Category Archives: Uncategorized

Buffalo’s Olmsted Parks Conservancy Calls For Volunteers For Annual Tree Planting

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following media release from Buffalo, New York’s Olmsted Parks Conservancy, a not-for-profit group of residents dedicated to preserving and enhancing the beauty of Delaware Park, Martin Luther King Jr. Park and other great green spaces in the city.)

It’s Tree Planting Time in the Olmsted Parks

Volunteers are needed to plant 600 trees this spring throughout Buffalo’s historic Olmsted Park System.

Volunteers planting trees in Buffalo's Olmsted Parks. Photo courtesy of Olmsted Parks Conservancy.

As part of the Olmsted Parks Conservancy’s master plan, The Plan for the 21st Century, the Conservancy and volunteers will plant understory, flowering and canopy trees in April and May. Over the next decade, 10,000 new trees will be planted in Olmsted green spaces. Continue reading

Ontario’s McGuinty Government Rewards Bureaucrats It Hides Behind For Unpopular Hospital Service Plans By Exempting Them From Scrutiny

By Doug Draper

While many residents across the Niagara region continue to express worry and concern over the future of hospital services here, at least one bureaucratic body Ontario’s Liberal government has set up to oversee changes to our hospitals has recently been given less reason to worry.

Peter Kormos, Welland riding NDP representative says scrap LHIN health care bureaucrats.

The Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) for the Niagara and Hamilton areas, along with several other high-priced, appointed bodies of bureaucrats like it across the province – is being granted immunity from legislative review by Premier Dalton McGuinty and his government so it can go on doing the government’s dirty work of reducing services at smaller hospitals across the region.

Members of the opposition Conservative and NDP parties discovered late this March, while taking some infra-red light to the fine print of the budget papers the McGuinty government dumped on us that a legislative review of the four-year-old LHIN bureaucrats for our area and others – a review that is in no small part about checking out their performance and spending practices for public accountability purposes, by the way – has been brushed forward from happening now – meaning the end of this March or  sometime in the future, or maybe never, for all we know.

(Click on ‘keep reading’ at the end of this sentence for more news and commentary on this topic.) Continue reading

Say ‘No’ To Jet Boats. What Are ‘Amusement Rides’ Doing On The World Class Waters Of The Niagara River?

By Jim Armstrong

After reading Doug Draper’s excellent article in Niagara At Large regarding the Whirlpool Jet Boats, I thought the following information might also be of interest to those who are concerned about the Niagara River.

A Jet Boat gets ready to unload passengers on a dock in Queenston, Ontario along the lower Niagara River with the iconic monument of War of 1812 hero Sir Isaac Brock looming behind. Photo courtesy of Louise Howe.

The Ontario Court of Appeals recently overturned a decision by Justice Quinn that defined the operation of Whirlpool Jet Boats at the Melville Street dock in Niagara-on-the-Lake as an illegal use. This reversal of a well-written and unequivocal decision has been met with great disappointment and disbelief among the members of the Niagara River Coalition, and with good reason. 

The process of challenging the Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake on the legality of the Jet Boat lease was long and expensive, and launched in the interest of protecting the integrity of the dock area and the Niagara River.  The Coalition is now faced with the prospect of either abandoning their case or facing another lengthy and costly process.

 Unfortunately, this scenario is all too typical of situations in which citizens groups seek to challenge what they believe to be unacceptable activities.  Continue reading

Arts And Culture Can Breath New Life Into Niagara

By Becky Day

The arts and culture are the vital threads that weave the region of Niagara together, says Rosemary Hale, Dean of the Faculty of Humanities at Brock University in Niagara.

The historic Canada Haircloth mill in downtown St. Catharines could be transformed into a performing arts centre for Niagara. Photo by Doug Draper

Hale stressed that point late this March during a talk she gave as part of an ongoing special dinner series being featured through this year at the Keefer Mansion in Thorold, Ontario.

Hale’s talk, titled ‘Arts, Culture and a bit of Haircloth’, also focused on a unique vision for the Canada Haircloth heritage property and is one of the driving forces behind the creation of the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts, an extraordinary facility to be located in St.Catharines, Ontario’s downtown. Continue reading

Niagara Loses Great Champion For Social Justice and Environmental Protection

By John Bacher

On March 13, 2010, Niagara lost one of its most effective champions for social justice and protecting the environment

Bill Lidkea, who died at age 73, was for 52 years the loving husband of his wife and partner Wilma in these great passions for the earth and human dignity. Continue reading

The Text Of The Ontario Government’s 2010 Budget Address

Niagara At Large is posting the budget speech delivered by Finance Minister Dwight Duncan on behalf of Ontario’s Liberal government on Thursday, March 25. In the days and weeks ahead Niagara At Large will post news and commentary on the impacts of this budget on health care, education, transit and other key areas of our lives.  In the meantime, please feel free to scroll down to the comment boxes below the text of the budget speech and share your thoughts.

Introduction

Mr. Speaker, I rise to present Ontario’s 2010 Budget.

Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan.

For the better part of the last two years, the global economy has been mired in deep recession.

The Ontario economy, like most others, has felt the effects of both a global recession and the transformation of key sectors, especially manufacturing and forestry.

Some early signs of the recovery have arrived. However, the job losses that have hurt Ontario families remain and this government continues to take action. Continue reading

Invasive Species Still Poised To Ravage Native Life In Our Great Lakes – Why Aren’t Our Governments Taking More Action?

By Doug Draper

Of all the threats to a Great Lakes ecosystem so vital to our lives and the economic welfare of our communities across the greater Niagara region, few continue to wreak more havoc than the invasion of alien species in and around our lake waters.

Sea lamprey - an invasive species in our Great Lakes - suck the living fluids from a lake trout. Photo courtesy of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

From the sea lamprey that threatened to wipe out the recreational and commercial fishery in the last half of the 20th century, to the Asian carp now on the verge of finishing off a fishery worth hundreds of thousands of jobs and many billions of dollars to the economies of the United States and Canada, the number of invasive species now populating or on the verge of populating the Great Lakes basin now total more than 180.

It has already been well documented how many hundreds of millions of dollars annually just one alien creature like the zebra mussel can do. This Asian creature, that caught a free ride to the Great Lakes in the ballast waters of ocean vessels in the 1980s, has clogged industrial and municipal water lines, and vacuumed up no end of plankton and other aquatic life that make up a critical part of the foodchain for native fish and birds in the lakes basin.

Yet governments on both sides of the Canada/U.S. border seem reluctant to take all the actions necessary to combat the invaders already in our lakes and prevent others like the Asian carp – possibly the greatest threat to the survival of our native fishery to date – from getting in. Samples of DNA from these voracious fish have already been detected in the southern most waters of Lake Michigan, indicating that they may have already broken through from the upper Mississippi River watershed.

Niagara At Large is sharing a media released, dated March 24, by the Canada/U.S. not-for-profit coalition, Great Lakes United, on the subject of invasive species and the pressing need to bring their numbers under control before it is too late. You can read the release by clicking ‘keep reading’ at the end of this sentence. Continue reading

When Will Future Of Region’s Odorous Sewage Lagoons In Niagara-on-the-Lake Be Decided?

By Randy Busbridge

What is going on with the Niagara-on-the-lake Sewage Lagoons?

For several years, nearby residents have been complaining about unpleasant odours. And it’s no secret that the Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP) is nearing capacity. 

Niagara region's sewage lagoons in Niagara-on-the-Lake - an odorous and unwanted neighbour for at least some residents in the community.

A servicing study completed by Niagara Region in July 2008 confirmed that the facility will reach its limit by 2013. It also confirmed that the WWTP is challenged to consistently meet Ministry of the Environment targets, and stated that options needed to be identified as soon as possible.

Unfortunately, by then Project Niagara had come along with its proposal to locate a summer music festival on the site of the current WWTP. This controversial proposal has served to muddy the waters, confusing and slowing down the decision making process. This is not good because time is on no one’s side. Continue reading

One Of Ontario’s Oldest And Most Historic Churches Is Crying For Help

By Pamela J.Minns

Nestled away in our small village of Beaverdams is one of our heritage jewels called the Beaverdams Methodist Church.

A wooden structure built 1832, the building and graveyard were designated under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act in 1994. It has been recognized by the Province of Ontario through the Archaeological & Historic Sites Board of Ontario on June 20th, 1965 during the church’s 133rd anniversary.

The Ontario Government was represented by Wm. Armstrong of the Historic Sites Board and the Hon. James N.Allan whose ancestors are buried in the Beaverdams churchyard. Continue reading

Niagara Children, Along With Greg Keelor and Jim Cuddy Of Blue Rodeo Fame, Lend Their Voices To Fundraiser For Orphaned South African Children

The Rotary Clubs of Lincoln and Niagara-on-the-Lake will be hosting their third children’s charity concert, “Hearts Gathering Children” on Sunday, April 11th, 2009, 2 pm at Bethany Community Church, 1388 Third St., St. Catharines.

Greg Keelor and Jim Cuddy of Blue Rodeo fame to perform.

Eight local groups of children from across the Niagara Region will be performing to raise funds for “Adrie’s House of Hope”, a project initiated by the Rotary Clubs of Lincoln and Niagara-on-the-Lake.

