Category Archives: Uncategorized

On The 10th Anniversary Of The Iraq War, An Open Letter From A U.S. Veteran To Bush And Cheney – ‘Your Day Of Reckoning Will Come’

A Brief Foreword by Niagara At Large Publisher Doug Draper

Following a commentary I wrote and posted on Niagara At Large this March 19, expressing relief that Canada did not bend to the pressure of the U.S. Bush/Cheney administration to become a military partner in the Iraq War, a number of readers from both sides of the Canada/U.S. border sent me a copy of the following letter by U.S. marine veteran Tomas Young, which was beginning to make rounds in the blogosphere.

U.S. Iraq War veteran Thomas Young at one of many rallies against the war.

U.S. Iraq War veteran Thomas Young at one of many rallies against the war.

This open letter to former U.S. president George W. Bush and his vice-president Dick Cheney was written by Tomas Young, who was wounded and partially paralyzed in the early days of the Iraq War and who later became a vocal opponents of the war. Young wrote his “last letter” on the war this March as he prepared to stop being kept alive by a feeding tube. It is a moving testament and it speaks for itself.

So with just one last passing thought from me, that Thank God it was unnecessary for a Canadian veteran to write a similar letter to Canada’s leaders about this equally unnecessary and costly war, here is Thomas Young’s letter. Please read it and share your thoughts below. Continue reading

A Dispatch From One South Niagara Citizen – To Minister Matthews … .Can You Hear Us?

A Commentary by Pat Scholfield

(A brief foreword from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – Pat Scholfield was one of the first Niagara residents, a decade ago, to know that hospital services would be consolidated in fewer and fewer, and possibly one hospital in this Niagara, Ontario region.

Niagara, Ontario resident and citizen health care activist Pat Scholfield

Niagara, Ontario resident and citizen health care activist Pat Scholfield

She was one of the only few who was on record speaking out at the time for locating a new mega-hospital for Niagara, opening this March 24 in the north Niagara community in St. Catharines, Ontario, in a more central location in the region for all Niagara residents.

Few listened and few paid attention to whatever few reporters, including this one working for the old Thorold News and Niagara This Week at the time, wrote about consultant reports for the Niagara Health System, going back to a decade ago, recommending that most acute care services be pulled out of older hospitals in Port Colborne, Fort Erie, Welland and Niagara Falls and be located at one hospital site.

Pat Scholfield does not regard herself as a hero. She just paid attention while others chose, for whatever reason, to ignore reports going back ten, eight and six years ago that gutting hospital services at the older Niagara sites and consolidating them in a new hospital was in the offing.

Pat was one of the few citizens at the time who did pay attention while others, including the Ontario Health Coalition/NDP coalition wanted to go on living in a fantasy world that smaller aging hospitals could go on operating as fully functioning acute care centres into the indefinite future.

Pat’s narrative, in my view (and please don’t blame her for this foreword – come after me)  is more about working, in a non-partisan spirit, with open minded MPPs like Welland riding MPP Cindy Forster and Niagara Falls MPP Kim Craitor, and with trying to cross a bridge or two with the current Liberal government health minister Deb Matthews to find some common ground in a world where everywhere – not just in Ontario – hospital services are being cut back and consolidated as new out-patient and home-care services are coming to the fore to address the escalating costs of serving aging populations.

This NAL reporter has thrown more than a few stinging comments at Deb Matthews over the past two or more years, but Matthews at least deserves credit for meeting with me and others, coming off a bus from Welland who she knows are terribly upset over what is happening around the restructuring of hospital services in Niagara. As a reporter of local, provincial, national and international news for the past 34 years, I have watched far more politicians in Matthews’ position running away from a meeting with citizens so upset. She at least had the courage to wade in and listen.

So read Pat’s dispatch with that in mind, and knowing that she at least tried to speak out about why a new super hospital in Niagara should be located more centrally in the region before so many others did.)

By Pat Scholfield

We came back from our bus trip to Queen’s Park in Toronto on Thursday, March 21 with the slight feeling that there might be a glimmer of hope, particularly after Ontario’s health minister, Deb Matthews graciously granted  to have a private meeting with a small delegation within the group. Continue reading

Canada’s Harper Government Invests In Great Lakes Clean-Up

A Submission from the Office of Canada’s Environment Minister Peter Kent

NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. March 22, 2013 – Today, the Honourable Peter Kent, Canada’s Environment Minister, announced a major investment under the Great Lakes Sustainability Fund to support 57 clean-up projects in officially designated Great Lakes Areas of Concern.

Canada's Environment Minister Peter Kent

Canada’s Environment Minister Peter Kent

“Today, as we mark United Nations World Water Day and this year’s theme of water cooperation, we reflect on the importance of our water resources globally, and how to protect them,” said Minister Kent. “Our Government is working with many partners to protect the Great Lakes for generations to come. This investment will help us continue to work towards our goal of restoring water quality in all Canadian Great Lakes Areas of Concern.” Continue reading

Another Harbinger Of Spring In The Greater Niagara Region – The Welland Canal Opens

By Doug Draper

It may seem hard to believe given the relentless wintery weather we are enduring, but the Welland Canal officially opened to shipping this March 22.

We are back to the big cargo ships like this again in the Welland Canal. File photo by Doug Draper

We are back to the big cargo ships like this again in the Welland Canal. File photo by Doug Draper

So get set for the bridges to rise, if you cross them for work, and the big cargo boats to float by.

Some of us in cars or trucks may be cursing those bridges as they lift, especially if we feel in a hurry to corss them.

But let’s not forget that the Welland Canal is worth numerous tens-of-millions of dollars in commerce to the Niagara region each year, including countless numbers of visitors who come to this region because they are in to major canals like this one, and the boats that ply them.

 Let’s also not forget that marine transportation is one hell of a lot more environmentally friendly than car or truck transportation, when you add up what car and truck emissions, versus boats, do to the atmosphere.

The Welland Canal is one more feature of the greater Niagara region that perhaps far too many of us take for granted.

 (Niagara At Large invites all of you who care to share your first and last names with your comments to join the conversation by sharing them below.)

Deb Matthews To Cindy Forster – Ontario Government Will Not Reverse Plans To Move Health Care Services To New North Niagara Hospital

By Doug Draper

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews told Welland MP Cindy Forster the provincial government stands behind a decision to move maternity and other acute care services to a new hospital in west St. Catharines from other hospitals in Niagara “and we have no plans to reverse that decision.”

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews insists hospital restructuring will mean better health care for Niagara residents

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews insists hospital restructuring will mean better health care for Niagara residents

Matthews made that statement in the Ontario legislature this March 21 as about 60 Welland area residents looked on from the gallery while Forster told the health minster “they have come here because they are concerned about access to health care in their community.”

 “The residents in my community are sick of being ignored,” added Forster of the continued lobbying residents in Niagara’s southern tier have done to keep services from being cut or completely closed down in hospitals in Welland, Niagara Falls, For Erie and Port Colborne. “The Welland hospital essential to the well-being of my community and we are watching as our hospital is being dismantled.” Continue reading

Gun Industry Lobbyists Have U.S. Politicians Crawling On Yellow Bellies

A Brief Comment by NAL Publisher Doug Draper

I’m not going to dwell on this much longer because I already posted a commentary this March 16 on the death grip Americans have on their guns despite repeated mass shootings, including the one last December that snuffed out the lives of 20 young children at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut.New York Daily News

Report in the American media that I referred to in that commentary, that efforts by everyone from U.S. President Barack Obama to victims of gun violence to get some reasonable gun control legislation passed are dying under relentless lobbying pressure from the Niagara Rifle Association, were confirmed this March 19 when Harry Reid, leader of the Democratic Party controlled U.S. Senate, said there are not enough votes in the senate to pass a ban on the sale of military style assault weapons.

The image I am posting here, of the front page of the New York Daily News, featuring a headline that reads; “Shame on U.S.,” along with the faces of the children slaughtered in Newtown by a deranged young man with an assault weapon and high-capacity magazine, pretty well sums this appalling state of affairs up. Continue reading

You Are Invited To A Niagara-Wide Forum – Developing A ‘Niagara Aging Strategy’

A Submission from Niagara, Ontario’s regional government

Event: Information Forum and Interactive Workshop

Date: Monday, April 8, 2013. Time: 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Location: Welland Community Wellness Complex, 145 Lincoln St., Welland, Ontario.niagara age friendly

Presentations and collaborative work of the forum will include:   

  • “Building a Master Aging Plan – the Brantford/Brant County Experience” – Jean  Kincaid & Lucy Marco, Grand River Council on Aging Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario’s RiverBrink Art Museum Opens New Exhibition “The Battle of Lake Erie” On March 23

A Submission to NAL from the RiverBrink Art Museum

RiverBrink Art Museum announces the opening of a new exhibition “The Battle of Lake Erie” curated by Debra Antoncic, Associate Curator, on Saturday, March 23, 2013. This exhibition is a continuation of RiverBrink’s commemoration of the War of 1812-14.

