Raise Your Voice to save what’s is left of the wonderful, wild places in our Niagara watershed

Help save Thundering Waters Forest in Niagara Falls, Ontario from developers’ buzz saws! Sign the Petition below.

Posted July 17th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

An Introductory Message from Doug Draper, environment writer, publisher, Niagara At Large

Niagara At Large is pleased to post the necessary links to a very important petition now being circulated far and wide in social media circles, urging Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne and her government, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his government and other political leaders to save some 500 acres of forested lands, provincially significant wetlands, and savannah grasses in our Niagara River watershed before it is too late. Continue reading

MP Badawey invites us all to join him as Niagara Centre prepares to host North American Indigenous Games

From Tuesday, July 18th to Thursday, July 20th, 2017  at the Welland International Flatwater Centre

News from the Office of Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

Posted July 17th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Welland, Ontario – Vance Badawey, Member of Parliament for Niagara Centre is preparing for a busy week ahead as the canoe and kayak portions of the North American Indigenous Games (NAIG) come to the City of Welland. Badawey, one of ten members of the Liberal Indigenous Caucus, is proud to be showcasing Niagara Centre to indigenous athletes and their families from all across Canada and the United States.

From July 18 to July 20, indigenous athletes will be competing in canoe and kayaking competitions at the Welland International Flatwater Centre.  The events will be open to the public free of charge. Continue reading

Never mind Donald Trump Jr.’s Russia meeting

I’d be happy to see him thrown in the slammer for the wildlife he’s blown away, alone!

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted July 15th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“The children asked him if to kill was not a sin
‘Not when he looked so fierce’, his mummy butted in
If looks could kill it would have been us instead of him
All the children sing

Hey, Bungalow Bill
What did you kill, Bungalow Bill?
Hey, Bungalow Bill
What did you kill, Bungalow Bill?”

      from The Beatles’ song ‘Bungalow Bill’

Check out the following two disgusting photos from about seven years ago – the first one of Donald Jr. (left) and his idiot brother Eric doing a grip and grin with a wild cat they shot on safari, and the second of Donald Jr. – he’s a “good boy,” his old man insists – posing cheerfully with an African buffalo he apparently bullet-drilled down.

If these two rich, white boys like stalking around in the fields and woods so much, all suited up in camouflage, gum boots and totting a gun, why don’t they do what tens of thousands of other young Americans do and volunteer to serve in the armed forces for the nation their daddy claims he wants to put so first and make so great again? Continue reading

Ontario Premier Strengthens U.S. Ties At National Governors Association Summer Meeting

News from the Office of Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

Posted July 15th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Premier Kathleen Wynne released the following statement this past Friday, July 14th regarding her participation in the National Governors Association (NGA) Summer Meeting in Rhode Island:

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

“We are at a critical point in our North American trade relationships. Now more than ever, we must reinforce the need for free trade and cross-border partnerships to grow our economies and create good jobs.

I was pleased to join Prime Minister Trudeau at the National Governors Association Summer Meeting to do just that. Over two days, I have connected with U.S. governors to discuss our common interests and the need to continue working together to advance our shared prosperity. Continue reading

A Few Words of Tribute for Jimmy Carter and Dick Halverson – Two Beacons of Light in Dark Times

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted July 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

I can’t help it, Niagara At Large readers, and I hope you will indulge me on this one for a few moments.

Former U.S. Preisdent Jimmy Carter as he looked during his years in office

In what so often seem to be these scoundrel times we live in, it is important to remember that there are good people among us, devoted to making our world a little better.

With that in mind, here is to one of my favourite people and one of the most decent people ever elected to the to the U.S. presidency – Jimmy Carter, who at the age of 92, is still out there volunteering his time to Habitat for Humanity, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to building affordable housing for people in the United States, Canada and other parts of the world.

This July 13th, while working on a building project for the organization in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Jimmy Carter collapsed from dehydration and ended up spending the night in hospital. Continue reading

Conservative President Swears Under Oath Ontario PC Nomination Results Don’t Matter

What’s the point of holding a nomination meeting in Niagara?

A Commentary from the Ontario Liberal Party

Posted July 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Amid accusations from PC Party Members and former executive members that Patrick Brown’s PC Party is stuffing ballot boxes and fixing nomination meetings, Rick Dykstra, the President of the PC Party, submitted sworn testimony to a court highlighting the contempt Brown’s PC Party has for their own party members and their nomination process.

Ontario PC Party president and former St. Catharines Harper/Conservative MP Rick Dykstra

In an affidavit obtained and reported on by the CBC, Mr. Dykstra (a former federal Conservative MP for St. Catharines) admitted that Conservative nominations don’t actually matter, with PC Leader Patrick Brown hand-picking his party’s nominees and bypassing hard-working nomination candidates, like Mike Strange, Dan Sadler, and Nick Lauwers.

“The nomination meeting is not determinative of who will ultimately be listed on the ballot as a PC party candidate in the general election… There is no requirement in the Election Act, the Constitution or the rules that the party leader must endorse, or can only endorse the nomination contestant who is successful at the nomination meeting.” – Rick Dykstra, CBC News, July 10, 2017.  Continue reading

At least America and the World still have Bernie Sanders!

Sanders speaks up for ‘people power’ and grassroots democracy on cable news program

A Brief One from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted July 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

I travel across the Ontario/New York State border quite often to visit some of my American friends, and they are repeatedly telling me how depressed they are with Trump and his stupid tweets and temperament scorching their land.

“I can barely stand to turn on the news,” one of them told me recently. “It leaves you feeling hopeless, depressed.”

I dig it. There are many here, on the Canadian border, who worry about the impact the Trump rampage will have on our health and welfare too. Continue reading

Canada’s Prime Minister announces action on British Columbia wildfires

“Our thoughts are with all British Columbians dealing with the devastating impacts of these wildfires. ” – Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

A News Release from the Prime Minister’s Office

Posted July 14th, 2017 on Niagara At Large


Ottawa, Ontario – The Government of Canada will do its utmost to help the people of British Columbia facing the immediate and long-term impacts of destructive wildfires.

That is why the Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today announced the creation of a new ad hoc Cabinet committee to coordinate federal efforts to help the many communities affected by the wildfires raging through British Columbia. Continue reading

A $15 an hour Minimum Wage in Ontario couldn’t come soon enough!

 A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted July 13th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“It seems in the silly season of an election year this government’s coming up with new promises every single week,” said Ontario Conservative Party leader Patrick Brown during an interview earlier this July on a southern Ontario radio program. You know – policies like the overnight increase in the minimum wage.”

Brown’s “silly season” missive was aimed at promise made by Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne and her Liberals this spring to raise the minimum wage in the province from the current $11.40 to $15 an hour by2019.

It’s “too much, too soon,” Brown insisted.

You know, Mr. Brown, a lot of things have gone up ‘too much, too soon’ over the past two or three decades, like the price of groceries, tuition fees for college and university, home and car insurance, just to name a fuel. All while, wages for many have hardly gone up at all, and while for the better part of 10 years while your Tory buddy Mike Harris was premier of Ontario, the minimum wage did not go up one penny. Continue reading

Government of Canada has done right thing by Omar Khadr

A Commentary by Desmond Sequeira, Multi-Faith Chaplain (Rtd.), Government of Ontario, and a resident of St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted July 13th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Along with millions of other Canadians, I fully support the Government decision to apologize to and compensate Omar Khadr for the callous injustices inflicted on him by successive governments of Canada, purportedly representing Canadians including me.