This year a special set will be courtesy of Jim Cuddy and Greg Keelor of Blue Rodeo who will perform acoustic versions of some of their best-known songs

Funds raised will lend support to orphaned children in South Africa.  As part of 6 homes currently built at Ikhalayathemba Village (near Cape Town, South Africa), Adrie’s House provides a loving environment for HIV+ children and AIDS orphans, as well as abandoned, abused and neglected children from the surrounding township.  Continue reading

Pros And Cons Of Ontario Greenbelt’s Five Year Legacy To Be Explored At Niagara Summit

By Doug Draper

One of the most significant steps Ontario’s Liberal government has taken to protect our natural heritage over its more than six years in power – and possibly the only significant one – was the creation of the “Greenbelt” in the greater Golden Horseshoe of this province five years ago this March.

The areas in green highlight Ontario's Greenbelt, where agricultural and other lands are intended to be off limits to urban sprawl.

Ontario’s Greenbelt – protecting some 1.8-million acres of agricultural and environmental sensitive lands stretching east of the Toronto area above Lake Ontario and around the lake to the shores of the Niagara River in our greater Niagara region – received a prestigious award from the Canadian Institute of Planners two years ago as a model for protecting and preserving what is left of some of our most precious rural lands from continued, low-density urban sprawl.

Yet it has also been an ongoing bone of contention and it has even been vilified by some as an assault on the rights of farmers and others within its boundaries to do what they want to with their land, and as an impediment to development for municipalities that find themselves, to use one of the words of some municipal leaders, “locked” in it.

This March 31, Niagara’s regional government is hosting what it is calling a “Greenbelt-After-Five Years Summit at the Four Points Sheraton in Thorold, Ontario, and a day-long summit that involves a registration fee of $100 and features a host of speakers from this region and beyond. This site will include more details on the summit agenda and how and where to register later. Continue reading

Bank Execs Bask In Ballooning Salaries While Seniors And Others Get By On Crumbs

By Joe Somers

Canadian banks were largely unaffected by the economic crisis which had such a dramatic effect on their American counterparts, and consequently bankers in the country enjoyed an average 10 percent increase in pay for 2009 at the six largest banks doing business in Canada.

While seniors and others on low and fixed incomes struggle to make ends meet,
The top two executive increases were for Bank of Nova Scotia CEO Richard Waugh, who received a hefty pay increase of 29 percent, and Bank of Montreal CEO William Downe, who wasn’t far behind, getting a pay increase of 25 percent. Continue reading

Niagara Parks Ontario Invites One And All To A ‘Seasonal Favourite’ For The Easter Weekend

The Niagara Parks Commission’s Floral Showhouse is pleased to once again feature a seasonal favourite – The Easter Flower Display – a Niagara tradition for over 60 years. Back by popular demand will also be the added feature of real chicks and bunnies, a treat for kids and adults alike.

The Niagara Parks Commission's classic 'Floral Showhouse', located just upstream from the Horseshoe Falls, will be the venue for an annual favourite and free Easter weekend show.

The Easter show features a cross display of lilies surrounded by colourful and fragrant spring flowers such as daffodils, tulips, hyacinths and azaleas. The warm and serene setting is bursting with gorgeous blooms, orchids and exotic tropical plants as well as beautiful songbirds to get you in the mood for spring. The Floral Showhouse features eight different displays each year, so you can return again and again to discover paradise right in the heart of the city.
 
The show will be ready for the weekend of March 27 – a beautiful place to bring the family on Palm Sunday. Admission to this year-round attraction is free. Located just south of the Falls at 7145 Niagara Parkway, the Floral Showhouse is open daily from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Parking is available on site. Continue reading

On This Earth Hour 2010, Pledge To Yourselves To Make Every Hour Earth Hour

 By Dan Wilson
 
Earth Hour is fast approaching. That’s the time of year, once a year when we’re encouraged to turn our lights off for an hour to show how much we love and care about the planet.

Started in 2007 by the World Wildlife Fund, individuals, families and businesses are asked to switch off their lights, TVs and other non-essential appliances at 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 27th.
 
According to the WWF website, hundreds of millions of people took part in last year’s Earth Hour, making it “the world’s largest global climate change initiative.”
 
To be honest, I haven’t been a big fan of previous Earth Hour events. The idea that the best we can do for THE PLANET THAT GIVES US LIFE is to turn off the lights for one hour is both sad and embarrassing to me. Continue reading

Ontario Municipal Board Approves Condo Development For Wainfleet’s Old Easter Seals Camp Along Lake Erie Shore

By Doug Draper

If Niagara’s regional government is really all that interested in saving what is left of lands along our Great Lakes for public access, it better get to it, because there isn’t much left to save.

Even less this March following a ruling by the Ontario Municipal Board – a quasi-judicial board handpicked by the provincial government – to say yes to a proposal for a condominium that would include some 35 units, along the shores of Lake Erie in Wainfleet. Continue reading

For Crystal Beach Residents Fighting Bay Beach Tower Plan, An Appeal To The Ontario Municipal Board May Be A Crap Shoot

By Doug Draper

Residents in the Crystal Beach area of Fort Erie opposed to plans for a high-rise condo in their lakeshore community may feel encouraged by a recent decision from the Ontario Municipal Board.

A virtual image of the condo tower planned for the Fort Erie community of Crystal Beach.

That decision, tabled earlier this March, ruled against plans by a Toronto-area developer to build a 27-storey high-rise condo in the west end of Toronto, in the Parkdale-High Park area of that city near the water.

The OMB ruling argued that the proposed high-rise was “simply too large” and “inappropriate for (a) site” of mostly one-to-three-storey buildings.

That argument sounds kind of familiar, doesn’t it? Continue reading

Niagara Falls MPP Steps Up For Region’s Grape Growers In ‘Open Letter’ To Wine Industry

By Kim Craitor, MPP for Niagara Falls

I have received so many emails and phone calls about the efforts of Andrew Peller Limited and Vincor’s attempt to get the government to rescind the government’s recent initiative to ensure that 100 per cent of the Ontario grape crop gets put into bottles and not end up on the ground that I feel I should publish this response as an open letter to the industry so Niagara’s grape growers can decide from a position of knowing another point of view on this issue.

Niagara grape growers displayed this sign in St. Catharines, Ontario last fall. On the side it says - "growers forced to dump 15,000 tons of local grapes while wineries import 40,000 tons." Photo by Doug Draper

The so-called Winery and Growers Alliance is in fact a lobby group for the handful of giant wineries that enjoy a monopoly position in the trade of “Cellared in Canada” (CIC) wines.

Unfortunately, they own this monopoly at the expense of the grape growers and taxpayers of Ontario – and now they are using their privileged position to threaten the livelihood of Ontario grape growers. Continue reading

Jet Boats Will Continue To Ply Or Plague The Lower Niagara River – Depending On Your View – Thanks To An Ontario Court Decision

By Doug Draper

A few years back, I descended steps leading down the steep gorge walls of the lower Niagara River with retired Niagara Parks naturalist Robert Ritchie for a tour of one of the few remaining places that can give a person some idea of what this magnificent river must have looked like before the first white settlers showed up in the area.

A Jet Boat, roaring toward the whirlpool rapids of the lower Niagara River early last spring in this file photo by Doug Draper.

That place is on Niagara Parks-owned land and is known as the Niagara Glen – a rich, relatively undisturbed oasis of green along a river corridor that has otherwise been a setting for almost every kind of development imaginable, good, bad and ugly.

As we wound our way down stoney paths, past all of the rare and unique plants, trees  and rock formations the Glen has to offer, Ritchie had just finished telling me there was something almost spiritual about this place when the sound of rushing water below us was masked out by the roar of engines and a voice booming through a bullhorn.

As birds scattered from their nesting places in the trees above us, I looked down on the river and there was another ‘Jet Boat’ loaded with tourists, wide-eyed and grinning as if they were on a giant coaster ride at the Darien Lake amusement park. Continue reading

Latest Federal Budget From Canada Gives The Red Light To A Green Economy

By Tim Weis

This year’s federal budget plays like a bad sequel to a film that never made the Oscars.

Canadian environmentalist Tim Weis

The plot behind last year’s “Economic Action Plan” was simple: create short-term jobs and immediate cash flow by funding “shovel-ready” infrastructure projects in as many Canadian communities as possible. Critics said the plan reflected a lack of vision from the director’s chair, and the final tallies show it ran over-budget.

In terms of investing in renewable energy, last year’s budget had very little to offer (although nuclear and ‘clean’ coal got over $1 billion combined). This year, it took a surprise turn for the worse. Continue reading

Another In Niagara At Large’s Series Of ‘Signs Of Our Times’

By Doug Draper

Here is one of my favourite signs along the Niagara River corridor – erected by the Niagara Parks Commission some years ago for the benefit of any visitors to the Canadian side of Niagara Falls who might be a little bit on the daring side.

A sign one thinks would not be necessary except for the stupidity of the human species. Photo by Doug Draper

Don’t know if there are any comparable signs on the American side of the river but given how litiginous a society there seems to be south of the border (or east of the border in this case) the New York State Park authorities might want to post a few around Goat Island and Terrapin Point just as a matter of ‘due diligence’.

