Buffalo-Based PBS Network Airs Important Documentary On Great Lakes

View The Documentary In Two Hour-Long Parts,                      This October 17 & 18th At 10 p.m!

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted October 17th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Lakes Ontario (in lower right foreground), Erie and Huron from space.

Lakes Ontario (in lower right foreground), Erie and Huron from space.

As a journalist who spent more than two decades covering Great Lakes issues for mainstream newspapers, and who still does what one can, with the limited resources available, to post information about threats to these vital waterbodies and efforts on both sides of the Ontario-U.S. border to protect them, I have often been impressed with the efforts public broadcasting stations like WNED in Buffalo New, York have made to keep us aware of pressing Great Lakes issues.

WNED Television (the old Channel 17 and Cogeco Channel 21 on the Niagara, Ontario side of the border) is doing it again with a two-part broadcast at 10 p.m. this Monday, October 17 and at 10 p.m. again this Tuesday, October 18th of a documentary called – ‘Making Waves – The Battle for the Great Lakes’. Continue reading

Ontario Government Taking Action to Protect Clean Water From Corporate Sellers

Province Proposes Two Year Moratorium on New and Expanded Water Bottling Operations

A Message from the Government of Ontario

Posted October 17th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

“Water is essential for the well-being and economic strength in our communities. With a changing climate, and specifically with the impacts from drought and increasing population growth, we want to work with the people of Ontario to make sure that we are properly protecting this vital resource.”  — Glen Murray, Minister of the Environment and Climate Change

Ontario Environment Minister Glen Murray

Ontario Environment Minister Glen Murray

Queen’s Park, Toronto – Ontario is taking action to protect the province’s water resources for future generations by proposing a two-year moratorium on new or expanded water takings from groundwater by bottling companies, as well as stricter rules for renewals of existing permits.

The proposed moratorium is the first of a number of steps the province will be taking to further protect Ontario’s clean water. It will apply to every water bottling facility that takes groundwater and is required to have a permit under the Ontario Water Resources Act. 

Proposed rules would reduce the duration of permit renewal applications from 10 years to a maximum of five years, as well as require increased public transparency, new operating guidelines, mandatory reductions on water taking during drought and further scientific studies. Continue reading

Buffalo History Museum Hosting 18th Annual Paint The Town Art Auction

Over 35 Local Artists with Strong Ties to the Buffalo Region Participate

An Invite from the Buffalo History Museum in Buffalo, New York

Posted October 17th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Buffalo, New York – For the eighteenth year, the social celebration of art, history, and community will take place during Paint the Town art auction and fundraiser at The Buffalo History Museum.

Painting for TBHM Collection: Birds-eye View, Pan American Exposition” by H.H. Green]

Painting for TBHM Collection: Birds-eye View, Pan American Exposition” by H.H. Green]

The fundraiser will feature both live and silent auctions, and will include a wide range of artworks by over 35 artists with strong ties to the Buffalo region. Proceeds from the auction benefit both the artists and The Buffalo History Museum.

  • WHAT:    The 18th Annual Paint the Town – Fundraiser with live and silent art auction
  • WHEN:    Thursday, November 3, 2016           
  • TIME:      6:00 – 9:30 p. (Doors open at 5:30 pm)
  • WHERE: The Buffalo History Museum, One Museum Court (Elmwood Ave. & Nottingham Terr. intersection)
  • TIX:         $50/member, $75/general  
  • INFO:       buffalohistory.org , (716) 873-9644 x 318

Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Award-Winning Journalist & Writer Launching Book On ‘Age Of Daredevils’

A Brief One from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted October 14th, 2016

This is just a reminder and  follow-up to an advance I posted earlier this October on the launch this coming Sunday, October 16th at the Chapter’s bookstore in the Niagara, Ontario community of St. Catharines of Mike Clarkson’s new book on ‘The Age of Daredevils” in Niagara Falls.

mike-clarkson

Read the earlier story I posted in Niagara At Large on this book launch by clicking on – https://voiceofniagara.wordpress.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=21411&action=edit .

PLEASE JOIN THE CONVERSATION Niagara At Large welcomes 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.

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

Study Reveals 2016 List Of Best And Worst Cities To Be A Woman In Canada

St. Catharines ranks 19th out of 25 – “Women’s levels of full-time employment (in St. Catharines) are the lowest of any of the 25 cities included here.”

Neighbouring City of Hamilton ranks 13th out of 25

A Nation-Wide Study by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

Posted October 14th, 2016 on Niagaara At Large

Ottaway, Ontario  —A new study released today by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) updates the list of the best and worst cities to be a woman in Canada.

Victoria comes out on top for the second year in a row while big gaps in employment and high poverty rates for women put Windsor in last place.ccpa-logo

The study, by CCPA Senior Researcher Kate McInturff, provides an annual snapshot of the gaps in men and women’s access to economic security, personal security, education, health, and positions of leadership in Canada’s largest 25 metropolitan areas. It measures the gap between men and women in a given community in order to capture inequalities that can be attributed, at least in part, to discrimination based on gender.

