bill Hodgson I have known going back to his earliest days as a school board trustee in Niagara and mine as a reporter at The St. Catharine’s Standard – has also found himself a target of the kind of political bludgeoning that has left others wondering why any good person in this region would want to run for elected office in the first place.
“I feel bad about this and I’ve already had some people tell me that if I don’t run, then they win,” he told me after I called him about the newspaper report this July 5th. “But I can’t go back,” he said, before going on to explain how much all of the stress around being attacked has taken a toll on his health and his family.Continue reading →
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Vance Badawey, MP for Niagara Centre, has worked for the past four weeks with local steel companies to address the impact of a 25 per cent tariff on steel and aluminum imposed May 31 by the president of the United States.
News from the Constituency Office of Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey
Posted July 5th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Welland, Ontario – As of this July 4th, , six companies and more than 1000 jobs have been spared from imminent closure, thanks to the collaborative efforts of MP Badawey, his counterparts in the nation’s capital, and a $2-billion commitment from the Canadian government to defend and protect Canadians in the steel, aluminum, and manufacturing business.
Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visits ArcelorMittal Dofasco steel plant in Hamilton earlier this 2018.
“It is entirely inappropriate to view any trade with Canada as a national security threat to the United States,” stated Badawey.
“These unilateral tariffs, imposed under a false pretext of safeguarding U.S. national security, are inconsistent with the United States’ NAFTA and World Trade Organization (WTO) obligations. These tariffs will harm industry and workers on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border, disrupting linked supply chains that have made North American steel and aluminum more competitive around the world.”Continue reading →
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Motion to Be Tabled at July 5th Regional Council Meeting, Calling On Province to Appoint Supervisor to Take Over NCPA Operations
A News Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted July 4th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
“The NPCA is committed to maintaining its position as the most transparent Conservation Authority in the Province.”
That line was taken right off the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s website.
And it’s the same line that we, the people, who pay millions of dollars in taxes to fund this Conservation Authority’s operations, have been hearing over and over again from the NPCA’s current board chair, Fort Erie regional councillor Sandy Annunziata, and past chair, St. Catharines regional councillor Bruce Timms.
The Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority (NPCA) board of directors, dominated by Niagara regional council members, in session.
Okay then, if the NPCA is such an “Ontario leader” when it comes to transparency, when are the taxpaying residents of Niagara going to find out how much of their money has been spent on buyouts for however many employees have been ushered out the doors in recent years.
It has now been four months since Niagara’s regional council passed a motion, tabled by St. Catharines regional councillor Brian Heit, and supported by a vote of 16 to seven, for the NPCA to disclose how many municipal tax dollars have been spent to part ways with as many as two dozen employees over the past four years.Continue reading →
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Three regulations set to be implemented this month quietly postponed, including a cap on entertainment and sports ticket prices
News from the Office of Ontario’s NDP and Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath
Posted July 4th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Ontario INDP Leader Andrea Horwath
Toronto, Ontario – Doug Ford appears to be governing from backrooms, making changes to laws in secret, without disclosing who asked for those changes, or who he consulted with. Three separate regulations scheduled to come into effect over the long weekend were quietly postponed indefinitely, with no public notice.Continue reading →
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’s Also Hoping that Bernie Sander’s Revolution and the Youth Movement it has Inspired Will Prevail in America, in Canada and around the World
A Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted July 4th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
One of America’s greatest literary figures, Mark Twain, once wrote; “Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.”
More than a hundred years after Twain put those words on paper, they are excellent ones to embrace not only in the United States, but right here in Canada.
We Canadians have often looked upon expressions of American patriotism as being mindless and misdirected in the sense of; ‘an attack against our president is an attack against our country,’ and loud and showy to the point of being annoying and obnoxious.
I found none of that on a recent trip to visit friends on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. All the way there and back, and found people who feel embarrassed and ashamed of how their nation must look in the eyes of the world, and who wonder out loud of the great American experiment in democracy is going to survive.Continue reading →
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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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(A Brief Foreword from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper –
Maybe there are groups on the Canadian side of the Great Lakes that can join the call to purge plastics from our Great Lakes too.
We once had activist groups in Ontario like Pollution Probe, the Canadian wing of the now-defunct Great Lakes United and Niagara’s own Operation Clean dedicated to Great Lakes issues, but no more.
At least we have the U.S.-based Alliance for the Great advocating for these precious water bodies. There is information in this message by the Alliance that Canadians in Ontario should embrace too.)
The Great Lakes are one of the best places to spend the 4th of July. Chances are, plastic pollution on the beach, or in the water, isn’t a part of your perfect holiday. It’s an eyesore, it’s bad for wildlife, and it gets in our drinking water. Continue reading →
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“It had been estimated that pharmacare for youth would cost about $465 million a year while pharmacare for seniors would cost about $1 billion over three years. Ford pledged to reduce the corporate tax rate to 10.5 per cent from 11.5 per cent. That promise is expected to cost about $1.3 billion a year in government revenue.” – Council of Canadians
News from the Council of Canadians, a nation-wide public advocacy organization
Posted July 3rd, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Well, “my friends,” Doug Ford promised to cut services to put “more money back in your pockets.” Maybe you can use some of that money to pay for your own pharmaceutical drugs! Good luck with that. (An editorial comment from Niagara At Large.)
The Council of Canadians is dismayed by Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s weakening of pharmacare for youth and seniors while at the same time he pledges to implement a massive corporate tax cut.