The sign literally warns people not to jump over a fence which is the last stop left before plunging hundreds of feet to rock and water below the roaring Horseshoe Falls of Niagara. Continue reading

Niagara Business Leader Bob Gale Joins National Advisory Board For Blowing Whistle On Niagara Parks Commission

By Doug Draper

 Bob Gale, a Niagara business many on the Ontario side of the Niagara River may know as the owner of Gale’s Gas Bars, may not seem the most likely guy to get recognized nationally as a whistleblower for the public good.

Former Niagara Parks Commission board member blew the whistle on the NPC for not putting a new contract for the Maid of the Mist ride up for competitive bidding. File Photo by Doug Draper.

But he most certainly has by The Federal Accountability Initiative for Reform (FAIR), a nationally supported charity group that includes among its members David Kilgour, one of the longest-serving federal MPs from Alberta,  Bob Stenhouse, a highly decorated member of the RCMP who found his future on the line a decade ago for blowing the whistle on the ineffectiveness of federal investigations into outlaw motorcycle gangs.

FAIR has appointed Gale to join Kilgour, Stenhouse and others on its advisory board in the wake of his revelations, in the wake of his service on the board of the Niagara Parks Commission, that the commission was not placing a contract for the Maid of the Mist ride out for competitive bidding in a way that might ultimately benefit a taxpaying public that is the ultimate custodian of lands along the Canadian side of the Niagara River corridor.

Since Gale blew the whistle on the Maid of the Mist business and ultimately parted ways with the NPC’s board, the provincial government has directed the commission to put the contract for that iconic ride out for competitive bidding. The commission has also opened its board meetings to the public for the first time in its 124-history as a steward of one of Canada’s natural gems. Continue reading

Welland, Brock University Strike Partnership For Working On Future Projects

The City of Welland and Brock University signed a memorandum of understanding this March 10 that provides a foundation for the city and Niagara-based university to work together on future projects.

Onlookers applaud after Welland Mayor Damian Goulbourne and Brock University President Jack Livingstone sign 'memorandum of understanding' to work cooperatively on future projects. Photo courtesy of Brock University

“In signing the document … at Welland City Hall,” according to a media release circulated  by the university, “Brock President Jack Lightstone and Welland Mayor Damian Goulbourne also announced the partnership’s first initiative and a significant step forward.
“The University is agreeing in principle to a long term-lease of space to locate the Brock University Human Performance Centre in the Welland International Flatwater Centre. The Brock Centre will operate non-academic, revenue-generating activities that support the work of Brock’s Faculty of Applied Health Sciences. Continue reading

Opponent Of Fort Erie NASCAR Plan Issues Warning To Niagara Falls Residents About ‘Motorsports’ Plan There

By Dianne Giliforte

Get ready Niagara Falls!! Coming soon to your community – NOISE and POLLUTION.

Dick Juloksy owns a farm for race horses near the site for the proposed NASCAR speedway and is opposed to the plan. Photo courtesy of CARS

An application to establish a Motorsports Park at the intersection of Sodom Road and the QEW has been submitted to the Region. If this is not what you envisioned when you moved to your quiet rural abode or the quaint community of Chippawa, then start making your own noise now and make it loud and clear, since some politicians are hard of hearing.

Take a look at the travesty in Fort Erie and be afraid, be very afraid. Continue reading

Longtime Conservation Group Moves To Appeal Fort Erie NASCAR Race Track Plan To Ontario Municipal Board

By Doug Draper

The Niagara-based Preservation of Agricultural Lands, one of the oldest citizens groups dedicated to conservation in the province, has launched an appeal before the Ontario Municipal Board of a plan to build a NASCAR speedway facility on rural lands in Fort Erie.

PALS is concerned that decisions by the Town of Fort Erie and Niagara’s regional government that allow such a massive facility on more than 800 acres of agricultural lands outside the town’s urban boundaries literally paves the way for the loss of more of what remains of our rural lands to this kind of development.

Fort Erie’s town council sees the proposal by a consortium called Canadian Motor Speedway as a great economic and tourist opportunity for the municipality, drawing tens-of-thousands of racing fans to the region each and every time races are held. But not everyone in the town embraces the idea – at least not for lands outside Fort Erie’s urban boundaries. Continue reading

Chaos Was A Key Word At Hearings Over Niagara’s Hospital Services

By Doug Draper

“There is only one word to describe our health system and it is chaos,” said Pat Scholfield of Port Colborne toward the beginning of a public hearing the Ontario Health Coalition held this March 9 in Welland, Ontario on the state of services in smaller hospitals across the province.

This sign loomed at public hearings over hospitals, though no Welland city councillors made a presentation at the hearings.

More than 250 people from across the Niagara region attended these bipartisan hearings – a series of which is taking place across the province – to address concerns people have over the loss of services at smaller and rural hospitals in Ontario.

The Niagara hearing featured presentations by more than two dozen individuals and groups, including two mayors (Vance Badeway of Port Colborne and Doug Martin of Fort Erie), the president of the Canadian Auto Workers’ Local 199, Wayne Gates, doctors, nurses, paramedics and others

Almost to a person, those who spoke at these hearings expressed concern for diminishing services at the hands of government bodies unresponsive to them. Some, including Badeway, also spoke of building new health system for their communities despite what is being lost through the province’s status quo. Continue reading

‘Would Reilly Still Be Alive If The Port Colborne And Fort Erie Emergency Rooms Were Still Open? – ‘I Think So’

By John Kennedy, grandfather of the late Reilly Anzovino, on behalf of his wife Phyllis, daughter Denise and the rest of Reilly’s family and friends

To Whom It May Concern … And it won’t be (Ontario’s premier) Dalton McGuinty or (the province’s health minister) Deb Matthews that’s for sure.

Reilly's grandfather, John Kennedy, her aunt Marnie Kennedy, mother Denise Kennedy and her brother Kain look on as Sue Salzer reads a message from the family to a public hearing in Niagara on our diminishing hospital services. Photo by Doug Draper.

First of all, thank you to everyone that is working passionately at getting our Fort Erie hospital or what they call “small town facilities” secured. Please forgive me if I sound a little bitter but I woke up this morning again…. a grieving grandfather who has lost his beautiful, sparkling granddaughter Reilly! My granddaughter, who I hugged not knowingly (for) the last time on Christmas Eve.

We all watched Reilly in amazement like we always did, tell us about school and her future plans….. and how happy she was to see her friends and family for Christmas Break. (It was) a visit that was cut short because, and I will try to be nice… of maybe, the McGuinty government’s negligent thinking and paying out millions to restructure our small town health care. … 40,000 people (in Fort Erie when, during the summer, the Buffalo area and other U.S. summer cottagers come in) is apparently considered a small town now?? Continue reading

Friends Of The Late Reilly Anzovino Appeal For Better Hospital Services In Niagara

By Hillary Beney and Nikki Caperchiono

(Two close friends of Reilly Anzovino, a Fort Erie, Ontario teen who died following a tragic traffic accident in her hometown this past Boxing Day, could barely contain their tears as they asked tearful listeners at a public hearting in Welland this March 9 if Reilly might still be alive today had the province not shut down the emergency rooms in Fort Erie and Port Colborne.)Reilly was not only an amazing daughter and sister, but also the best friend anyone could have asked for.

Denise Kennedy, mother of Reilly looks on as two of Reilly's close friends hold back tears after delivering a message during a public hearing on hospital services in Niagara, as Sue Salzer, a Fort Erie advocate for hospital services in south Niagara looks on.

When she walked into a room, her angelic smile and beauty took over. She was artistic, beautiful, funny, clumsy, smart, passionate and outgoing.

She was the best prom date (anyone) could have asked for. She brought laughter into the lives of everyone she knew. We have all felt as though Reilly had a greater purpose in life, this may just be it.

On December 26th, Reilly passed away in a tragic car accident. Each and every one of us can remember the exact moment when we received the news and the overwhelming rush of heartbreak and disbelief.

What happened that night forever changed our lives and our outlook on this community? We believe that this irrational decision to close down emergency rooms within the area played a big role in the death of Reilly.

The closure of the emergency rooms forced the ambulance to travel a greater distance and ultimately cost Reilly valuable time. In those critical moments we lost the girl who would buy you lunch, when you ran out of money, lend you her clothes if you had nothing to wear and run to your house, in a heartbeat when you needed her just because you had a bad day. Continue reading

A Recently Retired Nurse In Niagara Shows The Courage To Voice Her Concerns On The Downward Spiral Of Our Hospital Services

By Linda McKellar

(from a presentation Linda McKeller delivered during public hearings hosted this March 9 by the Ontario Health Coalition in Welland Ontario, as part of a series the not-for-profit, province-wide coalition is holding in regions across Ontario on concerns over service cuts to our hospitals.)


I have been asked to give a presentation representing the point of view of a group who have been reluctant to speak out due to fear of repercussions – the front line nurses.

Retired Niagara nurse Linda McKellar testifies at public hearing about diminishing hospital services in Niagara. Photo courtesy of Donna Frankson.

By way of introduction, I was a nurse for 40 years, the last 25 in Welland ER (emergency room), so I feel I can speak accurately about the conditions.

