Stark Warnings From Ontario’s Environment Minister On Climate Change

News from Citizens At City Hall (CATCH) in Hamilton, Ontario

Posted May 10th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword from NAL publisher Doug Draper – As you read this, and I hope you do, keep in mind that the information and concerns contained in this post are just as relevant for the greater Niagara region as they are for neighbouring in Hamilton, and so are the suggestions made for lifestyle changes that can help reduce emissions of carbon-based, greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.)climate change photo

Hamilton, Ontario – Ontario’s minister of the environment and climate change had some blunt advice when he spoke at the climate resilient cities conference in Hamilton. Glenn Murray offered detailed evidence that climate change already threatens our food and water security and it’s going to get much worse.

While he declared that “there’s nothing that Hamilton lacks to be the kick-ass city in Canada”, the former mayor of Winnipeg made clear that “fundamental transformation” in our urban form is required including intensification and no more suburban sprawl. Continue reading

Ontario Tory Leader Patrick Brown To The Premier: Autism Doesn’t End At Five

From Ontario’s Progressive Conservative leader Patrick Brown

Posted May 10th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto – This May 10th, Leader of the Official Opposition Patrick Brown used Question Period to demand the Ontario Government reverse their cuts to autism therapy.autism demo

“Cutting IBI treatment for children over five is a mistake. It is a mistake to take the chance for IBI treatment away from 5 year old Keith in Toronto,” said Brown, referencing a five year old boy who was removed from the waitlist for therapy. “His mom called these changes ‘devastating for [her] child’s future.’ And she said the devastating cuts to Keith’s treatments are ‘heartbreaking.’” Continue reading

NDP MPPs To Hold Town Hall Meeting In Niagara On Changes To Autism Services

This Coming Wednesday, May 11th At Thorold Public Library

Posted May 10th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

News from the Constituency Office of Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

Thorold, Ontario – Cindy Forster, MPP for Welland, will be hosting a town hall meeting to discuss recent changes to the Autism program in Ontario.

autism_coalition_protest2___Gallery 

Also attending are the Ontario NDP’s critic for children and youth services, Monique Taylor (MPP for Hamilton Mountain), Wayne Gates, MPP for the riding of Niagara Falls, and the parents and families of children with autism, to address the impact of the government’s changes to autism services.

When – Wednesday, May 11, 2016

6:30 p.m.            Town Hall Meeting

Hosted by:          Monique Taylor, MPP, Hamilton Mountain,                                Ontario NDP Children & Youth Services Critic , Wayne Gates, MPP, Niagara Falls, Cindy Forster, MPP, Welland

Location:             Thorold Public Library , 14 Ormond St. N., Thorold

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

“A politician thinks of the next election. A leader thinks of the next generation.” – Bernie Sanders

 

Ontario’s NDP Leader Calls For Moratorium On Wynne Government’s Cuts To Nurses

A Call-Out from Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

Posted May 9th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto – To mark the beginning of Nursing Week, Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called on the province’s Wynne government to impose a moratorium on any further nursing cuts in Ontario’s hospitals.nurses ontario rally

“This morning, on the first day of Nursing Week, I’m here with one message for Premier Wynne: Enough is enough,” said Horwath. “The Liberals are forcing our hospitals to make decisions based on dollars and deficits, rather than what’s best for patients. The Premier’s deep cuts to nursing care in Ontario’s hospitals must stop – Now.”

Horwath was joined by Vicki McKenna, First Vice-President of the Ontario Nurses’ Association (ONA), who revealed that 1,440 registered nurses have been cut since the beginning of 2015. In 2016, Ontario is on pace to more than double the number of nurses cut compared to last year. Continue reading

Ontario’s Liberal Cabinet Accused Of Being Divided On Future Of Nuclear Energy

“Ontario’s nuclear industry creates the cheapest emission-free power we have (and) the Premier must commit to supporting Ontario’s nuclear industry.” – Ontario PC Opposition Leader Patrick Brown

From the Office of  PC Opposition Leader Patrick Brown

Posted May 9th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto Ontario Liberal Cabinet Ministers are divided on the future of nuclear energy in the province.

Ontario's Pickering Nuclear power plant. Is it a cheaper way to go? And where is a safe method and place for disposing of the radioactive waste generated from these facilities?

Ontario’s Pickering Nuclear power plant. Is it a cheaper way to go? And where is a safe method and place for disposing of the radioactive waste generated from these facilities?

During his Thursday, May 5th speech to the Economic Club of Canada, Minister of Environment Glen Murray said that he believed the province would eventually move away from nuclear power within the next 10-20 years.

However, during yesterday’s Question Period, Minister of Energy Bob Chiarelli said that the province was committed to a $12.8-billion refurbishment over the next 30 years to produce clean energy. Continue reading

Statement By Canada’s Prime Minister On The Disastrous Fort McMurray Fire

 “To those who have lost so much: we are resilient, we are Canadians, and we will make it through this difficult time, together.”

Posted May 6th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Ottawa, Ontario The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on the Government of Canada’s response to the Fort McMurray fire:

“Today, I speak for all Canadians when I say that our hearts go out to the families affected by this terrible fire. We are thinking of – and praying for – the people of Fort McMurray. Though Alberta’s loss is profound, we will get through this tragedy together: as friends, as neighbours, as Canadians.fort-mcmurray-fire

“I encourage everyone to make a donation to http://www.redcross.ca , and help the thousands of displaced residents of Fort McMurray.

“The Government of Canada will match every dollar donated to the Canadian Red Cross in support of the Fort McMurray relief effort. Our commitment will apply to individual charitable donations made within Canada, it will be backdated to May 3rd, 2016, and it will continue until May 31st, 2016. There will be no financial cap on the federal government’s contribution.

“We applaud the Government of Alberta, who has also agreed to match donations. As a result, for every dollar donated by Canadians, the Red Cross will receive a total of $3.fort m fire

“The outpouring of goodwill and compassion we have already seen from Canadians across the country has not only been inspirational, but stands as a testament to who we are as a nation.

“I would once again like to thank the many first responders who are working tirelessly, day and night, to fight this fire. To those who have lost so much: we are resilient, we are Canadians, and we will make it through this difficult time, together.”

(A note from Niagara At Large – If you are interested in making a donation to the Canadian Red Cross to assist the many victims of this unfolding disaster click on https://donate.redcross.ca/ea-action/action?ea.client.id=1951&ea.campaign.id=50610&gclid=CKLZqomnxswCFQEGaQodmPUAVA   .

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

A Happy 100th Birthday To A Heroic Advocate For Healthy, Sustainable Communities.

“This book is an attack on current city planning and rebuilding.” – so reads the opening salvo from Jane Jacob’s powerfully influential book ‘The Death And Life Of Great American Cities’

A Brief Tribute from Doug Draper

Posted May 6th on Niagara At Large

She was small in stature but mighty.

Jane Jacobs in Toronto

Jane Jacobs in Toronto

Jane Jacobs was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania on May 4th, 1916 and died in Toronto, Ontario on April 25th, 2006.

And in between, the “housewife” and self-taught urban planner, whose 1961 book ‘The Death and Life of Great American Cities’ was as groundbreaking Rachel Carson’s ‘Silent Spring’ was to environmental protection and Marshall McLuhan’s ‘Understanding Media’ was to comprehending all forms of media and their mpact on our lives, did more to advance the cause of preserving and building healthy living communities than most of the planners out there with a wall full of professional credentials.jane jacobs

During her years in New York City in the 1950s and 1960s, Jane Jacobs and a small group of citizen leaders stood up to Robert Moses, then one of the most powerful bureaucrats and builders of highways and bridges in North America, and stopped his plans to cut an expressway system through the heart of Manhattan – a scheme that would have gone a long way toward destroying iconic neighbhourhoods in and around the Lower East Side like Soho, Little Italy and the bohemian mecca of Greenwich Village where she lived at the time.

The courageous battle Jacobs led against Moses is wonderfully portrayed in Ric Burns’ crtically acclaimed PBS documentary series ‘New York’ and serves as a lasting inspiration for anyone engaged in David vs. Goliath s battles against forces that might do harm to the communities where we live.

Jane Jacobs’ work should be required teaching in our high schools and should be a centre piece of every municipal planners’ education.

Indeed, we are certainly in need of more Jane Jacobs today, especially in this Niagara, Ontario region where the record shows we have far too few planners, evelopers and municipal politicians with the will and intelligence to move beyond paving over ever more of what is left of green spaces to make way for car-dependent, low density sprawl.