Omar Khadr, then and now

Persons seeking the truth would do well to visit the details of the “firefight” that started all this ( https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2017/07/10/omar-khadr-fact-check-paints-a-clearer-picture-of-the-case-and-the-incident-underlying-it.html ) Just don’t ask Jason Kenney for the facts of that firefight!

The subsequent events are now well known. Most significantly, none other than the Supreme Court of Canada has  pretty much declared the whole U.S. Guantanamo Bay judicial process in which Canadian investigative agencies were fully complicit to be nothing short of a kangaroo process. Continue reading

A Treasure of a Passenger Ship – a last of a kind from the Titanic era – is still with us to tour in Ontario

By Linda McKellar

Posted July 13th, 2017 in Niagara At Large

Two years ago I had the unexpected pleasure of coming upon a treasure.

At Port McNicholl  near Midland, Ontario there is a magical relic of our own Great Lakes history, the SS Keewatin.

The SS Keewatin, in 2012, being towed from Michigan to her permanent home in Port McNicholl. near Midland, Ontario. All photos courtesy of the ‘Friends of the Keewatin’.

The Keewatin was built in Scotland in 1907 and sailed across the stormy North Atlantic (and did so, amazingly, with an open bridge). When she arrived in Canada there was a major problem as she was too long to fit through the locks of the Welland Canal.

The solution? Continue reading

Ontario’s governing Liberals and opposition Conservatives refuse to extend public hearings on labour laws, minimum wage

News from the Office of Welland Riding MPP and NDP labour critic Cindy Forster

Posted July 13th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Welland MPP and Ontario NDP labour critic Cindy Forster on her feet in the provincial legislature. File photo

An all-party committee of MPPs is touring the province to hear feedback regarding proposed changes to labour laws – but Wednesday night, Wynne’s Liberals and the Conservatives refused to support a move from NDP MPP and Labour critic Cindy Forster meant to extend the committee’s hearings.

The proposal was aimed at accommodating a young worker who wanted a chance to speak. Conservative and Liberal MPPs joined together to cut the proceedings  and send him, and anyone else that wanted to speak away.  Continue reading

INDIGENOUS 150+ offers Great Summer Film Screenings in Niagara Falls, Ontario

Friday, July 28 and Wednesday, August 30,

An Invite from the First Peoples Group, Great Lakes Métis Council, M’Wikwedong Native Cultural Centre,  the Fort Erie Native Friendship Centre and the Niagara Regional Native Centre

Niagara, Falls, Ontario – INDIGENOUS 150+ is an indigenous film series dedicated to showcasing Indigenous films and artists, using story-telling and cinema as a vehicle for reconciliation.  In recognition of support from the City of Niagara Falls under the Niagara Falls Cultural Development Fund (NFCDF) program and with Good Influence Films a pay-what-you-can film series, for all ages, is taking place in Niagara Falls Canada.  Continue reading

How far will new hospital funding go to offer  south Niagara health care sites a stay of execution?

And will a new south Niagara hospital ever get built?

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted July 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – This July 11th, Jim Bradley, the Ontario government’s veteran MPP for the north Niagara riding of St. Catharines, joined Niagara Health system representatives in announcing more than $1.6 million in additional funding to upgrade the system’s aged sites in the region’s south end, including the 57-year-old Welland Hospital.

St. Catharines’ Liberal MPP Jim Bradley (centre) joins representatives of Niagara Health, the region’s amalgamated hospital system, this June 11th for funding announcement. Photo from Niagara Health news release.

“By investing in renewing hospital infrastructure, the provincial government is helping to ensure our hospitals can continue to meet the needs of patients in comfortable, healthy and safe facilities for many years to come,” said Bradley during a gathering of Niagara Health representatives at the system’s newest and largest hospital site in St. Catharines.

“This investment brings the total to more than $8.5 million in Hospital Infrastructure Renewal Funding in the last four years which was used for building maintenance and upgrade projects,” added Angela Zangari, Niagara Health’s Executive Vice-President Finance and Operations and Chief Financial Officer. “Thank you MPP Bradley and our partners at the LHIN (Local Health Integration) for your ongoing support of healthcare in the region, and for working with us towards our vision of a Healthier Niagara.”

Left unsaid was any mention of the next provincial election, now less than a year away,  and any possibility that announcements like this may help the governing Liberals draw votes away from Andrea Horwath’s New Democrats as they face, what is shaping up to be, a tough, heavily funded fight with Patrick Brown’s Conservatives. Continue reading

Raise your voice against roping, wrestling, bronco riding and racing of animal at Calgary Stampede

A Call-Out from Niagara Action for Animals

Posted July 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Dear friends of Animals 

The Calgary Stampede is in full progress now.

One of many protest demonstration over the years at the Calgary Stampede

Rodeo is a spectacle of trauma and violence, causing immense animal suffering.

Chuckwagon races, calf-roping, bronco riding, and steer wrestling events subject animals to physical pain and psychological torment. Sensitive horses, cows, and calves are lassoed, wrestled, or roped to the ground. Continue reading

Free quit smoking help for Niagara/Ontario residents

An Invite to all smokers from Niagara Region’s Public Health Department
Posted June 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Free quit smoking patches are available to Niagara residents for a limited time. The STOP (Smoking Treatment for Ontario Patients) Program offers eligible participants in Niagara five weeks of cost-free nicotine replacement therapy and smoking cessation information to help them in their quit attempt.

  • WHAT: Free patches for adults in Niagara to quit smoking
  • WHERE: STOP workshops will be held in Thorold, Welland and Port Colborne
  • WHEN: July 19, August 17 and September 28, 2017

Registration is necessary. To find out if you are eligible and to register for a workshop, call 905-688-8248 ext. 7240, or 1-888-505-6074. Continue reading

Antique & Classic Car Show 2017 at The Buffalo History Museum

 Old-fashioned family fun … Museum admission and car show are free.

An Invite to all from the Buffalo History Museum

Posted July 12th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

From 2014 car show at Buffalo History Museum. photo courtesy of museum

Buffalo, New York – The Buffalo History Museum announces its 5th Annual Antique & Classic Car Show. The rain or shine festivities will showcase prized autos and feature free admission to the Museum; complimentary tours; food trucks; award presentations; prize giveaways, Oldies Hit Parade DJ music and surprise guests.

  • WHEN: Sunday, July 30, 2017
    SHOWTIME: 9 am – 3 p.m. (Museum is open 12 – 5 pm)
    COST: Museum admission and show are free
    WHERE: The Buffalo History Museum
    One Museum Court (Elmwood
    Ave. and Nottingham Terr.)
    ADDITIONAL PARKING FOR GUESTS: McKinley High School lot at 1500 Elmwood Ave.

Registration for cars (day of event) is from 9:00 to 11:00 am. Cost is $15. Dash plaques will be given to the first 100 registrants.

File photo from 2016 car show. Courtesy of Buffalo History Museum

2017 SPONSOR SUPPORT:  Joseph Golombek, Jr. Councilmember North District, Master Khechen’s Martial Arts Academy, Lester H. Wedekindt Funeral Home, Lenox Grill, Urban Paint, Romeo’s Superior Home Improvements, Mark Brylinski – Hunt Real Estate, C & C Auto Repairs, Hagerty Insurance, Grand Jude Plumbing & Heating, Westermeier Martin Dental Care,Vape E’s

For more information on the Buffalo History Museum and the many exhibits and events it is hosting, visit the museum’s website at – http://www.buffalohistory.org/ .

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space below the Bernie quote.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater binational Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

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

 

 

Niagara Thanks Transit Users As It Enters The Next Phase Of Inter-Municipal Transit

A Message from Niagara’s regional government

Posted July 11th, 2017 on Niagara at Large

Niagara, Ontario – Thanks in large part to the feedback and continued support of Niagara’s growing number of transit users, Niagara is set to begin making service improvements and governance changes to prepare for a new region-wide transit system.

