Peter Kormos – 1952 to 2013
A Foreword by Doug Draper, reporter and publisher, Niagara At Large
September 6th, 2021 on Niagara At Large

The late great MPP for Niagara Centre and all-round voice for everyday working families, Peter Korms
If the former Niagara Centre MPP and Niagara Regional Council member for Welland was still alive, I am sure no one would be more active in their efforts to remind us who built this region and this country with their blood, sweat and tears than Peter Kormos
Like all too few politicians around today, Peter Kormos was the real deal – a fearless voice for ordinary working people and their families, regardless of how much blow back he received from others, including leaders of the NDP, where he landed a home after the late, great Mel Swart retired in 1988.
I grew up in the same city Peter Kormos did and wrote this piece shortly after he died. It appeared in other venues at time, although I can’t now remember which ones.
On this Labour Day, I miss the likes of Peter Kormos more than ever. Had he lived on, I am sure he would have done his best to tear to ribbons the Caslin cabal at Niagara Region and, as one of the champions for creating Ontario’s Greenbelt, would be leading the fight now against Premier Doug Ford’s ongoing efforts to deconstruct our province’s conservation and environmental protection rules.
Here is my 2013 tribute to Peter Kormos –
Remembering Peter Kormos: A rebel with a cause
By Doug Draper
“A working class hero is something to be.” – a lyric by John Lennon
“I don’t change my values the way some people change their socks.” – Peter Kormos
Peter Kormos, a Niagara regional councillor and former NDP MPP in Ontario, died suddenly on Friday at the age of sixty. Tributes and condolences have poured in from friends and former colleagues. In remembrance of Peter Kormos, we are pleased to share this in-depth profile, first published by Niagara at Large.

Peter Kormos being dragged away by police at a 1960s protest for public access to our lakeshores at Sherkston Beach on Lake Erie –from the photo collection of Peter Kormos
In the dimly lit banquet room of Club Social on Welland’s gritty east side, a raucous chant of “Peter, Peter, Peter” rolls up from the floor. It is the night of the October, 2003 provincial election and, to no one’s surprise, the numbers on a nearby tote board show Peter Kormos leading his nearest challenger by a margin of two to one.
Kormos, in this election, is one of only seven New Democratic Party candidates across Ontario to survive what some political pundits are describing as a “catastrophic night” for the NDP – leaving it one seat short of the number it needs to hold on to official party status. But there is no hint of catastrophe at Club Social on this night. Continue reading
“They (the anti-vaxxers or vaccine resisters) grasp onto any conspiracy that reinforces their view no matter how ludicrous and easily disproved, again due to fear, fear of being wrong or looking stupid. … Problem is they are both, wrong and stupid.”
This past Friday September 3rd, I finally lost it with all of the bad news coming our way and I called Ontario’s Premier a “Fat F—“ in the headline of a story about Ford’s decision to keep the provincial legislature closed until October – right through a time when our province is heading into a fourth deadly wave of COVID-19.



There’s a story (or should I call it a bit of a horse tale) I got to tell you.


There is one thing we may have learned. Time sure does have a way of flying and getting confused during a pandemic.
Finally, if you are not yet fully vaccinated, please do yourself, your family and friends, and your community a favour and do it. It may be the only way to truly crush this thing that has been wreaking havoc on our lives for more than a year and a half now.



“Our forests and urban trees solve many problems. Record high temperatures have sparked heat warnings. … Trees provide shade, cooling neighbourhoods by 5˚C. When we plant trees, we turn scorched lands into healthy forests. Trees absorb water, helping to prevent floods. Forests filter and purify the water we drink. And of course, forests sequester the carbon that we’ve released into the atmosphere that is dangerously warming our Earth.”
Vast, beautiful, healthy forests define Canada, making up 38 per cent of our land, but they are under attack. Wildfires engulf huge swaths of woodlands in British Columbia; smoke from similar infernos in north-west Ontario reaches as far as Toronto, Windsor and Ottawa.
In an old issue of The New Yorker magazine we’ve kept around our cluttered house, there is this wonderful photograph of Leonard Cohen, taken at his home in 2016, with this heroic looking cat beside him named Hank.












TORONTO 

After a summer of devastating extreme weather events and stark IPCC report, 34 of Canada’s leading environmental organizations call on voters to demand transformative change







Students can be fully vaccinated for the first day of school on Sept. 7 if they receive their second dose of vaccine by Aug 24. Full protection against COVID-19 infection comes two weeks after the second dose is received, so we are urging students 12 years and older to receive their vaccines as soon as possible.

“Adults keep saying we owe it to the young people, to give them hope, but I don’t want your hope. I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day. I want you to act. I want you to act as you would in a crisis. I want you to act as if the house is on fire, because it is.” – Greta Thunberg, 18 year-old Swedish Activist
To all of us in Niagara, Ontario and the rest of Canada who may not have wanted a federal election now, but thanks to Justin Trudeau and his Liberals, here we are, here is just one more quote I want to lay on you from one of the many authors around the world of a United Nations report released earlier this August called “Code Red for Humanity” – “There’s really one key message that emerges from this report,” said Kim Cobb, Ph.D., Professor of earth and atmospheric sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology. “We are out of time.”

Niagara, Ontario – A Brock University research team is looking for youths aged 11 to 18 years old to participate in a new study on adolescents’ preferences for time spent alone and their thoughts and feelings as young people.



According to a breaking report from CBC News, issued at noon hour this August 12th, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected, as soon as this coming weekend, to call a snap election, with voters going to the polls on September 20th.

A Statement from Ontaro’s Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca
FORT ERIE, Ontario – Over 100 people rallied (recently) in support of Natalee Cole, a Black resident of Fort Erie, who has been receiving anonymous threatening letters complaining about her music which escalated to a terrorist threat, “your neighbours and I will burn your house down with you inside.”

Niagara, Ontario – Residents who need a first or second dose of a COVID-19 vaccine are invited to pop in to an upcoming Niagara Region Public Health clinic at the Crystal Ridge Community Centre in Fort Erie.
This brief commentary by Liz Benneian follows in the wake of a United Nations report, released this August 9th, that concludes that we may have reached the point of no return, globally, on dealing with a climate crisis that is responsible for devastating wildlfires, floods, wind storms and other disaster know playing out in Canada, the United States and many other countries around the world.
QUEEN’S PARK – The startling new United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report shows that the urgent actions to cut emissions and transition to a clean economy proposed in the NDP’s climate plan
“It has been clear for decades that the Earth’s climate is changing, and the role of human influence on the climate system is undisputed” – the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group I Co-Chair, Valérie Masson-Delmotte.

“From July 23 to August 8, 2021, Canadian athletes participated in the Tokyo Olympic Games alongside athletes from around the world. As the Games officially come to a close, I congratulate, on behalf of the whole country, our Canadian athletes on their achievements throughout the past two weeks.