The previous Liberal government in Ontario introduced a pharmacare plan called OHIP+ that provided free access to 4,400 medications in a provincial formulary to 4 million children, teens and young adults under 25. The Council of Canadians – and its allies the Ontario Health Coalition, the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario, and Unifor – welcomed OHIP+ when it was first announced in April 2017. Continue reading →
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Health Coalition Calls for Ford to Restore Public Drug Coverage & Proper Public Consultation About Policy Changes that Impact Ontarians’ Lives and Pocketbooks
Ontario Health Coalition executive director Natalie Mehra
“Mr. Ford would do well to remember that he has no mandate to cut health care and no mandate to privatize it and we intend to fight every cut and every attempt to privatize health care tooth and nail.” – Ontario Health Coalition executive director Natalie Mehra
News from the Ontario Health Coalition
Posted July 3rd, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Toronto, Ontario – Twenty-four hours after being sworn in as Ontario’s new Premier, Doug Ford’s government issued a press release on the Canada Day weekend revealing a plan to cut health care coverage.
Details are scant. It appears that the plan is to roll back OHIP+ — the Liberal government’s expansion of public drug coverage to those aged 24 and under – so that only those families and young people who do not already have a private drug plan will be covered.Continue reading →
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“Ontario egg farmers deliver eggs that are safe, nutritious, and top-quality. This investment will help Ontario’s egg industry take a major step forward on animal welfare, for less cost and with less waste.” – Vance Badawey, Member of Parliament for Niagara Centre
Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey
A News Release from the Niagara Centre Constituency Office of Vance Badawey
Posted July 3rd, 2018 on Niagara at Large
West Lincoln, Ontario – Canada’s hardworking farmers are the backbone of Canada’s economy, ensuring families across Canada and around the world have safe, high-quality food on their tables.
The Canadian egg industry is a vital part of the Canadian economy, contributing over $1 billion a year and employing 17,000 people.
Today (this July 3rd, 2018), Lawrence MacAulay, Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, announced an investment for the egg industry to assist in the development of an electronic scan to determine the gender and fertility of eggs, helping to increase the capacity and efficiency of hatcheries. Continue reading →
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Fulfilment of election promise is the first step toward reducing gas prices by 10 cents per litre
News from the Office of Ontario Premier Doug Ford
Posted July 3rd, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Ontario Priemer Leader Doug Ford
Toronto, Ontario — Ontario Premier Doug Ford today confirmed that, as the first order of business of Ontario’s Government for the People, his cabinet revoked the regulation that punishes Ontario residents at the gas pump through a wasteful cap-and-trade carbon tax regime; this measure comes into effect July 3, 2018.
In order to fulfill this election commitment, the Government of Ontario will immediately begin an orderly wind-down of all programs funded out of cap-and-trade carbon tax revenues.Continue reading →
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Congratulations to St. Kevin’s Social Justice Scholarship winners
“There are graduation awards for students who are proficient in English, history, mathematics and the like. We put the focus on social justice leadership, commitment and involvement in the school and community. …They walk the talk by doing what they say.” – Joe Barkovich, chair of St. Kevin’s Social Justice Committee
News from St. Kevin’s in Welland, Ontario
Posted July 3rd, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Zoe Bertrand, student, Blessed Trinity Catholic Secondary School
Four high school students this week received $1,000 scholarships for exceptional social service in their schools and communities.
During graduation ceremonies, St. Kevin’s Social Justice Committee members congratulated the 2018 recipients:
Some of you may remember the time when Canada’s first Prime Minister Trudeau – scrappy old Pierre – responded to some hecklers in the federal legislature with words we could not clearly hear, but upon reading his lips, looked clearly like he had just fired them off the F-bomb.
Trump, hardly for the first time, giving our prime minister the look.
When one of the hecklers dared him to repeat what he had said, he told them that he had said “fuddle duddle” – an episode that launched a whole cottage industry of t-shirts with the words ‘fuddle duddle” on them, and that reminded the world that this was one national leader that was not going to be messed around with.
That scrappy little id inside me – the part of us we always have to work to control check when some bully or creep throws mud in our face – says it is well past time our current prime minister, Justin Trudeau, stop trying to be so civil and nice with Trump and just flat out, in front of the world, tell him to go fuddle duddle.Continue reading →
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“Canada’s workers are the backbone of our country. Together, we will keep building a country where every Canadian – no matter where they’re from, what religion they practice, or whom they love – has a real and fair chance to succeed.”
Posted July 1st, 2018 on Niagara At Large
“Happy Canada Day!
“No matter where we are, today, as Canadians, we celebrate Canada and the people who have built the country we love.
“We’re 37 million – strong in our differences, proud of our diversity, and united by our dreams. From one generation to the next, Canadians have brought our country’s promise to life, with hard work, bold vision, and determination. They’ve grown the strong middle class at the heart of our success – and today, Canada’s workers are the backbone of our country.Continue reading →
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“The U.S. tariffs leave Canada no choice but to defend our industries, our workers and our communities, and we will remain firm in doing so.” – Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs
News from Canada’s Federal Government
Posted July 1st, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Canada’s steel and aluminum industries have made North American steel and aluminum more competitive around the world. It is inconceivable and completely unacceptable to view any trade with Canada as a national security threat to the United States.
The U.S. has a US $2 billion annual trade surplus on iron and steel products with Canada. Canada buys more American steel than any other country in the world, accounting for 50 per cent of U.S. exports. Canadian steel is used in American tanks, and Canadian aluminum in American planes. Indeed, Canada is recognized in U.S. law as part of the U.S. National Technology and Industrial Base related to National Defence.Continue reading →
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Niagara, Ontario – There were rumours circulating around in recent weeks that Niagara Region’s chair, Al Caslin, might not run again in this coming October’s municipal elections.