Conditions in the entire hospital have gotten progressively worse. The staff attitude has become one of despair and frustration and public opinion of services has gone down the toilet. This started with cutbacks and closures under the Conservatives and now continues under the Liberals. Care has suffered horribly.

These initiatives didn’t work then and they won’t work now. Continue reading

A Retired Niagara Doctor Offers His Take On Diminishing Hospital Services In The Region

(From an address Dr. William Hogg presented to public hearings hosted this March 9 by the Ontario Health Coalition in Welland Ontario, as part of a series tof public hearings he not-for-profit, province-wide coalition is holding in regions across Ontario on concerns over service cuts to our hospitals.)

By William Hogg, MD

Hello everyone.

Dr. William Hogg, a retired Fort Erie physician, speaks on concerns over cuts to Niagara's hospital services at public hearings in Welland, Ontario.

I’m a retired doctor who has done acute emergency work – and taught it on both sides of the border.

Today I’ll try to translate a tiny part of the grievous loss of Ms Reilly Anzovino into a plea and rationale for local Medicare repair. In June of last year, concerned about the Niagara Health System’s depredations, I sent a series of short notes to NHS – warning of deaths to come. SURELY to come – should the small town Emergency Departments in our region’s southern tier be shut down?

NHS did not acknowledge my early warnings. It did not care enough to act humanely for any of the critically injured or sick people in our area. | NHS just ploughed ahead unwisely. Both emergency rooms WERE closed. And deaths HAVE happened – unwarranted and wrongful deaths! Now – the kinds of deaths I predicted and warned of happen during so-called ‘TIME-critical’ emergencies.

They can come on in a split second. They can happen anywhere. At home. On a country road. In ambulances. If a ‘far away’ hospital IS reached, disability or death may still occur – even there. Continue reading

Ontario Conservative Leader Tim Hudak Promises To Restore Province’s Economic Predominance

In his first address to an annual meeting as leader of Ontario’s Conservative Party Leader,  Tim Hudak – a Fort Erie native and Niagara area MPP – vowed to “modernize” his party, “once again lead as the province with the strongest economy, best hospitals, best schools and best jobs in Canada,” and “leave behind the failed policies of the McGuinty Liberal government.”

Ontario Conservative leader and Niagara area MPP Tim Hudak delivers keynote address at party's annual meeting in Ottawa this March.

In a continued spirit of publishing, for the record, statements by significant others on matters of importance to the residents of our

 region, Niagara At Large is providing Tim Hudak’s first address, as Conservative leader, to the party’s annual meeting below.

Please feel free, at the end of the text for this speech, to join the discussion and debate where we as a binational region of this province should be going by sharing your views in the comment boxes below.

We encourage your views and believe they are as vital to the process of building healthier communities as those of anyone holding an elected or non-elected office in government today. We also welcome the opportunity to review for publicaltion addresses on matters of interest and conern from other residents and community leaders in our region. Continue reading

Ontario Colleges Praise Provincial Government’s Commitment To Higher Education

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from Ontario’s colleges with quotes from Niagara College president Dan Patterson, praising the throne speech delivered this March 8 by the provincial government of Dalton McGuinty. NAL posts it, without edits, with a few questions we are not sure have been answered through the throne speech, including – What is the government specifically going to do to take the burden off our college and university students around the costs for tuition and the outrageous prices charged for text books? Or is most of this provincial initiative all about packing our colleges and university – many of them built through donations by generations of Ontarions in our communties with more foreign students, at even higher tuition rates, so they can go back to their countries with the skills and knowledge they learned here to fuel the futures of their countries’ economies? Again, what is there in the McGuinty throne speech that will make it more affordable for young people in Ontario to receive a college or university education?)

March 8, 2010 – Ontario’s colleges, including Niagara College, are praising the important commitments made by the Ontario government today to produce more college and university graduates.

“Greater numbers of people will get the higher education and training they need to achieve success,” said Anne Sado, the chair of the colleges’ committee of presidents, “This is an important commitment to people’s futures and to producing a stronger workforce in this new knowledge economy.” Continue reading

Good Riddance To The Hummer And – Hopefully – Everything This Monster Mobile Stands For

By Doug Draper

If we need one more reminder that the party is over for all the relentless binging aging baby boomers like me have been on for everything from pet rocks to big, bloated vanity homes for just two boomers with no kids, consider the news last week that General Motors is at long last closing the curtains of its show rooms on the Hummer.

Seems GM could not find another buyer on the planet for this gargantuan, gas-sucking pig of a vehicle – not even from auto manufacturers in China – and had no choice this March but to shut the “brand” down.

And thank whatever god you and I pray to for that!

There are possibly few more conspicuous symbols of the ‘no-holds-barred, let’s-live for-today’ drive to consume almost anything and everything we boomers can grab on to, regardless of the consequences, than the Hummer.

There was something very obvious about the Hummer and many of the larger Sport Utility Vehicles (more infamously known as SUVs) that spoke to a culture – pre-soaring oil prices and 2008 economic meltdown – that said; ‘We who drive this car couldn’t give a damn about energy conservation, air quality or anything else. … If we happen to get in a collision and you are driving a smaller car, we’ll just brush you off the grill and move on.” Continue reading

Is Shark Fin Soup Worth Committing Genocide On One Of The Oldest Living Creatures On Earth?

By Dan Wilson

Bob Timmons, an artist, vegan and animal rights activist, spoke about ocean life at the Niagara Action for Animals Vegan Potluck Friday night in St. Catharines, Ontario.

Bob Timmons, artist and advocate for marine life, speaks in Niagara. Photo by Dan Wilson.

Timmons, who is based in Toronto, was in town to raise awareness of the plight of sea animals, including sharks, which are being slaughtered by the millions for the shark fin trade.

According to Timmons, 90 million sharks are fished every year, with 80 per cent of the shark fins going to Hong Kong. Many shark species are on the verge of extinction because of over-fishing and shark fining, the practice of catching sharks, cutting off their fins and throwing them back in the water to drown. Continue reading

Buffalo Area Senator Calls For Borrowing $5 Billion For Bond To Invest In Green Jobs, Cleaner Environment

By Larry Beahan

Buffalo’s own Senator Antoine Thompson, Chair of the New York State Senate Environmental Conservation Committee, proposes that the State borrow $5 billion to pay for clean water, clean air and, in the process, create green jobs. Sometimes you need to borrow money.

Waters both Buffalo area and Niagara, Ontario residents share could benefit from a 'Green Bond' being proposed by Western New York Senator Antoine Thompson. Photo by Doug Draper

My friend Chuck’s grandfather arrived in New York City from Russia with no money at all. He borrowed $5 from relatives, rented a push cart, peddled bananas and wound up a successful real-estate developer. New York State’s finances now resemble those of my friend’s forbearer on his arrival here. And since that time we have badly polluted the air and water of our State.

The $1.76-billion-dollar 1996 Clean Water Clean Air Bond Act paid for a lot of wastewater treatment, separate storm sewer systems and aquatic habitat restoration but it is now exhausted. The Environmental Protection Fund, supplied by the real-estate transfer tax, has protected open space, bought parks, revitalized waterfronts and closed dumps all over the State.

But in these difficult times the Governor has used his power to sweep it clean of cash. He has used the money to plug holes in the leaking dike that is the New York State budget. Problem Number One is that our economy is stalled. There are not enough jobs to go around. People who are out of work don’t pay taxes and without tax revenues we cannot attack Problem Number Two, our polluted environment.

This $5 billion will buy us an enormous push cart, a push cart of green jobs, a push cart full of clean water, clean air, and reclaimed land. To bring it right home, Woodlawn Beach State Park has a magnificent wide sandy beach and it is close to where a lot of Western New Yorker’s live. Continue reading

A Written Plea To Ontario’s MPPs To Reject Proposal For NASCAR Race Track On Niagara’s Rural Lands

By Bob Korol

Dear Honourable Members of the Legislature,

It has been brought to my attention that the Ontario government is considering re-designating 827 acres of good quality agricultural lands to site a proposed motorway, aka a NASCAR race track. 

I wish to express most strongly my opposition to the proposal for several reasons. Continue reading

There Is Far Too Much Secrecy Around Niagara Region’s Discussions On Where A New Police Headquarters Should Go

By Doug Draper

When it comes to the Niagara Regional Police Service and its plans for building a new police headquarters, any semblance of openness and transparency too often flies out the window for Niagara, Ontario’s regional council.

The Niagara Regional Police Service's existing headquarters in downtown St. Catharines. Photo by Doug Draper

For about the umpteenth time over the past two or three years, the doors to the regional government’s council chambers were closed to members of the media and general public this March 4 – this time for more than four hours. The doors were shut for so long that Cogeco’s Cable 10 media crew, which dutifully trains the eyes of their cameras on regional council proceedings for the public, finally packed up their gear and went home.

The optics of those doors remaining closed until members of the public finally get fed up and leave on Thursday council meeting nights are not good for a regional government that otherwise has a pretty decent record for openness.

And to swing those doors shut almost every time there is a discussion or debate over a police headquarters that would amount to one of the largest capital investment of our money the regional government is perched to make in its 40-year history is unacceptable.