Honour the legacy of Jane Jacobs by putting her great book ‘The Death And Life Of Great American Cities’ on your must read list. What the book has to say about what makes for an urban environment worth living in is just as vital today as it was when it was first published more than five decades ago.

quote-cities-have-the-capability-of-providing-something-for-everybody-only-because-and-only-jane-jacobs-39-44-02

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

Hello America. Canada Has Been Down This Road Before – Just With A Lot Less Yelling And Reality TV Pizazz

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted May 4th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Since a year ago this June, when he glided down the escalator from his gold tower to begin his campaign for the U.S. presidency, Americans have looked on – some with chuckles, some with jeers and some with cheers – as Donald Trump, with reptilian voracity has ripped one piece of flesh after another from the bones of the once proud, 164-year-old Republican Party.

This May 3rd, as the votes were tallied in the latest in a series of presidential primaries in the State of Indiana, what little was left of the grand ol’ party of Abe Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt breathed its last gasp as the Donald emerged as the last clown standing in a year-long race to run against Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders for the highest office in the land.

This May 4rth, on its front page, one of America’s most circulated news tabloids, the New York Daily News, depicted Trump’s victory over an eviscerated Republican establishment and the elephant that serves as its symbol as follows.

new york daily news

Seems like a shocker to many Americans but not so much for those of us living north of the U.S./Canada border that went through this more than two decades ago with the death of the old Conservative Party of John A. MacDonald, John Diefenbaker and Joe Clark, and almost every last one of its so-called “Red Tory” members. Continue reading

Greater Niagara Chamber To Honour Niagara, Ontario’s Best In Business And Philanthropy

Posted May 4th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

News from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Niagara, Ontario – The Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce will celebrate Niagara’s most outstanding business and community leaders on Thursday, June 23, 2016, at the Niagara Business Achievement Awards.

The restoration and preservation of the 19th century Keefer Mansion in the Niagara, Ontario community of Thorold is one of the achievements of Phil Ritchie and Keefer Developments, who are among those who will receive an award for their contribution to the greater Niagara community. File photo by Doug Draper

The restoration and preservation of the 19th century Keefer Mansion in the Niagara, Ontario community of Thorold is one of the achievements of Phil Ritchie and Keefer Developments, who are among those who will receive an award for their contribution to the greater Niagara community. File photo by Doug Draper

Four distinguished business and community leaders will receive bestowed awards at the 13th annual edition of the ceremony for their achievements in business and philanthropy within the community.

Rob Welch, Partner at Lancaster, Brooks and Welch, will receive the Lifetime Achievement Award sponsored by Walker Industries. This award is presented to a businessperson who has demonstrated a lifetime commitment to business success and community leadership. Continue reading

Join The Ontario-Wide Referendum – To Save Our Community Hospitals & The Services They Provide

A Call-Out from the Ontario Health Coalition – a citizens advocacy group for quality public health services

Posted May 4th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

The Ontario Health Coalition has been on the front lines across the province, actively campaigning to stop the devastating cuts in local public hospitals and to win a restoration of funding, staffing, beds and services to meet communities’ needs for care.

save hospitals

Now heading into the ninth year in a row of real-dollar cuts to hospitals’ global budgets, Ontario’s community hospitals are lagging behind virtually all other provinces in every reasonable measure of hospital funding. We have dropped to the bottom in key measures of care: we have the fewest hospital beds, we are pushed out of hospital faster, and we have the least nursing care (RN & RPN) per patient of any province in the country. Continue reading

‘Four Dead In Ohio’ – May 4th, 1970

Remembering A Tragic & Shocking Day For The Peace Movement

Posted May 4th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

As Canadian native and rock legend Neil Young once reflected – It was “probably the biggest lesson ever learned at an American place of learning.”

At the same time, said Young – “It’s still hard to believe I had to write this song.”

The song, for those of us old enough to remember or for younger people who care enough to study the history of some of the earlier years of the civil rights and anti-war movement of the 1960s and 70s, is ‘Ohio’.

At the 25th commemoration ceremonies in 1995 for the 1970 Kent State shootings, a little girl places flowers on a spot where one of four students fell dead. Photo by Doug Draper

At the 25th commemoration ceremonies in 1995 for the 1970 Kent State shootings, a little girl places flowers on a spot where one of four students fell dead. Photo by Doug Draper

And at least part of the lesson that was learned on that spring day 46 years ago, on a university campus that looks like many others across the continent, is that not everyone is going to look favorably upon you or think you are a nice person if you are out there demonstrating for civil rights or the environment or for the end of war. In fact, many may dislike you and at least some may hate you enough that you could get killed!

That is what happened on the grassy hills of Kent State University in Ohio during a week of on-campus protests against an ever more unpopular War in Vietnam when students William Schroeder, Sandra Scheuer, Jeffrey Miller and Allison Krause – two of them 19 and two of them 20 years old, and two of them not even participating in the protests, but walking between classes with books in their hands – were cut down in a sudden volley of fire from an army composed of the state’s National Guard. Continue reading

A Saying On A T-Shirt Worth Sharing And Thinking About

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted May 3rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

There are people out there – you know who you are – who go out of their way to find and wear t-shirts with catchy or interesting words or sayings on them.

And I’m one of those people that likes reading them. It’s just one of the things I do while I’m out there, circling around the community, trying to figure out why I’m here and where it is I want to go.

I’ve yet to fully find answers to questions of why am I here and where I want to go, but I sure have read a lot of interesting sayings on t-shirts along the way. And one of the most interesting sayings I’ve read on a shirt lately is one worth all of us sharing and thinking seriously about.bernie_sanders_2016 next generation

It is a line attributed to one of my favourite people in the world these days, U.S. Senator and presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, and it goes like this – “A politician thinks of the next election. A leader thinks of the next generation.”

Yes!

I thought about that saying this past April 30th, when there on the TV screen, CBC was broadcasting a live media briefing following a meeting Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau, had with his Liberal Party operatives in Quebec. Continue reading

Racial Issues On The Agenda This Fall As U.S. Conference Comes To Brock University

“As the first Canadian institution to host the White Privilege Symposium, Brock is leading a national discussion.” 

News from Brock University

Posted May 3rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – For the first time in its history, the White Privilege Conference — a prominent American symposium of educators and students “designed to examine issues of privilege beyond skin colour” — is venturing outside of the U.S.

This fall, Brock University will be the host site for the White Privilege Symposium Canada. Pictured are keynote speaker Eddie Moore with Brock symposium organizing team members Dolana Mogadime, centre, and Kim Radersma.

This fall, Brock University will be the host site for the White Privilege Symposium Canada. Pictured are keynote speaker Eddie Moore with Brock symposium organizing team members Dolana Mogadime, centre, and Kim Radersma.

This fall, Brock University will be the host site for the White Privilege Symposium Canada (WPSC). The two-day event Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 will use a format of guest speakers and group workshops to examine the impacts of, and solutions to, racial and cultural oppression.

Organized by Brock’s Task Force on Racial Climate, and supported by the U.S. parent group, the WPSC will be themed “Academics & Activists: Advocating for Equity, Justice and Action,” and is expected to draw attendees from Canada and the U.S. Continue reading

Greater Niagara Chamber Launches ‘Small Business Too Big To Ignore’ Campaign

Nearly 3 million Ontarians are employed by small businesses of 100 or less employees, but the rising cost of doing business in the province is stunting their growth

News from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Posted May 3rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario This first week of May, 2016, the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce (GNCC), in partnership with the Ontario Chamber of Commerce (OCC), is launching Small Business Too Big To Ignore, a six month campaign that will highlight the important contributions of small businesses to our communities and investigate the top barriers to small business growth.support small business

Coinciding with the launch of this campaign, the OCC also released its report, Top 3 Obstacles to Small Business Success, aimed at starting a conversation about the underlying challenges that are weighing on small businesses and stifling job creation. Continue reading

The Wetland At The Heart Of A Controversy Over Biodiversity Offsetting In Niagara Is ‘A Gem In Our Backyard’

 “Biodiversity offsetting should not be part of wetland discussions and any thought to the contrary is simply uninformed and incorrect.  The science says so and so do most of our wetland policies and protocols in Canada.”

By Barry Warner, Professor of Wetland Ecology, University of Waterloo

A Special to Niagara At Large

Posted May 2nd, 2016

Some of the information presented in media reports regarding the wetlands in the vicinity of Dorchester and Oldfield Roads in Niagara Falls, Ontario (where the proposed …. Thundering Waters/”Paradise Community” development is proposed to go on hundreds of acres of land) needs clarification and correction.

Two of the hundreds of Niagara residents who have attended meetings and rallies in recent weeks to stop a bid by the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority to "offset" - take that to mean destroy - wetlands in Niagara to make way for sprawling development.