So much for those rumours.
And because I just returned from a visit with friends on Cape Cod, where there were warnings, over and over again, about great white sharks in the water and where the all-time scariest shark movie, Jaws, was filmed, let me begin with this line – “Just when you thought it was safe. …”
Just when at least some of you in that rumour mill possibly did, Al Caslin announced this June 28th that he is running again for Niagara Region’s top elected job – only this time in a region-wide race where his name will be on the ballot in this October 22nd municipal elections for each and every one of us who are eligible to vote.
When he won the top job on regional council the first time, in 2014, the then-St. Catharines regional councillor Al Caslin replaced past chair and Niagara-on-the-Lake regional councillor Gary Burroughs in a contest that was limited to only members of the council voting for a chairperson – a decades-long system of choosing regional chairs that has since been terminated by the provincial government.
Here is a statement from Caslin that his campaign released this June 28th, which also came with a video featuring the same narrative –
“For the past four years, I have been honoured to lead a Niagara Regional Council that has repeatedly delivered for Niagara residents.
As your Regional Chair, I have worked hard to bring Council and staff together to deliver on our commitments to you – and the results are clear: More Jobs, Lower Taxes, Real Results.
We have seen the creation of 12,700 new jobs, billions of dollars in economic growth annually, the lowest unemployment rate in 18 years, and a low tax plan that included a tax freeze in 2016.
Every day I am working with people from across our region to bring our communities together to make a difference for you. We always get further when we row in the same direction.
Together, we secured Daily GO Train service to Niagara Falls, won the 2021 Canada Summer Games bid, and have seen significant private sector investment through companies like GE Canada.
Much has been accomplished and there is more to do – there is real momentum in our communities when we work together and I’m proud to be leading that change.
It’s a great time to be in Niagara and I’m excited to continue serving as your Niagara Regional Chair.”
Now there, as Caslin was want to say in his annual State of the Region addresses, ‘is something to cheer about.”
We’ll have much more to say about this and the race for Niagara regional chair on Niagara At Large in the days and weeks to come. But first let’s make the best of the Canada Day weekend.
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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But Honestly, Are We Really Doug Ford’s “Friends?” Is He Really Ushering In “Ontario’s First-Ever Government for the People?”
A Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted June 29th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
“My friends …. we are going to turn this province around so that our children and their children will feel proud to call Ontario their home.”
Are we really Doug Ford’s friends? Are you?
That was the vow Doug Ford – sworn in this Friday, June 29th as Ontario’s 26tth Premier – made before cheering crowds of supporters on the night of June 7th, after just enough voters across the province gave him the number of seats his Ontario PC Party needs to rule the next four years as a majority government.
An Orwellian chill shot up my spine when I heard Ford make that election night vow. And not just because he led in with the words “my friends,”, although his frequent use of those words that night, and during the weeks of his campaign for the province’s top job, didn’t help.
There is something about politicians who repeatedly use “my friends” in addresses to crowds that makes me cringe – like someone I’m not sure about placing a sweaty hand on my shoulder. Continue reading →
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“When you’re down and troubled … you’ve got a friend.” – a few lyrics from Carole King
Our fabulous feline friend Dylan – white as snow with one eye green and the other blue – in all his glory.
I can’t let this month of June go by without saying a few words about one of my very best friends in this world.
His name is Dylan and he’s one of my all-time favourite cats, and this June he turned 19. That is all of 92 in human years, and still going strong.
Our daughter Sarah adopted Dylan into our family when she, now in her late 20s, was still in her first years of grade school, and a lot of things – good and bad – have happened in our lives since then.
And like other people would know – people who are fortunate enough to have a cat or a dog in their lives – the unqualified love Dylan has given back has never wavered through good times or bad.
However rough a day I may have had, Dylan is always there to jump up beside me and stare into my eyes with a look of devotion I am not sure I always deserve. And that look, along with the soft sound of his pure, never fails to make things better.
Happy birthday dear buddy and hang in there. Let’s go for 20!
Dylan with another great pal of ours, Dexter, taking in some sun filtering in through the windows of our back door.
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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A Statement from the Fort Erie Native Friendship Center
Posted June 29th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
No One Is Illegal – Niagara
Indigenous families in what is currently known as North, South and Central America have experienced separation and violence by the settler states.
Given this shared experience, the Fort Erie Native Friendship Center (FENFC) joins with those standing up on June 30th and adds its voice to demands that the U.S. government must immediately end their current policies of detaining migrants, reunite families and abolish ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency).Continue reading →
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News from the Office of Ontario’s Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff
Posted June 29th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Niagara West-Glanbrook PC Party MPP Sam Oosterhoof
Queen’s Park, Toronto – Sam Oosterhoff, the newly re-elected MPP for Niagara West, will serve as the Parliamentary Assistant to Lisa Thompson, the Minister of Education, in the first Progressive Conservative government of Doug Ford.
“I am honoured and humbled to accept the responsibility of Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Education,” said Oosterhoff (this June 29th).
“I look forward to working with Minister Thompson and to deliver the positive change in education that the people of Ontario want and deserve.” Continue reading →
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Niagara, Ontario – There were rumours circulating around in recent weeks that Niagara Region’s chair, Al Caslin, might not run again in this coming October’s municipal elections.
So much for those rumours.