The Niagara Region Transit pilot service has been in operation for the past six years.

During that time customer feedback has helped to shape a number of service improvements, such as the enhancement of Routes 40/45 to service the Niagara Outlet Collections in Niagara-on-the-Lake, later hours servicing Brock University and Niagara College, and the realignment of several routes to better integrate with local systems. Ridership has also risen during that time as more and more residents rely on the inter-municipal connections the service provides.   Continue reading

Pollution Costs Canadians Tens of Billions Every Year, Reveals one-of-its-kind Report

“This report demonstrates that the costs of pollution amount to tens of billions of dollars a year. These costs are real and will be borne by Canadian families, businesses and governments into the future unless we take action to minimize pollution.”                          – Scott Vaughan, president-CEO, International Institute for Sustainable Development

News from the International Institute for Sustainable Development, a non-profit organization of experts in economics, law, environmental sciences and a host of other fields, with offices in Canada, the United States and Switzerland

Posted July 10th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

A  from Niagara At Large journalist and publisher Doug Draper –

 

One of many  fish kills in the Great Lakes over my more than 35 years of following Great Lakes environmental issues

This report, released this spring by a team of researchers for the International Institute for Sustainable development, speaks to a very costly reality that, in my more than three and a half decades of covering environmental issues, flies in the face of those in government and industry who repeatedly argue that environmental protection regulations are a burden to the economy.

 

This rap against “burdensome environmental regulations” has almost always come from politicians on the right end of the spectrum – members of federal and provincial Conservative parties in Canada and Republicans in the United States – who represent the interest of corporation and other entities pushing to advance narrow, short-term interests and gains over long-term consequences that can often prove very costly, and even deadly, for a great many people. Continue reading

St. Catharines – the largest of Niagara, Ontario’s 12 local municipalities – Begins Work On  Transportation Master Plan

 City now inviting public feedback on plan

News from the City of St. Catharines

Posted July 10th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The last time the City of St. Catharines created a transportation master plan Brock University had just opened its doors, the population was around 85,000 and St. Catharines Transit had been in operation for less than five years.

A City of St. Catharines transit bus. File photo by Doug Draper

The transportation needs of residents have expanded considerably since 1965, which is why City staff are embarking on a new Transportation Master Plan to shape the future of walking, driving, cycling and commuting in St. Catharines.

“Transportation is about more than just cars and streets,” said Brian Applebee, manager of transportation services for the City. “It’s about providing alternative and sustainable ways to connect residents to the places they need to go, both within the city and beyond our borders.” Continue reading

Raising Awareness and Support for Community Food Bank

A Call-Out from the Niagara Activist Network

Posted July 10th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Hello Niagara Activists,

This is 10 Men in a Tent. A movie about how the Niagara community rallied together to save the local food bank, Project Share.

In 2009, 10 community leaders spent 5 days and 5 nights in a tent, eating only food provided by the food bank and with nothing but a tent and a sleeping bag. The event raised $302,000 in food and donations. Continue reading

Next Year’s Municipal Elections are our chance to clean up the toxic mess at Niagara regional council

Start getting informed and engaged now, people. It’s our region and future at stake here!

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted July 7th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“Abandon all hope, ye who enter here.” – from Dante Alighieri’s 14th century poem Inferno

I too often find these words – intended by Dante to greet any and all unfortunates passing through the gates of hell -– crossing my mind when I dare to enter Niagara Region’s headquarters for another meeting of regional council or begin to watch a live stream of the meeting on a screen.

And I say this as someone who, for most of the 47 years we have had regional government in Niagara, Ontario, has been a strong supporter of transitioning from local municipalities to one ‘City of Niagara’ as possibly the best way of providing all Niagara residents, urban and rural, with equal access to water, waste management, public transit and other services we need.

Well I haven’t got a dying breath left in me to support a regional system of government in our Niagara any more – not with what I, along with many other residents from all corners of Niagara – have witnessed of this current edition of regional council under the chairmanship of Al Caslin.

Depressing, dispiriting, disturbing … these are just a few of the politer words that come to this reporter’s mind at far too many of the committee and council meetings Caslin and his pals have chaired over the going on three years since the last municipal elections and the end of Gary Burrough’s four-year tenure as regional chair.

Think I’m being over the top? Continue reading

Ontario Government Increases Penalties for starting Forest Fires

News from the Ontario government

Posted July 7th, 217 on Niagara At Large

With forest fire season well underway in Ontario, the province has increased the maximum fines for individuals and corporations for starting forest fires.

If found responsible, individuals can now be fined up to $25,000 for starting a forest fire, with fines for corporations that start a forest fire going up to $500,000. These increased maximum fines will help deter human-started fires.

Approximately half of all forest fires are started by people. Forest fires can cause considerable risk to public safety, can cause expensive property damage and have broader impacts on communities and regional industry. Continue reading

Join citizens who are ‘standing up’ our Great Lakes

A Call-Out from the Alliance for the Great Lakes, a U.S.-based citizens group

Posted July 7th, 217 on Niagara At Large

It seems like we keep hearing bad news about the Great Lakes lately.

Our Great Lakes – the largest source of fresh water in the world – from space. Where are you in this picture?

Major budget cuts to critical Great Lakes programs. Asian carp found just 9 miles from Lake Michigan. Huge harmful algal blooms in parts of the lakes threatening public health.

It’s easy to get down when you only hear bad news.

But, you know what? The Great Lakes region is 40 million people strong, and we won’t be deterred by the headlines. Our summers are the time when we celebrate water. And there is no better time than now to stand up for  the lakes, clean water, and the future of our communities. Continue reading

A Teddy Bear Picnic is set for St. Caatharines, Niagara’s historic Morningstar Mill site

An Invite to all teddy bears owners from the City of St. Catharines

Posted July 7th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario – Calling all teddy bear owners – you and your cuddly friend are invited to the Morningstar Mill for a Teddy Bear Picnic.

Morningstar Mill off Decew Road and Lake Gibson. File photo by Doug Draper

Head to the mill Sunday, July 9 from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. for a day of fun, history and furry friends. The picnic is perfect for children aged four to nine and will include crafts, games, lunch and more. Visitors will also enjoy an inside look of the Morningstar mill and homestead. There will even be a nurse’s station for minor repairs to teddy bears, dolls and other stuffies.

“This is sure to be an un-bear-lievably good time,” said Kathleen Powell, who oversees the Morningstar Mill for the City. “We are looking forward to hosting young visitors and their families for a special morning of fun activities.” Continue reading

Why Canada’s Newspapers Don’t Deserve Government Subsidies

Money should go to committed Internet news sites

A Commentary from Veteran Canadian journalist  Nick Fillmore

Posted July 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

News Media Canada – formerly the Canadian Association of Newspapers – has submitted a proposal to Minister of Canadian Heritage Mélanie Joly for a whopping $350-million a year to prop up the journalism of the country’s struggling 105 dailies.

 

 

 

 

 

The publishers are asking for:

  • $175-million of our tax dollars per year to subsidize the first 35 per cent of the salaries of hundreds of journalists who are paid $85,000 or less, including luminaries such as the Globe and Mail’s  columnist Margaret Wente, who creates her own reality, and the National Post’s right-wing reporter Christie Blatchford.
  • And $90,000 a year to help each of these newspapers improve their presence on the Internet – a request that comes 18 years after Kijiji and others began grabbing their classified ads. This reveals their ineptitude to successfully get on the Internet themselves.