Two of the hundreds of Niagara residents who have attended meetings and rallies in recent weeks to stop a bid by the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority to “offset” – take that to mean destroy – wetlands in Niagara to make way for sprawling development.

Despite great progress in recent decades, wetlands continue to be enigmatic and poorly understood habitats. They have characteristics in common with both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.

By scientific definition, they are their own discreet ecosystems with unique wetland attributes in addition to the shared attributes found in each of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems too. Thus, it might be understandable that concepts and interpretations get confused by the non-specialist or lay persons.

Wetlands are not only attractive hotspots of biodiversity and important water features; they have also played central roles in shaping the history of our nation and possess great spiritual connections to our Mother Earth. Continue reading

The Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority’s RUMPELSTILTSKIN

Just Movin’ Things Around

A Take by Niagara, Ontario resident and author Leslie Daniels on the controversy over the wetland destruction scheme the NPCA choose to peddle as something called “biodiversity offsetting”

Posted May 2nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Once upon a time . . . a group of foreigners offered great wealth to those in authority in Niagara, if they could just give up a tiny bit of their protected lands.

The Queen of the province had already made a deal with the wealthy developers and told Rumpelstiltskin, the leader of the authority to find a way to change the laws without it looking like they were selling off the protected and threatened species that lived in these slough forests of Niagara.rumpel for daniels piece

The authority thought and thought and finally came up with a plan. They called it biodiversity offsetting. Sounds kind of like a ‘Sarah Pailn-make-up-your-own-word”, doesn’t it?<giggle> But I digress… Continue reading

Ontario NDP Presses Province’s Wynne Government For Employment Protection For Ontario Interns

A Call-Out for Justice for Ontario’s working interns from the province’s New Democratic Party

Posted May 2nd, 2916 on Niagara At Large

(Just a brief Foreword to this Post from NAL publisher Doug Draper –

Every fair-minded person in Ontario – that means all of us – needs to speak out against the continued approval by Premier Kathleen Wynne and her Liberal government of colleges and universities in Ontario forcing students to perform slave labour – they call it “unpaid internships” – in order to receive their diploma.

This shameless exploitation of our young people – of people who are already having a hard enough time finding paying jobs while they are neck-deep in student debt – is a form of theft of their time and of the skills they bring to the work place, and it has got to stop!)unpaid-interns-art-e1393863041710

Queen’s Park, Toronto – Today during Question Period, Peggy Sattler, Ontario NDP critic for Training, Colleges and Universities, called on the Wynne government to protect all Ontario interns from workplace exploitation, after the Ministry of Labour uncovered widespread violations of the Employment Standards Act during a fall 2015 workplace blitz. Continue reading

Oh No! Another ‘Business Mission’ To China – Ontario Government Secures New Agreements In Beijing

Major Agreements Signed with Chinese Partners

News from the Ontario Government of Premier Kathleen Wynne with a Foreword & Cautonary Words from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted May 1st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword to this Post by Niagara At Large publisher Doug DraperWell, here we go again. Hopefully it is a good thing for grape growers and wine producers in Niagara, Ontario that, as this Ontario government news release states below, an agreement has been reached with China to export and sell more ice wine to that country.

On the other hand, what other agreements has Ontario’s Wynne government, which I’ve found myself feeling more distrustful of with each passing month, cut that may be in the interest of a few special interests, but may be of questionable benefit or may possibly even have damaging impacts on our communities as a whole.

The last time Ontario’s Liberal government, led by Premier Kathleen Wynne herself, went on a “business mission” to China, in November of last year (2015), she boasted of brokering more than $2 billion in deals – one of them a development proposal for the Niagara Falls, Ontario area identified as “Thundering Waters” and mentioned in a provincial government media release at the time in the following few lines; “Also in Beijing, Xincheng Real Estate Fund announced a $100 million investment towards Paradise, a new attraction and residential development in Niagara Falls. The development is led by China-based GR Investment Group, which has purchased 484 acres of property located west of Marineland and adjacent to Thundering Waters Golf Club.”

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne in the second row, in China last November 2016, cutting business deals with numerous other Chinese and Ontario corporate reps on hand.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne in the second row, in China last November 2016, cutting business deals with numerous other Chinese and Ontario corporate representatives on hand.

It wasn’t until a few months later that residents across Niagara began to learn more about this Thundering Waters” development plan and the potentially destructive impacts it might have on hundreds of acres of lands in and around the Niagara River watershed. Continue reading

Slither And Hop Into Spring – The Secretive World Of Reptiles And Amphibians Is Coming To Life

This Post Is Courtesy of Ontario Nature, a province-wide advocacy group for protecting and preserving our natural spaces

Posted May 1st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Note from Niagara At LargeWith all of the discussion and debate in Niagara, Ontario in recent months over something called “biodiversity offsetting” – something the Niagara Peninsula Conservation is interested in trying for the benefit of developers who want to bulldoze through “nuisance pieces” of wetlands in our region – NAL is including this piece from the group Ontario Nature as a way of shining a little light on the key role wetlands play in the web of life on our planet.)

Painted Turtle - Photo by Jason King, Courtesy of Ontario Nature

Painted Turtle – Photo by Jason King, Courtesy of Ontario Nature

Niagara Falls, Ontario – A few reptiles and amphibians have already been spotted in Niagara Falls this spring. But with the warmer weather, the first weeks of this April served to rouse scores more.

On a leisurely shoreline stroll you may spot an American toad or midland painted turtle. If you turn over a log, you may find a spotted salamander or milksnake. Continue reading

Federal NDP Calls For Continued Protection Of Canada’s Dairy Products Against Cheaper U.S. Imports

‘We Must Protect Our Dairy Producers’ -NDP Motion

From the New Democratic Party of Canada

Posted April 30th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Note from Niagara At Large – NAL is continuing to post news updates on this issue because dairy farming is a significant part of a farm industry worth hundreds of millions of dollars annually to the economy of this region.)

Ottawa, Ontario – New Democrats tabled a motion earlier this April calling on Canada’s Liberal government to keep its election promises and commitments made at the beginning of its mandate and require all Canadian producers to respect cheese composition standards immediately.dairy protest sign

“The situation is urgent and producers are tired of waiting. The solution is simple and comes down to the government standing up for Canada’s dairy industry by enforcing cheese composition standards,” said NDP Agriculture critic Ruth Ellen Brosseau (Berthier-Maskinongé). “Our family dairy farms are being threatened and the NDP will continue to fight for their future.”

Canadian producers lost a total of over $220 million in 2015 due to imported diafiltered milk from the United States. The industry is calling for this problem to be solved immediately by properly enforcing cheese composition standards.

“Dairy producers are fed up. We even missed a day of work to come to Ottawa to express our discontent. The Liberal government promised us action – but we’re still waiting. It’s time for them to get moving,” said Pierre Lampron, 2nd vice-president of the Quebec Federation of Dairy Producers.

Diafiltered milk is a milk protein concentrate from the United States designed to circumvent Canadian regulations and laws as no American processor uses it.

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

Brave Hearts Keep Beat To The Music – Come Experience A Celebration Of Human Courage & Inspiration

Niagara, Ontario’s Momentum Choir In Concert May 15 and May 18, 2016

By Joanne McDonald

Posted May 1s, 2016 on Niagara At Large

It’s a brave heart that will carry the beat of every song when Momentum Choir singers take the stage to share their talent and the courage to make a positive difference during two year-end concerts, May 15 and May 18 at Bethany Community Church in St. Catharines.

Kristen Smeets - a powerful profile of bravery

Kristen Smeets – a powerful profile of bravery

This year’s theme, ‘Be Brave’ marks the choir’s ninth-season finale for Momentum – both the mantra for the choir’s 50 singers who live with disabilities and the magic they bring to audiences who pack concert halls every time they sing.

Executive and Artistic Director Mendelt Hoekstra talks about real fortitude. “The audience will witness musicians with Down Syndrome, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Learning Disabilities and Cerebral Palsy who are proving that being brave is something that they live with every day. It isn’t easy to perform well. Audience members will tangibly feel what being brave means for those who live with a disability.”
Continue reading

The Twisted Way To An Environmental Impact Study For The Thundering Waters ‘Paradise Community’ Plan In Niagara Falls, Ontario

“To be effective in protecting the environment, the closed nature of the EIS process needs to end!”

By John Bacher

Posted May 1st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – In the midst of good news this last week of April about a plunge in municipal support for a bizarre scheme called “bio-diversity offsetting” to destroy protected provincially significant wetlands, some new revelations emerged with equally nutty twists and turns.