And because I just returned from a visit with friends on Cape Cod, where there were warnings, over and over again, about great white sharks in the water and where the all-time scariest shark movie, Jaws, was filmed, let me begin with this line – “Just when you thought it was safe. …”
Just when at least some of you in that rumour mill possibly did, Al Caslin announced this June 28th that he is running again for Niagara Region’s top elected job – only this time in a region-wide race where his name will be on the ballot in this October 22nd municipal elections for each and every one of us who are eligible to vote.Continue reading →
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See Details Below For Niagara, Ontario Events Scheduled For June 29th and June 30th
Posted June 28th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – Over a dozen cities across Canada, including St. Catharines and Niagara Falls, are joining 600+ #FamiliesBelongTogether rallies calling for family reunification of children separated from their families, an end to immigration detention and abolition of ICE in the United States.
Rallies in Canada are also calling on Prime Minister Trudeau to condemn US policies in the strongest terms; to end immigration detention and deportation in Canada which also separates families; open the borders to asylum seekers from the United States by revoking the Safe Third Country Agreement and the Designated Country of Origin list; and grant permanent resident status to undocumented and migrant people in Canada. Continue reading →
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Niagara, Ontario – For the past two years the Haudenosaunee have been involved in a heroic struggle to protect the more than 500 acre Thundering Water Forest in Niagara Falls.
Located in Niagara Falls near the conflux of the Adam Beck Generating Power Canal and the Welland River, this rare mix of Carolinian habitat forms a large forest block, including publicly owned parklands along the Welland River.
John Bacher, left, and Danny Beaton, Mohawk Turtle Clan, Waverley Uplands
In this struggle a prominent role has been played by an Oneida family with long roots in Niagara Falls, the Dockstaders. A respected elder of this family Bob, spoke to Niagara Falls City Council on May 8, and identified himself as part of the Oneida Bear Clan. Continue reading →
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Considering the urgent nature of the immigrant and refugee situation at the borders in Donald Trump’s United States, the U.S. is simply not “safe” for immigrants, particularly immigrant children who are still being held in detention camps.
Human rights are not negotiable.
Let’s get Justin Trudeau’s attention together – please signand forward this email to all of your friends, family, colleagues, and neighbours.Continue reading →
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A Call-Out from members of the Western New York Peace Center
Posted June 28th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Dear Friends,
Yes!! Desperately needed and We Shall Overcome!
Si, se puede!
There’ll be a Families Belong Together Rally & March at 10 a.m. Saturday, June 30, starting at Niagara Square, with Music, Speakers, and a march up to ICE at Delaware North, 250 Delaware Ave. (cnr w Chippewa). Continue reading →
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“Challenges include the enormity of the plan, isolated location, high costs of servicing infrastructure, transit tax rules, difficult drainage patterns, changing provincial density rules, and the public determination to preserve agricultural land.”
News from Citizens at City Hall (Catch), a citizens watchdog group based in Hamilton, Ontario
Posted June 28th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
(A Brief Foreword from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper –
For anyone in Niagara, Ontario who may think this news from a citizens’ watchdog group the City of Hamilton is not relevant here, consider the following; Continue reading →
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Let’s Make Wins Like This Happen In Niagara, Ontario This Coming Fall
A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted June 27th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
28-year-old Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez went up against big money and the establishment and won one for the people
You might wonder what the stunning victory of 28-year-old Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in a Democratic election primary in the Bronx and Queens, New York this June 27th has to do with our greater Niagara region and why we would post anything about it here.
Well, in a sense it has nothing to do with our region, but in at least one way, it could be a great source of hope and inspiration for those in Niagara, Ontario hoping to campaign, possibly against big odds and money, for real change for the better in this coming October’s municipal elections.Continue reading →
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“Some people tell me that they are delighted with the progress. … Others express regret that not much is different for riders since the pilot (for an inter-municipal transit system for Niagara) was first launched in 2011.” – Town of Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn
A Column from Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn
Posted June 27th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – I am wondering about your thoughts on the work toward a seamless and integrated transit system for the Niagara Peninsula.
You may recall that after working on an inter-municipal transit system for a few years, Staff presented a plan in 2010 for the Region to begin operating transit. Continue reading →
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Niagara, Ontario – Niagara celebrates the start of the tenth year of seasonal weekend GO Train Service to Niagara. Starting June 22 GO Transit runs trains from Union Station along the Lakeshore West corridor, making stops at the existing St. Catharines and Niagara Falls VIA Rail stations.
This seasonal service, which enjoyed a 40 percent increase in ridership in 2017, is an annual reminder of the importance of GO Train service for Niagara.Continue reading →
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Target Trump Head-On. Slap Sandions On His Own Company and Assets
A Call-Out from Avaaz, a 47-million-people, online global campaign network
Posted June 27th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Dear friends across Canada,
Donald Trump might seem like a joke, but his tariffs on Canada are serious. It’s time we fight back — by hitting him where it hurts.
Trump’s trade war could cost thousands of Canadian jobs, and if we retaliate, we’ll mostly hurt hundreds of thousands of Americans who didn’t vote for him. That’s why a new idea has emerged to target Trump head-on — sanctions on Trump’s own company and assets.Continue reading →
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News from Brock University in St. Catharines/Niagara
Posted June 27th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – A new nighttime look is on its way for Brock University’s signature building.
Since its construction in 1968, the Schmon Tower has been a key component of the University’s landscape and is visible on a clear day from miles around.
A new lighting system being launched on Canada Day will see Brock’s Schmon Tower lit up in various colours throughout the year. Photo courtesy of Brock University
But with the help of a new LED lighting system, the 13-storey landmark will soon be just as eye-catching at night.Continue reading →
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News from the Campaign to Elect Damian Goulbourne Regional Chair
Former Welland Mayor Damian Goulborne running for Niagara regional chair
Posted June 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – A Niagara area educator, business person, parent and former mayor filed his papers today to enter the first Regional Chair of Niagara election race October 22.