The region has been drawing a curtain of secrecy around this issue for far too long now and it is about time members of the public began contacting their mayors and directly elected regional councillors and demanding some disclosure. Continue reading

Sentencing To Fit The Crime – ‘Truth In Sentencing Act A Major Step Forward In Restoring Canadians’ Confidence In Justice System’, Federal Justice Minister Says

By Rob Nicholson,
Niagara Falls, Ontario MP and Canada’s Minister of Justice and Attorney General

Canadians lose faith in the criminal justice system when they feel that the punishment does not fit the crime. They have told us they want criminals – particularly violent offenders or those involved in gangs and organized crime – to serve a sentence that is proportionate to the severity of their crimes.

Niagara Falls MPP and Canadian Justice Minister Rob Nicholson

I am pleased to write that we have met those expectations in the Truth in Sentencing Act, which came into force Monday, February 22. This piece of legislation strictly limits the amount of credit granted for time served in custody prior to sentencing, thereby ensuring offenders will serve sentences that are more appropriate.

In the past, courts often applied a credit of two-to-one for time served in pre-trial custody when sentencing criminals.  In some circumstances, certain offenders even received three-for-one credit.

This awarding of extra credit lead not only to the perception that sentences were too lenient – it also lead to the reality that, all too often, criminals were being released back on our streets far too soon.

Like the majority of Canadians, our Government believed that this situation was unacceptable. So, we acted on it.  Continue reading

Say ‘No’ To Jail Tanks At Marineland And SeaWorld – Whales Belong In The Ocean

By Doug Draper

Beyond the sandy dunes lining the northeastern shores of the Cape Cod community of Provincetown, Massachusetts, is one of the most fertile areas for marin

Humpback whale off coast of Cape Cod's Provincetown. This Photos and others below courtesy of the Dollphin Fleet of Provincetown.

e life in the coastal waters of the North Atlantic.

This 842-square miles of ocean – known since its designation by an act of U.S. Congress in 1992 as the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary – is still thankfully host to Humpback, Minke, Finback and other species of whales, and to sharks, seals, porpoises and tuna. On a good day of sailing on these waters, a person may enjoy the spectacle of dozens, if not hundreds of dolphins dancing in the boat’s wake.

Thanks to the Dolphin Fleet of Provincetown – a company of boats that, in concert with marine experts like Carole Carlson and others from the Center for Coastal Studies, my family and others have enjoyed the experience of viewing these wondrous beings in their natural habitat now for more than 30 years. I can still remember taking my daughter Sarah out on one of these excursions a good 15 years ago when she was only five-years old, and watching her eyes turn wide as boat cut off its engines and all we could hear was the sound of water lapping against the bow as a female Humpback and her calf glided by.

Since then, this is the only way our daughter has experienced these great creatures. She has never expressed any desire to go to SeaWorld or Marineland, and my wife Mary and I have never had any desire to take her there. And I don’t mind telling you, I am proud of that as the tired old debate of whether whales and other marines mammals comes up again. Continue reading

Inquest Will Hopefully Lead To Better Health Care In Niagara – Reilly’s Parents

By Doug Draper 

A friend to the left and Reilly in pink along the shores of Lake Erie

 

The mother of Reilly Anzovino – the Fort Erie teen who died following an ambulance trip from a traffic accident scene in her hometown to a hospital emergency room in Welland – hopes that an inquest into the circumstances around her death will lead to better health care for all Niagara residents.

Reilly’s mother, Denise Kennedy, was responding to news this March 2 that Ontario’s chief coroner, Dr. Andrew McCallum, will hold an inquest into the 18-year old’s death in the early morning minutes of this past December 27, following a traffic accident on Hwy. 3 before midnight on Boxing Day.

“Although nothing will bring Reilly back,” Denise told Niagara At Large on behalf of herself, Reilly’s father, Tim Anzovino, and other members of the family, “we hope that this inquest will bring recommendations and changes to the health care of our community. …. “I think it is important to have recommendations that are unbiased and made by a competent expert,” she added. Continue reading

McGuinty Continues To Defend Government’s Health Care Record As Questions Swirl Over Fort Erie Teen’s Death

(As part of Niagara At Large’s mission to provide more information than the mainstream media on issues of concern to residents in our greater binational Niagara region, we offer the following for-the-record exchange between Ontario Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty and NDP leader Andrea Horwath on the issue of hospital services in Niagara)

Ms. Andrea Horwath: This is over to the Premier as well. Ontarians are soon going to have some answers about the terrible tragedy that took place on December 27 in the Niagara region. The coroner’s inquest into the death of Reilly Anzovino will determine whether this young woman’s tragic death may have been prevented had the emergency room of Fort Erie not been forced to shut its doors last year.

Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath

In the face of growing health care cuts, Ontarians are looking to the government for assurance. If the coroner’s jury determines that the ER closures in Port Colborne and Fort Erie contributed to Reilly Anzovino’s death, will the Premier commit to reopening them?

Hon. Dalton McGuinty: I don’t think it would be appropriate for me to comment on the outcome that my colleague is speculating about.

Let me just say, on behalf of the government, we welcome this review by the coroner’s office. We look forward to receiving the jury’s recommendations, and we look forward to acting on those in any way that serves the interests of the people of Ontario. Continue reading

Controversial Condo Tower Plan For Public Beach Area Is Pushed Forward

By Doug Draper

Fort Erie’s mayor Doug Martin says he’s prepared to stake his political future on supporting a controversial high-rise tower for his town’s historic Crystal Beach district, and he has proved it.

Fort Erie Mayor Doug Martin displays images of condo development he's willing to stake his political future on. Photo by Doug Draper

At the end of another marathon meeting before his council this March 1 on the pros and cons of a developer’s plans to erect a 12-storey condominium in front of a publicly owned stretch of the Lake Erie shore, known as Bay Beach to many Niagara, Ontario and Western New York residents who enjoy it during the summer months, Martin stood true to his words.

The mayor – having listened to close to two hours of delegations speaking for and against the council plan – broke a three-to-three tie on his council to support the passage of a bylaw allowing the height restrictions in Crystal Beach (where most of the cottages and buildings presently there are one or two stories) accommodate a building as high as 12 storeys.

“I believe this is the right thing to do,” Martin told Niagara At Large while the marathon meeting was still looming. “It is about Crystal Beach. It is about rejuvenation. It is about laying the foundation for our children to built on.” Continue reading

News Bulletin – Ontario’s Chief Coroner Has Announced He Will Hold An Inquest Into Circumstances Surrounding Death Of Fort Erie Teen Reilly Anzovino

By Doug Draper

Some breaking news here this March 2.

Reilly Anzovino

Dr. Andrew McCallum, Ontario’s chief coroner, has announced that he will hold a public inquest into the death of Reilly Anzovino, a Fort Erie teen who died from injuries in a car accident in her home town when she was ambulanced to emergency services at a hospital in Welland.

Many south Niagara residents and politicians, including Niagara Falls Liberal MPP Kim Craitor, Welland NDP MPP Peter Kormos and Niagara area MPP and Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak, called on the chief coroner to hold an inquest following Reilly’s death. All, including Reilly’s parents in their own letter to the coroner, wonder if Reilly might still be alive today if the emergency rooms at the Fort Erie and Port Colborne hospitals had not been closed by the Niagara Health System and Local Integrated Health Network as cost cutting measures last year.

Read on for the text of the chief coroner’s announcement, and Niagara At Large will provide more news and commentary on this development as information comes in. Continue reading

McGuinty Is ‘Defanging’ Ontario’s Most Fearless and Effective Watchdogs

By Doug Draper

A few years ago, when Ontario’s environmental commissioner Gord Miller appeared as a keynote speaker at an annual fundraising dinner for the Mel Swart Lake Gibson Conservation Park in the Thorold community of Niagara, Ontario, he proved once again what a fearless voice he was for environmental protection and this province’s people.

Ontario government is pulling plug on Gord Miller's stint as province's top environmental watchdog

 During the course of his speech, he made several references to a lack of priority and resources the Liberal government of Premier Dalton McGuinty was devoting to a host of environmental issues from energy conservation to the protection of our land and water resources. At one point, he went so far as to say that the budget for the province’s Ministry of Natural Resources had been cut so much, its field officers could hardly afford fuel for their trucks. All the while Miller (also a former Ontario Ministry of Environment scientist) was saying these things, Jim Bradley, a St. Catharines MPP and a minister in McGuinty’s cabinet, was sitting there at the head table taking all this in.

When I approached Bradley later, he didn’t give an impression that he minded Miller’s criticism so much and even suggested that he had some respect for the man. But that was a few years ago and still some time away from a 2011 provincial election in which McGuinty, by all accounts, plans to run in and win a third term as premier.

With that election looming ever nearer, we learned late this February that McGuinty and his gang have decided to let their contracts with Miller and with an equally fearless public watchdog – Ontario Ombudsman Andre Marin – expire at the end of this March. Continue reading

The Silent Forces Behind The Niagara Health System And Our Diminishing Hospital Services

By William Hogg, MD

Most people in Niagara see the Niagara Health System as an ogre.
 
Health care delivery here is bad. The lay-administrators of Niagara Health System (NHS), who should be focused on balancing finances properly, have stuck their noses into medical matters and thoroughly botched them.

Emergency department closures in the southern tier of Niagara are just part of the fiasco. But they are enough to gain the bureaucrats a new and sinister slogan to play with: NHS = DOA!!!
 