“Canada has made gains in creating opportunities for women and girls to thrive in our communities. But there is still work to do,” says McInturff. Continue reading

Ontario’s Niagara Parks to Host Public Information Centres – October 20th & 25th

 A Call-Out to all citizens from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted October 14th, 2016 on Niagara At Largeniagaraparks

Niagara Falls, Ontario – The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) will host two Public Information Centres to provide an overview of its upcoming activities and projects planned for 2016/2017. At each of these sessions, members of the public will have an opportunity to meet with NPC project teams and to provide their feedback to the Commission. Continue reading

Join Us At A Meeting Of Citizens For Regional Transit In Buffalo, New York

Quarterly Meeting To Explore Options for a New Multimodal Transportation Station in Downtown Buffalo

An Invite from Doug Funke, President of  Citizens for Regional Transit

Free and Open to All Wednesday, October 19, 2016 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Doors open at 5:00 p.m. at United Way 742 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo

Light rail gliding through heart of downtown Buffalo, New York

Light rail gliding through heart of downtown Buffalo, New York

Buffalo, New York – On Wednesday October 19th, 2016, at 5:30 p.m., Bruce Becker (National Association of Railroad Passengers), Dan Leonard (Buffalo Niagara Partnership), and Tom DeSantis (City of Niagara Falls) will spotlight the need for Buffalo to have a modern inter-modal train station in the heart of downtown. Mayor Paul Dyster (City of Niagara Falls) will provide introductory remarks. Continue reading

Congratulations On the Nobel Prize, Bob!

A Brief One from NAL publisher Doug Draper

Posted October 14th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

See them big plantations burning, Hear the cracking of the whips, Smell that sweet magnolia blooming, And see the ghosts of slavery ships, I can hear them tribes a-moaning, I can hear the undertaker’s bell, Nobody can sing the blues, Like Blind Willie McTellbob-dylan

  • From Bob Dylan’s song ‘Blind Willie McTell’

They walked along by the old canal, A little confused, I remember wel,l And stopped into a strange hotel, With a neon burnin’ bright, He felt the heat of the night, Hit him like a freight train, Moving with a simple twist of fate

  • From Bob Dylan’s song ‘Simple Twist of Fate’

Continue reading

Michelle Obama Finishes It Up On Trump, the Serial Woman Abuser

‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered’ – She’s Nailed Him

A Brief One from NAL publisher Doug Draper

Posted October 14th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

From a speech U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama delivered this October 13th in the State of New Hampshire for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton – michele-obama-headshot

“Here I am, out on the campaign trail in an election where we have consistently been hearing hurtful, hateful language about women – language that has been painful for so many of us, not just as women, but as parents trying to protect our children and raise them to be caring, respectful adults, and as citizens who think that our nation’s leaders should meet basic standards of human decency.”

“The fact is that in this election, we have a candidate for president of the United States who, over the course of his lifetime and the course of this campaign, has said things about women that are so shocking, so demeaning that I simply will not repeat anything here today. And last week, we saw this candidate actually bragging about sexually assaulting women. And I can’t believe that I’m saying that a candidate for president of the United States has bragged about sexually assaulting women. …” Continue reading

Lawyer For Indigenous Peoples List Numerous Concerns Over Proposed Thundering Waters Development Project In Niagara Falls

Posted by Doug Draper

October 13th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – A letter from a lawyer representing Indigenous communities in and around the Niagara, Ontario recently sent a letter to Niagara Falls municipal officials expressing concern over a proposal to carry out an urban development project on hundreds of acres of forest, savannah and wetlands known as the Thundering Waters Forest in southwest end of that city.

Members of Indigenous community at one of many rallies this year to save Thundering Waters Forest, File photo by Doug Draper

Members of Indigenous community at one of many rallies this year to save Thundering Waters Forest, File photo by Doug Draper

Among many concerns outlined in the letter to the city, lawyer Aaron Detler points out that the $1 billion-plus development project, proposed by a China-government based corporation called GR Investments Co., Ltd. “will interfere, impair, and infringe upon Haudenosaunee title, rights and interests as guaranteed and recognized by the Nanfan Treaty of 1701.”

In the letter, Detler also raises concerns about a trip to China last November, 2015 by Niagara Falls Mayor Jim Diodati and two senior city administrators , paid for by the China-based developers, and about a failure of the city and other parties to properly consult with Indigenous community representatives about the controversial project. Continue reading

 Buffalo’s Record Theatre Is One Of The Last Of The Great Independent Stores In New York State & Ontario

Check It Out And Help Keep Record Stores Alive!