Continue reading

Canada’s Transport Minister Unveils Trade and Transportation Corridors Initiative Expected to have Benefits for Niagara Region

 “I firmly believe that Niagara Centre’s designation as a Foreign Trade Zone, combined with our Gateway incentives, creates an environment that perfectly aligns with the Minister’s vision for a ‘Trade and Transportation Corridor’.”Niagara Centre Riding MP Vance Badawey 

News from the Niagara Centre Riding constituency office of Liberal MP Vance Badawey

Posted July 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword Note from NAL publisher Doug Draper – This initiative may face at least one problem Canada has little control over. Trump doesn’t seem much interested in a future trade relationship with Canada.)

The Peace Bridge between Niagara, Ontario and Buffalo is a major Canada-U.S. crossing for people and goods

This July 4th, Canada’s Minister of Transport, Marc Garneau, unveiled details of the Government’s new Trade and Transportation Corridors Initiative, which seeks to increase the efficiency of Canada’s transportation systems in order to ensure that goods are better able to reach domestic and international markets.

  • $2.1 billion dollars will be invested in order to support the government’s plans.  This includes:
  • $2 billion over 11 years, to develop a National Trade Corridors Fund.  This merit-based program is geared towards strengthening the efficiency and reliability of Canada’s trade corridors in order to best get people and goods to market. 
  • $50 million directed towards establishing a Trade and Transport Information System. Working with Statistics Canada, public, and private partners, increase data collection will allow for sound scientific-based decision making in order to streamline all modes of transportation.   
  • $50 million towards the adoption of autonomous vehicles and unmanned air vehicles (UAVs), in particular the development of regulations and standards which will ensure that these new technologies are developed and implemented with the highest degree of safety.

Today’s announcement includes a preliminary call for “expression of interest projects” under the National Trade Corridors Fund. Continue reading

Join in urging G20 Leaders to stand up to Trump on climate change

If you believe in Climate Change, join the petition calling on German Chancellor Angela Merkel to isolate Trump at the G20 pushing the 19 remaining countries to sign a pledge to switch to 100% clean energy!

A Call-Out from the global, online citizens’ campaign network, Avaaz

Posted July 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Dear friends,

The international environmental group Greenpeace projected this image on the U.S. embassy headquarters in Berlin, Germany this spring after Trump announced his intentions to back away from the Paris climate agreement.

Trump’s going to try to hijack a meeting of the world’s 20 most powerful nations and turn it into an attack on our planet and the Paris climate deal.

Unless Germany’s Angela Merkel stops him. She’s one of the great climate leaders of our generation and could push hard to isolate Trump with a plan for 100% clean energy from the remaining 19 countries.

But she’ll need to know she has massive support from everywhere to take this unprecedented step. Sign and share the open letter to Merkel — we have just days to hit 1 million and Avaaz will print it in major German media ahead of the summit!

To read and sign your name to the petition, click onAdd My Name Continue reading

Ontario’s NDP calls for Wynne government to drop court case against injured workers

“New Democrats call on Premier Wynne to stop running roughshod over Ontario workers and Ontario’s workplace safety and insurance system.” – Cindy Forster, NDP labour critic, Welland Riding MPP

A Message from Ontario’s New Democratic Party

Posted July 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

Queen’s Park – Cindy Forster, the Ontario NDP’s labour critic and MPP for the Niagara riding of Welland, issued the following statement in response to the Wynne government’s refusal to drop its defense of discriminatory practices that are currently denying injured workers their WSIB claims after they developed mental health issues while on the job –

“Instead of helping workers who were injured on the job, the Wynne government is going to court to fight them. Continue reading

Canadian Marine Shipping endorses international CO2 reduction targets

News from Canada’s Chamber of Marine Commerce

Posted July 5th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large – Trump may not give a damn about addressing climate change, but since he announced his intentions this June to walk away from a Paris Climate Agreement endorsed by Canada and many other countries around the world, numerous parties, including U.S. state governors and industries in and outside his country, have pledged to forge ahead with plans to reduce carbon emissions that impact the earth’s climate.

The following statement from Canada’s Chamber of Marine  is but one example of those pledges. It was shared with Niagara At Large earlier this June, during a  period our site was shut down due to technical problems, but we still feel it is worthwhile posting as one more message of hope during a time when  Trump’s madness has so many of us feeling down.

So here it is – )

June 7, 2017 – The Chamber of Marine Commerce (CMC) is endorsing proposed international targets to reduce marine shipping’s carbon emissions per tonne-km by 50 per cent by 2050 in order to match the ambition of the Paris Agreement on climate change. Continue reading

A Happy Fourth of July to our American friends and neighbours from Niagara At Large

  • Keep Peace, Liberty and Democracy Alive!

A Brief Message  from Doug Draper, NAL publisher

Posted July 4th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

What a difference an election can make!

A lot has changed – and certainly not for the better – in the 12 months since July 4th, 2017 when Barrack Obama was still in the White House, and Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders were still competing for delegates to become the Democratic Party’s  candidate for president of the United States.

Yet ‘Lady Liberty’ still stands tall with her torch in the harbour, and millions of Americans have risen up to resist efforts to pull them away from the torch’s light, to darker corners where fear, anger, hate and oppression crawl up from the swamp where the orange-hair creature resides. Continue reading

Celebrating 200 years of a public works project that had a major impact on the shared histories of Niagara Ontario and Buffalo, New York

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

Posted July 4th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“I’ve got a mule and her name is Sal
Fifteen miles on the Erie Canal
She’s a good old worker and a good old pal
Fifteen miles on the Erie Canal


We haul’d some barges in our day
Filled with lumber, coal and hay
We know every inch of the way
From Albany to Buffalo.”

  • Lyrics from the song ‘Low Bridge, Everybody Down’, later known as the Erie Canal Song, written by Thomas Allen in the early 1900s and recorded by every musical icon from Pete Seeger to Bruce Springsteen

Two hundred years ago this July 4th, 2017, in Rome, New York – an upstate community just east of Syracuse and west of Utica – dignitaries broke ground for a public works project that would have a major impact on the future and fortunes of Niagara, Ontario, Western New York and many other communities in Canada and the United States.

Along the Erie Canal, Buffalo, N.Y. (No. M 71, Buffalo News Co., Buffalo, N.Y.) — not postally used ; approximately 1908

What began on that Fourth of July day in 1817 was the construction of the Erie Canal – a watercourse stretching hundreds of kilometres between the shores of Lake Erie in Buffalo and the Hudson River in Albany that triggered an unprecedented industrial boom that meant growth and prosperity for many communities, including Buffalo, New York and across the border in Niagara, Ontario. Continue reading

You are invited to Niagara Park’s Annual Battle of Chippawa Commemorative Ceremony – July 5th

 News from the Niagara Parks Commission

Posted July 4th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

A re-enactment of battle at Niagara Park’s Chippawa Battlefield Memorial Park. File photo

Niagara Falls, Ontario – Niagara Parks and the Chippawa Branch 396 of the Royal Canadian Legion will hold a commemorative ceremony to honour those who served on the Chippawa Battlefield on Wednesday, July 5 at 7 p.m., at the Chippawa Battlefield Monument.

Fought on July 5, 1814, the Battle of Chippawa was the opening engagement of the Niagara campaign, the longest and bloodiest military operation of the War of 1812. Each year on July 5, a memorial service is held to honour the legacy of those who fell in service of their nation. Continue reading

Help Stop the needless killing of Bears wandering into urban areas

A Call-Out from Niagara Action for Animals (NAFA)

Posted July 4th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Dear friends of animals 

Here is an important petition that needs to be signed.