One of the many classic works of art to be featured in the War of 1812 exhibit, this one of U.S. Navy Commandant Oliver Perry's victory on Lake Erie.

One of the many classic works of art to be featured in the War of 1812 exhibit, this one of U.S. Navy Commandant Oliver Perry’s victory on Lake Erie.

The Battle of Lake Erie, one of the most significant U.S. American victories in the War of 1812-14, took place on Sept. 10, 1813 off the coast of Put-in-Bay, Ohio, near Pelee Island, Ontario. This exhibition features representations of the naval engagement in various media, including a series documenting specific moments in the battle by U.S. American artist Thomas Birch (1779-1851). The Birch series, from the collection of Samuel E. Weir, is accompanied by views of the battle and participants in different media, along with archival documents and objects related to 19th -century marine warfare. Continue reading

Canadians Can Thank Former Prime Minister Jean Chretien For This Much – We Didn’t Do The War In Iraq

A Commentary by Doug Draper

This March 19, our American neighbours are marking the 10th anniversary of the George W. Bush/Dick Cheney-led invasion of Iraq with some grim statistics.

Tony Blair of Britain joins George W. in marching off to the war in Iraq

Tony Blair of Britain joins George W. in marching off to the war in Iraq

Those statistics include at least $2.2 trillion in costs to American taxpayers – $$2.2 trillion that could have been invested on domestic energy and other programs aimed at building the United States a continued leadership role in the 21st century – more than 4,400 American lives lost and more than 30,000 other young Americans wounded, many of them maimed for life. And let’s not forget the more than 120,000 Iraqi lives, most of them innocent civilians, snuffed out in the crossfire.

On this 10th anniversary of what Bush/Cheney called ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom’, Canadians should perhaps take a moment to be thankful that Stephen Harper was not prime minister of our country then and that we are not facing equally grim statistics on this side of the Canada/U.S. border. Continue reading

Please Let’s Stop All The Whining Over The Loss Of Extra-Curricular Activities In Ontario’s Schools

A Commentary by Doug Draper

The March break for Ontario’s elementary and secondary school students is now over and already we are hearing whining once again from parents and some students over the continued suspension of extra-curricular activities in the province’s schools.extra curricular protest 

Ontario’s teachers have been withholding their supervision in almost every form of extra-curricular activity, from football and basketball to music, theatre and other clubs, since the start of the school year last September as a way of letting the province’s Liberal government know how upset they are over its suspension of their collective bargaining rights. 

Now, whether you support the teachers in their concerns over the erosion of their bargaining rights or not, at least one thing has to be kept firmly in mind. Teachers in Ontario were never – and that means they have never, ever, ever, to this date – been mandated to organize or supervise after-school, extra-curricular activities for parents’ kids as part of the job they are obligated through any legal contract with the province to do.

So if you are one of those parents out there, whining about the loss of extra-curricular activities because you think the school should be there to play nanny to your kids while you pursue your career opportunities into the event hours, to hell with you. Why should the rest of us expect teachers we already pay generous salaries and benefits to perform an after-school activity service for your kids?  Continue reading

In NRA’s America, Trafficking Guns Continues To Mean More Than Mass Shootings And Body Counts

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Three months have passed since America and the rest of the world turned on televisions sets to the horrific news that a deranged young man walked into an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut and blew to pieces 20 young children and six of their adult educators with military-style assault weapon owned by his mother, who he also murdered.

Gun sales soar to record levels in U.S. following shooting of children at Conneticut elementary school

Gun sales soar to record levels in U.S. following shooting of children at Conneticut elementary school

In the days and weeks following this blood bath, and as millions of calls and letters of sympathy poured in from around the world to families of the victims, we heard over and over again from politicians and other leading Americans that ‘things have changed this time” – that this time some meaningful legislation would finally be passed in America to control the type of guns and bullet magazines, and who they would be sold to.

Three months later, it is beginning to look like the only thing that changed was the length of time it took for Americans to move on from the Newtown massacre, relative to the shorter time it took to get past other mass shootings that have become epidemic in the country in recent years, and for things to return to business as usual for the gun industry. Continue reading

Niagara’s Ontario Has A New Emergency Medical Services Chief – Kevin Smith Will Take Over From Retiring EMS Director John Cunnane This Spring

Submitted to NAL from Niagara, Ontario’s regional goverment

(A Brief Note from NAL – Kevin Smith from the Niagara Region’s EMS services should not be confused with Kevin Smith, the temporary, Ontario government appointed supervisor for the Niagara Health System in charge of most hospital services in the region.)

NIAGARA REGION, March 14, 2013 – Niagara Region Public Health is pleased to announce the new chief of Niagara Emergency Medical Services (EMS), Kevin Smith, effective April 28, 2013.

Niagara's incoming EMS chief Kevin Smith

Niagara’s incoming EMS chief Kevin Smith

Smith has spent his entire paramedic career in Niagara and area with over 21 years of proven excellence in clinical and administrative emergency medical service environments, including operations superintendent and commander of operations, and most recently as Niagara EMS deputy chief since 2008. He is known for his lifelong learning, through both formal and continuing education. This has been demonstrated most recently as he received his Bachelor of Applied Business: Emergency Services, with distinction, in 2010. Knowledge exchange is two-way for Smith, as he’s also spent nearly ten years as a Paramedic Program Educator with Niagara College. Continue reading

Port Colborne, Ontario Continues To Get Two-Thumbs Up As ‘One Of Ontario’s Best’ For Annual Canal Days Festival

A Submission to NAL from the Office of Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey

Port Colborne, Ontario, March 2013 – Festivals and Events Ontario has once again accredited Port Colborne’s Canal Days Marine Heritage Festival as one of Ontario finest by naming the event to the list of Ontario’s Top 100 Festivals.

Canal Days on one of the most historic canals on the North American continent. File photo by Doug Draper

Canal Days on one of the most historic canals on the North American continent. File photo by Doug Draper

 The Top 100 is a designation created by Festivals & Events Ontario, and sponsored by VIA Rail Canada, which represents excellence for the province’s festivals and events industry. The winners are selected through a nomination process that included a predetermined set of criteria; Canal Days edged out over 3000 other festivals in Ontario, to obtain Top 100 status.

Festivals & Events Ontario is a professional association for the festivals and events industry in Ontario, providing a network for festival and event professionals to share information and resources. The association is involved with collaborative advocacy, policy development, marketing and the provision of educational opportunities for members.

“I am extremely proud that Festivals & Events Ontario has recognized Port Colborne’s signature event, Canal Days”, Mayor Vance Badawey said. Continue reading

From One Of Niagara Ontario’s Great Art Galleries – Silk Painting Workshop with Lillian Asquith, Saturday, April 6 at RiverBrink

Submitted to NAL from the RiverBrink Art Gallery 

Following a successful series of artist’s demonstrations over the fall and winter, RiverBrink is pleased to announce the first of its artist’s workshops.

A sample of the art in this special RiverBrink exhibit

A sample of the art in this special RiverBrink exhibit

Lillian Asquith will conduct a mini-workshop in the art of silk dying. In this “beginner” workshop, students will create their own silk scarf while learning the principles of colour and design. Scarves will be created using silk dyes and will be set using the microwave heat-setting technique. Scarves will be ready to wear when the student leaves.

Lillian Asquith comes originally from Sarajevo. As a Canadian her life has been surrounded by creativity. Of the many US and Canadian artists who have influenced her work, she speaks most highly of Tom Lynch. Her studies have led her to oil painting and watercolour on both paper and canvas. Silk painting however, brings out the freedom of expression in Lillian’s work. Continue reading

U.S.-Canada Agreement Aimed At Easing Congestion At Peace Bridge Border Crossing

Submitted to NAL by the Office of U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins 

Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins announced that U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano will sign a Memorandum of Understanding (this March) with Canada authorizing two phases of primary inspections of commercial cargo in Canada, including one at the Peace Bridge in Buffalo.

Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins

Buffalo, New York area Congressman Brian Higgins

“The economic future of Western New York will be linked to our integration with Canada, said Congressman Higgins, a member of the House of Representatives Committees on Homeland Security and Foreign Affairs as well as the US-Canada Inter-Parliamentary Group.   “The Beyond the Border Action Plan was symbolic of that, and this agreement is a concrete step in that direction.”

The MOU is a codification of commitments in the Beyond the Border Action Plan which originally authorized the pilots to take place. Phase One will take place in Blaine, Washington.  Phase Two will be at the Peace Bridge in Buffalo. Continue reading

Canada’s NDP Leader Delivers Obama’s America A 21st Century Vision For The Future

A Commentary by Doug Draper

If the opposition party of federal NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair is – as the party hopes Canada’s ‘government in waiting’, then Canadians may soon have a government that joins U.S. President Barack Obama in believing that climate change is one of the most serious issues we humans on this planet face in the 21st century.

Canada's federal NDP leader, Thomas Muclair, embraces a Barack Obama future in Washington, D.C.