A Brief One from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Posted October 7th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Every so often – and far more often than one might imagine given that the flagship store is now more than nine years gone – I still hear people I meet in Buffalo, in Toronto and in many cities and towns in between, how much they miss one of the mothers of all record stores – Sam the Record Man store on Yonge Street in Toronto.record-theatre-logo

For anyone who loves collecting music by favourite artists on vinyl or CDs, I felt like a little kid walking into the world’s greatest toy store when I entered that place with the giant neon sign shaped like LPs above the front doors.

Sam’s, like so many of the great independent record stores, fell by the wayside as younger generations of would-be customers buying and downloading music online, and corporate chain retailers like Wal-Mart and Best Buy started mass-selling the top 20 CDs the suits at Disney Corp. want us to consume, but carry hardly any titles by artists whose music reduces Britney Spears and Justin Bieber to the soulless, flatulating midgets that they are.

Fortunately, one of the last of the great independent record stores going back to the formative years of Bruce Springsteen, Pink Floyd, David Bowie, U2, Prince and so many others in the 1970s and 80s is still with us – in Buffalo, New York. Continue reading

Ontario’s Wynne Government Scores Another Victory For The Rich And Powerful – This One Favouring Petroleum and Mining Barons Over Endangered Species

Citizen Protectors Of Thundering Waters Forest In Niagara Should Beware!

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted October 12th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Well, here is yet another loss for Mother Earth and for those living things who need her to be healthy and green to survive.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne wins court battle to drive holes through Endangered Species Act for developers

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne wins court battle to drive holes through Endangered Species Act for developers

This one was delivered this October 11th by the Ontario Court of Appeal in favour of the anti-environmental protection government of Premier Kathleen Wynne’s drive to corrupt the province’s Endangered Species Act with 19 exemptions favouring gas, oil, lumbering and mining activities over protecting some of the last green spaces left for wildlife on the brink saying a final goodbye – at least in this region of the world.

The court ruling came down just hours after this news and commentary site, Niagara At Large, posted a news release by the citizens-based conservation group, Ontario Nature, celebrating the fact that it and a number of other environmental organizations won standing in the provincial courts to appeal the government’s proposed changes to the Act. Continue reading

Remembering One Of The Most Destructive Ice Storms Ever To Ravage This Region – 10 Years Ago This October 12th & 13th

By Doug Draper

Posted October 12th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Ten years ago this October 12th, a huge mass of winter-like air from the west moved in to the greater Niagara area, sweeping over Lake Erie waters still warm enough to make for a highly volatile, destruction mix by the time it reached shoreline communities like Fort Erie and Port Colborne, Ontario, and Buffalo, New York.

The way it looked on many streets in south Niagara, Ontario and in the Buffalo, New York area 10 years ago this October 13th.

The way it looked on many streets in south Niagara, Ontario and in the Buffalo, New York area 10 years ago this October 13th.

By mid to late afternoon, the freezing rain began falling as thunder rumbled overhead. Waves of icy rain continued falling relentlessly through the night, coating trees still bearing that spring and summer’s foliage and no longer able to withstand the weight of the ice.

For hundreds of thousands of residents in southern parts of Niagara, Ontario and Erie County, New York, the continuing clatter of falling ice pellets was punctuated by the sound of branches and whole trees cracking before crashing down on fences, cars the roofs of homes or whatever else was beneath them. Continue reading

Critical Injuries to Worker in Niagara, Ontario City Of Thorold Result in $75,000 Fine

A News Release from the Ontario Government

Posted October 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

St. CATHARINES, ONTARIO – TSP Canada Towers Inc., a company that manufactures wind turbines and towers, pleaded guilty and was fined $75,000 after a worker was critically injured when a one-ton structural steel ring fell from a storage rack.justice-image

On April 29, 2014, workers were being trained in moving a structural steel ring (also known as paint ring) and placing it into a storage rack at the workplace. The ring was approximately 15 feet in circumference and weighed about one ton. Continue reading

Please Help Us Find ‘Snowshoe’ – A Beloved Cat Of One Of Our Loyal Niagara At Large Readers

A Call-Out from Doug Draper, publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted October 11th, 2016

Niagara, Ontario – As many of you long-time visitors to this news and commentary site know, Niagara At Large has always been a very animal friendly zone.

We have our own beloved team of animal friends here – our great felines Dylan and Dexter, and our small but mighty NAL mascot who we have introduced to visitors to our site a number of times before – our beloved chiwawa companion Pinky.

Help us get Snowshoe the cat safely back home

Help us get Snowshoe the cat safely back home

Well now we’ve heard from Sheila Krekorian, one of our many friends of Niagara At Large, whose family is feeling very blue because one of their beloved family members – a beautiful Siamese cat named ‘Snowshoe’ has goine missing somewhere from their home on 93 Riverview Blvd in the St. Catharines-Glenridge/Glendale area. Continue reading

Niagara Citizens Coalition Applauds MPP Gates’ Call For Answer On Status Of Niagara Falls Hospital

 Niagara Residents Deserve Answers For The Whole Region & On Privatization Plans

A Message from the Niagara Health Coalition, a citizens group advocating for quality public health care

Posted October 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

“The government cannot continue to pit community against community in a false competition that, in the end, would see not enough hospital services for anyone in Niagara.” – : Sue Hotte, chair, Niagara Health Coalition

(A Note from Niagara At Large – as of the posting of this article, we have yet to hear a status report from the Premier on plans for a new Niagara Falls hospital.)