You can sign it by clicking on – https://www.change.org/p/premier-wynne-black-bears-shouldn-t-be-needlessly-killed-in-toronto

Every year, bears that wander into developed areas are needlessly shot, not because they pose a threat, but because there is a lack of an experienced and coordinated response.

A properly trained police unit, working closely with a wildlife expert, will help to ensure the most effective and humane outcome in these situations. Continue reading

Ontario’s Niagara Parks Launches New Summer Concert Series

 News from the Niagara Parks Commission in Niagara, Ontario

Posted July 4th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

  • Ontario Live will take place every Wednesday night in July and August
  • Annual Coca-Cola Concert Series will feature local talent every weeknight from July 1 to August 31
  • All performances begin at 8:00 p.m. and culminate with fireworks over Niagara Falls at 10:00 p.m.

Niagara Falls, Ontario – This summer, Niagara Parks’ annual Coca-Cola Concert Series in Queen Victoria Park will be accompanied by a new Wednesday night edition called Ontario Live. Featuring a diverse selection of Ontario artists making airwaves today, Ontario Live will take place on Wednesday nights throughout July and August on the Illumination Stage overlooking the American and Canadian Horseshoe Falls.

Ontario Live in Niagara Parks
The series will continue every Wednesday night in July and August on the Illumination Stage in Queen Victoria Park. Performances will begin at 8:00 p.m. and will culminate with a fireworks display over Niagara Falls at 10 p.m. Continue reading

A Canada Day Salute from one of Ireland’s favourite sons

U2’s Bono Praises Canada as a nation that ‘opens doors’ rather than ‘builds walls’ … that ‘leads while others follow’

A Brief One to share from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted July 1st, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Before this 150th anniversary of Canada Day is over, I want to share this moment with you if you missed CBC’s broadcast of the afternoon festivities at Canada’s big birthday party on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

U2’s Bono pays tribute to Canada for opening up arms, doors.

Bono, front man of the legendary rock group U2 and a long-time champion of humanitarian causes around the world, took time out from the band’s ongoing global tour to attend Canada’s country and praise the country for standing by policies that reflect compassion and inclusivity in a world where – in these times – there are too many forces pushing the other way.

 “When others build walls, you open doors,” said Bono to those, including Canada’s Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, gathered on Parliament Hill for the festivities before singing a song. “When others divide, your arms are open wide. Where you lead, others follow.”

To watch a video of Bono’s appearance at this July 1st’s Canada Day party, click on –

.Before I end, I mentioned in a Canada Day piece I posted on NAL earlier this July 1st that a Canadian writer, Stephen Marche, recently had a very thoughtful column about Canada published in the New York Times. Continue reading

A Happy Canada Day from Niagara At Large

A Brief Message from Doug Draper, journalist/publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted July 1st, 2017 on Niagara At Large

“It’s so nice to visit a country where we are not called ‘enemies of the people’,” a news reporter from the Buffalo, New York area told me after covering a recent visit by Canada’ Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, to Niagara-on-the-Lake for an Environment Day event.

The Ontario and Canada pavilions at EXPO 67 in Montreal in 1967.

The reporter was referring to the relentless campaign by the current occupant in the White House to undermine a press essential to the workings of a free and open democracy.

In my regular cross border trips to the Buffalo, New York area, I cannot count the times since Trump took the oath of office that I’ve had friends and associates I meet there if they would be welcome to come live in Canada.

It is a reminder that for all of the challenges and problems we Canadians face in our region, province and country – and we will continue addressing those in news and commentary on Niagara At Large in the times – we are still very fortunate to be living here rather in many other places in this world. Continue reading

Setting Canada on a ‘real path of reconciliation’ with Indigenous people

A Canada Day message from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

Posted July 1st, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Dear Friends,

We all want to feel good about what Canada stands for. From progress on LGBTQ rights, to communities coming together to support new immigrants, to modest steps toAward reconciliation, there are reasons to be proud of how far we’ve come in 2017.

But are we prepared to move beyond pride—to acknowledge just how much more work needs to be done?

For over 35 years, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives has been promoting public policy solutions grounded in ideals of social, economic and environmental justice. We’ve always believed that public policy can play an important role on the road to social transformation. But today, on the occasion of Canada 150, we are asking ourselves tough questions about the role of public policy in reconciliation. Continue reading

Time for Canada to fully comply with Human Rights Tribunal

A Canada Day message from Ed Broadbent, Chair, Broadbent Institute

Posted July 1st, 2017 on Niagara At Large

So much of what makes us proud about Canada is the product of the dedication of principled activists who won’t take “No” for an answer.

Former Federal NDP leader Ed Broadbent, chair of Broadbent Institute, Canada

We had a great example of this earlier this month when Parliament adopted a bill prohibiting discrimination against transgender Canadians and affording them protection against hate crimes.

The Canada we are proud of is also the product, whether explicit or not, of a social democratic engagement to put equality and the good of all first. As my friend Rosemary Brown, the first Black woman elected to a Canadian legislature, famously said “Until all of us have made it, none of us have made it.”

Though we’ve come a long way, Canada remains a work in progress. The narrative of an inclusive Canada is a story that is still at odds with the lived experience of too many Canadians. And nowhere is the gap between rhetoric and reality more glaring than in the case of First Nations. Continue reading

Say it ain’t so! Is this really going to be the year Record Theatre goes down?

Short of some last-minute miracle, the days are now numbered for our cross-border region’s last iconic store from the golden age of record buying

By Doug Draper

Posted June 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

This year is turning out to be the roughest one yet in more than a decade of rough years for record stores and for those of us who love shopping in them for music.

It was almost 10 year ago to this day, on June 30th, 2007, to be exact, that one of the most iconic record stores in Canada – Sam the Record Man’s flagship store on Yonge Street in Toronto – closed its doors for the last time after close to 50 years of spawning a chain of Sam outlets in St. Catharines, Welland and numerous other communities across the nation that were all gone by then.

Record Theatre’s main retail area, taken just around opening time recently, before things got busy. Photo by Doug Draper

Seven years later, in 2014, the last of the original Sunrise Records stores, including a very good one at the Pen Centre plaza in St. Catharines, Niagara closed, leaving just one major competitor, HMV, hanging on until early this year when it filed for bankruptcy and proceeded to close all its stores, including its last remaining outlet in this Niagara region.

Continue reading

Urge Canada’s Trudeau Government to toughen lax animal abuse laws

Find a petition here to sign below

From the citizen advocacy groups Niagara Action for Animals and Animal Justice

Posted June 30th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Dear friends of animals

Animal Justice, a Canada-based legal action group for animals, has sent a post about our lax Canadian laws that allows bestiality!

Please go to the site below to sign a petition urging the Prime Minister to outlaw the sexual abuse of animals in Canada.

To sign the petition, click onhttps://e-activist.com/page/10386/action/1?ea.tracking.id=email&ea.url.id=950618  Continue reading

New Ontario bottled water fees not enough to protect groundwater, says Council of Canadians

 A Call-Out from the Council of Canadians

Posted June 30th,, 2017 on Niagara At Large

The Council of Canadians is calling on the Wynne government to ban bottled water takings in Ontario, rather than simply increase water taking fees for the bottled water industry.

The Ontario government has released a formal decision to move forward with a regulation that would increase bottled water taking fees from $3.71 per million litres to $503.71 per million litres. Continue reading

Another Sign of the Times in Trump’s America

A Brief One from NAL publisher Doug Draper

Posted June 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

After attending a recent screening of ‘I, Daniel Blake’ – a powerfully disturbing film about a working class person being ground down by the heartless acts of  government  – I looked up from the sidewalk in front of the historic North Park Theatre on Hertel Avenue in Buffalo, New York and spotted this sign in a second-floor window above a book store.