An overview image of the Thundering Waters development project, displayed at a recent public information meeting in Niagara Falls, Ontario where the massive development would go

An overview image of the Thundering Waters development project, displayed at a recent public information meeting in Niagara Falls, Ontario where the massive development would go

These revelations concern the research being done for an Environmental Impact Statement. (EIS) required for the Thundering Waters Secondary Plan for a “Paradise community” China-based developers are proposing to build on hundreds of acres of land in the southwestern end of Niagara Falls.

The reason an EIS document is so important is that it is the only barrier in the way of a developer wiping out natural landscape in Ontario that is not a wetland, with the exception of forests on the Oak Ridges Moraine or on lands on the Niagara Escarpment protected by the province’s Greenbelt rules. Continue reading

Join In Celebrating The 40th Anniversary Of Niagara, Ontario’s Premier Agricultural Lands Preservation Group

You Are Invited To PALS’ 40th Annual General Meeting – Thursday, May 5th, 2016

An Invite from Gracia Janes and the Preservation of Agricultural Lands Society

Posted May 1st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

The Preservation of Agricultural Lands Society (PALS) –  the oldest farmland preservation group in Niagara, Ontario and in all of Canada – has invited land preservationist  cowboy, agri-tour operator and beef farmer,  Carl Cosack ,from the Dufferin County group Food and Water First, to speak at its 40th Annual General Meeting on Thursday May 5,   7-9:30 p.m. at the Unitarian Congregation of Niagara Community Hall,  223 Church Street, St. Catharines.

"Cowboy land preservationist" and beef farmer Carl Cosack of Dufferin County, Ontario is keynote speaker

“Cowboy land preservationist” and beef farmer Carl Cosack of Dufferin County, Ontario is keynote speaker

Cosack, is a “local hero” and “Quarry-breaker”   for his leadership role within the North Dufferin  Agricultural and Community Task force, in defeating  the Highland Company’s’ proposed mega-quarry in Melancthon, which was to be located over the purest ground water in Canada, if not the world.

It was a ‘David and Goliath’ win for what started out as just a few farmers opposing the plans of  a company   backed by a multibillion-dollar US hedge fund and powerful political lobbyists. Continue reading

This May 1st, 2016 Marks Another Unaffordable Hydro Rate Increase In Ontario

“Only in Ontario could this happen. If you use too much power, rates go up. If you conserve energy, rates still go up.”

A Message from Ontario’s Opposition Progressive Conservative Party

Posted May 1st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto –This May 1st, Ontario ratepayers will see yet another increase to their hydro bills, with annual energy costs rising by an average of $37.56.hydro meter best

Ontario’s energy rates are increasing at a faster rate than any other jurisdiction in North America.

Since November, hydro bills have skyrocketed by an average of $186.96. “This rate increase is just further proof that life is harder under the (Ontario) Liberals. Ontarians already pay some of the highest energy rates in the continent, and now they will have to endure another increase,” said Ontario PC Energy Critic John Yakabuski (Renfrew-Nipissing-Pembroke). Continue reading

Wetland Monitoring On the Horizon For Great Lakes Basin

News from  Staff of the Canada/U.S. International Joint Commission

Posted May 1st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Adaptive management is nothing new.

Canada and the United States have asked the International Joint Commission to evaluate fluctuations in levels and flows in the Great Lakes periodically over the last half century.

Wetland Monitoring in the Great Lakes. An Environment Canada file photo

Wetland Monitoring in the Great Lakes. An Environment Canada file photo

In early 2015, the IJC formed the Great Lakes Adaptive Management (GLAM) Committee. The goal is to assist the St. Lawrence River, Lake Superior, and Niagara boards of control to evaluate the long-term effects of water regulation plans and the resulting effect of fluctuating water levels and flows on socio-economic interests and the environment. Continue reading

Niagara Falls Fireworks Return Sunday, May 1

2016 Season to Include 43 Additional Shows in Queen Victoria Park – Presented by the Tourism Partnership of Niagara

News from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted May 1st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario – The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC), along with presenting sponsor the Tourism Partnership of Niagara (RTO2), are pleased to announce the return of Canada’s longest-running fireworks series on Sunday, May 1 at 10 p.m. in Queen Victoria Park.

Photo courtesy of Ontario's Niagara Parks Commission

Photo courtesy of Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Thanks to the continued strong support of destination partners on both sides of the border, a total of 85 fireworks displays are planned for 2016, up from the 42 shows which took place last year. Fireworks displays are scheduled to take place at 10 p.m. every Sunday, Wednesday, Friday and holiday from May 1 to October 31. Continue reading

Remembering Workers In Ontario Who Have Been Killed And Injured On The Job

Statements by Ontario’s Minister of Labour & the Province’s Opposition Leader On Day of Mourning

Posted April 28th,, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(Niagara At Large did not receive a Statement from the Ontario NDP for this post as of press time.)

Ontario’s Minister of Labour Kevin Flynn released the following statement today:

Queen’s Park, Ontario – “Today is the Day of Mourning — a day when we pause to honour and remember all people who have been killed or injured on the job. The Day of Mourning was established to mark an important event for workers.day of mourning

It was on April 28, 1914, that the Ontario Legislature passed the first Worker’s Compensation Act. Now, on each Day of Mourning, we take time to remember, reflect and re-commit.

We remember lives lost or forever changed by the simple act of going to work. We reflect on the past and we re-commit ourselves to making workplace health and safety a priority and to taking action to prevent workplace tragedies. Together, we have come a long way.

Over the past decade our province’s annual rate of workplace injuries has dropped by more than 40 per cent, making Ontario’s workplaces among the safest in the world. Continue reading

Niagara College Receives $1.4 Million In Provincial Funding For Green Tech Automotive Lab

News from Niagara College

Posted April 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Welland, Ontario Campus – Niagara College has received more than $1.4 million from Ontario’s Apprenticeship Enhancement Fund program to build a Green Tech Automotive Lab at its Welland Campus. Niagara College Welland-Frontview campus

The project allows Niagara College to expand its focus on green technologies in its automotive programs – an area where Niagara College is already ahead of the curve.

The 3,600-square-foot Green Tech Automotive Lab will be an extension of the existing automotive facilities at the Welland Campus’s Rankin Technology Centre. It will include open bays, a work area and classroom, and will house the latest in green automotive technologies, including electric charging stations, alternate fuel technology, diagnostic equipment, green technology simulators, and electric and hybrid vehicles. Continue reading

A Tale Of Two Ontario Cities – Hamilton & Burlington – On Contrasting Climate Priorities

“We’re very proud to be building a great city and not a sprawling suburb.” – Burlington, Ontario Mayor Rick Goldring

News from the Hamilton-based Citizens at City Hall (CATCH)

Posted April 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

In the wake of more record-smashing global temperatures, the mayors of Burlington and Hamilton got an opportunity to speak last week at a McMaster-organized conference on climate change.

Burlington in the foreground with the Skyway and Hamilton behind.

Burlington in the foreground with the Skyway and Hamilton behind.

The two cities that straddle the western end of the lake appear to have quite different approaches to what is increasingly being described as a planetary emergency.

Last month was by far the hottest March in global records. It was the eleventh consecutive month to break records and was the ninth consecutive one to break them by record amounts, almost guaranteeing that 2016 will be the hottest year yet despite the records set in both 2015 and 2014. Continue reading

Brock U. Researchers And Long-Term Care Residents Collaborate On Scientific Research

The Health & Wellness Benefits Of Connecting – Or Re-Connectiong – With Nature

News from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario

April 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

As Canada’s population ages, people are looking for ways to improve the quality of life for their loved ones. One approach, which is becoming increasingly popular, is to get people connected — or reconnected — with nature.

Brock University researcher Kerrie Pickering fills a bird feeder at the Woodlands of Sunset long-term care facility in the Niagara community of Welland, Ontario

Brock University researcher Kerrie Pickering fills a bird feeder at the Woodlands of Sunset long-term care facility in the Niagara community of Welland, Ontario. Photo courtesy of Brock University

A group of researchers from Brock’s Environmental Sustainability Research Centre (ESRC) is exploring the link between nature and health through a partnership with The Woodlands of Sunset, a regionally owned long-term care home in Welland.

This initiative, “Wetlands of Sunset: Connecting Memories with Nature,” aims to show the importance of the location of long-term care facilities for the well being of their residents. What makes this an excellent case study for the research is that it is surrounded by wetlands and forests that are also owned by Niagara Region. Continue reading

Ontario’s Niagara Parks To Host Community Tree Planting and Niagara Glen Nature Events On May 7

News from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted April 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario – The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) is pleased to once again partner with Forests Ontario as part of a province-wide free community tree planting event to be held on Saturday, May 7 from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.

Participants will have the opportunity to directly support their community in a local reforestation project and learn about the benefits of trees, shade and green urban spaces. The NPC planting site is located directly across the street from the Niagara Glen Nature Centre at 3050 Niagara Parkway.