Damian Goulbourne, former Mayor of Welland, a Niagara College staffer, and columnist for the St. Catharines Standard, said he is seeking election because he believes in the region’s ability to build a community “where residents experience the value of a strong and vibrant local economy.”Continue reading →
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“Before Ford makes a final decision to scrap cap-and-trade, let’s see just how much that will cost families and businesses – including the impacts on gasoline prices and household heating bills.” – NDP Leader Andrea Horwath
News from the Office of Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath
Posted June 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath.
Queen’s Park, Toronto – Scrapping Ontario’s cap-and-trade program could come with a big price tag, and NDP Leader Andrea Horwath has asked the province’s Financial Accountability Officer (FAO) to look into just how big.
“With Kathleen Wynne and the Liberals’ gas plants scandal, Ontarians saw just how much it costs to rip up contracts,” said Horwath. “Before Mr. Ford rips up the cap-and-trade deal, and makes billions in credits already bought by Ontario businesses worthless, we need to take a hard look at those costs in this case – not just for the province, but the costs to families and businesses.”Continue reading →
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A Canada Day Invite from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission
Posted June 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Fireworks over Niagara Falls
Enjoy free live musical performances in Queen Victoria Park, including the launch of the new Niagara Stage concert series, followed by Canada Day fireworks
Start your day with a mindful outdoor meditation session at White Water Walk or hiking excursion at the Niagara Glen
Take part in a night-time zipline by the Falls and experience the return of Night Lights: Journey Behind the Falls After Dark
Take advantage of the GO Niagara Seasonal Train service, as Niagara Parks and GO Transit make travelling from Toronto to Niagara Falls even easier
Niagara Falls, Ontario – Niagara Parks is set to once again mark Canada Day with a full lineup of events over the July 1st long weekend all along the Niagara River corridor, including the annual outdoor Canada Day celebration taking place in Queen Victoria Park. Continue reading →
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News from the St. Catharines Museum and Welland Canals Centre
Posted June 26th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Architecture from St. Catharines’ past will soon be on display as part of a new exhibit at the St. Catharines Museum and Welland Canals Centre.
People and Places highlights the landmarks and stories behind some of the City’s most famous buildings and landscapes. Items in the exhibit include window pediments from the Russell House Hotel, the May-Clark-Seiler house doorway, the Henry Furs sign from King Street, the YMCA sign from its former location on Queen Street, plus other photographs and objects from the Museum’s collection.
The Russell Hotel in downtown St. Catharines/Niagara, circa 1950s
“This exhibit is about remembering the past and exploring how it fits into the changing landscape of a growing city,” said Adrian Petry, visitors services coordinator with the St. Catharines Museum and Welland Canals Centre. “Life-long residents will certainly experience nostalgia for the sites and stories, but newer residents will get an appreciation for how St. Catharines has evolved over the years.” Continue reading →
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A Powerhouse in the Niagara Falls Tourist Industry, He and His Park Became Targets of Controversy as the Years Wore On
A Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted on June 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
“I built this operation without any help from the government.” John Holer once told me of Marineland, the giant Niagara Falls, Ontario amusement park that was his baby and that became his life-long obsession. “I never got a nickel from the government and I never want a nickel from the government.”
Love him or hate him (and there never seemed to be a shortage of people who felt one way or the other), John Holer, who died this past Saturday, June 23rd at age 83, was every bit a self-made man who built a venue for tourists that, by the 1980s, lived up to all the hype in those ubiquitous ‘Everyone Loves Marineland’ commercials as the most popular attraction next the Falls themselves. Continue reading →
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“Most people who have spoken to me about this issue see (the Councillors’) fliers as an improper use of public resources and funds for self-promotion. Some have even called it electioneering.” – Pelham Mayor and Niagara Regional Councillor Dave Augustyn
A Column from Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn
Posted June 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn
Do you think that your property taxes should pay for self-promotion by elected Councillors?
This was the issue at our last Regional Council meeting when I brought forward a motion to end the practice of some Councillors using public funds to send self-promotional fliers to residents.
You see, this year Councillors Annunziata (Fort Erie), Barrick (Port Colborne), and Quirk (Grimsby) used Regional staff resources to prepare self-promoting fliers and public tax dollars to mail them to residents in their Towns/City. Councillor Quirk mailed something in January and again in May, when the others followed his lead.Continue reading →
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Long Range Queen Victoria Park Concept Master Plan Project
Niagara Parks’ Table Rock Centre to host upcoming information session for members of the public
Session will provide information, collect comments and discuss next steps related to the Queen Victoria Park Concept Master Plan project
Queen Victoria Park with the American Falls in the background
Niagara Falls, Ontario – The Niagara Parks Commission will host a Public Information Centre (PIC) on Tuesday, June 26 from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Table Rock Visitor Centre Upper Rotunda.Continue reading →
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‘Switching from coal, oil and other fossil fuels to energy derived from plants and animal waste is a crucial climate change strategy — but one businesses are still learning how to find value in.’
News from Brock University in St. Catharines/Niagara
Posted June 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
While governments offer incentives for entrepreneurs to become biofuel leaders, the payoff may not be as attractive as continuing to extract and sell the fossil fuels that contribute to greenhouse gases which cause global warming.
Brock chemist Travis Dudding and his team are working with Welland-based Atlantic Biodiesel to boost production value. Photo courtesy of Brock University
That’s where Brock University chemist Travis Dudding comes in.Continue reading →
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Have A Garden Walk Buffalo Map Mailed To You In Advance Of The Walk!
News from the Organizers of Garden Walk Buffalo
Posted June 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Be the first to get your 2018 Garden Walk Buffalo map!