Canada’s federal NDP leader, Thomas Muclair, embraces a Barack Obama future in Washington, D.C.

And wouldn’t that be a striking contrast from a Conservative Stephen Harper government that treated climate change and environmental issues as a joke right up until a few months ago, when Obama one a second term of office and gave climate change prominence in his January 21 Inaugural Address with these words; “We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that failure to do so would betray our children and future generations.”

“Some may still deny the overwhelming judgment of science, but none can avoid the devastating impact of raging fires, and crippling drought, and more powerful storms,” Obama added.

The Harper government in Canada, faced with the loss of U.S. Republican presidential contender and kindred spirit Mitt Romney, who surely would have ditched climate change and related environmental issues had he bumped out Obama, has been scrambling ever since with a phony campaign aimed at convincing the U.S. administration it cares about the environment – all of this orchestrated to win U.S. approval for the Keystone XL pipeline that would carry crude from the tar sands of Alberta to oil refineries in Texas. Continue reading

Major U.S. Newspaper Urges Obama To Say ‘No’ To Keystone Pipeline. Canadians Should Urge Obama To Say ‘No’ Too

Another of many protests against the tar sands and Keystone pipeline in front of the White House

Another of many protests against the tar sands and Keystone pipeline in front of the White House

A  Commentary by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

 While so many newspapers and broadcasters in Canada’s mainstream media function like marketing agents for the Alberta tar sands and proposed Keystone XL pipeline for carrying crude from these filthy pits to refineries in Texas, one of America’s largest and most influential newspapers is urging U.S. President Barack Obama to say no to the pipeline.

“The U.S. State Department’s latest environmental assessment of the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline makes no recommendation about whether President Obama should approve it. Here is ours,” reads a lead editorial that ran in the New York Times this March 10. “He (President Obama) should say no, and for one overriding reason: A president who has repeatedly identified climate change as one of humanity’s most pressing dangers cannot in good conscience approve a project that — even by the State Department’s most cautious calculations — can only add to the problem.” Continue reading

A Correction For All Niagara At Large Subscribers

A story posted this Wednesday, March 13 wrongly stated in the headline that a bus trip of citizens to Queen’s Park to call for the saving of hospital services at the Welland, Ontario hospital is scheduled for March 24.

Actually, this bus trip, which all concerned citizens are invited to take, is scheduled for March 21st. The new hospital in St. Catharines, Ontario is opening March 24.

Sorry for the error which has been corrected in the post, which NAL urges you to visit by clicking on www.niagaraatlarge.com and reading the information in the piece submitted by Pat Scholfield for further details.

A Call To Niagara Citizens – Join Us On The Bus For A March 21st Trip To Queen’s Park In Support Of Saving Welland Hospital Services

Submitted to NAL by Pat Scholfield and the Welland Health Care Committee 

On March 24th the NHS will be removing Obstetrics and Paediatric Services (Mat/Child) from Welland Hospital and transferring them to the new hospital in St. Catharines, Ontario.

This hospital in Welland, Ontario will be seeing maternity and related services closed by the end of this March - another migration of hospital services from Niagara's southern tier to a new hospital in north Niagara.

This hospital in Welland, Ontario will be seeing maternity and related services closed by the end of this March – another migration of hospital services from Niagara’s southern tier to a new hospital in north Niagara.

The removal of these services will have a dismantling effect on Welland Hospital and there is a concern Orthopedics may also be transferred in the near future as NHS supervisor Kevin Smith has proposed consolidating Orthopedics and the Hospital Improvement Plan recommends moving Orthopedics out of Welland Hospital. Continue reading

An Open Letter To Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne – Ontario PC Leader Urges Premier To Pay Heed To His Party’s “Action Agenda”

Submitted to NAL by the Office of Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak

March 12, 2013,

Dear Premier, I write to express my mounting concern that, after a third of a year since Prorogation, no progress has been made in the Legislative Session to confront the biggest jobs and spending crisis of our lifetimes. Not a single Liberal Bill has been tabled to deal with these challenges.

Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak

Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak

Nor have you targeted even one of Dalton McGuinty’s unaffordable spending items for postponement or reversal. On the contrary, backed by the NDP, you repealed the only wagenfreeze legislation ever tabled by your govemment, keeping Ontario on a path that your own hand-picked economic advisor, Don Drummond, wamed would take Ontario off the deficit cliff. Ontarians are watching, and they rightly expect a renewed sense of confidence in our economy and our future. They too know that Ontario is on the wrong path. I therefore feel it is my responsibility to lay out a series of emergency steps required to set Ontario onto a positive path toward balanced budgets, sustainable spending and renewed job creation. So if you refuse to lead on these challenges, we will. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Heritage Advocate Appeals To Province’s New Premier To Take Heritage Seriously

By Pamela Minns

Heritage in Ontario is in trouble ! 

At present it is under a ministry called the Ministry of Tourism, Culture & Sport – the Minister is Michael Chan;  this has just been confirmed as part of the new cabinet for Kathleen Wynne, Premier of Ontario……and as always, it is last on the list of Ministers announced !

The gutted remains of the historic old Welland Club along the canal in Welland, Ontario. Abandoned and ultimately a target of arson - another case of what heritage activists sometimes refer to as "demolition by neglect."

The gutted remains of the historic old Welland Club along the canal in Welland, Ontario. Abandoned and ultimately a target of arson – another case of what heritage activists sometimes refer to as “demolition by neglect.” Photo by Doug Draper

Heritage is buried in “culture” and is squeezed in between Tourism and Sport — we don’t have a name and we don’t have a hope unless we do something to change it !  We need a proper Heritage Minister in this province — one who will stand up for heritage and, as legislation allows, will indeed fight for it and intervene when necessary.

Please see the letter I have written to the new Premier;  I hope those of you who are involved in heritage preservation will write to the Premier about the sad state of affairs we now have in heritage and urge her to appoint a proper Heritage Minister. Continue reading

New York State Legislators Approve Two-Year Moratorium On ‘Fracking’ For Gas In The State

A Submission from the New York State citizens group New Yorkers Against Fracking

(A short foreword from Niagara At Large – The debate over whether or not to drill for gas in layers of shale below the surface grounds of New York State, using a controversial method known as “hydraulic fracturing” or “fracking for short, has been raging on in that state for at least two years now. And residents in Ontario ought to pay close attention, because the same debate may be coming to tracts of land near you.

Geological studies have shown that there is plenty of gas in the layers of shale below our feet in southern Ontario and there are already petroleum companies interested in exploiting those deposits. The question is – ‘What risks does this practice pose to human health and the environment?’ So keep an eye on this one. Stay tuned.)

Dear Friends:dontfrack1[1]

Good news!  Our voices are being heard:  Yesterday, in an overwhelming 103-40 vote, the New York State Assembly passed a bill that mandates a two-year moratorium on fracking in order to allow studies on the health impacts of fracking. This is a clear recognition of our momentum and an auspicious sign for the days ahead. Continue reading

Buffalo’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade – Always One Of The Region’s First Great Green Harbingers Of Spring

By Doug Draper

We’ve moved our clocks forward an hour and there is a slight smell of spring in the air. Robins are once again beginning to bob on the lawns of our yards and flocks of geese, migrating back from the south, are honking overhead.

Celebrating one of the first great green parties in the greater Niagara region. File photo by Doug Draper

Celebrating one of the first great green parties in the greater Niagara region. File photo by Doug Draper

Finally, we can get away from the dead brown and cold, pitch-black mornings and nights of winter and start looking forward to forward to green.  And one of the greatest green parties of all this time of year is the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Buffalo, New York, ready to roll out of the gates in Buffalo’s downtown this coming Sunday, March 17, which just happens to be St. Patrick’s Day, spot on.

If you can handle a nice long walk through beautiful neighbourhood from where you may have to park your car to the parade route along Delaware Avenue, this parade is one fun way to usher in the spring. It is one of the biggest St. Patrick’s Day parades east of Chicago west of Boston and New York City, and south of Toronto, and you only have to be Irish for a day to be there. Continue reading

Niagara Parks Offers A Host Of Family Activities For March Break

Submitted by the Niagara Falls, Ontario-based Niagara Parks Commission 

(A brief note from NAL – For families remaining in Niagara and neighbouring regions during this March break, Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission has always put together a host of activities that feature some of the world’s most wondrous plants and animals – not to mention a host of exotic butterflies and reptiles – and the great falls of Niagara.

Here is this year’s list of NPC activities for the March break.) 

Niagara Falls, Ontario – The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) has put together a great lineup of activities for visitors and families this March Break holiday.  Come out and enjoy all that Niagara Parks has to offer, including:

A slice of the spring warmth in the Niagara Parks Floral Showhouse. File photo courtesy of NPC

A slice of the spring warmth in the Niagara Parks Floral Showhouse. File photo courtesy of NPC

Venom Exhibit at the Niagara Parks Butterfly Conservatory

2405 Niagara Parkway, Niagara Falls, Ontario

March Break Hours: Open daily from 9 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.