I thought that there is a fitting sign of our times that I would share with you, dear readers.

Feel free to share any comment of your own in the space below.

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space below the Bernie quote.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater binational Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

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

Niagara Regional Council’s condemnation of BDS Israel movement sparks counter-demonstration

A Commentary by Doug Draper and some News from BDS Coalition representatives in Niagara and other regions of Canada

Posted June 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

From NAL publisher Doug Draper

Members of groups – some of them Jewish and some of them not, but all of them saying they are opposed to current Israeli government policies they feel violate the civil rights of Palestinian people in the West Bank region of the Middle East – are pushing back at a motion approved by a majority on Niagara’s regional council earlier this June to condemn the so-called “Boycott-Divestment- Sanction (BDS) Israel movement” and a recent expression of support for the movement by some members of the Niagara Centre NDP Riding Association.

Niagara’s regional headquarters

That expression of support, tabled at a riding association meeting where the ridings MPP, Cindy Forster, was not present, reportedly never received an ounce of support from NDP’s provincial party. But that didn’t stop Fort Erie regional councillor Sandy Annunziata from condemning members of the riding association for flirting with it and from publicly scolding Forster, in her absence, for not apologizing to Jewish communities in the region and beyond for the fact that support for the BDS movement had been entertained by one or more NDP members in her riding g at all.

I sat at the June 8th regional council meeting while mayors and councillors from across Niagara rung their hands for the better party of two hours over what to do with Annunziata’s motion of condemnation, and while three spokespersons for groups representing members of the Jewish community in Niagara and elsewhere in the province and country expressed their views that the BDS movement is nothing short of an expression of hate toward Jewish people – code for anti-Semitism – pure and simple.

But like so many other issues facing humankind in this world today, there is apparently nothing all that pure and simple about it. Continue reading

Linking Niagara Launched to link Job Seekers in Region together with Jobs

“We’re pleased to be leading this program in response, and to take decisive action that will close the skills gap and help businesses here in Niagara.”– Mishka Balsom, President and CEO, Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

News form the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Posted June 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Linking Niagara, the first project of its kind in Ontario, is being launched in Niagara.

Overseen by a steering committee consisting of the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce, Niagara Workforce Planning Board, YMCA Employment & Immigrant Services, Rel8ed.to, Business Jumpstart, the Niagara Community Observatory and Niagara Connects, Linking Niagara will close the skills gap in Niagara.

Mishka Balsom, CEO, Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

 Linking Niagara is funded by the Ontario Centre for Workforce Innovation, with the support of Ryerson University and the Ministry of Advanced Education and Skills Development.

Employers in Ontario identify access to a talented workforce as their number-one challenge, yet despite this fact, there are still thousands of job-seekers in Niagara who are not finding roles. Linking Niagara aims to bring the two together, building the connections and tools that will help businesses recruit talent, job-seekers to find available jobs, and employment service providers to connect their clients with local employers.

The program will raise awareness of the various support programs, initiatives, and funds available to local employers. A key challenge for employers is not a lack of programs to assist with hiring, but a lack of awareness of them. Linking Niagara will build that awareness.

The project’s coordinators will work throughout Niagara running workshops, info sessions, and information technology tools to make connections and help employers access key hiring resources. The project will particularly focus on smaller enterprises who do not have dedicated human resources staff, and face challenges recruiting and expanding their business.

The long-term results of this project will be decreased unemployment, faster economic growth, and more job opportunities, particularly among the long-term unemployed, persons with disabilities, and equity-seeking groups. The program will aim at creating a self-sustaining network and body of knowledge between employers, job-seekers, and employment service providers in Niagara.

Quotes:

“Employers have repeatedly said that their biggest problem right now is finding talent. It was one of the key takeaways of the 2016 Niagara Economic Summit. We’re pleased to be leading this program in response, and to take decisive action that will close the skills gap and help businesses here in Niagara.”Mishka Balsom, President and CEO, Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

“As Niagara’s leading workforce research organization, we are very aware of Niagara’s workforce challenges: people without jobs, jobs without people. Linking Niagara is the means by which we can solve that problem for ourselves.” Mario De Divitiis, CEO, Niagara Workforce Planning Board

“Linking Niagara will help the YMCA and other employment service providers with more tools and bigger networks so that we can reach even more of the people we need to. This project is a new and valuable resource for everyone in Niagara who is trying to connect job-seekers with employers, to help people find work, and to help employers recruit talent. “ Deanna D’Elia, Director of Employment and Newcomer Services, YMCA of Niagara

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space below the Bernie quote.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater binational Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

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

Port Dalhousie’s Lakeside Park Carousel Opening for Canada Day, July 1st

News from the City of St. Catharines

Posted June 29th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – St. Catharines families can add taking a spin on the Lakeside Park Carousel to their Canada Day festivities this weekend.

After a six-week delay caused by record-breaking high water levels in Lake Ontario that saturated Lakeside Park, the carousel is set to open for the season Saturday, July 1.

“We are thrilled to be able to open up the Lakeside Park Carousel for the Canada Day weekend,” said Lori Mambella, the City’s manager of programs and culture services. Continue reading

Ontario NDP bill to protect vulnerable adults in unregulated supportive living homes passes second reading

 “Too many vulnerable adults who are under the care of these private operators don’t have the ability to advocate for themselves.” – Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

News from the Constituency Office of Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

Posted June 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park – This June, a bill from Welland MPP Cindy Forster designed to protect vulnerable adults and seniors in Supportive Living Accommodations (SLAs) passed a critical vote in the legislature.

Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster

sIncluded among the safeguards proposed in Forster’s bill is a provision that would require housing providers to be provincially licensed in order to collect ODSP cheques and other types of support payments on a resident’s behalf.

“I’ve been hearing complaints about some SLAs from support workers, tenants and families,” Forster said. “Too many vulnerable adults who are under the care of these private operators don’t have the ability to advocate for themselves. In some cases, the operator provides horrific conditions and substandard care. We simply have to stop this from happening to anyone.” Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario woman has covered 250km and raised $20,000 for Cystic Fibrosis in marathon Bruce Trail run

News from Cystic Fibrosis Canada

Posted June 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large – This news was sent to NAL on June 16th, while our site was down for technical reasons, and we still wanted to get it in due to the cause and the great lengths Niagara resident Emily Allan has been going to support it.)

Each day, Emily Allan wakes up in a new town along the Bruce Trail with one goal in mind: to cover more ground, and raise more money for Cystic Fibrosis.

Fonthill’s Emily Allan, cross country coach and an employee at Brock University, has now covered more than 250km of her End to End Bruce Trail run to raise money for Cystic Fibrosis. She will finish at Queenston Heights on Canada Day.

The cross-country coach and an employee in Brock University’s Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Emily has now run more than 250km during End to End CF, a fund-and awareness-raising expedition covering the entire 895km Bruce Trail.

Cystic Fibrosis is the most common fatal genetic disease affecting Canadian kids and young adults. Emily is doing the run in memory of her cousin Sarah Bloomfield, who died of the disease at the age of 23. Continue reading

Federal Liberals take first small step toward rebuilding the CBC, but there are many miles to go

“With the world pretty much in a state of chaos and false news coming at us from many directions, a strong CBC has never been more important.”

A Commentary by Nick Fillmore, veteran Canadian journalist

Posted June 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Canada’s federal government has taken the first step on a long road toward what hopefully will be the restoration of the CBC as Canada’s most important public interest and cultural institution.

For nearly 10 years the Harper government forced the CBC off track from its original goals of promoting culture and the arts, providing quality news, and facilitating a national discussion.