Niagara Falls, Ontario – On Thursday, October 6th, in advance of (Ontario) Premier Kathleen Wynne’s visit to Niagara Falls(this October 11th), (Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates questioned the Health Minister in the Ontario Legislature on the slow pace of approval for a new hospital in Niagara Falls.

Niagara Falls MPP for Niagara Falls Riding and NDP rep Wayne Gates in provincial legislature

Niagara Falls MPP for Niagara Falls Riding and NDP rep Wayne Gates in provincial legislature

Gates advocated that local contractors be used in the construction. All this is good. There is no question that the Niagara Falls hospital is old and a new one is required.

Two years ago, the Niagara Health System submitted to the Ministry of Health a Phase I proposal to build a new hospital in Niagara Falls that has not yet been approved.

Unfortunately, here in Niagara, as is the case in Scarborough, Durham, Picton and other areas, the government has used a vague and distant promise of a new hospital in what appears to be an attempt to stifle dissent about closure of needed health care services and a dismantling of local governance. Continue reading

Please Join In Telling The Ontario Government To Do The Right Thing By Abused Animals

Call For An End To Veterinarians Being Allowed To Police Their Own Conduct

A Commentary by Doug Draper, publisher, Niagara At Large

Posted October 11th, 2016

What do you think the chances are of Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne and her government ever allowing citizens at large to police themselves when it comes to paying taxes?

The chances of that happening, we might easily guess, are zero because if citizens were allowed to police themselves around paying taxes, a good many of us (except a few honest citizens like, of course, you and I) would probably take advantage of every opportunity not to pay taxes at all.

Only a months' long suspicion? How weak would the punishment have been if he wasn't caught on surveillance camera?

Only a months’ long suspicion? How weak would the punishment have been if he wasn’t caught on surveillance camera?

So why is it that the Ontario government allows associations and so-called “colleges” for veterinarians, lawyers, doctors, real-estate agents and other professional groups to play a primary role in policing their members?

Could it have something to do with all of the political lobbying these same organizations do to weaken or kill any regulations over what they do and to avoid the kind of policing the rest of us are subject to? Continue reading

Helping Families in Niagara Region with Quality Child Care – Ontario Premier

Ontario Government Investment Will Deliver More Licensed Child Care Spaces

A News Release from the Office of Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

Posted October 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

“We are taking action to give more parents access to high-quality, licensed child care. We understand that today’s families face many pressures and that parents deserve to know that their children are being looked after in a safe and caring environment.”— Kathleen Wynne, Premier of Ontario

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne.

Niagara, Ontario – This October 11th, Premier Kathleen Wynne visited the onsite child care centre at Glynn A. Green Public School in Fonthill, where the government supported a retrofit of existing rooms to help create more than 30 new licensed child care spaces for toddlers and pre-schoolers.

Approximately 20 per cent of children up to the age of 4 in Ontario are currently in licensed child care, and research indicates that demand is much higher. To address the demand and ensure more working families can find quality, affordable care, Ontario made a commitment in the recent Speech from the Throne to help create another 100,000 new, licensed child care spaces for infants, toddlers and preschoolers within the next five years — starting in 2017. Continue reading

A Warning To Ontario Government – PrivatizingProvince’s Systems for Patient Records and Information Will Incite Massive Public Opposition

Banking Executive is Not Trusted to Protect Patient or Public Interest, Especially After Hydro Privatization Debacle

A Message from Natalie and Mehra and the Ontario Health Coalition

Posted October 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Toronto, Ontario – Earlier this Ocotober, the Wynne government made public a formal invitation from the Ontario Health Minister to Ed Clark to “assess and validate the value these [health data, e-health records and related intellectual property and infrastructure] systems have created for Ontario and to recommend ways to take them to the next level”.

Ontario Health Coalition Executive Director Natalie Mehra

Ontario Health Coalition Executive Director Natalie Mehra

Ed Clark is the former President and CEO of TD Bank – a bank deeply involved in P3 privatization in Ontario. TD’s economics branch was used by the McGuinty government to generate a pro-privatization health care report. The former head of TD Economics, Don Drummond, wrote the pro-privatization and pro-public-service-cuts Drummond Report.