This hands-on, interactive learning environment allows kids of all ages to explore the various aspects of life systems. The travelling exhibit, which was created by Little Ray’s Reptile Zoo of Ottawa, includes tarantulas, scorpions, highly poisonous toads, rattlesnakes, vipers and one of only two king cobras on display in Canada. Admission: $13.50 adults 13+; $8.80 children 6-12, and children 5 and under free. Season pass upgrades are available for an additional $5 and parking is also $5. Continue reading

Celebrating – More Like Fear and Loathing – The Opening Of A New Hospital In The Niagara Health System Twilight Zone

A Front-Line Dispatch from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

It was closing in on 10 a.m. this past Thursday, March 7 when I entered the sprawling parking lot of the new hospital complex scheduled to open this March 24, and finally found a place to park my gas guzzler.

It’s a parking lot that you, by the way, will have to pay dollars per hour to park in once this place is open and you may be unfortunate enough to have a loved one needing treatment here. But let’s leave the parking fee column for later, and get back to the grand ceremony at hand.

Wendy Metcalfe, Sun Media editor in chief for the St. Catharines Standard and affiliated media products, plays master of ceremonies for the NHS.

Wendy Metcalfe, Sun Media editor in chief for the St. Catharines Standard and affiliated media products, plays master of ceremonies for the NHS.

For a few minutes, I sat in my car, thinking about how many dollars each hour visitors to this hospital will soon have to pay just to park in this lot, and listening to a CBC radio newscast followed by a nice eulogy Jian Ghomeshi was airing on his Q show for Stompin’ Tom Conners. All that while, hundreds of invited guests – many of them well-dressed members of the St. Catharines area business elite – were filing in to the new St. Catharines hospital site for a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Continue reading

Forster To Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews: Keep Health Care Services In South Niagara

Submitted to NAL by the Office of Welland, Ontario MPP Cindy Forster

(A brief foreward by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – While St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley was attending an official ribbon cutting ceremony this March 7 for the new hospital opening this March  24 in his St. Catharines riding, Welland MPP Cindy Forster , an NDP member of the provincial legislature, opted out of an opportunity to attend the ceremony to make the following statement in the legislature to the Liberal government of which Bradley is a member.)

QUEEN’S PARK, March 7 – Today in question period, Welland MPP Cindy Forster called on Health and Long-Term Care Minister Deb Matthews to cancel plans to move key health care services from the south Niagara area to a new St. Catharine’s hospital.

Welland, Ontario MPP abd NDP member Cindy Forster

Welland, Ontario MPP abd NDP member Cindy Forster

“People are worried that the ribbons that are being cut today at the new St. Catharines hospital will mean out of business signs for south Niagara,” said Forster. “Residents know that re-establishing the services close to home is years away at best. This gap in services is unacceptable.”

Important services including obstetrics and paediatrics are being moved to the new St. Catharines hospital. For many residents, accessing these services will require driving over an hour, or travelling by public transit for over four hours. Continue reading

Hundreds Gather To Celebrate Ribbon Cutting For New St. Catharines Hospital Site

Submitted by the Niagara Health System

March 7, 2013 – The ribbon has been cut, and the final countdown is officially on for the March 24 opening of the new St. Catharines hospital site.

Kevin Smith, supervisor of the Niagara Health System in Niagara, Ontario. speaking at the official ribbon cutting for the new hospital in west St. Catharines. Photo by Doug Draper

Kevin Smith, supervisor of the Niagara Health System in Niagara, Ontario. speaking at ribbon cutting for the new hospital in west St. Catharines. Photo by Doug Draper

With just 17 days until opening, community partners from around the province joined the Niagara Health System this morning for the ceremonial ribbon cutting of the new St. Catharines Site. There is a tremendous amount of excitement within the NHS and the broader community as the opening of this state-of-the-art facility approaches.

 “We were very pleased to have a large number of political leaders, health care partners, staff, physicians and volunteers join us this morning for this important milestone for healthcare in Niagara,” says Dr. Kevin Smith, NHS Supervisor.  Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario MPP Takes One More Stab At Fighting For Justice For Laid-Off Workers in Fort Erie

Submitted by the Office of Welland, Ontario MPP Cindy Forster

(A Note from Niagara At Larger – Niagara Health System honchoes mentioned Cindy Forster’s name and wondered why she might not be there this March 7 at the ceremonial opening of the new mega-hospital complex located in the north Niagara, Ontario area of west St. Catharines.

Welland, Ontario riding MPP Cindy Forster

Welland, Ontario riding MPP Cindy Forster

While St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley was continuously praised at the ceremony for the new hospital as a champion for the opening of the facility there, in his riding, Forster was at Queen’s Park making one more plea for some justice for 100 employees who were summarily dumped by a U.S.-based corporation when it closed its doors on a plant in Fort Erie, Ontario.

While there is so far no indication that the Liberal government Bradley is part of will do anything to uphold labour laws in Ontario that might at least deliver these workers some severance pay, Forster at least tried to speak for them one more time. NAL is posting her comments this March 7 in the provincial legislature below.)

Ontario, Queen’s Park Hansard, March 7Ms. Cindy Forster: I rise on an issue having a devastating impact on workers in my riding and in the Niagara Falls riding. When US-based company Vertis Communications declared bankruptcy and laid off some 100 employees, they strategically avoided paying these workers their owed severance pay to the amount of $2.7 million. ” Continue reading

A Stompin’ Goodbye To A True Canadian Troubadour

A Short Note from NAL publisher Doug Draper

 I’ve got to admit, I never quite wrapped my mind around Stompin’ Tom Conners. Try as I must, I just didn’t get it.Stompin-Tom-660[1]

If some conclude that makes me less of a Canadian, so be it, since he , by so many accounts was such an unwavering, giant one. I’ve always been more of a Gordon Lightfoot fan and have followed his path around any troubadouring for Canada and for where ever else in the world. I’ve also remained a true fan of Joni Mitchell and Neil Young, who fell into the category of Canadian artists Stompin’ Tom felt jumped our border to acquire larger bags of gold, state side.

Yet there is no doubt, upon the death of Stompin’ Tom Conners, at age 77,  this March 6, that he was much beloved by many Canadians. All you had to do was listen to the phone-in calls to CBC radio over the past 24 hours, and the love for this man comes across loud and clear. Continue reading

Niagara Region Has No Choice Now But To Build Costly ‘Hospital Interchange’ – Will It Get Funding From Province Or Be On Hook For The Whole Thing?

A News Analysis by Doug Draper

Niagara regional councillors will be heading off to Queen’s Park this May with a list of priority projects for the region it hopes the provincial government will support through whatever means, including tax dollars if dollars are what the project calls for.

Niagara Regional Headquarters

Niagara Regional Headquarters

High up on the list of priorities the councillors have decided to ask government ministers to support at their annual Niagara Week at Queen’s Park is funding for the construction of what some of them have taken to calling the “hospital interchange.”

For those who may not know or may need a reminder, the hospital interchange is the one Niagara’s regional government is planning to run on and off the 406 Highway as it swings through the north Niagara community of St. Catharines. It would connect with Third Avenue Louth  and would assist an existing Fourth Avenue  interchange in taking growing volumes of traffic off the highway to a sprawling collection of strip malls and big box stores already doing business in St. Catharines’ west end, and to a super hospital for the region the Niagara Health System is opening later this March in the same area. Continue reading

TELUS Joins Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce As Sponsor Of Niagara Technology Summit

Submitted to NAL by the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Niagara, Ontario, March 6, 2013 – The Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce today announced telecommunications giant TELUS has joined as a presenting sponsor of the Niagara Technology Summit, taking place on May 8 at the Scotiabank Convention Centre in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

The Scotiabank Convention Centre in Niagara Falls, Ontario where the summit will be held

The Scotiabank Convention Centre in Niagara Falls, Ontario where the summit will be held

The Summit is an opportunity for entrepreneurs and businesses from across Niagara to take part in an interactive event featuring the latest technological innovations. The event includes a trade show, informative demonstration sessions and a keynote speaker in the field of business and technology. It will also provide an opportunity for local businesses in Niagara to showcase their work and innovations in the area of technology development and support. Continue reading

Public Inquiry Into Deadly Elliot Lake, Ontario Shopping Mall Collapse Is A Travesty Of Justice

A Commentary by Doug Draper

If you live in Ontario, you may very well remember the horrific news a year ago this coming June of the roof of a shopping mall collapsing, killing two people and seriously injuring many others.elliot lake mall

This March 4, Ontario’s government does what it typically does in a case like this, where higher private and public interests may be criminally culpable for a disaster of this nature, and began a public inquiry.

And we should all know what a public inquiry means in Ontario by now. Months and months and months of questions and answers and depositions drone by, and it is a feeding frenzy – one honking pig out for lawyers and consultants. And at the end of it all, there are some “findings” and “recommendations” tabled for a government that usually yawns at that point. No criminal charges are ever laid. Continue reading

Ontario PCs Will Put Taxpayers Before Public Sector Union Bosses

Submitted by the Office of PC leader Tim Hudak

 QUEEN’S PARK, March 5 – Ontario can return to balanced budgets and job creation – but not while property taxes are going up to pay for unaffordable increases in public sector salaries and benefits, PC Leader Tim Hudak said today.