Plan ahead to see hundreds of gardens on this year’s Walk! Get your advance copy of the map – which includes a detailed street map, a handy garden features list, shopping guide, free shuttle bus route, detailed garden descriptions, and more – when you support Gardens Walk Buffalo.
With a minimum $15 donation, you’ll receive the 2018 map mailed to your home prior to the Walk.
Here is hoping Joan Baez will always be an inspiration to each and every one of us who longs for a more just and peaceful world
A Brief Commentary from Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted June 21st, 2018 on Niagara At Large
One of the truly great ones, folk singer and humanitarian Joan Baez
Now is her mid-70s, legendary American folk singer Joan Baez is also now in the middle of what she is calling her “farewell tour” (a stop at Massey Hall in Toronto is scheduled for this September) and her latest critically acclaimed album – ‘Whistle Down The Wind’ – is reportedly the last set of new songs she plans to record in the studio.
Joan Baez has marched shoulder to shoulder with everyone from the late civil rights leader Martin Luther King to anti-war and human rights advocates around the world, and has done so despite every threat of violence, of being jailed and of being censored or blacklisted in one way or another.
Joan Baez, to the right of Martin Luther King (centre) during a civil rights rally in the 1960s
And there is no record of her ever compromising her principles or backing down.
She is one of my heroes and true sources of inspiration going back to my teen years in the 1960s.
Here is a line from Joan Baez’s acceptance speech when she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this past 2017 – a line that defines her legacy as an artist and a caring, compassionate citizen of the world. I hope you find it inspiring too.
“I want my granddaughter to know that I fought against an evil tide and had the masses by my side”
Niagara At Large is still on the road this week and will be back in full operation this coming Monday, June 25th with more news and commentary about the good, the bad and the ugly in our region and the world around us.
Road trips are good for a little escape, but as far as the good, the bad and the ugly around us goes, I am reminded of a line in an old Eagles song – “You can check out any time you want, but you can never leave.”
So here’s to coming back to face the music folks.
Stay Tuned!
To watch Joan Baez entire acceptance speech at the 2017 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee ceremonies, 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 binational Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .
“A politician thinks of the next election. A leader thinks of the next generation.” – Bernie Sanders
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This is horrible – will you pitch in to help us put the Liberals on notice?
“Thus far, the non-action from Justin Trudeau and the federal Liberals in the face of this human rights tragedy is deeply disturbing. We can’t let this go on!” – Ed Broadbent
A Message from Former Canadian NDP Leader Ed Broadbent
Posted June 25th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Ed Broadbent
Like (so many of) you, I have been simply horrified at the news coming out of the US this week regarding the barbaric treatment of migrant children. It’s too horrible to believe. But it’s all too real. And the callous attitude of the Trump administration demands a strong and principled response from Canada’s government.
With an estimated 48 children a day being ripped from their parents and herded, alone, into detention centres often in baking heat in the desert, the urgency could not be clearer.Continue reading →
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NDP says Ford’s anti-environment move comes with costs
A News Release from Ontario’s New Democratic Party
Posted June 16th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Queen’s Park – Doug Ford’s anti-environment crusade will put Ontario’s air, water and land at risk – and cost people and the province billions.
Ford announced Friday he’ll remove the cap on how much industrial operations are allowed to pollute, despite having no plan for a replacement climate change strategy.
Then Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne (left) signs cap and trade pact with Quebec Premier Pillippe Couillard (centre) and California Governor Jerry Brown in September of 2917 in one more effort to address climate change.
“Does Doug Ford not believe in climate change, or does he just think a climate strategy is not part of his job?” asked Peter Tabuns, the NDP MPP-elect for Toronto-Danforth. “Scrapping all clean-air and climate change initiatives will hurt Ontario – and doing that without any sort of a replacement carbon reduction initiative is completely irresponsible.Continue reading →
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“My Friends …. We are going to turn this province around so that our children and their children will feel proud to call Ontario their home.”
Doug Ford likes to call us his “friends”.
That was the vow Doug Ford delivered before cheering crowds of supporters on the night of June 7th – on the day that just enough Ontario voters gave him the number of seats his Ontario PC Party needs to enjoy the next four years as a majority government in the province.
An Orwellian chill shot up my spine when I heard Ford make that election night vow, and not just because he used the words “my friends” to set it off.
There is something about politicians who repeatedly use “my friends” in addresses to crowds that makes me cringe – like someone I am not sure about putting a sweaty hand on my shoulder. Continue reading →
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“Wetlands and naturalized shorelines are critical habitat for so many of our indigenous species in the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Region. As mayors, we need to find ways to naturalize our shorelines and connect terrestrial habitat and migratory pathways throughout the region.” – Suzie Miron, councillor and representative of City of Montréal Mayor Valerie Plante
A News Release from the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative
Posted June 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
At the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative annual conference in Ajax, Ontario this June, Canadian and US mayors celebrated the strong, integrated relationship on environment and economy that binds our two countries and the Great Lakes St. Lawrence region as a whole. The mayors cautioned against isolationist policies towards trade and environmental protection.
“As mayors in the Great Lakes St. Lawrence region, we represent a community of common interest, dedicated to the protection of our shared waters and our integrated economic prosperity,” said incoming Cities Initiative chair Sandra Cooper, Mayor of Collingwood.