A walk through Niagara Glen near the rushing waters of the Lower Niagara River

A walk through Niagara Glen near the rushing waters of the Lower Niagara River. Photo courtesy of Ontario’s Niagara Parks

As a result of its strong partnership with Forests Ontario, NPC has greatly expanded its tree planting program. Since 2013, over 100,000 trees have been planted in the Park, including the restoration of over twenty-two hectares (55 acres) at the Legends on the Niagara Golf Course Complex. In 2016, NPC intends to plant an additional 5,000 new trees and seedlings on the over 1,300 hectares of property it is entrusted to protect. Continue reading

BANG! – Come See and Hear Carl Orff’s thrilling CARMINA BURANA

News from Chorus Niagara

Posted April 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, OntarioChorus Niagara and Artistic Director Robert Cooper present a thrilling finale to their first season in the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre with BANG! Saturday May 7, 7:30pm.BANG Poster

Carmina Burana is one of the most popular, accessible and energetic 20th Century classical music works. Audiences will experience the driving rhythms LIVE with special guests TorQ Percussion Quartet. Continue reading

In Trump’s America – Shades Of 1930s Germany

“You see parallels that you don’t want to see but that we have to start talking about.” – American writer and senior partner of the Center for Courage & Renewal, a group dedicated to promoting leadership that is “more just and compassionate.”

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted April 25th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Most of the political pundits and reporters I see on American cable networks look like they are lapping up Donald Trump’s campaign for the U.S. presidency like ice cream.

Donald Trump yells at a protester at one of his rallies to "get out!"

Donald Trump yells at a protester at one of his rallies to “get out!”

They play clips from Trump rallies over and over again of the Donald ordering his goons to throw any protesters out or pledging to “bomb the shit” out of American enemies, and they sit there in the studio grinning and chuckling over it all – even when Trump does his usual schtick, pointing at reporters at the back of the hall and calling them “scum”, “crooks” and “liars” while thousands of his supporters or fans or whatever they are cheer on.

Turn on CNN or any other 24-hour news channel in the States, any time of the day or night, and the coverage is all about Trump, Trump, Trump. If there is a choice between cutting in live to a Trump rally, or one featuring Hillary Clinton or any of the other candidates, even if Bernie Sanders is holding one that has drawn record numbers of supporters, the networks will tune into the Trump rally almost every time. Continue reading

Heroine With Niagara Link Will Be First Woman Featured On U.S. Currency

Former Slave & Abolitionist Harriet Tubman Will Grace American $20 Bill. Now how About A Another Heroine With A Niagara Link – Laura Secord – Gracing A Canadian Bank Note?

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted April 24th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Many Niagara, Ontario residents expressed pride this past winter when a statue of Harriet Tubman – created by artist and former Niagara resident Frank Rekrut at his art studio in Florence, Italy, was unveiled at a new school in the Niagara community of St. Catharines, just down the road where she spent a few years living in the years before the American Civil War of the 1860s.harriet tubman bill

That pride was manifest for some of us again this past April 20th when the United States Treasury Department announced that for the first time in that country’s 240-year-old history the image of a woman in the name of Harriet Tubman – a former slave in America who went on lead fleeing saves through the “underground railway” to freedom in Canada – will be featured on U.S. paper currency. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Volunteers Are Mounting Referendum To Save Local Hospitals

From Sue Hotte, Niagara Health Coalition, a citizens organization fighting for quality, public health care services in Niagara

Posted April 24th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Welland, Ontario – Niagara residents have been hard hit by the provincial government’s decision not to properly fund hospitals.

Kevin Smith’s Report advocated for the closure of five hospitals once a new hospital is built in Niagara Falls. In 2013, Fort Erie and Port Colborne lost their operating rooms and emergency departments.

save hospitals

In 2014, Niagara on the Lake lost all its beds and is scheduled to close. This month, staff were told at the Port Colborne hospital that the 48 complex care beds would be moved to Douglas Memorial in Fort Erie. Both Fort Erie and Port Colborne have populations of over 20,000. The Welland hospital servicing over 94,000 people in its catchement area is on the chopping block. Continue reading

Ontario Helping Local Groups Protect and Restore Great Lakes

Province Marking Earth Day; Investing $1.5 Million in Grassroots Projects

“These projects have a direct environmental benefit to the Great Lakes and include … restoring wetland habitiat.”

Posted April 22nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto Ontario is investing $1.5 million this year in local efforts to help protect, restore and enhance the Great Lakes.

The lower Great Lakes from somewhere up there in space.

The lower Great Lakes from somewhere up there in space.

Now in its fourth year, the Great Lakes Guardian Community Fund is providing up to $25,000 each to fund 69 projects led by not-for-profit organizations, schools, First Nations and Métis communities and other local groups. These projects have a direct environmental benefit to the Great Lakes and include:

  • Planting trees and other forms of vegetation
  • Naturalizing stream banks
  • Cleaning up beaches and shorelines
  • Creating rain gardens
  • Restoring wetland habitat
  • Controlling invasive species

Continue reading

Climate Change Is “One Of Biggest Threats” Facing World – Ontario PC Leader Patrick Brown

Posted April 22nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword Note from NAL publisher Doug Draper – One of the reasons I am posting this is that I cannot image a leader of the Ontario Conservative Party even saying something like this over the past 25 years.)

The following is a statement from Leader of the Ontario PC Party Patrick Brown on Earth Day:

“On Earth Day, people from across the globe gather together to celebrate the beauty and splendour of the natural environment. Whether it’s the Niagara Falls in the South or the Boreal Forest in the North, in Ontario we are fortunate enough to be home to some of the world’s most beautiful landscapes.ontario pc logo

To ensure that our province’s natural resources and pristine landscapes continue to flourish for generations to come, we must recognize that climate change is one of the biggest threats facing our world. Strong and credible action is needed to tackle climate change, to preserve and protect the environment while protecting taxpayers and the economy.

So on not just Earth Day, but every day, I encourage all Ontarians to do their part to conserve and safeguard our environment – little actions can make a big difference.  We owe it to future generations to take action.”

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

 

“Climate Change Is The Great Global Challenge Of Our Time’” – Canadian PM Justin Trudeau

A Statement by the Prime Minister of Canada on Earth Day

Posted April 22, 2016 on Niagara At Large

The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on International Earth Day –

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in December, 2015 at Paris Climate Summit

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in December, 2015 at Paris Climate Summit

“Today is Earth Day. It is an opportunity for us to cherish and celebrate Canada’s natural beauty from coast to coast to coast. We also take this day to reflect on the impact that each and every one of us can – and must have – on the world around us.

“We must protect our environment – clean air to breathe and clean water to drink means better health for all Canadians. The Government of Canada has already demonstrated leadership and courage as it tackles climate pollution. We have taken important steps with our partners to grow cleaner businesses, develop clean technologies, reduce the footprint of our resource sector, and protect our National Parks.

“Climate change is the great global challenge of our time, but it is also an opportunity for those willing to solve it. Around the world, communities grapple with the complications of a rapidly changing environment. Strong action is needed to address the issues we face – and build a cleaner, stronger, and more sustainable world.

“On this day, I encourage all Canadians to join us in our efforts to conserve and safeguard our natural environment. Every single Canadian has a role to play to protect our earth and leave our children a better world than the one we inherited from our parents.”

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

Why We Fight – A Message from the Green Party of Canada

Posted April 22nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

From the Green Party of Canada’s digital director Jeff Braunstein

Dear Friend,

This Friday, April 22nd, 2016 is Earth Day, and if you’ve been reading the headlines this week, you got another crude reminder of why we have to keep fighting.

Canadian Green Party leader Elizabeth May

Canadian Green Party leader Elizabeth May

TransCanada’s Keystone pipeline sprang another leak, fracking in Alberta and British Columbia was confirmed to be causing earthquakes, and a report was released showing that the Energy East pipeline will put the drinking water of over 5 million Canadians at risk.

This Earth Day, make a difference by adding your name to demand climate action. Continue reading

This Earth Day – April 22, 2016 – Let’s All Pledge To Stand Together For A Cleaner, Greener Earth Every Day Of The Year!

A Brief One by Doug Draper, publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted April 21st, 2016

In the final days of 1968 – a little more than a year before the launch of the first Earth Day and beginning of a modern-day environmental movement that faces unprecedented challenges to this day –  U.S. astronauts orbiting the moon for the first time took a picture of our earth rising about the horizon of the lunar landscape.apollo_8_earthrise

That iconic image should continue to be reminder to all of us to this day that this magnificent sphere of blue and green remains our only oasis in a vast dark universe. In the more than four and a half decades since that photo was taken, we have sent probes out to the farthest reaches of the universe and have yet to find another stone circling the sun that can support all life as we know it, including our own.