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak

 “Under this government, public sector compensation has gotten way out of line with private sector realities,” Hudak said. “We need to act on behalf of the 85 per cent of Ontarians who aren’t on the government payroll and have made far more sacrifices in these difficult times.

“In the name of fairness, it’s time to fix a broken system that sees arbitrators hand outsized wage settlements to local public sector workers regardless of a municipality’s ability to pay.” Continue reading

Ontario Arbitrators May Give Municipalities’ Ability To Pay More Consideration Before Approving Police Budgets

By Doug Draper

Niagara and other municipal governments across Ontario may finally be making some progress with provincial arbitrators in controlling the ballooning costs of policing, says Niagara’s regional council chair Gary Burroughs.nal-police-costs1 

The Ontario Police Arbitration Commission, which has powers under the province’s Police Services Act, to settle contract disputes between municipalities and  their police departments, has finally expressed an interest in giving a municipality’s ability to pay more consideration when demands by police unions for wage and benefit hikes come before it, said Burroughs at a February 28 regional council meeting. Continue reading

Join In Celebrating The Life Of One Of Niagara, Ontario’s Very Most Heroic Women

By Gail Benjafield

Woman’s Day – falling every year in early March – is celebrated in many ways.

The great Harriet Tubman, who led countless slaves from America's south to freedom by following the northern star

The great Harriet Tubman, who led countless slaves from America’s south to freedom by following the northern star

For the last several years, the members of the British Methodist Episcopal (B.M.E.) congregation in St. Catharines, Ontario have held an annual dinner in memory of one its founding members, Harriet Tubman.  As most surely know, Tubman was a major conductor of the Underground Railroad, bringing many members of her family and friends to St. Catharines, in safety, and by stealth.

This Woman’s Day is special, because it is not only the 100th anniversary of Tubman’s death, but is also the month in which she was born in 1822. She and fellow freedom fighters built Salem Chapel at 92 Geneva Street, with the help of noted philanthropists and abolitionists such as William Hamilton Merritt. Continue reading

They’ve Already Done More Than Enough Damage To The Flow Of News In Niagara. Keep Quebecor And Sun Media From Poisoning Canada’s Airwaves

A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

As a veteran journalist in Canada who continuously deplores what a handful of corporations have done to a profession I loved enough to venture in to – a profession  I  believed should, at its core, play a vital role in being  a watchdog on governments and other powers-that-be in a democracy – I am pleased to post this piece by Avaaz.org.Media_Propaganda_by_Trosious[1]

Quebecor and Sun Media make up one of the worst of the worst corporations on this continent when it comes to media strangulation – one that places the maximizing of ever-more-piggish profit margins for its corporate bosses and shareholders ahead of anything else, including the resources needed to run respectable, functional newsrooms across the country, including what’s left of the newsrooms at the only three daily newspapers in Niagara, Ontario.

Now this God-awful corporation, with links in its ranks to Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, is seeking a CRTC licence to do a broadcasting station that would spread American neo-Republican-Tea Party like progoganda across our country. Continue reading

Former U.S. President Says Academy Award Winning Film Did Not Give Canada The Credit It Deserved

By Linda McKellar

Perhaps I am not a good Canadian because I actually like to promote my country at home and abroad.

Jimmy Carter, then U.S. president during the "Argo" caper, gives bulk of credit for escape of Americans to Canada

Jimmy Carter, then U.S. president during the “Argo” caper, gives bulk of credit for escape of Americans to brave Canadians like Ken Taylor and to a friendly Canadian government that backed Taylor up..

 Such words as “pride” and “patriotism” often seem foreign to the Canadian lexicon and are considered impolite. I don’t want to come off as a braggart but perhaps it is time we start speaking up when blatantly disrespected.

Many are flocking to see “Argo”, the American-produced film that received an Oscar for best picture at the Academy Awards this February. But not me because this film represents a gross distortion of historical events.

Yes, I know Argo is not a documentary, but it is an all too common example of American braggadocio. Unfortunately many people get their “history” from movies and the misrepresentations are taken as fact. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario MP Blasts Harper Government’s Cuts To Via Rail Services In House Of Commons

 Submitted by the Office of Welland Riding MP Malcolm Allen

 OTTAWA –Malcolm Allen, the federal NDP representative for the Niagara, Ontario riding of Welland, spoke out in Canada’s House of Commons during Question Period this February 28 on behalf of constituents in his riding affected by the cuts to Via Rail.

Niagara, Ontario area MP Malcolm Allen

Niagara, Ontario area MP Malcolm Allen

 “Mr. Speaker,” stated Allen. “Via Rail is not working for Niagarians. On February 20th last week, I held a community roundtable on the cancellation of the only Via train from Niagara Falls to Toronto.”

 “Many angry Niagarians from across the entire region actually came and raised concerns about the reckless Conservative cuts to (passenger rail services) that Via says ‘wasn’t because of ridership’. In fact most of the time it’s full.”

 So what is the alternative that Via says we should in Niagara. It says well take the GO bus and get stuck in traffic. Oh, by the way, wait at night and take the Amtrak train from the U.S.

 When will this government restore Via’s funding and give Niagarians their train back?”

 To watch a video of Malcolm Allen asking this question in the House of Commons and the response he received click on the following link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-sWv6N6vEY&list=UUPlbB-Es16zaprMM1W1-5sg .

 Later on February 28, at a Niagara regional council meeting, regional government Chair Gary Burroughs  said the Region needs to assist in applying pressure on the appropriate federal bodies to reverse the cuts to Via Rail services in Niagara.

“We need rail service,” said Burroughs. “They took one of our services away and we will get involved as much as we can” to get the service back.

For more news on the Harper government’s planned cuts to Via Rail services for the year ahead, visit the site of Toronto area MP Olivia Chow at http://www.oliviachow.ca/2013/02/via-rail-massive-cuts-looming/  .

(Niagara At Large encourages all visitors to this site to share their views on this post or any other posts NAL has posted. Divergent views are most welcome in the spirit of NAL’s goal to operate as a virtual town hall for discussing and debating issues of interest and concern to our communities and countries across the greater Niagara region and beyond.)

Health Care Services In Niagara, Ontario’s Southern Tier ‘Must Be Preserved’ – Niagara MPP

Submitted by the Office of Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

QUEEN’S PARK, February 28 – Today in the legislature, Welland MPP Cindy Forster presented a petition signed by nearly 20,000 Ontarians calling on the government to preserve health care services in the south Niagara and Welland area.

Cindy Forster, NDP MPP for the Niagara, Ontario riding of Welland, tables citizens' petition for health care in provincial legislature

Cindy Forster, NDP MPP for the Niagara, Ontario riding of Welland, tables citizens’ petition for health care in provincial legislature

“As the Niagara Health System prepares to transfer important services from Welland and Greater Niagara General Hospitals into its new north St. Catharines hospital at the end of March, thousands of south Niagara residents hope Health and Long-Term Care Minister Deb Matthews will listen to their concerns, and impose a moratorium on the move until new south Niagara hospital services are implemented,” said Forster.

“If the move goes ahead, residents of south Niagara will have to travel to north St. Catharines to access obstetric, pediatric and gynecological services. Many residents will have to travel an hour or more to access these essential services,” explained Forster. Continue reading

Celebrate the Arrival of Spring with Hawkwatch Activities at Niagara, Ontario’s Beamer Memorial Conservation Area

Submitted by the Niagara Peninsula Conservation  Authority

A brief foreword from Niagara At Large  –

It is one of the great rites of spring in Niagara, Ontario – the annual migration of the great birds of prey, a diverse host of hawks and eagles, soaring and circling through the airshafts above the Niagara Escarpment.

A Red-Tail Hawk in landing mode

A Red-Tail Hawk in landing mode

This yearly migration seems to be attracting larger gatherings of people, bustng to spend more time outdoors after another long, cold winter, and nowhere is their a larger gathering and a better place to witness this spectacle of great birds than the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s Beamer Memorial Conservation Area, atop the Niagara Escarpment in Grimsby, Ontario.

 NAL encourages you to read the following submission from the NPCA and consider giving yourself a chance to share in witnessing one of the great spectacles of nature this region of the world offers each year.) Continue reading

Tim Hudak Takes His Vision Of Cost Cutting And Gutting Any Green Plan That Has Anything To Do With Wind Turbines To Ontario’s Rural Municipalities

 A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

 Tim Hudak and his Conservatives always seem to have found comfort zone in Ontario’s rural communities, including Hudak’s own Niagara West-Glanbrook riding made up of Pelham, West Lincoln, Lincoln Grimbsy and rural stretches of Hamilton.