If the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence region were a country, encompassing Québec, Ontario and the eight Great Lake states, it would be the world’s third largest economy. It also holds 20% of the world’s fresh water. Due to the integrated nature of its economy, both sides of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence region would be seriously impacted by the imposition of trade tariffs. Continue reading →
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An Invite to All from the Niagara movement for Justice in Palestine- Israel
Posted June 15th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
A number of very concerned residents of Niagara have initiated a “Movement for Justice in Palestine-Israel” (MJPI). The movement made its presence felt very positively at the Market Square in St. Catharines on 19 May.
Participants were encouraged by the large number of the public who were very receptive to their message.
They are now holding a MARCH FOR JUSTICE IN PALESTINE-ISRAEL on Friday, 22 June, 2018 starting at 4.30 p.m. on the sidewalks at the intersection of Geneva- St. Paul- Niagara Streets in St.Catharines. Continue reading →
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A News Release from the Campaign to Elect Haley Bateman, With a Foreword by Doug Draper
Posted June 13th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
A Foreword by Doug Draper –
When so much of what is happening in politics in our country, the world, and right here in our province and region is enough to make a person feel at least a little down, every once in a while some news comes along that gives you a lift and makes you feel hopeful again.
That is certainly true of the news that Haley Bateman has officially launched her campaign to run for one of the five directly elected seats the City of St. Catharines occupies on Niagara’s regional council.
As a citizen in our region, Haley Bateman already has a record of demonstrating her interest in making a Niagara better place to live and work in through her social through her work in the non-profit sector, supporting the Performing Arts, Health and Wellbeing and Women and Children’s organizations.Continue reading →
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Posted June 13th, 2018 by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large
Every once in a while we at Niagara At Large like to share with our readers a letter-to-the-editor that grabbed us while reading the daily newspapers, something we also still do around here – read newspapers, as much as many have made the mistake of giving up on them.
If we have to have an autocrat in the G7, why not Russia’s Putin instead of America’s Trump?
The following letter caught our attention in the Monday, June 12th edition of The Globe and Mail, and appeared in the wake of the ugly conduct of America’s reality TV show president, Donald Trump at the recent G7 Summit meeting in Quebec.
It was written by Michael Armstrong from Niagara Falls, Ontario, right here in our own region, and, believe it or not, when I shared it with a gathering of some of my American friends in Cape Cod, Massachusetts this June 13th, they all thought it pinned the tail on the donkey too.
Here it is –
‘U.S. President Donald Trump wants Russia invited back to the G7.Fine: Let Russia replace America in the G7. That way, at least the lone autocrat there won’t be one withdrawing from the Paris climate agreement.’
In Putin, we at Niagara At Large would add, there would be someone much intelligent sitting at the table too.
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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Before remembrances of the 50the anniversary of Robert F. Kennedy’s assassination – on June 6th, 1968 – become a distant memory themselves, here is a message form Robert Kennedy that comes to mind for me as I follow the antics of those who service in politics across our country, across the country to the south of us, and too often, across our region of Niagara –
The problem of power is how to achieve its responsible use rather than its irresponsible and indulgent use – of how to get people of power to live for the public and not off the public.” – Robert F. Kennedy
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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“We must do what our electoral system failed to, make sure Ontario’s government represents the will of the people.”
A Message from the Broadbent Institute, Dedicated to Upholding the Principles of Canada’s Former NDP Leader Ed Broadbent
Posted June 14th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Doug Ford’s PC win this past June 7th in Ontario proves the major fault in our electoral system.
Canada’s former federal NDP leader Ed Broadbent
Ontario will now be faced with a government set on an ultra-conservative agenda to cut services, freeze minimum wages, attack women’s right to choose, and ignore climate change – even though 58% of voters chose a decidedly different course of action.
This would never have happened with Proportional Representation. Continue reading →
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“BE IT RESOLVED that the Council of City of St. Catharines commends the media for their investigative reporting and in no way supports censorship of news.” – from a motion to be tabled at the Monday, June 11th meeting of St. Catharines council by City Councillor Joe Kushner
A News Commentary by Doug Draper
Posted June 111th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
St. Catharines City Councillor Joe Kushner standing up for local news coverage
There has probably never been a time since the first person chiselled what might be called a news story on a stone tablet, that one politician or another didn’t complain about the coverage they get.
These days though, attacks on the media are far less random or sporadic and have become part of one of the tools of choice politicians and other individuals in government use to paint the news media as just one more ‘elite’ or ‘enemy’ that is working to keep them from dong the peoples’ work.
We see this news bashing tactic employed daily south of the Canada/U.S. border where Trump and his loyalists repeatedly refer to any reporting they don’t like as “fake news” and make less than subtle threats about taking reporters or whole news organizations to court, and weakening age-old laws that support freedom of the press.Continue reading →
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Still coping with the loss of one of the great characters, Anthony Bourdain
It was bad enough waking up this past June 8th to the realization that Doug Ford had actually won the Ontario election, but to get the “breaking news” around 8 a.m. that Anthony Bourdain was found dead at age 61, reportedly after committing suicide, made the morning too damn much to take.
If you don’t know who Anthony Bourdain was, to say that he was a chef with a television series on CNN called ‘Parts Unknown’ hardly gets to the essence of what endeared him to so many millions of people, including this person who doesn’t make a practice of watching so-called cooking shows.Continue reading →
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“We are going to have to be ready to fight. … The forces of cuts and privatization are now ascendant and it will take a great deal of strength to protect public health care and our core principles of equity and public non-profit service in the upcoming months.”
An Analysis by Ontario Health Coalition executive director Natalie Mehra
Posted June 11th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Natalie Mehra, Ontario Health Coalition’s executive director
In the last days before the election, we tried to find a way to contrast Doug Ford’s belated “platform” with the former Conservative government of Mike Harris to see how far apart they were.