Top former and current leaders of Infrastructure Ontario – the P3-privatization entity of the Ontario government — have come out of TD. Ed Clark recently recommended the deeply unpopular privatization of public hydro in Ontario. He is the father of Bert Clark, the current President and CEO of Infrastructure Ontario. Continue reading

Ontario Environmental Groups Win Right To Appeal Endangered Species Decision

Industry Exemptions From Endangered Species Act Unlawful, Groups Say

News from Ontario Nature, a citizens advocacy group for the protection of Ontario’s natural heritage

Posted October 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Toronto, Ontario – The Ontario Court of Appeal has granted Ontario Nature and Wildlands League leave to appeal a lower court ruling that puts already endangered species at further risk of extinction.

Iconic Barn Owl on endangered species list in Ontario

Iconic Barn Owl on endangered species list in Ontario

“Biological diversity is a great treasure of our planet with ecological, social, economic, cultural and intrinsic value, yet we are losing plants and animals forever at an alarming rate due to human activities,” says Caroline Schultz, Ontario Nature’s Executive Director. “That’s why the Endangered Species Act was put in place — as an essential safeguard to protect Ontario’s natural heritage for our kids.”

This marks the first time environmental groups have won the right to appeal to the Ontario Court of Appeal on a case about the Endangered Species Act (ESA) or about endangered species. Continue reading

Let’s Stand Together To Save Thundering Waters Forest In Niagara Falls, Ontario

Legendary Hiker to be Featured at Niagara Wetlands Info Session on Thursday, October 13th

A Call-Out from Karl Dockstader and Friends of the Thundering Waters Forest

Posted October 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara Falls, Ontario –  Respecting nature is sometimes as simple as understanding how great it really is and that is exactly what the enigmatic, appealing and entertaining youth Owen Bjorgan will do for the people of Niagara Falls and beyond at the Coronation Centre on 5925 Summer St, Niagara Falls, this Thursday, October 13th, at 7 p.m.

karl-oct-13-meeting

Head to YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YnwREmarvcQ) and check out Owen’s TEDx Talk and then come see Owen at the Niagara Wetlands Info Session. This is your chance to be a part of a growing community of people that are unlocking the power of finding peace by respecting the natural world. Continue reading

Trump Turns Legendary American Actor Into A Raging Bull

“I’d like to punch Donald Trump in the face.” – Robert De Niro

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted October 9th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

I knew there was a reason why Robert De Niro is one of my all-time favourite actors!

Robert De Niro as Jake LaMotta in the 1970s film classic 'Raging Bull'

Robert De Niro as Jake LaMotta in the 1970s film classic ‘Raging Bull’

For a campaign launched by a group of American celebrities called ‘Vote Your Future’, Robert De Niro offered a video that has him punching with words to lay a Jake LaMotta-like beating on Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

He’s so blatantly stupid,” says the 73-year-old Academy Award winning actor of Trump in the video. “He’s a punk, he’s a dog, he’s a pig. He’s a con, a bulls–t artist, a mutt. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about, doesn’t do his homework, doesn’t care, thinks he’s gaming society, doesn’t pay his taxes. He’s an idiot. Colin Powell said it best: He’s a national disaster.”

The De Niro video was initially rejected as too hard-hitting and punchy for a campaign that is mainly aimed at encouraging citizens of all political stripes to vote in the coming November 8th U.S. elections. But with Trump continuing to say and do things that are so outrageously sexist, racist and zenophobic – not to mention so blantantly false – the producers of the campaign changed have changed there mind and put the video out.

Here it is

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Q-ZyW9bz5c

.PLEASE JOIN THE CONVERSATION 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.

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

Do Millions Of Americans Really Want Trump To Be Their Next President?

Please Don’t Inflict This Racist, Sexist, Lying Hate-Monger On The Rest Of The World

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

Posted October 8th, 2016

The front page of the Saturday, October 8th, 2016 edition of a highly-read New York City tabloid – the New York Daily News – focuses on yet another reprehensible episode starring billionaire celebrity, now Republican Party standard barer Donald Trump – one that should, at long last, drive every thoughtful, decent-minded American citizen (including any that may be left in the old Republic Party of Abe Lincoln) to stand up to the prospect of a Trump presidency with three simple words – “NO DAMN WAY!”

Here is that front page –

daily-news

For those of you who missed it – and it is hard to believe that anyone who has been near a newspaper or radio or TV news program in the last18 hours has missed it- that front page is a reaction to a newly leaked audio tape made in 2005 of then Reality TV star Donald Trump telling some guy from the Access Hollywood program how, he likes to grope women and “grab them by the pussy,” and that how as the “star” he says he is, he can do that because because, after all, he is a “star” and “they will let you do it. … You can do anything.” Continue reading

Niagara’s Queenston Heights Now Home To ‘Exquisite’ Commemorative Memorial To Six Nations And Native Allies

“This memorial is a very important part of the reconciliation between our peoples, and a testament to our survival on our native land.” – Rick Hall (Hayadaha), Coordinator, Indigenous Knowledge Centre, Six Nations Polytechnic

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted October 7th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – It has been eight years in the making and it is 200 years overdue, said Niagara-on-the-Lake regional councillor Gary Burroughs when it was his turn to speak.