Ontario Conservative opposition leader Tim Hudak slams Liberal's green energy steps

Ontario Conservative opposition leader Tim Hudak slams Liberal’s green energy steps

Rural communities in Niagara and other areas of Ontario have been a bedrock, core constituency for Hudak’s warmed over Mike Harris stew of tax and spending cuts, and disarming labour unions of any strength they may have left to stand up against employers – public or private – who are pleased to see the wage gap continue to widen between them and all the rest of us, lower down on the foodchain. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Rally Aims To Say ‘Save’ Our Hospital Services

A Submission from the Ontario Health Coalition

The Ontario Health Coalition, a Toronto-based public interest group lobbying for keeping public health care services public, affordable and accessible in the province, will be bringing its ‘Save Our Services’ campaign to the Niagara region this coming Monday, March 4.SOSLOG[1]

And the Ontario Health Coaltion’s hopes you will show your support for quality, accessible hospital services for all Niagara residents by attending this rally, to take place Monday, March 4 at the Welland Arena at 501 King Street in Welland, Ontario. Continue reading

Marching Forward From An Age Of Bitumen Pipelines And Dirty Oil

By Delila Jahn-Thue – NAL’s Voice from Canada’s Mid-West

It’s still February as I write this and my deadline is two days away. I’m thinking about March, the month in which you’ll read this, the notion of moving toward something – a procession, progress through a season.tar sands sierra club ontario

A few days ago Farmer and I called the children to count fat prairie chickens through our dining room window during another Alberta Clipper. Sheltered by the trees, they happily foraged the berry patch while our bird dog Pepper lay clueless on the porch floor.

 I’m thinking about Farmer, last night in bed. I woke him from the verge of sleep to quiz him about prairie chickens. I’d never seen them so big, only the smaller ones and pheasants. “No,” he said, “what you saw before were partridges or huns.” Continue reading

Canada Missed Out On The Invasion Of Iraq? Would Canada’s Harper Government Make Sure We Joined In Any Invasion Of Iran?

By Mark Taliano

The terror bombing and invasion of Iraq by the U.S and the U.K was and is, according to International Criminal Court criterion, a war crime. Neither country has to worry about prosecution though, since they are not within the court’s jurisdiction.  However, many would argue that it is a shame that the ICC doesn’t have more “teeth.IRA_iraq_iran_c_55[1]

 The US/UK foreign policy barbarity has so far destroyed and partitioned Iraq, and it continues to exact a stupendous toll on innocent civilians.  At last count, there have been from 111,309 to 121,640 documented civilian deaths from violence in Iraq since the 2003 invasion began.

 These statistics do not include estimates from critics that 1,000,000 (including 500,000 children), died as a result of the United Nations imposed sanctions campaign that preceded the Second Gulf War.  (Former U.S Secretary of State Madeleine Albright infamously commented that it was “worth it”.)

What else has been accomplished? Continue reading

Niagara Region Invites Usual Suspects To Slam Greenbelt Plan

Do You Want To Stick It To Ontario’s Greenbelt Plan? Well Here Is Your Chance

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Niagara’s regional governmet is holding a public forum this Tuesday, February 26, giving Niagara residents an opportunity to rant and rave about Ontario’s Greenbelt Plan and all it is doing to destroy opportunities to build more low-density suburbs and shopping malls.

This display of protest against the Greenbelt was displayed near St. Catharines, Ontario's Pen Centre Mall a few years back. File photo by Doug Draper

This display of protest against the Greenbelt was displayed near St. Catharines, Ontario’s Pen Centre Mall a few years back. File photo by Doug Draper

This opportunity to slam a 2005 Greenbelt Plan that was intended to protect further farming lands, including tender fruit-growing lands from being paved over, has apparently been a disgusting, government-imposed road block to further development since it was implemented eight years ago.

Therefore, Niagara’s regional government, which has shown its continued interest in sprawling development in areas like west St. Catharines (where the new mega-hospital for all of Niagara will go), Niagara-on-the-Lake where it has approved a mega mall that may very well take customers away from and destroy Pen Centre and Fairview Malls in St. Catharines, and what is left of the Niagara Square Mall in Niagara Falls), now wants to hear from those who will most certainly ask for an end to the Greenbelt. Continue reading

Hey Fellow Ontarians. Are You Ready For ‘Radical Change’?

A Commentary by Doug Draper 

Well, are you ready for radical change? Or at least a sequel to former Tory premier Mike Harris’s ‘Common Sense Revolution’?

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak, led forward by his old boss, former Ontario Conservative premier Mike Harris

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak, led forward by his old boss and political mentor, former Ontario Conservative premier Mike Harris

I ventured out my front door in the dark and cold this Monday, February 25 to pick up The Globe and Mail to a front-page headline that read; “Hudak ready to topple Liberals and campaign for radical change.”

The story underneath that headline begins like this; “Ontario’s Progressive Conservatives are shifting to a state of campaign readiness as Leader Tim Hudak declares he’s prepared to bring down the minority Liberal government by the summer and fight an election on a platform of sweeping change.”

And what do Harper and his Conservatives mean by sweeping change. The Globe report goes on to say this; “Not only does he (Ontario Conservative leader and Niagara area MPP Tim Hudak) want to slash spending to rein in Ontario’s deficit, he aims to redefine the scope of government and shrink it, contracting out health services to the private sector and ending state monopolies such as the LCBO.”

Hudak is then quoted saying this about the change he has in mind; “It’ll be a focus of what government should be in the 21st century.” Oh yah? Sounds more like a warmed over version of the trickle-down economics from the Thatcher/Reagan and Mike Harris eras in the 20th century to me. And all that led to was generous tax cuts for the richest individuals and corporations, and lower wages and fewer job opportunities for the rest of us, along with cuts to health, education and other social services. 

If that’s the kind of radical change you want in Ontario, then the Tim Hudak Conservatives may be just what you are looking for. Continue reading

Village Idiot’s Warnings Go Unheaded – And So Do Those Around Climate Change And The Keystone XL Pipeline

By Delila Jahn-Thue – A Voice from Canada’s mid-west

We’re burning through February here on the farm.dc-keystone-pipeline-rally1[1]

 Farmer’s winter is punctuated by a series of tractor troubles, storms and junk pile emergencies. “Junk pile” is what he calls my mini-van. Throughout January it sat lifeless most times I tried to start it.

It seems there’s a statute of limitations on battery life. I neglected to make sure a switch was off and once depleted in polar conditions, the battery refused to hold a charge. During one compelling emergency I was even forced to drive Farmer’s new-to-him truck.

He wasn’t pleased. Continue reading

Ontario’s Gas-Plant Scandal – Never Mind A Public Inquiry. Let’s Leave It To The Voters To Bury The Governing Party In The Next Provincial Election

A Commentary by Doug Draper

The mess the now-finally-gone Dalton McGuinty – one I always thought was among the worst stinkos of a premier Ontario has ever had, and one who never gave a real fig about anything other than keeping himself elected and prepped up for those corporate boardroom jobs upon retirement – may now destroy any possibility his predecessor Liberal premier predecessor Kathleen Wynne has of surviving  long enough to chart a path of her own.

This guy still stands to destroy the Ontario Liberal's chance to save itself, as a government.

This guy still stands to destroy the Ontario Liberal’s chance to save itself, as a government.

And that is too bad, because Kathleen Wynne, in her own right, seems, or at least seemed, so different from the stinking pile of manure that was Dalton McGuinty. As someone I interviewed on a few occasions, and as someone I quite liked (or may have been sucked in to believing) was one of those few politicians who had an open and honest edge to her, it is sorry to see her going down so rapidly on the McGuinty baggage. Continue reading

West Valley, New York’s Nuclear Waste Site Remains A Serious Threat To Great Lakes Waters Shared By Millions of Canadians And Americans

By Art Klein

(A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper – Way back when – in the dirty 1980s and 90s, when I was covering environmental issues for a once-decent daily newspaper in Niagara, Ontario, one of the major issues for people in the Southern Ontario and Western New York regions sharing the Great Lakes were the number of hazardous waste dumps bleeding their poisons into waters we drink, and waters vital to a diversity of wildlife, including fish many Great Lakes residents catch and eat. 

Environmental groups during that time – groups like Pollution Probe from Toronto, Operation Clean from Niagara-on-the-Lake, the Sierra Club from Western New York and others – pushed governments to excavate all of the wastes from these dangerous dumps and have them destroyed or, if that was not possible, at least place them in leak-proof vaults further away from watersheds in the Great Lakes basin.

One of the many sites that were subject to this debate was the West Valley, New York nuclear waste site, located in the Cattaraugus Creek watershed, draining into Lake Erie and the upper waters of the Niagara River, southwest of the Buffalo Area. Like Love Canal and so many other infamous waste sites that were a focus of debate back then, governments of the day decided that excavating and destroying the waste would be too costly, and they opted to hire engineers to come up with plans to wall the wastes in, using “containment  systems” instead.