Though I knew the cuts were massive, I was still shocked to discover that Ford’ planned cuts to provincial revenues — the money used to fund our public programs and services including health care — are actually deeper than those of Mike Harris.
The Harris government cut $13 billion in its first four years. Doug Ford plans to cut $22 billion over three years. Continue reading →
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“Our reputation is growing, in Canada and globally, as a university of academic excellence that welcomes diversity from across the country and around the world.” – Jamie Mandigo, Vice-Provost for Enrolment Management and International.
A News Release from Brock University
Posted June 11th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Brock University is emerging as a school of choice for more and more new students, despite a provincial decline in high school-aged applicants.
Brock U. is a magnet for growing numbers of first-year students
Ontario’s ongoing demographic trough has seen the population of 18-year-olds shrink by more than 13,000 in less than a decade. Yet the confirmation rate of first-year students intending to attend Brock this September is more than 15 per cent above where it was a year ago.Continue reading →
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Doug Ford’s PC Party won a majority government in Ontario this June 7th – a majority!
A majority government gives Ford a license to run a virtual dictatorship over the next four years.
These two will probably co-exist on this continent just fine.
The province’s NDP Leader Andrea Horwath promises that she is going to use her party’s second place finish and newly minted official party status to “hold Ford’s feet to the fire.”
Sounds good, Andrea, but with the size of the majority Ford has won, he can, in so many words, simply tell any NDP member who stands in the legislature and questions or complaints to sit down and shut up.
Given Ford’s past conduct, loaded with bullying and bluster, on Toronto’s city council, that may very well be the way it goes.
“The United States and Canada are the world’s largest trading partners. Canada has been a reliable ally in fighting terror and has been a good friend to the United States. “We need to stand with our allies and friends, not abandon them.” – U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins, Buffalo, New York
Congressman Cites Costs to Lackawanna Company; Says: “We Need to Stand with Our Allies and Friends, Not Abandon Them”
U.S Congressman Brian Higgins
A News Release from the Office of U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins, a member of the House of Representatives Ways and Means Subcommittee on Trade and Co-Chair of the Northern Border Task Force
Posted June 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Buffalo, New York – Last week the President announced new tariffs on steel and aluminum – called Section 232 actions – on our strongest allies, including Canada and Europe. Companies in Higgins’ district are already hurting from these bizarre penalties on America’s greatest trading and business partners.
In a letter to Congressman Higgins, Lackawanna, New York based company Welded Tube, USA, writes, “The imposition of 25 percent duties on the OCTG we make in Lackawanna and finish in Ontario will render our products uneconomical. Continue reading →
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Yet Putin’s Russia is Fine and so are those Neo-Nazis carrying torches and yelling anti-Semitic Epitaphs in the Streets of Virginia
A Brief Comment from Doug Draper
Posted June 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Did you know that Canada once burned down the White House?
That is what Trump (I’m sorry, I just can’t bring myself to call him “President Trump”) reported told Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
At least Trump didn’t bring up the time Canada attacked Pearl Harbor or that earlier time when we attacked Fort Sumter and started the Civil War.
And wasn’t it a Canadian who assassinated Abraham Lincoln while he was watching a play at the Shaw Festival Theatre?
Thanks to this faux pas, to put it politely as I can, about the torching of the White House (for all of you so-called undereducated deplorables out there you may take ever word the reality show huckster shouts or tweets out as gospel, it was the British that did that. The country of Canada was still 60 years out from being born at the time), it may be hard enough next time I cross the border to visit my relatives and friends.
And yet this clown, who repeatedly blames others for spreading “fake news”, got elected to one of the powerful positions in the world.
Why did you do this to yourselves and the rest of the world, America?
You should feel embarrassed to have a dangerous ignoramus like this in the same Oval Office where giants like Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Delano Roosevelt once served with intelligence and class.
The fiddle is now playing in Trumpland. Can you hear it?
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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Join us on a free and casual guided tour of a some Garden Walk Buffalo gardens!
A News Release from our cross-border friends at Garden Walk Buffalo
Posted June 7th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Campus Wheelworks and the Campus Cycling Collective are collaborating with Gardens Buffalo Niagara on three bike tours—each on the first Fridays of June, July and August.
We’ll visit a few select gardens in the Elmwood Village and Cottage District, as well as a couple public gardens. The tour will be a total of 8-10 moderately-paced miles on bike paths and bike lanes when possible.Continue reading →
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Jerry Maren, 98, Dedicated Part of His Life to Advocating for “Little People”
A Brief One from Doug Draper
Posted June 8th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
I can’t help it. As a life-long fan of ‘The Wizard of Oz’, just want to put a little something in hear about the passing of the last actor who played one of more than 100 “munchkins in that classic 1939 movie.
His name was Jerry Maren and he played one of three members of the “Lollipop Guild” who sang a welcoming song to Dorothy (Judy Garland) as he – the one in the centre dressed in green – handed her a giant lollipop.Continue reading →
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An Election Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted June 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
The choice for Ontario’s next premier should be obvious this time – it is Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath
About eight years ago, I had an opportunity to do a one-on-one interview for the better part of an hour with Kathleen Wynne during a break at a conference in Niagara-on-the-Lake, when she was serving in the cabinet of Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty as his Minister of Transportation.
In that interview, Wynne was the first Minister of Transportation I can ever remember in the province who said she wasn’t interested in building more highways because she wanted to focus on making communities less car dependent and friendlier to walking, biking and public transit.
Everything about that part of the interview and the rest had me feeling that I was in the presence of someone who refreshingly candid and who embraced a green, progressive vision of where she wanted Ontario to go.Continue reading →
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