Burroughs was Niagara-on-the-Lake’s  Lord Mayor in 2008 when the town’s council voted to work with Six Nations, Niagara Parks and other partners to create a lasting memorial in recognition of a ceremony of peace held over two days in the late summer of 1815 among Indigenous nations that fought on opposing sides during the War of 1812.

A computerized rendition of the new Landscape of Nations Memorial in Queenston Heights Park in Niagara, Ontario.

A computerized rendition of the new Landscape of Nations Memorial in Queenston Heights Park in Niagara, Ontario.

That Native memorial – named Landscape of Nations and described in handouts prepared by the town and Niagara Parks as “a public artwork of deep meaning, exquisite beauty and power – was unveiled this past Sunday, October 2nd on the scenic parklands of Queenston Heights where in October of 1813,  Indigenous warriors were engaged with British and U.S. troops in the Battle of Queenston Heights that cost the life of British commander, Major-General Sir Isaac Brock before the U.S. invaders were driven back across the Niagara River below.

The memorial’s unveiling was attended by hundreds of Indigenous and non-Indigenous people who arrived in the rain and saw the skies open up and the sun come out as the unveiling ceremony began with a list of speakers that included Ava Hill, Chief of the Six Nations of the Grand River who was particularly eloquent in expressing her hope that the memorial will help keep the spirit of reconciliation between her community and others sharing this continent alive.

Members of the region's Indigenous communities proceed through Queenston Height's Park to the site of the about to be unveiled Landscape of Nations commemorative memorial. Photo by Doug Draper

Members of the region’s Indigenous communities proceed through Queenston Height’s Park to the site of the about to be unveiled Landscape of Nations commemorative memorial. Photo by Doug Draper

“This memorial will serve to make people more aware of the significant contributions and sacrifices that were made by the people of Six Nations and their allies during the War of 1812,” said Hill, adding that she also hopes it will inspire people to can act together for the betterment of present and future generations. Continue reading

When Is Canada’s Government Going To Address The Traffic Mess At Niagara’s Border Crossings?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted October 6th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

For at least the third time in as many months, The Buffalo News has published a front-page story about the ridiculously long wait times and traffic tie-ups caused by the understaffing of custom booths on the Canadian side of Niagara’s border crossings.peach-bridge-buffalo-news

This latest story, published at the top of the Buffalo, New York’s major daily newspaper’s this October 6th,  is crowned with a headline ‘Canadian understaffing leads to delays at Peace Bridge’, and goes on to talk about a vow from Brian Higgins, a U.S. Congressman from the Buffalo area, to continue putting pressure on officials in the Canadian government to make sure that those wanting or needing to use the Peace Bridge and other border crossings in the area do not go on facing the same long delays long into the future. Continue reading

Provincial Representative Turns Up the Pressure on the New Niagara Falls Hospital

News from the Constituency Office of Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates

Posted October 6th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

This billboard sign has been up in Niagara Falls for about three years now for a new hospital that would cost more than half a billion dollars to build. Whether that ever happens in the foreseeable future is an open question.

This billboard sign has been up in Niagara Falls for about three years now for a new hospital that would cost more than half a billion dollars to build. Whether that ever happens in the foreseeable future is an open question.

Queens Park, Toronto – Wayne Gates, NDP MPP for Niagara Falls (a riding that also includes Fort Erie and Niagara-on-the-Lake) rose in the Ontario Legislature this October 6th  and pressed the Government to fulfill its promise to build a new Niagara Falls hospital.

Gates noted that the (province’s) Liberal Government announced funding for the hospital during his by-election two years ago but the project has yet to be approved beyond Phase one.

“They have their Phase 2 plan that now shows specifics of what will go into each unit ready to be submitted in November, but they can’t do that yet. They can’t submit their Phase 2 plan because phase 1 hasn’t been approved yet. That is simply unacceptable.” Continue reading

Please Don’t Stereotype Indigenous People By Wearing “Indian” Costumes This Halloween

“‘Indian’” costumes – no matter how innocent in intent – perpetuate stereotyping.”

A Message of Consideration from the Niagara Regional Native Centre in Niagara, Ontario

Dear Niagara Community at Large,

It is the position of the Niagara Regional Native Centre that “Indian”, “Native American” or any Indigenous based costume perpetuates stereotypes that marginalize members of our shared urban Indigenous communities.

Our Indigenous friends and neighbours are asking us all to respectfully not wear "Indian" costumes this Halloween.

Our Indigenous friends and neighbours are asking us all to respectfully not wear “Indian” costumes this Halloween.

While it is not the place of a community centre to direct the behaviour of retailers, consumers, or families celebrating a Canadian cultural event we do hope to work within our mandate to share knowledge with both the Indigenous and non-Indigenous community in Niagara.

