Niagara College Celebrates The Launch Of Pioneering Graduate Certificate Program
News from Niagara College in Niagara, Ontario
Posted September 6th, 2018 on Niagara At Large
Niagara, Ontario – Niagara College welcomed its first class of future cannabis industry leaders and officially launched its one-of-a-kind Commercial Cannabis Production (Graduate Certificate) program at its Niagara-on-the-Lake Campus on September 5.

From left to right, Commercial Cannabis Production program coordinator and professor Bill MacDonald, Ruth Chun, General Counsel for Newstrike, Vivian Kinnaird, Niagara College’s Dean of Business, Hospitality and Environment, St. Catharines MP Chris Bittle, Niagara College President Dan Patterson, Jeff Ryan, Vice-President of Government and Stakeholder Relations for Canopy Growth Corp. and John F. T. Scott, Chair of Niagara College’s Board of Governors, celebrate the start of class in Niagara College’s Commercial Cannabis Production (Graduate Certificate) program, Canada’s first post-secondary credential in the production of cannabis.
The program is Canada’s first postsecondary credential in the production of cannabis and will prepare students for successful careers in the country’s rapidly expanding cannabis industry. Classes are held in a purpose-built, fully secure teaching lab at the College’s Niagara-on-the-Lake Campus. Continue reading






Niagara, Ontario – 

If you have spent any length of time following the rhetoric of politicians from Conservative Party politicians in Canada and their Republican counterparts in the United States, you have likely heard the term “job creators” used to describe big businesses – especially at times when these same politicians are working to sell on de-regulation or another round of tax cuts for them.

Posted September 3rd, 2018 on Niagara At Large






For all of you older people across Ontario who are more in to saving about 22 cents a day on your gas bill more than what might happen to the climate and weather conditions sometime in the future when you may not be around anyway, this news from Doug Ford’s self-described “Government for the People” may be cause for applause.












(A Brie

Toronto, Ontario
From Glen Walker, Chair of the Niagara Poverty Reduction Network

Going back at least as far as the War in Vietnam and all of the Cold War posturing with nuclear bombs during the 1960s and 70s, I have never felt all that hot about higher ups in the U.S. Pentagon and its foreign and domestic intelligence networks.

Niagara, Ontario – Earlier this August, in the Niagara Falls Clerk’s Department I filed a letter of appeal against Amendment 128 to the Niagara Falls Official Plan. The amendment seeks to pave over about 120 acres of the approximately 500 acres Thundering Waters Forest.

From killing a cap to control climate changing carbon emissions and reducing social assistance to people at the lower end of the income scale for reasons of “compassion,” to vowing to deliver you a “beer for a buck” by Labour Day, Doug Ford and the majority government he was awarded after receiving less than half the votes cast in this spring’s Ontario election is following through on his bumper sticker promises aimed at “putting more money back in your pocket.”
“For Aretha Franklin, the answer is a truckload of accolades, including a stack of gold and platinum singles and albums and an armful of Grammy awards, within a colourful influential career that has spanned decades.
Never mind the public outrage that followed Doug Ford’s July 27th announcement that he and his self-described “Government for the People” were scrapping elections for regional chair in Niagara, York, Peel and Muskoka, and cutting the number of councillors on Toronto’s city council in half.
Waving all petitions from residents and elsewhere aside, along with calls from Ontario’s NDP Official Opposition Party to at least push a “pause button” and consult with the people, Ford and the majority government he was gifted by less than half of the people who voted in this June’s provincial election, made the shocking announcement this past July 27 – on the last day citizens had to register to run as a candidate in this October’s municipal elections – to slash the size of Toronto’s council in half and cancel elections for the position of regional chair in Niagara and the other three regions referred to above.
There was a time when all participants in the political process – whether from the left or right – disagreed about the best approach to issues, but did so with a respect for their opponents and our democratic process.