Not a happy thought. And so recently borne out by the untimely death of an exceptionally promising young girl, Reilly Anzovino. Continue reading

‘Signs Of Our Times’ – A New Niagara At Large Series On Signs That Say Something Good, Bad, Maddening Or Crazy About The Times We Live In

 By Doug Draper

Niagara At Large is launching a new off-and-on-and-whenever-we happen-get-a-good-submission’ series that speaks to the good, bad and ugly across our binational Niagara region called “Signs Of Our Times.”

Signs of the Times photo by Bob Liddycoat

And when we say signs, we are talking about real signs up on poles, a billboard, on a picket line or displayed on a lawn or wall somewhere that you happen to spot in your communities and can share an image of with Niagara At Large. Send us a digital image of the sign; along with a bit of commentary on why you feel whatever message the sign conveys ranges from something that may be great for our communities, to something that is sad, disgusting or absurd.

We are starting this ‘Sign Of The Times’ series with an image of a cluster of signs captured by Bob Liddycoat, now a Wainfleet, Ontario resident and old journalism colleague of mine, taken on Ormond Street in his old hometown of Thorold, Ontario. You may have viewed them already on the right, up-hand side of this column. In Bob’s note on this one, he mentioned “three billboards from three levels of government telling us what a wonderful job they’re doing – all at our expense. …

“And if this is just one stretch of one street in one town in Canada,” added  Bob, “imagine what they’re wasting across the country.”

What are they wasting, indeed! Continue reading

Controversial Condo Tower Plan For Crystal Beach About to Reach Crescendo

By Doug Draper

Fort Erie Mayor Doug Martin calls it a “win-win” for the town and the residents of Fort Erie’s Crystal Beach area.

This image was produced by Crystal Beach area residents as an expression of their concern of what might happen to this historic cottage community if Fort Erie's council passes a plan for a condo tower in the community. Fort Erie's mayor, Doug Martin, insists the plan is a 'win-win' for everyone.

Many residents in Crystal Beach insist it will destroy the character of a quaint little lakeshore community that has a good deal of historical significance attached to it. A history that goes back to the time when it was a summer haven for the better half the last hundred year for residents in Southern Ontario and Western New York, when the grand old amusement park of Crystal Beach was still – up to more than decade ago before it closed – sending visitors on some of the best roller coaster rides in North America.

Many residents also argue that it will diminish access to one of the last remaining beaches along Lakes Ontario in Niagara – the popular Bay Beach are that the Town of Fort Erie purchased at a cost of slightly more than $2 million in 2001.

The “it” this commentary is referring to is a controversial proposal by the Molinaro Goup – a consortium of developers from the greater Toronto area – to build a 12-story condo tower on property in front of the beach, breaching a height restriction now on the bylaw books for the age-old cottage community of Crystal Beach of two-and-a-half storeys. And it is a conflict that may very well reach a crescendo this coming Monday, March 1, when Fort Erie’s council votes on matters that could make the first high-rise condo tower in Crystal Beach a reality – setting a precedent for possibly many more high-rise condos along the shores of Lake Erie to come. Martin believes this new development will make Bay Beach even more accessible to the public and may even make more beaches along the lakeshore open for public use.

“The entire (Bay Beach) will be open to the public,” the mayor stressed, adding that he can’t understand whom others believe the beach will become less inviting to the general public than it has since the town purchased it.

“There is overwhelming opposition to the Bay Beach project,” insists Marcia Carlyn, a Crystal Beach resident in a recent call for fellow residents to attend the March 1 meeting of Fort Erie’s town council at 6 p.m. and express their views. Continue reading

Hallelujah For Our College Students! There Will Be No Strike!

 By Doug Draper

Great news this February 24 for students at Niagara College and 23 other colleges across the province.

The flag of Niagara College will continue to fly above its campuses with students walking in and out of their classrooms thanks to the end of a strike stand-off with the province's college teachers union.

Late this day, the Ontario Labour Relations Board has finally confirmed that a slight majority of college teachers across the province – 51.45 per cent – has accepted an offer by the province’s college presidents. This close vote in favour of the offer averts a strike that could have wreaked havoc for some 450,000 students – just as they are working to complete an academic year so many of them and their parents have sacrificed so much for in time and money.

The confirmation that a slight majority of college teachers – a total of about 54 per cent of them at Niagara College alone – has accepted this offer that gives the most senior teachers in the province’s college system the highest annual pay (more than $102,000 a year by 2011) of any college teachers in the country, is a tribute to slightly more than half of our province’s college teachers who showed some grounding in the realities most of the rest of us in the world out here are  facing today.

As for the union representatives for Ontario Public Services Employees Union – the union that continued playing a game of brinkmanship with the academic year of our province’s college students, even when it was clear, this January, that they had the thinnest of mandates to strike – I would suggest that those responsible college teachers out there take another look at them to the point of replacing them with representatives that show more respect for the concerns of students and the general public – many on fixed and lower incomes – who are struggling through their taxes to pay for our post-secondary schools and the good work they are doing.

These OPSEU representatives – so arrogant and self-righteous during this latest, so-unnecessary stand off with a college presidents’ group that has offered them a 5.9 per cent increase in teacher’s salaries over the next three years – should be run out off  their  bully pulpits on a rail. Continue reading

Reilly’s Memory To Live On In Bursary For Paramedic Students

By Doug Draper

As the parents of ReillyAnzovino – the Fort Erie teen who died following car crash this December – continue their call for a provincial inquest to determine if Reilly would still be alive today if emergency rooms had not been closed at hospitals in Fort Erie and Niagara Falls, they have joined others in south Niagara in establishing a bursary in her memory.

The bursary, announced this February 22 at a Fort Erie council meeting by the Yellow Shirt Brigade, a citizens group fighting for fair access to emergency and other hospital services in Niagara’s southern tier, will provide financial assistance to deserving students entering Niagara College’s Paramedic Program.

Reilly  died shortly after arriving at the Welland Hospital’s emergency department following a late night accident on a stretch of Hwy. 3 in her hometown of Fort Erie the day after this Christmas.

“We, as a family, would like to take this opportunity to say that having a Bursary fund set up for students wishing to pursue the Paramedic course at Niagara College is a great legacy for our daughter and sister Reilly Kennedy Anzovino,” said Reilly’s parents, Tim Anzovino and Denise Kennedy, and their son Kain Anzovino, in a statement they shared with Niagara At Large. Continue reading

Why Sharks and Other Creatures Struggling To Survive Matter, And Why We’ve Got To Fight To Save Them Before It’s Too Late

 (Bob Timmons, the Toronto area’s “artist for the ocean” and advocate for all creatures on this planet,  visited Niagara Friday, March 5 to speak on the disgusting practice of hunting down sharks for shark fin soup and other ocean conservation issues.  What follows is  an article Bob Timmons has prepared exclusively for Niagara At Large on the destructive practice we humans have of hunting down the last of this planet’s sharks .)
By Bob Timmons

 Back in 2007, I watched a movie called “Sharkwater” and it exposed me
 to a whole new world that was hidden.

A Tiger Shark, photo courtesy of Amanda Cotton

 This new world was the barbaric shark-fining industry that puts out thousands of miles of long lines to catch sharks, after which they remove their fins and dump the living body back into the ocean to die. Approximately 90 million or more sharks are killed
 in this manner every year.

The most targeted sharks do not have offspring yearly and can take up to 20 to 25years to become sexually mature. At this rate, the sharks are endangered and not sustainable for this type of industry. The fining  industry does not only take one type of shark. They take anything they can get from the endangered whale shark and basking shark, and from more than 200 other
shark species. Continue reading

Canada’s World War I Vets Are All Ghosts Now

By Doug Draper

I can still remember them marching by  so proudly, wearing their neatly tailored uniforms with all those metals pinned on their chests.

Canadian troops land in Plymouth, England on their way to the killing fields of the First World War. Photo courtesy of Great War Primary Document Archive: Photos of the Great War - http://www.gwpda.org/photos.

I was barely seven years old as I watched them march by in a parade to mark Welland’s 1958 Centennial celebrations and most of them were probably in their late 50s and early 60s. And to my youthful eyes, they all seemed so old then.

They were veterans of World War I – ‘the Great War’, as so many then called it – and they were actually a good deal younger at the time I was watching them march by than our remaining World War II veterans are today.

And now they are all gone. With the death this February 18 of Canada’s last World War I veteran John Babcock, who was born and raised in Kingston, Ontario in 1900 and died at his home in Spokane, Washington, we have lost the last living Canadian who wore a uniform during five of the bloodiest, most nightmarish years in more than two thousand years of recorded human history.

Other than the fascination I think many young boys (I can’t pretend to speak for young girls) have for wars and possibly joining the army, I have opposed wars all of my adult life. Other than agreeing that it was a good idea to finally blast our way in and put an end to that Nazi plague lead  by one of history’s maddest mass murders Adolf Hitler, I can hardly accept the possibility that we can’t resolve conflicts between one another in some other way.