We encourage our friends and fellow community members to be mindful of the impacts of stereotyping as an implicit form of racism. “Indian” costumes, no matter how innocent in intent perpetuate stereotyping. Stereotyping – or overgeneralizing a belief – a group of people is harmful and can fuel prejudicial attitudes that can result in discrimination and hurtful actions. Continue reading

Niagara Health Introduces Pet Therapy Program For Patients

 ‘The energy that radiates off  patients when you see them visiting with  pet therapy dogs is extraordinary.’

News from the Niagara Health System

Posted October 6th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(A Note to NAL readersTo  clear up any confusion, we at NAL wish to advise you that the Niagara Health System – the  publicly funded body governing the amalgamation of hospital and related health care sites in Niagara, Ontario – has recently begun identifying itself in media releases simply as ‘Niagara Health’.)

A new program at Niagara Health has been a paw-sitive experience for our patients.

Here is Bosco, one of the dogs that is part of Niagara Health's new pet therapy program. Photo courtesy of Niagara Health System

Here is Bosco, one of the dogs that is part of Niagara Health’s new pet therapy program. Photo courtesy of Niagara Health System

Niagara Health’s first Pet Therapy Program, which was launched in partnership with the Therapy Dog Program of St. John Ambulance, Niagara Region Branch, is providing comfort and support to patients, their families and our staff.

Therapy dogs and their volunteer handler teams started bringing cheer to our patients in the Woolcott Wing at our Welland Site a few months ago.
Continue reading

Ontario Liberals and Conservatives Vote Down NDP Motion to Stop Hydro One Sell-Off

News from the Ontario New Democratic Party

Posted October 5th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto – In the Legislature this afternoon the Liberal government joined forces with the Progressive Conservatives to vote down Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath’s Opposition Day Motion calling for an immediate halt to the sell-off of Hydro One and any further privatization of the province’s electricity system.

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath still fighting privatization of province's hydro system.

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath still fighting privatization of province’s hydro system.

“Ontarians have spoken. New Democrats are listening. We need to make crucial changes to stop the rising cost of hydro and stop the privatization that’s driving those cost increases,” said Horwath. “The priority of our hydro system shouldn’t be generating big profits for investors. It should be to provide affordable electricity that keeps people’s bills as low as possible.”

Horwath put the responsibility for high hydro rates on a Liberal government that is pushing ahead with plans to sell off Hydro One and further privatize Ontario’s electricity system despite strong opposition from the public. 80% of Ontarians oppose the sell-off of Hydro One. Continue reading

Award-Winning Journalist Pens Book On Niagara Falls Daredevils

By Doug Draper

Posted October 5th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Few jounalists I know have captured the power, the drama the beauty and theatrics in and around one of the world’s most scenic wonders – the Great Falls of Niagara – with as much passion and insight as Michael Clarkson.

Award winning journalist and author Michael Clarkson launching new bood on 'The Age of Daredevils'

Award winning journalist and author Michael Clarkson launching new bood on ‘The Age of Daredevils’

So it makes all the sense in the world that Michael Clarkson has written a book on the many daredevils that have tempted fate in the roaring waters of the Falls.

In the spirit of full disclosure, Michael and I were colleagues at The St. Catharines Standard in the 1980s and 1990s when the Burgoyne family still owned that newspaper and were generous enough to provide a newsroom full of journalists the resources needed to produce quality work.

During that time, I was writing about the toxic chemicals washing down the Niagara River and the Horseshoe and American Falls, and Michael was covering  the cast of characters plunging over the Falls in barrels and other makeshift contraptions, and reporting the first-hand accounts of those who survived, along with insightful accounts of what motivated them to do something that claimed so many lives. Continue reading

Stand With Us For A Green Future!

A Call-Out from the Ontario Clean Air Coalition for more Renewable Energy and an End to Nuclear

Posted October 5th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

We need your financial support to help us persuade Premier Wynne to choose the smart options that will actually lower our electricity bills and create a renewable energy future for our children.renewable-energy

Unfortunately, Premier Wynne has doubled down on the 1950s solution – nuclear power.  She is proposing to spend tens of billions of dollars to extend the life of Canada’s oldest nuclear station – Pickering – and to re-build 10 aging reactors at the Darlington and Bruce Nuclear Stations. According to Ontario Power Generation, this will cause its price of nuclear power to rise by 180% over the next 10 years. Continue reading

 New Study Brings Researchers Closer To A Universal Flu Vaccine

News from McMaster Univerity in Hamilton

Posted October 4rth, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Hamilton, Ontario — Researchers at McMaster University and two American universities have taken another step closer to developing a much more effective, “one-punch” universal flu vaccine.

McMaster University researcher Matthew Miller part of team working toward a universal flu vaccine

McMaster University researcher Matthew Miller part of team working toward a universal flu vaccine

Their latest findings, published online today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science USA (PNAS), build upon their earlier discovery of a class of antibodies capable of neutralizing the most dangerous types of Influenza viruses.