Harper refused to adequately fund the Mother Corp. In one fell swoop in 2012, the Harper government cut the CBC budget by $115-million over three years.

Harper very likely would have wanted to sell off the CBC but that would have caused a national backlash. Instead, he appointed seven Conservative lackeys and donors to the CBC Board with the idea of keeping the broadcaster in check. Continue reading

Great Lakes & St. Lawrence Cities Initiative Mayors Mobilize over Great Lakes Restoration and Climate Change

“Flooding across Great Lakes cities this spring shows that cities really are on the front lines of climate change and protecting our water sources.” – St. Catharines, Niagara Mayor Walter Sendzik

A Message from Mayors of Great Lakes Communities in Canada and the United States

Posted June 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Montreal, QuebecMember mayors of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative met at their annual meeting and conference (earlier this June), hosted by outgoing Chair Mayor Denis Coderre, in Montreal.

“This has been a very busy year. The Trump administration backed out of cutting the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative for the remainder of 2017, but we must continue the battle for 2018 and beyond. 48 million people depend on the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence for their drinking water. We are concerned for the future because such a decision would affect us all, from the port of Montreal to the waterfront restaurant in Windsor to the sport fisherman on Lake Superior,” declared Mayor Coderre this past June 15th.

Mayors of the Cities Initiative also asked the Canadian government to develop a more comprehensive strategy and framework for Great Lakes and St. Lawrence funding.

“Given the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence are a shared responsibility, both federal governments must reflect the importance of the resource in their budgets. The mayors of the Cities Initiative will continue working with the Government of Canada to develop a funding strategy for the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River to ensure their successful restoration and protection for years to come”, said Sandra Cooper, Mayor of Collingwood, Ontaro and vice-chair of the Cities Initiative.

Following the United States departure from the Paris Climate Change Agreement, Mayors reemphasized the increased role of cities in the fight against climate change. “While the President of the United States has bowed out of the Paris Agreement, we are stepping up as cities to lead the charge against climate change,” added Paul Dyster, new Chair of the Cities Initiative and Mayor of Niagara Falls, New York.

Cities Initiative board member, Mayor Walter Sendzik also commented on the meeting. “Flooding across Great Lakes cities this spring shows that cities really are on the front lines of climate change and protecting our water sources. As a board member of the Cities Initiative, I’m proud of the leadership role our cities are taking to protect our Great Lakes, the greatest fresh water source in the world,” said Mayor Walter Sendzik.

The mayors also resolved to seek UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve status for the entire Great Lakes and St. Lawrence basin, a measure intended to draw international attention to the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River as a unique ecosystem of worldwide significance. The resolution encourages the US and Canadian federal governments to pursue creating one of the largest UNESCO Biosphere Reserves on the planet.

The Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative is a coalition of 130 cities from the United States and Canada representing over 17 million people who work together for the long term protection and restoration of the resource. The mayors work closely with state, provincial, federal, tribal, first nation, metis, industry, and non-government representatives from across the basin to protect, restore, and sustain one of the largest freshwater resources in the world.

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space below the Bernie quote.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater binational Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

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

Canada’s Prime Minister announces new Ambassador for Climate Change

“Climate change is everyone’s challenge, and our children’s future depends on how quickly and seriously we tackle it.” – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

News from the Office of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
Posted June 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Canada’s new international ambassador for climate change, Jennifer MacIntyere

Strong action is needed now more than ever to tackle climate change, protect our environment and generate the long-term economic development that will grow the middle class and support a sustainable, clean growth economy.

The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau,  announced this June 27th that Jennifer MacIntyre has been appointed Canada’s new Ambassador for Climate Change, effective immediately. Ms. MacIntyre will work with international stakeholders to advance Canada’s clean growth and climate change priorities on the world stage, including the successful implementation of the Paris Agreement. Continue reading

Celebrate the Canada Day Weekend with Ontario’s Niagara Parks

 An Invite to All from the Niagara Parks Commission

Posted April 28th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

  • ·         Indie rock band Hollerado to headline free Canada Day weekend concerts in Niagara Parks
  • ·         Launch of new Niagara Parks experience: Night Lights: Journey Behind the Falls After Dark
  • ·         Free admission to Old Fort Erie and Laura Secord Homestead    on July 1
  • ·         Fireworks over Niagara Falls at 10:00 PM on July 1 and July 2
  • ·         New partnership between Niagara Parks and GO Transit makes travelling round-trip from Toronto to Niagara Falls even easier

 Niagara Falls, Ontario – Niagara Parks is set to mark Canada’s 150th birthday with a full lineup of events over the July 1st weekend. Continue reading

Safe  or Not … Niagara At Large will Resurface on Wednesday, June 28th

A Not So Brief Message from Doug Draper, reporter/publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted June 21st, 2017 on the newly named ‘National Indigenous Peoples Day’ in Canada

What a wild and crazy spring it has been, with all of the flooding rains, damaging winds and other calamities plaguing our region and so many others on this rapidly spinning-out-of-control planet.

This spring’s flooding waters threaten shoreline properties in Port Dalhousie in Niagara, Ontario. Communities around Lake Ontario and other areas of the Great Lakes have continued to suffer damage from unusually high waters this spring. Photo by Doug Draper

I hardly have any right to whine, given the  heartaches, hardships and loss of homes and treasured personal possessions so many others have endured this spring in other communities and regions due to sudden, severe shifts in climate conditions that some, in wilful ignorance, continue to view as a “hoax” or as something that just happens naturally every few thousand years, but here at Niagara At Large’s home base, we have had our share of high winds, flooding waters, not to mention technical difficulties that have wreaked havoc with our computers and our ability to get news and commentary out to you.

To tell you the truth, it has almost been a blessing that our systems for posting news and commentary have been down because it has given this journalist a chance to decompress from all of the relentless vomiting out of coarsened conduct that too often passes as governance on the Niagara, Ontario side of a binational border region that makes up NAL’s prime readership area.

But for better or worse, depending on your perspective or whatever side of the dung pile you are on, Niagara At Large is working through the technical glitches for a lift off scheduled for this coming Wednesday, June 28th – just in time for the next meeting of Niagara’s regional council and Canada’s 150th birthday. Continue reading

Technical Difficulties

Please note: We are experiencing technical difficulties, NAL will be back soon.

At Niagara Regional Council – They Just Keep on Keepin’ On with the Piling On

A Brief One from Doug Draper with more to come later

Posted June 9th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Andy Petrowski’s seat in the Niagara regional council chambers may have been empy this June 8th, but in many ways that are not pleasant or productive to deal with, the St. Catharines regional councillor was still very much there.

Andy Petrowski. File photo

Somewhere in the range of 20 or 40 minutes of time that should be used focusing on the real chances Niagara faces was taken up once again at the June 8th meeting with Petrowski’s shocking and unacceptable conduct and what to do with it.

Petrowski, as many Niagara resident who still follow the news by now no doubt know, decided or agreed late this May (we aren’t sure which because no one is saying) to take a leave of absence from his councillor duties after a communication device he was responsible for was used by someone (Petrowski claims it wasn’t it) to send a photo of a nude woman to more than 100 people. Continue reading

Nuclear Expert to Speak on Possible Cross-Border Shipments of Highly Dangerous Radioactive Waste through our Greater Niagara Region

An Invite from the Niagara District Council of Women

Posted June 8th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – On Friday, June 16th, the Niagara District Council of Women is bringing highly respected nuclear expert, Dr. Gordon Edwards, to Niagara as our guest speaker.

Are the Canadian and U.S. governments secretly shipping highly dangerous radioactive wastes across this Peace Bridge or other area border crossings? And are they doing it without even telling emergency responders on the Ontario and New York sides of the border?

