“If COVID-19 laid bare the inequities and insufficiencies of our society and our social safety net, it also brought out the compassion and caring of people.”
A Message from Natalie Mehra, Executive Director, Ontario Health Coalition
Posted July 6th, 2020 on Niagara At Large
A Brief Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper –
Niagara At Large apologizes for not getting this thoughtful message posted on Canada Day.
These days there is so much we would like to post, but given the crazy times we live in, things get left behind. It doesn’t help tat we are swamped with so many news releases and public advisories related to the ongoing COVID-19 health emergency.
However, as belated as the posting of this Canada Day message is, it is well worth the read. The points the head of the Ontario Health Coalition is making here, are important for the rest of us to consider anytime.
Now here is Natalie Mehra’s message –

Natalie Mehra, Executive Director, Ontario Health Coalition
It is Canada Day and after such a challenging winter and spring, it is time to celebrate.
One of our greatest achievements as a society is public health care for all. For all of the pain and grief that COVID-19 has caused, it has also reminded us all of our interdependence. Our health relies on the health and well-being of others. We know this now, more than ever.
And now, more than ever, we have been reminded of the vital importance of our public health care system; of our public programs and services; that government can create massive new programs overnight to support people in hardship and to improve equity; that human life and caring, and not tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, must be the priority.
If COVID-19 laid bare the inequities and insufficiencies of our society and our social safety net, it also brought out the compassion and caring of people. Continue reading




“Canada’s success is because of its people. People who strive to live up to our shared values of peace, equality, and compassion, and know that diversity is our strength.” – Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
“On Canada Day, we celebrate the amazing place we call home – and the people we share it with. Whether you are firing up the barbecue or playing outside with the kids, this is a chance to reflect on where we are as a country, and where we are headed.
Once upon a time, in the late 1960s and running right through the mid to late 1970s, one of the most popular bands in Canada and the world was one from Winnipeg, Manitoba called The Guess Who.


This month also celebrates Indigenous History Month as well as National Indigenous Peoples Day to honour the unique heritage, rich traditions, and cultural diversity of Indigenous peoples in Canada.

Strategic investments in public transit and active transportation infrastructure play a key role in ensuring Ontarians can get to work and essential services on time then safely back home at the end of the day. …








“We have a responsibility to create a more solid foundation to combat racism and discrimination in Canada and to achieve lasting change. We, First Ministers, commit to working with all Canadians to be part of the solution.” – from a statement issued June 25th by Canada’s First Ministers
Canada Day the Niagara Way; kicks off at 11 a.m. on July 1
TORONTO ― In consultation with the Chief Medical Officer of Health, the Ontario government has extended the provincial Declaration of Emergency under s.7.0.7 of the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act to July 15, 2020.




Niagara, Ontario – Niagara’s Economic Rapid Response Team (ERRT) now has a clearer picture of the local impact COVID-19 has had on Niagara’s business community, thanks to the completion of its second Business Impact Survey.
















“It may be politically expedient at this time to relax environmental standards and to prop up industries such as intensive agriculture, long-distance transportation such as the airlines, and fossil-fuel-dependent energy sectors, but doing so without requiring urgent and fundamental change, essentially subsidizes the emergence of future pandemics.” – global scientists representing the World Economic Forum

“We can build back better and emerge from the current crisis stronger and more resilient than ever – but to do so means choosing policies and actions that protect nature – so that nature can help.”
Please read this important article, prepared by world experts on pandemics and the environment, and think about what are left of the rich woodlands, wetlands and other green spaces still in the crosshairs of some developers and some of our politicians in Niagara who still have a 1950s notion of what constitutes good urban growth.
There is a single species that is responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic – us.
“Yes, our lives may never be the same as they were before, but that does not mean we are worse off. In some ways, we have been given the opportunity to rebuild aspects of our economy and our community so that it may better work for everyone. I hope as we slowly and safely start to recover and rebuild, we will do so in partnership and collaboration.” 

Will Ford’s Moves Put Biodiverse Gems Like Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls and Waverly Woods in Fort Erie at Further Risk


Some Good News we should all read from the not-for-profit group Forests Ontario
Shortly after noon this June 15th, Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced that Niagara and six other regions across the province will now join 24 others in moving to State Two when it comes to re-opening businesses and services.
“Migrant Workers face multiple challenges and obstacles in accessing services and information crucial to their well-being during their stay in Canada. … Many migrant workers are left with few resources to help them deal with the health, social, and legal issues they encounter while in Canada.” – Niagara Migrant Workers Interest Group




“Poverty is complex and intersects with many other forms of oppression, including race and racism. While media attention is focused on the United States, the same problems of institutional racism and violence are also present across Canada.” – Niagara Poverty Reduction Network
“Those who think our unhinged president’s recent mania about a murder two decades ago that never happened represents his moral nadir have missed the lesson of his life: There is no such thing as rock bottom. So, assume that the worst is yet to come.” 

Potentially damaging wind warnings for the Lake Erie shoreline – this one issued and included immediately below from the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority – have become more and more common place in this age of climate crisis.
Niagara Region and its Niagara Children’s Water Festival partners City of St. Catharines, Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority, Ontario Power Generation and Brock University, are pleased to offer a virtual water festival to provide children with an interactive opportunity to learn about water.
“God gave Noah the rainbow sign. No more water, the fire next time!” – from the late American author and civil rights activist James Baldwin’s classic 1960s book-size essay ‘The Fire Next Time’, about the racism that continues to poison life for so many in his native land









When ‘Eve Of Destruction’ first exploded onto the charts in the summer of 1965 – at a time when, short of Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, Peter, Paul & Mary and a few others, The Beatles and most of the other big-name artists were still singing songs about falling in and out of love – it became an immediate soundtrack for a growing nightmare that was our concern, at the time, over a global nuclear war, a growing war in Vietnam, racial strife and an environmental crisis at the time that sparked the first Earth Day in 1970.