That is why we must all stand up against those who, driven by willful recklessness and short-sighted greed, would  destroy any more of the life-giving resources present and future generations of humans and other species on this planet need for survival.

Those who would poison our water and air or destroy what are left of our wetlands and woodlands for profit are among the worst kind of vandals and rapists and should be locked in jail cells, not sitting on decision-making boards or holding positions of power.

If enough of us stand up, we can run these destructive individuals and the greedy few they represent out out of power.

This Earth Day – April 22nd, 2016 and for all of the Earth Days ahead – let’s make a pledge to lock arms together and do just that for ourselves, for other species on this great planet and for the future of our children.

Niagara At Large publisher and environment reporter Doug Draper with the gas mask and "If you are not part of the solution" sign, demonstrating in front of a then polluting Union Carbide plant in Welland, Ontario on the first Earth Day, April 22, 1970.

Niagara At Large publisher and environment reporter Doug Draper with the gas mask and “If you are not part of the solution” sign, demonstrating in front of a then polluting Union Carbide plant in Welland, Ontario on the first Earth Day, April 22, 1970.

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

 

 

Purple Rain, Purple Rain – The Prince Of Rock Is Gone

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted April 21st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

We are aren’t quite through the first four months of 2016 and it is already proving to be a year of huge and heartbreaking loss in the world of pop music.prince

It began on New Year’s Day with news of the death of Natalie Cole, daughter of the legendary Nat King Cole and a greater singer in her own right, and continued with the passing of David Bowie, Eagles co-founder Glenn Frey, Earth, Wind & Fire’s Maurice White, Beatles producer George Martin, Keith Emerson of Emerson, Lake & Palmer fame, and two members of the iconic late-1960s San Francisco group Jefferson Airplane, Paul Kantner and the group’s pre-Grace Slick lead singer Sgne Toly Anderson, and the list goes on.

And now singer, guitarist and rock and R&B performer extraordinaire Prince Rogers Nelson, known more simply and famously to the world as Prince, found dead in his suburban Minneapolis home this Thursday, April 21st at age 57.

“Dearly beloved

We are gathered here today

2 get through this thing called life

Electric word life

It means forever and that’s a mighty long time

But I’m here 2 tell u

There’s something else

The afterworld

A world of never ending happiness

U can always see the sun, day or night”

  • From ‘Let’s Go Crazy’, the opening song on Prince’s classic album ‘Purple Rain’

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

Coal-Free Ontario With Film Legend Morgan Freeman

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

One of Ontario's huge coal-fired plants demolished a decade ago.

One of Ontario’s huge coal-fired plants demolished a decade ago.

Toronto, Ontario – The leadership of the Ontario Clean Air Alliance in helping Ontario to become the first jurisdiction to end the use of coal-fired electricity for health and environmental reasons has not gone unnoticed.

Our hugely successful campaign was recently profiled in a 5 minute video produced by Al Gore’s Climate Reality project and featuring Academy Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman.

Click on the video here, then continue reading

Ontario set an example for the world with this action to reduce our climate impact, improve health and kick start a move toward a green energy future. But we still have a long way to go, with powerful interests still championing our creaky nuclear-dominated system and even questioning why we need to bother with energy conservation. Continue reading

10 Years After Being Paralyzed, Niagara Man Set To Run Wings For Life In Niagara Falls

Niagara, Ontario-native Kevin Rempel to join more than 1,000 others in Niagara Falls venue of global spinal cord injury fundraiser

News from the organizers of Wings for Life World Run

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario – For Kevin Rempel, competing in this year’s Wings for Life World Run is a story of spinal cord injury coming full circle.

The unique running event will be held on Sunday May 8 in Niagara Falls and 35 other cities around the world.

Kevin Rempel in action

Kevin Rempel in action

More than 100,000 runners will take part globally in an event that in its first two years raised more than $5.5 million for spinal cord research through the Wings for Life Foundation.

Rempel, a 33-year-old who grew up in Vineland, is able to compete this year because of the advancements in spinal cord injury research. Ten years ago, in July 2006, Rempel suffered a terrible motocross crash and was left an incomplete paraplegic. Continue reading

Ontarians Can’t Keep Up With Skyrocketing Hydro Increases – NDP

From the Office of Ontario NDP Energy Critic Peter Tabuns

Posted April 21st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto – Ontarians are using less electricity, but for the eighth year in a row, people will see the cost of hydro increase by more than nine percent.

This Wednesday, April 20th, 2016, Ontario NDP Energy Critic Peter Tabuns, MPP Toronto-Danforth, called on the Liberal government to get hydro costs under control, and start putting the needs of people and Ontario businesses ahead of private power companies.imagesB0JB61VE

“When Ontarians use less energy, the should pay less. People are doing their part; it’s time for the Liberals to do their part,” said Tabuns. “The Liberals are putting the interests of private power donors ahead of families and businesses. Instead of getting results for families and small businesses, the Minister is signing more high-cost private power contracts that help Liberal donors.” Continue reading

Ontario Premier’s Statement On Queen Elizabeth II’s 90th Birthday

Posted April 21st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne released the following statement today on Queen Elizabeth II’s 90th birthday:

“Today we join people across Canada and throughout the Commonwealth in celebrating the 90th birthday of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.queen-elizabeth-ii-9286165-2-402

The Queen is renowned for her lifetime of unwavering service to the people of our province and our country. For more than 64 years, she has carried out her duties with poise, integrity and intelligence, and has upheld the monarchy as a reassuring symbol of stability and continuity.

On behalf of the Government of Ontario, I want to extend our warmest wishes to Her Majesty and the Royal Family. Long live The Queen!”

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

Animal Ethics Organization Launched By Brock University Professor

News from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario – A first-of-its-kind institute to lead research, education and advocacy for animal ethics worldwide has been launched by Brock University professor David Fennell.

Brock University professor David Fennell, who recently launched the International Institute for Animal Ethics.

Brock University professor David Fennell, who recently launched the International Institute for Animal Ethics.

Based on an interdisciplinary approach, the International Institute for Animal Ethics (IIAE) focuses on how moral knowledge and best practice can stimulate change in the use of animals primarily in the tourism industry, along with other related contexts. Continue reading

Niagara Falls MP Celebrates Progress Over New ‘South Niagara’ Hospital Plan

“This project is a chance to create jobs for young people. The project should utilize our local trades, local engineers and local small and medium sized businesses that put money right back into our community.” – Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates

From the Office of  Niagara FallsRiding  MPP Wayne Gates

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Qieen’s Park, Toronto   This April 19th,  Wayne Gates, NDP MPP for Niagara Falls met with Dr. Kevin Smith, CEO of the Niagara Health System, and Dr. Suzanne Johnston, President of the Niagara Health System, regarding the New Niagara Falls Hospital. The meeting follows the news that the project has moved out of Stage One to Stage Two last Tuesday.

Site forproposed new Niagara, Ontario hospital for southern tier municipalities. Hospital is planned to go on lands in west end of Niagara Falls. File photo by Doug Draper

Site forproposed new Niagara, Ontario hospital for southern tier municipalities. Hospital is planned to go on lands in west end of Niagara Falls. File photo by Doug Draper

“It was a productive meeting and I’m happy to see that we’ve finally moved into Stage Two – though I believe this project can and should move quicker” said Gates. During the meeting both Smith and Johnston shared the early drawings of the new hospital with Gates.

Dr. Smith believes the project will have submitted the paperwork for Stage Two and move into the third stage by November of this year. Once the project reaches the third stage they begin selecting the vendors and issue the RFP to build the site. Continue reading

Calculating A Living Wage For People In Ontario’s Niagara Region

“Providing wages that allow a family to meet its basic household needs … should be top of mind of all employers.” – Niagara Poverty Reduction Network Chair Glen Walker

News from the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – With the annual cost of household living expenses for a Niagara region family of four conservatively pegged at over $65,000.00, the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network has calculated the hourly wage necessary for families to meet these expenses, otherwise known as a living wage, to be $17.47.living_wage

The Network has released a new report, ‘Calculating the Living Wage for Niagara Region, 2016’, which outlines the full methodology used. The report is available on its website www.wipeoutpoverty.ca

“A living wage reflects what earners in a family need to be paid based on the actual costs of living and being included in a specific community, “ says Glen Walker, Chair of the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network. Continue reading

Prayer Vigil For First Nations Communities In Crisis At Brock University This Coming Thursday, April 21st

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario – In response to the suicide attempts in the northern First Nations communities of Attawapiskat, Ontario and Cross Lake, Manitoba, the Indigenous Solidarity Coalition at Brock University will be hosting a tobacco ceremony and prayer vigil on Thursday, April 21st from noon to 2 p.m. in front of Schmon Tower.ATTAWAPISKAT-CRISIS

“We will send our prayers out to communities and together make signs sending good energy and support to the individuals, families and health support workers who are on the front lines of this crisis,” says Indigenous Solidarity Coalition co-chair, Jodielynn Harrison.