As at least some of us who followed this whole business closely knew, these containment systems would eventually break down and the buried wastes – many of these poisons capable of remaining toxic for hundreds, if not thousands of years – would have their chance to leak out into the surrounding environment, including waters flowing into the Great Lakes again. The dirty 1980s and 90s would be reprised to poison the planet for future generations.

So here, below, is some disturbing news shared with Niagara At Large from Art Klein, a member of the Sierra Club in Western New York. And here we go again.)

An aerial shot of the sprawling West Valley nuclear wast dump site in the Lake Erie watershed, just upstream from the Niagara River

An aerial shot of the sprawling West Valley nuclear wast dump site in the Lake Erie watershed, just upstream from the Niagara River

Bad science and engineering, entwined with the loony economics of shallow planning and the ever shifting priorities of government policy, developed West Valley Nuclear Demonstration Project, New York’s prominent Nuclear Waste Site. 

And the delays of five decades now allow climate change to intensify the menace of the site! Continue reading

An Open Message To NHS Supervisor Kevin Smith – Follow Through, Now, On Plans For Urgent Care Centres In Niagara’s Southern Tier

By Vance Badawey, Mayor of the Niagara, Ontario city of Port Colborne 

(A Brief Preface by Niagara At Large – Given that the Niagara Health System pushed ahead with its plans to site a new mega-hospital for Niagara in the region’s north end rather than somewhere more central, Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey has been an ongoing voice for finding new ways of providing acute care services in Niagara’s southern tier.

 In this post, he urges NHS supervisor Kevin Smith to follow through on plans for Urgent Care Centres in the region’s southern tier. If you are wondering what Urgent Care Centres or UCCs are, Ontario’s Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care defines them as facilitites that “can provide diagnosis and treatment for most injuries and illnesses through emergency trained doctors and other health care professionals. … “Some Urgent Care Centres,” the ministry goes on, “may offer follow-up appointments to see how your recovery from illness/injury is progressing.”

Now here is Mayor Badawey’s message to the NHS supervisor.)

Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey

Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey

 While sitting in my hospital bed at the Holland  Orthopaedic and Arthritic Centre of the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, recovering from knee surgery, I reflect on the health of the Niagara Health System and the current decisions yet to be made within the Niagara Health System – in particular, Dr. Kevin Smith’s expected announcement of the location of the two Urgent Care Centres. 

Our position continues to be consistent with the unanimous recommendation the southern tier mayors and the Niagara Regional Chair brought forward to NHS supervisor Dr. Smith  – two sites for his consideration, conditional upon the two UCCs being placed in Port Colborne and Fort Erie. The City of Port Colborne’s preference is the highway 140/East Main Street location for a new South Niagara hospital. Continue reading

Just As Ontario’s New Premier Was About To Get Started, Brace For Another Election – How Long Can Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals Last?

A Commentary by Doug Draper 

Just three days into a new session of the Ontario legislature, it is sounding more and more like Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak can hardly wait to get back on the campaign bus.

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak with his wife Deb Hutton and daughter Miller on the campaign trail in the fall of 2011. Hudak seems determined to get back on that trail as soon as possible. File photo by Doug Draper

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak with his wife Deb Hutton and daughter Miller on the campaign trail in the fall of 2011. Hudak seems determined to get back on that trail as soon as possible. File photo by Doug Draper

In a media release circulated this February 20, Hudak, who is also a Niagara, Ontario area MPP and was a cabinet minister in the former Conservative government of Mike Harris, declared that the only way the province is going to move in a “new direction”, is if it has a “new team” in charge at Queen’s Park. 

“For Ontario to rise again, it’s clear we need to change the team that leads this province,” says the media release without coming right out and saying this time that the best ones to take over governance in Ontario are the Hudak Conservatives.  Continue reading

Goodbye – All Too Soon – To Another Feline Friend

By Doug Draper 

His name was Zeus – a noble name and one he lived up to during his all-too-short 18 years on this planet.

Zeus being his regal self, this past July 2012. Photo by Doug Draper

Zeus being his regal self, this past July 2012. Photo by Doug Draper

He was, like his Greek god namesake from ancient times, regal and sturdy, and the next time I hear a crack of thunder from the skies – rather than fearing that a lightning bolt might be aimed my way for something I may have done wrong – I will hear it as a ‘Hi’ from Zeus that was just as loud and hardy as his meow.

The Zeus I am talking about, as you’ve probably already guessed was a cat, and one fine feline at that. If you’ve followed my columns over the years going back to my employment with Niagara area newspapers, I have written obits from time to time on some of the great animals – most particularly cats – that have shared some of the all-to-little time we all have together on this earth because I believe  these wonderful creatures can be, if we are wise enough to allow them a place in our lives, among the best friends we have.

Zeus was not my cat, not that anyone – as people much than me have said, can ever “have” or “own” a cat. They have their own, independent spirit, and if we are fortunate enough, they extend a paw to us, which makes a friendship with them all the more precious. As Charles Dickens once said; “What greater gift than the love of a cat.”  

What greater gift, indeed.

Continue reading

Groups At Niagara, Ontario’s Brock University Launch “Big Questions” Series For Region’s Youth

Submitted by Brock University

Youth University and Community Learning at Brock University have partnered to launch a “big questions” conversation series for Niagara youth.

The Brock University tower overlooking the Niagara Escarpment

The Brock University tower overlooking the Niagara Escarpment in St. Catharines, Ontario.

The series will provide a platform for youth aged 8 to 14 and their parents to discuss and engage with questions that have no easy answers, such as what makes a great country? And what is beauty?
 
“These types of questions explored in a group setting provide young people with an opportunity to question assumptions and develop critical thinking skills,” says Stacia Heaton, program manager of Community Learning at Brock. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Group Encourages You To Join Them On A Charity Walk In The Cold For The Homeless

Submitted by Start Me Up Niagara

(A brief note from NAL – We seem to be having more than our share of bitter cold days and nights this winter and most of us can only imagine what it must be like for someone without a home and with few, if any, warm places to go. 

That is where this not-for-profit group with a mission to “offer support and encouragement to people who are marginalized because of mental illness, disabilities, substance abuse or homelessness” comes in. 

Please read the following and do what you can to support Start Me Up Niagara. We also encourage you to click on the link below for the group’s website and learn more about its work and how you can assist.)start me up niagara

Bundle Up and hit the pavement on February 23, 2013 as part of the Coldest Night of the Year, a nation-wide family-friendly winter fundraising event for charities serving the local homeless community. Continue reading

Beware Of A Corporate World Of False Messages And Choices – It May Lead Us Down The Road To Destruction

A Commentary by Mark Taliano

The largest threat to meaningful democracy and a strong economy in Canada is barely perceptible, but pervasive and well entrenched.Mainstream-media[1]   

Political and corporate elites conveniently ally themselves to this threat to create a communication firewall between the relative few who have access to power, and the rest of us who do not.

This imperceptible, yet ubiquitous threat to Canadians and their freedoms is thought-control, known alternatively as indoctrination, or, in an opposing country, propaganda.

The drivers of thought control include corporate sponsored “think tanks” that masquerade as non-partisan research centers.  The public relations services that they ultimately provide are not about the communication of sound research, or, god forbid, the public good, but rather about supporting partisan views. Continue reading

Ontario’s New Premier Tables Throne Speech That Calls For A ‘Fair Society’

Breaking News from Niagara At Large

Submitted by the Office of Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

(NAL is posting this speech as it wraps up in the provincial legislature. If you catch this post on time you may wish to click on the following link to a live feed of the Ontario premier’s meeting with media at Queen’s Park at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, February 19 at http://www.livestream.com/premierofontario . )

Ontario’s Speech from the Throne Focuses on Common Ground of Strong Economy, Fair Society, Effective Legislature

The New Ontario Government Emphasizing New Jobs, Strong Communities and Healthy, Engaged Citizens

NEWS – February 19, 2013

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

The new Ontario government is working toward a stronger province that will create good jobs and build strong communities across the province.

The Honourable David C. Onley, Ontario’s Lieutenant Governor, delivered the government’s Speech from the Throne in the legislature today.

The speech highlighted the government’s way forward to find common ground with the opposition so that Ontario can build a fair society, a strong economy and establish a more accountable legislature. Continue reading

Time for a New Approach – St. Catharines Pets Alive to Launch Bold, New Initiative at Town Hall Meeting

Submitted by the public interest group St. Catharines Pets Alive

(St. Catharines Pets Alive in a recently formed, non-profit organization group in Niagara, Ontario that, among other thing, is dedicated to “promoting a ‘No Kill community’ in which no health or treatable animals are killed.” Its mission also includes the promotion of the humane treatment of animals, and the rescue and adoption of homeless pets.resuce and adoption of homeless pets.)