As a reporter for more than 30 years, I ‘ve joined fellow staff at the old St. Catharines Standard, The Thorold News, Niagara This Week and other newsrooms where I’ve worked in covering Remembrance Days and other anniversaries of conflicts our veterans have fought it. And what almost always strikes me is this.  Very few of the veterans I’ve met have any taste for more war or the conflicts we continue to get ourselves entangled in today. Continue reading

Niagara Hospital Bureaucrats ‘Celebrate’ While Our Region’s Hospital Services Burn

By Doug Draper

In a week in which the state of Niagara’s hospital services has taken quite the ripping in Ontario’s legislative assembly, the head of the body responsible for operating most of the hospitals across the region capped it off with what she called some ‘long-awaited…great news’.

The $1.5-billion plus new hospital complex the NHS is building on the fringes of west St. Catharines rather than somewhere in the centre of the region.

The $1.5 billion-plus hospital complex for Niagara in the outskirts of west St. Catharines under construction. Niagara Health System CEO Debbie Sevenpifer, in a February 19 memorandum “to all Niagara Health System employees, physicians and volunteers,” announced that the province’s Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care has managed to scare up an additional $14 million in funding for the NHS’s current fiscal year.

“This is great news for the Niagara Health System and long-awaited,” said Sevenpifer in the memorandum she circulated a day after a two-day debate in the provincial legislature over hospital cuts and their impacts on residents in Niagara and surrounding regions that you can find related stories on, including hansard from those provincial debates, by clicking on www.niagaraatlarge.com.

Sevenpifer went on to say that the $14 million infusion of funds from the province, which is basically just a drop in the bucket compared to the tens-of-millions of dollars in debt load the NHS is carrying and the more than $1.5 billion it will have us paying for a new hospital complex in the wrong location, “is a gold medal day for the Niagara Health System.

Celebrate?” A “golden medal day?”

What kind of twilight zone or alternative universe is Sevenpifer and her minions living in? Continue reading

Death Of Fort Erie Teen Reilly Anzovino Raises Questions At Queen’s Park About Hospital Cuts

 By Doug Draper

Opposition parties in the Ontario legislature hammered the province’s Liberal government once again this February 18 over hospital costs in Niagara and the possibility that they may have contributed to the death of Fort Erie teen Reilly Anzovino.

Reilly Anzovino

Reilly died following a car accident on Hwy. 3 in the late hours of this past Boxing Day,  enroute or very shortly after arrival by ambulance to the Welland hospital site.

Concerns that she may have lived if ambulance paramedics could have taken her to the Fort Erie or Port Colborne hospital sites instead of Welland are so pervasive that members of all three major political parties in the province – Liberal MPP Kim Craitor from the Niagara Falls/Fort Erie area, NDP MPP Peter Kormos from the Welland/Port Colborne area and Tim Hudak, a Niagara area MPP who is now leader of the province’s Conservative Party, have called for a public inquest.

A plea for a public inquest was also made this past January by Reilly’s parents, Tim Anzovino and Denise Kennedy, and that, along with other related stories on health care and hospital cuts in Niagara, can be found by clicking on www.niagaraatlarge.com. Niagara At Large will also reprise the letter Reilly’s parents sent to Ontario’s chief coroner, asking for an inquest, at the end of this post.

But before that, Niagara At Large is once again publishing hansard from the Ontario legislature this February 18, with oppositions critics slamming the McGuinty government, once again, for gutting hospital services in the southern tier of Niagara and calling on the government to hold an inquiry into the circumstances around Reilly’s death.

You can read the debate, featuring Hudak, McGuinty, Liberal health minister Deborah Matthews, Tory health critic Christine Elliott and others by clicking on ‘keep reading’ at the end of this sentence. Continue reading

Whatever Came Of Hillary Clinton’s Promise To Renegotiate The Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement?

By Doug Draper

A year ago last June, Hillary Clinton walked halfway across the Rainbow Bridge from the American side of the Niagara River to announce that, at long last, the United States was ready to work with Canada to renegotiate the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement.

Hillary Clinton, America's Secretary of State, on the Rainbow Bridge between Niagara Falls U.S. and Canada last June, announcing plans to renegotiate the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement. Photo by Doug Draper.

On that 13th day of June – celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Canada-U.S. Boundary Waters Treaty as one of the precedent-setting international agreements for protecting the health of shared natural resources in the world – Canadian and U.S. environmentalists around the Great Lakes applauded. They had been urging their respective governments to update the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (first signed in 1972 and last amended in 1987) for years to better address the kinds of pollutants and their sources, the alien species like zebra mussels and Asian carp, and other threats that could ravage these great reservoirs of fresh water today and for generations to come .

But eight months after America’s secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, made the announcement to renegotiate this groundbreaking treaty to protect and preserve the world’s largest resource of fresh water, it looks like the tens-of-millions of U.S. and Canadian residents living around the lakes might be shut out from the talks. Continue reading

Fort Erie NASCAR Speedway Plan Strikes At Heart Of Rural Life And Carolinian Canada

 By John Bacher

One of the great tragedies in the effort to construct an 821-acre ‘Canadian Motorway Speedway’ on agriculturally zoned and designated lands in Fort Erie is that the scheme rips through the heart of one of the most intact areas of Carolinian forest in all of Canada.

It also rips through the heart of the planning laws that seek to protect it. 

Dave and Sandy Mitchell of Fort Erie enjoy some rural peace, while they can, near their home, less than a mile away from the proposed Nascar speedway in Fort Erie.

The area east of the Welland Canal and between the Niagara River in our region has the largest remaining concentration of the most biologically diverse woodlands in Canada – our equivalent of tropical rainforests. This precious mosaic of farmland and forests, repaired from past ecological abuse through the influence of one of Fort Erie’s greatest residents, the pioneer forester Edmund Zavitz, is now threatened by a bizarre “NASCAR-like” motorway complex – a complex that includes an associated mix of shopping centres, and a camp ground for speedway worshippers. Continue reading

Is It Really Worth Destroying What’s Left Of The Animals We Share This World With For A Fur Coat?

By Doug Draper

 Why would anyone want to sit down on the cold pavement, locked up in a steel cage in downtown St. Catharines in the middle of February?

Tayler Staneff is caged while from left, behind her is Sarat Colling, Chris Shaperon and Kimberly Costello. On the cage is a fur coat that is the product of 15 foxes. Photo by Doug Draper

“We’re just trying to put out a message,” said Talyer Staneff as she talked to me through the mesh of that cage with animal make-up she had on.

“A lot of people who buy and wear fur coats probably don’t know how much suffering animals have to go through for them to get them.”

As I talked to her, an old fur coat hung over one corner of the cage, made from the pelts of 15 foxes. Staneff was one of more than 20 animal rights activists in Niagara who participated this February 13th in Canada’s 21st national anti-fur day, not that any federal and provincial government we’ve had in power over that time – Conservative, Liberal or NDP – has done much to recognized it.

What Kimberly Costello, a member of Niagara Action For Animals (NAFA) and one of the organizers of the demonstration had to say should leave Canadians wondering how our country could continue have such backward laws on protecting animals compared to the United States and European Union that at least bans the import of garments made from dog and cat fur, and has placed stronger restrictions on the sale of fur garments and the killing of animals for fur.

 “We are just out here to educate people,” said Costello, adding that the location, which happened to be in front of a store called Henry’s Furs in St. Catharines, which just happened to be closed during the protest, “is just symbolic.” Continue reading

Going Into An Election Year, Niagara’s Regional Council Votes For A Near Zero Tax Increase

By Doug Draper

It’s a municipal election year and Niagara region’s council is on the verge of passing a budget for the year that would keep any increase on its portion of municipal taxes down to around zero.

A zero tax increase in an election year? Is that just a coincidence?

Some would say of course not.

They might say these councillors can now go out at election time and say; ‘Hey, look what we did this year. We kept the regional portion of your municipal taxes down to zero.’ Even if zero this year comes back to haunt us an big jump in taxes next year.

Others might say; ‘Hey, give the council a break. They are doing this because they are aware of all the joblessness out here, along with the all of the people struggling to get by on low and fixed incomes. They are feeling our pain.’

It is more likely that the decision the council approved this February 11 to beat down any increase on a regional budget for 2010 has something to do with all of the above. Continue reading

Citizen Groups Already Planning Appeal As Regional Council Grants Approvals To Speedway Project

By Doug Draper

Niagara’s regional council has granted the proponents of pans for a mammoth NASCAR speedway complex some of the key approvals they need to build the speedway outside the town of Fort Erie’s urban boundaries.

One of the posters Fort Erie area residents have made up to protest NASCAR speedway project.

The council gave its blessings to amendments to the region’s policy plan and the town’s official plan – amendments that allow for such development on rural lands – despite a plea this February 11 from a citizens group to spend more time studying the impacts the speedway could have on the lives or nearby residents and farms before making any decisions.

“Amending the official plan at this point only results in hastily thrusting opponents, local governments and proponents into the expense and time commitments of an Ontario Municipal Board hearing,” Sandy Vant, head of CARS (Citizens Against Racing Speedway) warned the regional council. Continue reading

Another View From Port Dalhousie On The Battle Over A Condo Tower Plan For Crystal Beach

By David Serafino

It’s important to take a position on the Crystal Beach Gateway Project.

Why? Because it means you can influence change.

An image of how the Port Dalhousie heritage district in St. Catharines, Ontario will look if and when 'Port Place' is built.