Last week, Attawapiskat’s chief declared a state of emergency after 11 suicide attempts in one night. Dozens in the community of less than 2,000 people have attempted to take their own lives this year. Continue reading

Ontario Consumers Paying for Provincial Liberal Government Mismanagement of Energy Sector

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

From the Office of Ontario PC Opposition Leader Patrick Brown

Queen’s Park, Toronto – On May 1st, Ontario ratepayers will see hydro prices increase on average by $37.56 annually because consumers used less electricity than expected this past winter.untitled

This Tuesday, April 19th, Leader of the Official Opposition Patrick Brown used Question Period to ask the Premier about this logic-defying increase and the ongoing mess in the energy sector.

Referencing a Hydro One bill which has been making traction on social media, Brown said, “I came across a photo of a Hydro One bill the other day – it was dated April 13, 2016. It read: On-peak: 0 kilowatts per hour used. Mid-peak: 0 kilowatts per hour used. Off-peak: 0 kilowatts per hour used. Total cost of electricity charges: $113.” Continue reading

Ontario Liberals Should Come Clean About Taking Away Autism Services For Children – NDP

From the Office of Ontario NDP critic Monique Taylor

Posted April 20th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto – During Question Period today, Monique Taylor, the Ontario NDP’s critic for children and youth services, challenged the province’s Liberal government to provide the information it is using to justify kicking children with ASD, 5 years and older, off of lists for essential therapy.Autism-Rally

“When it comes to our most vulnerable kids, you would think government members would at least understand the devastating impact of their decisions. The Minister claims that, in the name of science, she had to remove children five and over from the list.  That’s simply not true,” Taylor said.

“Can the Minister please tell me on what page the Clinical Expert Committee recommends kicking children with ASD over 5 off the list?” Continue reading

Niagara At Large Not Posting This Tuesday, April 19th Due To Necessary Technical Maintenance

A Message from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Due to some necessary hard-drive cleaning we need to do, Niagara At Large will not be posting news and commentary this Tuesday, April 19, but will be fully back in operation this Wednesday, Aprile 20th

That doesn’t stop any visitors to the site from reading posts that are already there and responding to them with their own comments if they like on an understanding that your comments will not appear until we are fully back up and running.

Sorry for the inconvenience and look forward to being back online for all our readers as soon as possible.

Ontario Government Investing $662,000 In Cycling Infrastructure for Niagara-Area Municipalities

Ontario Expanding Cycling Networks and Improving Safety

News from the Government of Ontario

Posted April 18th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queens’s Park, Toronto – Ontario is providing $662,000 to Niagara municipalities over the next two years to help build new cycling infrastructure through the Ontario Municipal Cycling Infrastructure Program.
Cycling the trails along the scenic Niagara, Ontario Parkway

Cycling the trails along the scenic Niagara, Ontario Parkway

Niagara Region will receive $325,000 to install a new 1.06 kilometre cycling and walking path that offers an off-road alternative to Merritville Highway and provides improved access to Brock University.

Fort Erie and The Niagara Parks Commission will receive $250,000 to improve a scenic, 3 kilometre long section of the Niagara River Recreation Trail, which forms part of the Greater Niagara Circle Route, the Trans Canada Trail network, the Waterfront Trail and the 475-km Greenbelt Route. This work includes a new off-road path for walking and cycling and a signed bicycle route on a shared roadway. Continue reading

Ontario PC Critic Questions Premier On Huge Cost Over-Run For Replacing Burgoyne Bridge In St. Catharines

Posted April 18th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara At Large is posting the following video on the massive runaway costs of replacing the Burgoyne Bridge for your information.

The video is from this Monday, April 18th session of provincial parliament and highlights an exchange between Ontario PC Economic Development & Infrastructure Critic Money McNaughton and the province’s Premier Kathleen Wynne on this issue.

: http://https://youtu.be/X9omyWvKYEo

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

Brock U. Labour Expert Releases First-Ever Report On Gender Wage Gap In Ontario Retail

‘Men are paid more than women across every occupational category in front-line retail – often a lot more.’

News from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario

Posted April 18th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines – Men are being paid more than women in every occupational category within Ontario’s retail sector, new Brock University-led research reveals.women pay

This is despite the fact that most of Ontario’s one million retail workers are women.

These are among the stark findings of the report, “The Gender Wage Gap in Ontario’s Retail Sector: Devaluing Women’s Work and Women Workers.” The “gender wage gap” is the difference between what women and men are paid.

“I’ve studied retail work for six years, but the seriousness of the pay inequities in Ontario still surprised and angered me,” says Brock University labour expert Kendra Coulter, the report’s lead author. Continue reading

Pinky’s Barking For Bernie!

Our Canine Mascot Wants Every Eligible Voter In Western New York To Get To The Polls & Support Bernie Sanders In This Tuesday’s New York State Primary

A Brief One from Niagara At Large

Posted April 18th, 2016

Some of our longtime readers and subsribers have been asking about Pinky and what she’s up to these days.

Our NAL mascot is barking for Bernie! She wants all of her Western New York friends and neighbours to vote for him.

Our NAL mascot is barking for Bernie! She wants all of her Western New York friends and neighbours to vote for him.

In case you don’t know, Pinky is Niagara At Large’s adopted mascot – a small but mighty chiwawa with dual U.S.-Canadian citizenship who was visiting us during last year’s federal election in Canada and came down with a bad case of ‘Harper Derangement Syndrome’ until Harper’s defeat had her wagging her tail again.

Now Pinky’s back home with her American friends and like them, she’s Feelin’ the Bern’ because she knows, like they know, that if we are ever going to get any real action on issues like climate change and creating decent paying jobs and health care for all, you have to have someone like Bernie Sanders – someone who has been fighting for a better life for everyone all of his adult life – in the White House.

So forget about all of those mainstream media pundits and polls suggesting that Hillary and Bill Clinton Inc. have the Democratic Party nomination in the bag.

If enough of our New York friends and neighbours go to the polls this Tuesday, April 19th and vote for progressive change and a future we can all believe in, Bernie Sanders will be the next president of the United States.

For more information on voting for Bernie Sanders on New York State Primary day visit the volunteers for Buffalo for Bernie Sanders at – https://www.facebook.com/Buffalo-for-Bernie-Sanders-1636972909852447/ .

To see some of Bernie Sanders campaign ads, click on the following –

A recent ad on trade deals – https://berniesanders.com/press-release/sanders-talks-trade-jobs-tar-heel-state/ .

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nwRiuh1Cug .  for The America ad

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PewCSYS6a6s . works for all of us .

Real Change for America – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwwwn9zHT-8 .

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

 

U.S. Senator And Presidential Hopeful Bernie Sanders’ Address On ‘Economic Justice’ At Vatican

“The issue of wealth and income inequality is the great economic issue of our time, the great political issue of our time, and the great moral issue of our time. It is an issue that we must confront in my nation and across the world.” – Bernie Sanders

“Our challenge is mostly a moral one, to redirect our efforts and vision to the common good.”  – Bernie Sanders

The following is a complete transcript of U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders’ April 15th, 2016 remarks to Vatican Conference.

Posted April 15th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Vatican City – I am honored to be with you today and was pleased to receive your invitation to speak to this conference of The Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences.

Bernie Sanders

Bernie Sanders

Today we celebrate the encyclical Centesimus Annus and reflect on its meaning for our world a quarter-century after it was presented by Pope John Paul II.

With the fall of Communism, Pope John Paul II gave a clarion call for human freedom in its truest sense: freedom that defends the dignity of every person and that is always oriented towards the common good. Continue reading

Ontarians Hit With Another Unaffordable Hydro Increase

From the Office of Ontario PC Party Opposition Leader Patrick Brown

Posted April 15th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto – On May 1st, the people of Ontario will find yet another increase on their monthly hydro bill, with rates expected to rise $37.56 annually. 

Ontario PC Opposition Leader Patrick Brown

Ontario PC Opposition Leader Patrick Brown

 “Electricity rates in the province are skyrocketing and it’s only getting worse,” said Leader of the Official Opposition Patrick Brown. “Since November, bills have gone up $186.96 a year for the average consumer.  These rates are excessive for the average Ontarian.”