ST. CATHARINES, Ontario –– St. Catharines Pets Alive (SPA) is embarking on a bold and aggressive initiative to make St. Catharines a No Kill City as quickly as possible. To do so, we are beginning to build the resources needed to create a “safety net” for the pets of our community and their caretakers.pets alive

St. Catharines Pets Alive is following the best practices of other cities that are No Kill or are in the process of becoming No Kill. Managed by a talented and experienced board of directors that is committed to openness, transparency, and teamwork, SPA aims to bring the community together to form a coalition of volunteers, foster care providers, rescue groups, and local businesses to implement innovative and progressive solutions which have ended shelter killing in roughly 90 communities representing some 300 towns and cities across North America. Continue reading

Niagara MP To Host Public Meeting On Via Rail Transit Cuts

A Niagara At Large news brief from Doug Draper

 While other regions in North America and Europe are turning to rail transit as an answer to gridlock on their highways, governments in Canada seem to be moving in the opposite direction.

Niagara, Ontario MP for the Welland area Malcolm Allen wants you to rally around the need for more - not less - rail tranist.

Niagara, Ontario MP for the Welland area Malcolm Allen wants you to rally around the need for more – not less – rail tranist.

 Last year, and even while neighbouring New York State is continuing to work with the Obama administration to build a high speed rail system it hopes Ontario and Canada may want to link through Niagara to the Greater Toronto Area, Canada’s Via Rail cut its passenger services last year to this border region and others across the province.

 One Niagara, Ontario MP for federal New Democratic Party wants to hear from you if you happen to be someone who believes our governments should be investing more, and not less, in passenger rail transit. On that track, Malcolm Allen, the MP for the Welland Riding in Niagara, is inviting people from across the greater Niagara region to join him this Wednesday, February 20th for what he is billing as “a public discussion on the importance of rail service in the Niagara area. Continue reading

An American Cable Network Takes A Brave Look At The Official Lies That Led Americans – And Almost Led Canadians – Into A Costly, Unnecessary War

A Brief from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

What I am about to say is by no means an opinion of mine. It is a fact.maddow-hubris-3098-20130216-115[1]

If Stephen Harper and his coalition of Reform and Canadian Alliance followers had formed a Conservative government that was holding the wheels of power in Canada a decade ago, they would have joined then-U.S. president George W. Bush’s so-called “coalition of the willing” and enveloped Canada in a war in Iraq. They would have engaged brave young Canadians in uniform and an entire country in a war a majority o Americans now agree was unnecessary and cost far too much in lives and treasure.

There is absolutely no doubt about that as Harper and his Tea Party-like breed of Conservatives went so boldly on record 10 years ago this winter – in the months, weeks and days leading up to Bush-led “shock and awe” assault on Iraq in March of 2003 – attacking Canada’s then-governing Liberals for not joining in this debacle.maddow hubris promo]

This Monday, February 18 at 9 p.m. on MSNBC – a cable news and commentary television channel we on the Niagara, Ontario side of the Canada/U.S. border may get on Cogeco channel 133 – one of the network’s leading journalists, Rachel Maddow, will be hosting a special documentary called; “Hubris – Selling the Iraq War.” Continue reading

Niagara At Large Has Been Hacked, But Will Come Back More Feisty Than Ever

A Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

If some of our many readers have been wondering why we have slowed down on posting news and commentary in recent days, we have been experiencing some computer problems that have to do with outside sources hacking and injecting viruses into our system.

These assaults have caused breakdowns in our ability to post news and analysis on NAL and, ultimately, in our ability to deliver an independent voice on the news and commentary voice to a region and world that has become so blown away by corporate media messaging.

So we hope you will be patient with us and trust us to come back with a vengeance in the days ahead. We feel we have no choice but to do so.

Indeed, the challenges we face in this region and in this world to live in communities and countries that offer a life of peace, good health and prosperity need to be addressed by voices that are not controlled by  corporate media interests and the bottom line. And Niagara At Large is determined to ramp up its efforts be one of those alternative voices.

Thanks to so many countless thousands of your across this region and continents, and in other countries around the world, for your continued support as readers and contributors by way of news and commentary to this site.

Doug Draper

(As always, share your views below.)

Niagara Regional Council Endorses Community And Corporate Climate Change Action Plans

A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

The following post comes from Niagara, Ontario’s regional government, which has a continued history of supporting sprawling, low-density residential development, mega-malls and strip malls along four-to-six-lane highways while, at the same time, trying to pass itself off as a smart, sustainable growth supporter.

Niagara, Ontario's regional headquarters

Niagara, Ontario’s regional headquarters

And what does that have to do with promoting less car-free, carbon-reducing development that helps with climate change?

This is a regional government, that unlike ones in other regions of Ontario like Kitchener-Waterloo, can’t even get its bloody 21st century act together on a 21st century regional transit system because it is afraid that a couple of local municipalities that could not give a shit about the future of this region want to keep serfs tied to their own transit services. ‘Oh’, say most of the cowards on this Niagara regional council, ‘ we can’t talk about developing a truly regional transit system for Niagara because idiots on the council, who are against any form of amalgamating more services, will say no’ because they fear that their little fiefdoms might be next to be amalgamated.’ Continue reading

Ontario’s Conservative Leader Wants Province’s Colleges And Universities To “Meet Job Market Needs” – Maybe A Better Idea Is To Get Rid Of Colleges And Universities All Together

A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

In a media release, posted below, from the office of Ontario’s Conservative Party opposition leader Tim Hudak, we are told , in so many words, that young people today are graduating from college and university palaces with hundreds of millions of our tax dollars in brick and mortar alone, and are coming out with huge debts and little to nothing in the way of real, decent-paying jobs.

Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak wants more jobs for students graduating from the province's colleges and universities. Good luck funding that.

Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak wants more jobs for students graduating from the province’s colleges and universities. Good luck funding that.

Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak wants more jobs for students graduating from the province’s colleges and universities. Good luck funding that.

If you look at Statistics Canada and other data, that is fairly well true. Earning a graduate degree at a college or university in almost anything these days might get you a job stocking shelves at a Wal-Mart Store ahead of getting one in your field.

So while I post the piece from the office of Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak below, I do so with a reluctant message to young people my daughter’s age to say to hell with college and university altogether, and use your intelligence to create new opportunities for yourselves in this changing economy that, quite frankly, our colleges and universities have not shown a very good track record of training people for. Continue reading

Niagara Health System’s Kevin Smith Lists Committee To Choose A New Board For Niagara, Ontario Hospital Services

An Update from Niagara Health System Supervisor Kevin Smith

February 11, 2013

There has been a great deal of activity since my last posting. I continue to receive a steady flow of input from the communities and interested consumers and providers. The tours of the new St. Catharines Site in particular have been a focus of feedback, and the consolidation of maternal child services remains a hot topic. 

Niagara Health System Supervisor Kevin Smith announces new NHS board

Niagara Health System Supervisor Kevin Smith announces new NHS board

Here are updates on work underway:

A. NHS Board Process

You will recall from my report that we have struck a Community-Based Nominating Committee to aid in the selection of the new Board for Niagara Health System. This committee is made up of dedicated community leaders with governance experience including: Continue reading

If Canada Can Get Rid Of A Penny That Costs More Than It’s Worth, Why Can’t We Get Rid Of The Senate?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

If Canada’s federal government can get rid of the penny because the coin is worth less than what it costs to keep it in circulation, then why doesn’t it apply the same logic to the Senate and get rid of it too?

An abominatiion of Canadian democracy - a costly, unaccountable senate that offers nothing of any value to our country.

An abominatiion of Canadian democracy – a costly, unaccountable senate that offers less than nothing of value compared to what it costs to keep it in business.

I am being perfectly seriously here. Last year, we were told by the Stephen Harper government that the penny was being abolished as of this February, mainly because from a plain cost point of view, there is no benefit in continuing to mint it. It is a one cent coin that costs 1.6 cents to make.

So now, like all the pennies we still have hanging around in tin cans, we have all of these senators from across Canada – some 105 of them in all – that we are paying about $130,000 a pop per year for, not counting benefit and expense packages 99 per cent of Canadians could only pray for if there ever were a heaven, and millions more of our hard-sought tax dollars are being shoveled out for their office space and staff.

And what are we – the people – getting in return? Continue reading

Wynne’s New Ontario Cabinet Is A Mix Of New And Familiar Faces

–         The Question Is: How Much Time Will It Buy Her Minority Liberal Government?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

It is being billed by some in Queen’s Park circles as a “new face” cabinet.

Yet that billing remains in the eyes of the beholder and depends on the issues that matter to you the most.

Deb Matthews remains Ontario's health minister

Deb Matthews remains Ontario’s health minister in Kathleen Wynne cabinet.

If you are a teacher, or a student or parent of a student upset with the recent unrest and curtailment of extra-curricular activities in Ontario’s public schools, you might be elated to know that the province’s new premier, Kathleen Wynne, has replaced Dalton McGuinty era education minister Laurel Broten with London area backbencher and former school board trustee Liz Sandals.

If, on the other hand, you are a resident living in one of Niagara, Ontario’s southern or central communities, including two of the region’s largest municipalities, Niagara Falls and Welland, you might be upset to find out that Wynne is keeping Deb Matthews on as the province’s health minister. Continue reading