It is not essential that you do, but ideally, a democratic society hears all opinions. Opinions matter to varying degrees, but an informed opinion matters most. I don’t have one. At least not yet. At present, I choose to maintain objectivity through ignorance.

However, my experience in a similar situation has provided me with insights that I wish to share with the Crystal Beach community. Comparisons have been drawn between the Gateway and the condo development in Port Dalhousie. Port Place includes a 17 storey, 80 unit residential building, a 450 seat theatre, a 70 room boutique hotel and a public courtyard. I don’t know the features or layout of the Gateway but I do know that, like Port Place, it’s overlooking the beach.

When it comes time to take a position, I will begin by informing myself on the benefits and detriments of the project. I will ask this question first: ‘Does the project represent good planning and is it in the public interest?’ Continue reading

Niagara South Mayor Urges Province To Live Up To Its Responsibilities To Deliver Quality Health Care

 
By Doug Draper

In a February 8 statement to his own council, Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey renewed his council’s call for an investigation into management of the Niagara Health System responsible for operating the majority of hospitals across the region.

Port Colborne Mayor Vance Badawey

Badawey also urged Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and his health minister, Deb Matthews, “to give Niagara their full attention (on concerns over hospital services) immediately.”

“If not,” said Badawey in his statement, “(the premier and health minister) are ignoring their responsibility to ensure that the people of Niagara receive the highest quality of health care we deserve. … Throughout the past year,” added the mayor, who is moving forward with plans to develop a South Niagara Health Care Corporation to make up for the loss of emergency rooms and other cuts the NHS and provincially appointed Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) have made to hospital services in the region’s southern tier, the city of Port Colborne has worked extremely hard to do its part.

“We now demand that the province do theirs. It is time the premier and minister of health extend their attention to the affordability of delivering health care services within the region of Niagara in 2010.”

For the record, and by clicking keep reading, we are publishing a full text of Badawey’s statement. Continue reading

Union Bosses For College Teachers Continue To Leave Students’ Academic Year Twisting In The Wind

By Doug Draper

In case you haven’t heard or read it already, a vote this February 10 on a contract offer Ontario’s colleges have made to their teachers is so close to call it could take several more days before the final results are known.

This parking lot of Niagara College's Welland campus could be empty soon if college teachers' union follows through on its strike threat.

That means that more than four-hundred thousand full- and part-time students at Niagara College and more than 20 other colleges across the province are left worrying about whether there will be a teachers strike that disrupts their studies as they should be working toward their final exams and the end of this academic year for possibly another 10 days or so.

The February 10 vote by some 9,000 college teachers across Ontario was reportedly so close that slightly more than 51 per cent of the teachers – by a margin of 210 votes – said “yes” to the college presidents’ offer. Apparently there are about 300 “mail-in votes” left to be counted by the Ontario Labour Relations Board which must hire the most sluggish people in the world to recount votes because we are told it may take the OLRB another week and a half to let the students and public at large in on the final count.

The whole thing is disgusting for the young people and their families investing well over $3,000 a year now for tuition and for over-priced text books (often foisted on them by college teachers who author them with information anyone can find on the internet or in any well-stocked library) to pay the freight, including the salaries and benefits of college teachers who are already among the best paid in all of Canada. Continue reading

An Ontario Municipal Board Decision Presides Over The Destruction Of the Port Dalhousie Heritage District – Leaving More than 90 Heritage Districts Across The Province Vulnerable

 (This article, shared with Niagara At Large from a leading resident in Port Dalhousie, may give those fighting a similar high-tower condo project in the Crystal Beach area some idea of the odds they are up against.)

By Carlos Garcia

Ontario’s dismal record of failing to preserve our heritage is about to get worse – much worse.

Port Dalhousie, from across the harbour, as it looks today, but apparently not for much longer.

The landmark Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) decision to allow a 20-storey height condo tower in Port Dalhousie’s low-rise Heritage Conservation District (HCD) means every one of over 90 HCDs in the province is now vulnerable to towers and inappropriate development.

The volunteer community organization PROUD Port Dalhousie’s epic struggle to preserve the heritage of Port Dalhousie included: City and Regional Council meetings, OMB pre-hearings, a failed OMB mediation, and a 71-day marathon OMB Hearing. The City of St. Catharines and PROUD put forward a very strong OMB case, supported by leading expert witnesses and provisions of  the Provincial Policy Statement and City’s Official Plan, Zoning By-Law (3-storey height limit) and Heritage Guidelines.

Despite this Herculean effort, OMB Vice-Chair Susan Campbell claimed to strike a balance between the Planning and Heritage Acts and approved the proposal in almost its entirety (the OMB had NEVER before approved a tower in a designated HCD). PROUD then requested a review of the decision arguing that, contrary to Campbell’s ruling, the HCD Plan had the elevated status of the 2005 revision to the Heritage Act and, accordingly, Council “shall not …pass a by-law for any purpose that is contrary to the objectives set out in that plan”. Continue reading

An Open Letter To Niagara College Teachers – If You Care About Your Students, Please Don’t Risk Destroying What Is Left Of Their Academic Year!

 From Doug Draper

 I was checking out at the service desk of a retail store some three or four weeks ago when the cashier, who has been reading my columns years, asked me what I was writing about that week.

A Student Centre? This campus of Niagara College may have no students at all taking classes on it if the college teachers' union moves forward with a strike in the days ahead. Photo by Doug Draper

“Well, I’m writing about the possibility of a college teachers’ strike,” I said, “and I’m calling the piece – ‘College teachers who strike this time should be fired.’”

At that point, a young girl who was also working at the service desk turned around and told me that she is a student at Niagara College, and that about the last thing she and her fellow students need right now is a teachers’ strike. All three of us – the cashier, the young girl and I – got carried away in a discussion about this until I turned around and noticed a man behind me, weighed down with a couple of fairly heavy items, waiting to check out. I immediately apologized to him for keeping him waiting.

“That’s okay,” he said. “I have a son in college and we are worried about this too.”

Worried indeed!

These are far from the only folks I’ve talked to in recent weeks who feel the same way. Continue reading

Time For Niagara Residents To Get Together To Fight For Better Health and Hospital Care

By Wayne Gates

Over the past six years, the provincial government has increased spending on health care in the Niagara Region by 42 per cent.

CAW Local 199 President Wayne Gates

The question today is where did it go?  It obviously didn’t improve quality! 

This increase has instead produced closures of beds, programs, and operating and emergency rooms. It has resulted in staff layoffs and buyouts. It is leading to the closure of the GNGH’s maternity ward. How can the Honeymoon Capital of the world not have a maternity ward?

Here are a few troubling facts:

·  Our emergency room wait times far exceed the provincial average.

·  Surgeries are being delayed and even cancelled. Witness last week when local surgeons complained about the postponement of serious cancer surgeries. Continue reading

A Story Of A Niagara Health System Experiment Gone Wrong

By Sue Salzer
 
A report given by Kevin Smith to the regional government of Niagara points out glaring problems that have been created by the Niagara Health System.
 
Smith , who represents the administration of the Regional Ambulance Service (EMS) , reports overwhelming wait-times for paramedics to off-load patients at the Niagara Falls Hospital emergency department. The amount of time before paramedics can release their patient to Hospital personnel has almost doubled since the closures of the Emergency Rooms in Fort Erie and Port Colborne. Hours of wait  time have increased from around 130 hours to current times of approximately 240 hours per month.
 
The ambulances, two paramedics and the unfortunate patients are delayed an average of  eight  hours daily before they can be released to the care of hospital personnel. This is neither a wise nor necessary use of our ambulance resources and personnel. Continue reading

Crystal Beach Condo Battle Rages On In Pages Of The Buffalo News

By Doug Draper

The debate over a controversial plan to erect a 12-storey condo tower in front of one of the last stretches of lakeshore in the Fort Erie community of Crystal Beach open to the public raged on in the Sunday edition of The Buffalo News this Feb. 7.

The developer's image of a high-storey, big box condo that has become a subject of controversy over future development in the historic Fort Erie community of Crystal Beach.

The condo plan, as the front-page story in The Buffalo News reports, has received the support of Fort Erie Mayor Doug Martin and a majority on his council, even as it has drawn waves of opposition from residents – dividing this historic beachfront community as the council prepares to vote this March 1 on changing its height regulations to permit the tower.

The Buffalo News story, which you can read by clicking on the following link http://www.buffalonews.com/home/story/948395.html, quotes Martin at one point saying: “There will be those who see it (the condo plan) as a great beginning, the cornerstone of the redevelopment of Crystal Beach, and there will always be those who will wish for older days when the (Crystal Beach amusement) part was still there and it had a small-town collage atmosphere… I think the new history of Crystal Beach begins with this project.”

On the other hand, Wayne Redekop, a former Fort Erie mayor who once supported the idea of selling some of the land in front of what is actually known as Bay Beach in the Crystal Beach area to generate revenue for buying up more lakefront for public use, is thumbs down on this particular project in a community of mostly one or two-cottages and businesses.

“I think the 12-story condominium is completely out of character with the neighborhood. I think it’s pitting people of good faith against each other, creating problems for the municipality in terms of trying to move forward, and I think it appears very much as if the council is trying to ram something through,” Redekop said. Continue reading