 

Dr. Edwards will respond to concerns and questions about the potential shipments of liquid high level, extremely dangerous, nuclear waste containing Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) by road through Niagara.  There are many questions that have not been answered by the federal government or the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission:

  • What is the nature of the liquid radioactive material to be trucked over our roads?
  • Has highly radioactive liquid of this kind ever been transported before? Why now?
  • How dangerous is this material in case of a major accident?
  • Can leakage occur?
  • Are there practical and affordable alternatives that would make these shipments unnecessary?

Continue reading

Leading Activist Maude Barlow to speak in Hamilton on Canada’s Water Crisis

Posted June 8th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

NIAGARA AT LARGE encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space below the Bernie quote.

A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.

For more news and commentary from Niagara At Large – an independent, alternative voice for our greater binational Niagara region – become a regular visitor and subscriber to NAL at www.niagaraatlarge.com .

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

Lake Ontario Flood Waters won’t stop Canada Day Fireworks in Port Dalhousie

News from the City of St. Catharines/Niagara

Posted June 8th, 2017on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The record-breaking high water levels of Lake Ontario won’t stop fireworks from lighting up the sky in Port Dalhousie on Canada Day.

The Port Dalhousie Lions Club normally sets off its dazzling Canada Day fireworks display from Lakeside Park but will be unable to this year due to safety concerns associated with the record water levels in Lake Ontario. Instead, the Lions Club will set off its annual Canada Day fireworks from Henley Island. Continue reading

Grandpa And Grandson Are So Close, They Graduated Together At Brock U.Convocation

News from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

Posted June 8th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario – When he was eight years old, Jonah Mondloch walked into the library at Brock University with his grandfather Charles Burke to help him find some research books.

Jonah Mondloch, left, graduated from Brock University Wednesday alongside his grandfather Charles Burke. Cathy Mondloch, centre, a professor at Brock, hooded her two relatives during the Convocation ceremony. Photo courtesy of Brock University

This week — a decade and a half later — Jonah again walked through the University with his grandfather, but this time they had both just become Brock graduates.

On Wednesday afternoon, Jonah, 22, and Charles, 78, graduated together in the Spring Convocation ceremony for the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences. Jonah completed his degree in Kinesiology in five years. His grandfather had been taking classes part time, one credit at a time for 15 years, but doubled up his course load this year so he could finish his degree in time to graduate with Jonah. Continue reading

St. Catharines Mayor and MP meet with Canada’s Minister of Fisheries and Oceans to discuss importance of Port Dalhousie piers

News from the City of St. Catharines/Niagara

Posted June 7th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – St. Catharines Mayor Walter Sendzik and St. Catharines Riding MP Chris Bittle brought the importance of the Port Dalhousie piers to Ottawa this past June 2nd.

A look at a stretch of the pier below a line of trees from the east side of Port Dalhousie Harbour, now under water and fenced off due to record high water levels in Lake Ontario. Photo taken this June by Doug Draper

The Mayor and MP met with Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Fisheries and Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, to discuss the importance of repairing the federally-owned Port Dalhousie piers. Continue reading

St. Catharines, Ontario Veterinarian Charged With 16 Counts of Animal Cruelty

 

A News Release from the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, first posted on the SPCA’s official website on June 1st

Posted June 7th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines/Niagara – Ontario SPCA Inspectors with the Lincoln County Humane Society have charged a St. Catharines veterinarian with 16 counts of animal cruelty under the Criminal Code of Canada relating to alleged animal abuse that allegedly occurred in 2013.

A criminal investigation was launched on September 14, 2016 by the Lincoln County Humane Society after allegations of animal cruelty against Dr. Mahavir Rekhi were reported to the Society. Continue reading

Voices Of Eagles Art Exhibition On Display At Rodman Hall

An Invite to all from Brock University and Rodman Hall 

Posted June 7th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

An opening reception will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. Thursday, June 8 for Voices of Eagles, a new exhibit at Rodman Hall by students in the Soaring Eagles Indigenous Secondary School Program of the Niagara Catholic District School Board.

An art display by Dante MacNaughton and Britney Labelle which is part of Voices of Eagles, a new exhibit at Rodman Hall by students in the Soaring Eagles Indigenous Secondary School Program of the Niagara Catholic District Board.

The Soaring Eagles program provides an alternative learning environment, which focuses on the inclusiveness of cultural knowledge and teachings into the curriculum to help support Aboriginal students and to also provide education and awareness to non-Aboriginal students. Continue reading

TD Niagara Jazz Festival Hosts Jazz Royalty – Pat LaBarbera

–         At the Niagara Artist Centre – Frdiay, June 9th at 1 p.m.

An Invite from the Organizers of the TD Niagara Jazz Festival

Posted June 7th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Considered one of the world’s most exciting saxophonists, Pat LaBarbera comes to the TD Niagara Jazz Festival in 2017 with one huge fan club.

Jazz giant Pat LaBarbera in Niagara, Friday, June 9th for TD Niagara Jazz Festival

This Juno award-winning musician is regarded as jazz royalty and will be the featured performer at SAX IN THE VINEYARD at Henry of Pelham Winery, Thursday, June 8th at 7pm. But if you want to get close up and intimate with this astonishing musician, join him at the Niagara Artist Centre this Friday, June 9th, at 1pm. LaBarbera will be hosting a ‘Jazz Improvisation Clinic’ from 1pm to 3pm. at the NAC studio, 354 St. Paul Street, St. Catharines, where participants can enjoy playing, talking, or simply listening. Continue reading

Canada’s Resolve Won’t Be Trumped in Climate Change Fight – Trudeau

 “We can’t walk away from the reality of climate change and we won’t walk away from a global plan that has a realistic chance of fighting it.” – Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, June 5th, 2017

By Doug Draper

Posted June 6th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

The old line; ‘like father, like son’ has been used before on Pierre and Justin Trudeau for the obvious reason that both father and son ascended the ladder of Canadian politics to become prime minster.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking in Niagara-on-the-Lake, with Canada’s Environment Minister, Catherine McKenna, and the mouth of the Niagara River in the background. Photo by Doug Draper

The line came back to this reporter’s mind this past Monday, June 5th, when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greeted people gathered in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario’s Queen’s Royal Park after paddling ashore in a canoe – just as his father, an avid canoeist, might have in years gone by.

Then like his father, who pushed the U.S. administration of Ronald Reagan when he was prime minister for the second time around in the early 1980s, to negotiate an agreement to cut the flow of toxic chemicals reaching the Niagara River from U.S. industries and dumpsites, Justin Trudeau stepped up to a podium in the Niagara-on-the-Lake park to make it clear that Canada would remain committed to an international agreement he signed on behalf of the country in Paris a year and a half ago, despite Donald Trump’s recent announcement that he will withdraw the U.S. from it. Continue reading

Remembering Bobby Kennedy – A Voice for Peace & Equality, Gunned Down 49 Years Ago this June 6th

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted June 6th, 2017 on Niagara At Large

How different the world might be today had he survived to win the U.S. presidency in 1968, rather than Nixon.

Click on the following to hear readings of a message of hope that then U.S. Senator for New York, Robert F. Kennedy delivered 50 years ago this June 6th, during a visit to South Africa where the racially oppressive system of apartheid was then fully entrenched and anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela was serving the first years of a decades long ordeal in prison –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mSr9WkNPqKc%20

.During his 1968 presidential campaign, Bobby Kennedy was fond of ending speeches with a line from George Bernard Shaw – “Some men see things as they are and say, why; I dream things that never were and say, why not.”

It is a line we would all do well to embrace today. I miss you Bobby.

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