Ontario has the fastest rising hydro rates of any province or state in North America. 

This is the latest unaffordable hydro increase for Ontarians, who were faced with another Ontario Energy Board (OEB) rate increase in November 2015. Continue reading

Celebrate Record Store Day – Saturday, April 16th – At One Of The Last Of The Greater Niagara Region’s Grand Old Record Stores

A Short One from Doug Draper

Posted April 15th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

It wasn’t so long ago that people who claim to be in the know about pop culture and how we will participate in it in the future were predicting the demise of record stores and almost anything that resembles the vinyl and shiny plastic disks we listened to music on in years gone by.records onecloseup

And for a while it looked it looks most sadly to this record store lover and others that they might be right after one grand old record store after another like Sam the Record Man on Yonge Street in Toronto and whole record store chains went the way of the dinosaurs as more and more people were choosing to use handheld gadgets to download their music from various online sources.

Then something fantastic happened. A whole new generation of music fans in their teens and 20s began discovering the magic of taking a disk out of an artfully packaged sleeve and giving it a spin on a turntable. And suddenly, there are stores featuring whole rows of music by thousands of artists – new and old – on vinyl records that had all but disappeared only a few decades ago.

This renaissance of vinyl has thankfully breathed new life into the last of the great old record stores that managed to barely hang in there selling music, as they also still do, on CDs. Continue reading

A Call-Out From One Buffalo Area Resident To Others To Vote For Bernie Sanders In The April 19th New York Primary

“Canadians can help Bernie by talking to their U.S. friends and helping to dispel Hillary’s myth that single-payer health care is impossible!”

From Marie Janicke

Posted April 14th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(Niagara At Large has received permission from the author of this recently submitted comment to our site to re-post it here as a stand-alone call to everyone eligible to vote in this coming Tuesday’s April 19th New York State Primary to cast their ballot for the one and only true voice for progressive change running for the U.S. presidency – Senator Bernie Sanders!)

Buffalo, New York – I’m 100 percent behind Bernie Sanders. I’m glad to hear that you (at Niagara At Large) are too!

Vermont Senator and U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders on the campaign trail

Vermont Senator and U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders on the campaign trail

New York is an extremely important state for Bernie to do well in if he is to secure the Democratic nomination and go on to run in November against whomever becomes the Republican nominee.

Bernie Sanders does much better than Hillary Clinton does in head-to-head polls against all the Republican hopefuls, so you would think Bernie would be the obvious choice for the Democratic Party.

The problem is that Big Money is behind Hillary, who has served them well in the past and whose entrenched establishment status (and acceptance of major donations) convinces them she will serve them well in the future. Continue reading

Niagara Falls To Be Illuminated For 90th Birthday Of Queen Elizabeth II

 News from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted April 14th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – In October of 1951, then Princess Elizabeth and Prince Phillip visited Niagara Falls, as part of a Royal Tour of Canada that year.

The foaming waters of the Horseshoe Falls, bathed in night lights. File photo courtesy of the Niagara Parks Commission

The foaming waters of the Horseshoe Falls, bathed in night lights. File photo courtesy of the Niagara Parks Commission

A 15-minute purple illumination will take place at 10 p.m., in honour of the reigning Monarch, who has served as Queen of the United Kingdom, Commonwealth and Canada since 1953.

According to the Official Website of the British Monarchy, “The Queen herself has a very personal involvement with Canada and Canadians in every region of the country.

This involvement is based on a deeply held affection for and loyalty to a country that she first toured as Princess Elizabeth in 1951 and to which she has returned over twenty times since.”
Continue reading

Niagara Falls City Councillors Join In Putting Wetland-Gutting Scheme On Hold

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted April 12th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – For a second time in as many weeks, a bid by China-sponsored agents and the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority to “offset” – or to put it more plainly – gut more than 10 acres of provincially protected wetlands in Niagara Falls to make way for urban development has been placed on hold.

The first decision to defer moving forward with the scheme – cloaked in an until recently unheard of, yet already infamous term “biodiversity offsetting – was made this past April 7th by a majority of Niagara regional councillors, following more than three hours of discussion and debate where it was repeated over and over again that they weren’t provided enough information to make a decision.

Niagara area residents demonstrate before Niagara Falls council meeting on wetland "offsetting" scheme.

Niagara area residents demonstrate before Niagara Falls council meeting on wetland “offsetting” scheme.

And the second deferment was agreed to this April 12th by every member of Niagara Falls’ city council outside of the mayor, who is only required to cast a vote to break a tie, after a number of them also made it clear that they were not given enough information to make a decision.

Niagara Falls city councillor Carolynn Ioannoni, after the councillors heard from Ed Smith, one of three members of the public who came and spoke against destroying any of the old forest wetland to make way for some residential and commerical development loosely referred to by some as the “Paradise project,” got the ball rolling by holding up a single piece of paper she said contained the only information the council was given on the project. Continue reading

Bernie Brings His ‘Political Revolution’ To Buffalo, New York

 A Brief One from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted April 12th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

“We need to create an economy that works for all of us,” said U.S. presidential in an address to more than 10,000 supporters in Buffalo, New York this April 11th, 2016. “We need millions of people to stand up and fight back for a government that will represent all of us, not just the one percent.”

And now just a few words here from a friend and neighbour north of the Canada-U.S. border –

Bernie Sanders cheered by thousands in Buffalo, New York

Bernie Sanders cheered by thousands in Buffalo, New York

Speaking to all of our Western New York friends and NAL readers as a Niagara, Ontario resident living next door, we Canadians need a President Bernie Sanders next door.

We all need a progressive force for change like Bernie on this continent to lead the battle against climate change, job-killing trade deals and the growing gap in wages, health care and education services between the rest of us and the wealthy few.

So come on New Yorkers, for your own sake, and for the sake of your country and your neighbours in Canada, go out there this coming Tuesday, April 19th, and cast your ballot in the New York Primary for ‘a future we can all believe in’!

Click on the following to view and hear Bernie Sanders’ entire speech at the April 11th rally at the University of Buffalo’s Alumni Arena

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAvDmHU5h50

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

Bid By China Interest To Destroy Protected Wetland Area In Great Lakes Basin Must Be Spiked – ASAP!

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted April 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – To paraphrase an oft-used line from that old Paul Newman movie ‘Cool Hand Luke,’ what we’ve got here when it comes to some of our political leaders and this controversial matter of “offsetting” a natural wetland to make way for urban development is “a failure to communicate.”

One of more than a hundred Niagara citizens during a demonstration before an April 7th regional council meeting.

One of more than a hundred Niagara citizens during a demonstration before an April 7th regional council meeting.

How else can we have a situation where more than 100 members of the public show up at a Niagara regional council meeting this past April 7th, and where some among them made arguments against this destructive scheme that are so compelling that a majority of councillors voted to put any approval of it on hold – and yet, some of the same cast of characters who’ve been pushing for this scheme from the get go are determined to try their luck again this coming Tuesday, April 12th at a meeting of  Niagara Falls city council.

This time, Niagara Falls Mayor Jim Diodati, along with Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority CAO Carmen D’Angelo and St. Catharines regional councillor Bruce Timms, who is the Conservation Authority’s chair, may have a better chance with the city council of getting a motion approved that asks the Province of Ontario “to initiate a pilot project to allow for bio-diversity offseting of wetlands for ‘Paradise Development’ in Niagara Falls” for at least two reasons. Continue reading

Ontario’s Natural Resources Minister Urged Stop Plan To Destroy Protected Wetland Area In Niagara For Development

“Please take action and do what you can to put a halt to this travesty before uninformed decision makers allow it to proceed without appropriate safeguards to enforce the protection of “Provincially Protected Area of Global significance.”

An Open Letter to Ontario Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry Bill Mauro from concerned Niagara Falls resident Linda Babb

Posted April 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(NAL was sent a copy of this letter and sought and received permission from its author, Linda Babb, to post it here. We believe this letter helps inform the debate over a controversial bid by some of our municipal leaders and the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority to “offset” a protected wetland area in the Niagara River watershed for urban development, and we hope it inspires others in the community to share their concerns with their representatives at all levels of government.)

Dear Minister Mauro

Your portfolio bears responsibility for overseeing the activities of the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority and other Conservation Authorities across the province.biodiversity sign better

The NPCA was created by, and is subject to, the provisions of Ontario’s Conservation Authorities Act.

What we are witnessing appears to be flagrant contravention of, and disregard for, Provincially Protected Wetlands although “wetlands” encompasses four categories under that designation. Three of such areas identified and designated as “wetlands” may be “offset” safely. The fourth, the old growth slough forest with vernal pools and endangered wildlife cannot be offset. Continue reading