These antibodies, according to the researchers, essentially “train” the immune system to recognize a portion of the virus that does not change from year-to-year and, in doing so, can pave the way toward a universal vaccine that needs to be given just once and could protect against all future strains of the flu, including mutated strains. Continue reading

Trudeau’s Carbon Pricing Plan Won’t Fix Canada’sWeak Climate Targets

A Statement from Canada’s Green Party Leader Elizabeth May

Posted October 3rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

 (A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug DraperThis October 3rd, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tabled a plan to implement a carbon tax, and impose it, if necessary, on provinces that won’t take action on their own) as a way to reduce emissions that contribute to climate change.

Predictably, members of the federal Conservative Party who were schooled for years by former leader and prime minister Stephen Harper on what not to do about climate change, are already screaming that Trudeau’s plan goes to far and will damage the economy.

Canadian Green Party Leader Elizabeth May says Trudeau carbon pricing plan falls short of action needed to address climate change

Canadian Green Party Leader Elizabeth May says Trudeau carbon pricing plan falls short of action needed to address climate change

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, on the other hand, has been openly and actively supportive of the new Trudeau government’s pledge to address climate change, but is saying that the plan tabled this October 3rd falls pathetically short of what Canada needs to do to address what is, in the view of scientists around the world, the most serious environmental threat facing life on this planet in this century.

Here is a brief statement May and her party’s deputy leader Daniel Green released this October 3rd on the plan Trudeau tabled.)

Ottawa, Ontario – The Green Party of Canada released the following statement in response to a national carbon pricing plan: Continue reading

Week-Long Mental Health Awareness Campaign Enters Fourth Year At Niagara College

News from Niagara College

Posted October 3rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – The Niagara College Student Administrative Council (NCSAC), in partnership with the College Student Alliance (CSA),  is proud to bring the Yellow Umbrella Project (YUP) back to the halls of Niagara College.

niagara-college-mental-storycsa-yup-fb-rev2-1x

Now in its fourth consecutive year, the YUP campaign will continue to bring attention to mental health in post-secondary institutions across Ontario. Niagara College and the NCSAC have been at the forefront of institutions to embrace the campaign. Continue reading

Liquid Nuclear Waste Convoys A Threat to the Waters of the Great Lakes

Convoys Likely To Use Canada/U.S. Border Crossings in Greater Niagara Region

“Such high-level radioactive liquid has never before been transported over public roads anywhere in North America.”

A Message of Concern from the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility – a Coalition that includes the National Council of Women of Canada and its Environment Convenor from Niagara, Ontario, Gracia Janes

Posted October 3rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Over two dozen non-governmental organizations from Canada and the United States are asking Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and President Barack Obama to postpone or cancel an unprecedented series of shipments of highly radioactive liquid waste from Ontario to South Carolina along public roads and over bridges crossing the waters of the Great Lakes.

Push continues to keep truckloads with deadly concentrations of liquid radioactive waste from crossing Niagara border bridges

Push continues to keep truckloads with deadly concentrations of liquid radioactive waste from crossing Niagara border bridges

The groups are demanding that an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) be produced, published and circulated, to allow for scrutiny from other government departments and the public in both countries. In addition, the groups are insisting that proper notification be disseminated through the Great Lakes Executive Committee (GLEC) to federal agencies, state and provincial governments, tribal governments, First Nations, Métis, municipal governments, watershed management agencies, and local public agencies, as required under the terms of the 2012 Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (GLWQA).

The Great Lakes Commission and International Joint Commission are meeting in Toronto this week.

“There is enough time for the governments to fulfill their duties under the Great Lakes 2012 Agreement and to respond to the demands of Sierra Club and dozens of other environmental groups to prepare and circulate an independent and meaningful Environmental Impact Statement that considers alternatives to this risky proposal,” said Christine Elwell, Green Energy Campaign, Sierra Club Canada Foundation.  Continue reading

Indigenous Culture To Be Recognized At Brock University

News from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario

Posted October 3rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Brock University Chancellor Shirley Cheechoo will be on campus (in St. Catharines, Ontario) this Tuesday, October 4th for two significant events that will further define the University’s soul and culture.

The Healing Garden to be officially opened at Brock University this October 4th.

The Healing Garden to be officially opened at Brock University this October 4th.

At 10 a.m. this Tuesday, October 4th, a special ritual will officially open the Healing Garden that was completed this summer in the planted space on the north side of the Cairns Family Health and Bioscience Research Complex.

Tuesday’s event comes almost exactly a year after Cheechoo helped plant the symbolic white pine tree that is now in the centre of the Healing Garden. Continue reading

Niagara Health System Makes New Multi-Day Parking Passes Available For Niagara Falls, St. Catharines, Welland Hospital Sites

News form the Niagara Health System

Posted September 30th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

(A Brief Foreword Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug DraperWhile NAL is posting this media release from the NHS for our readers’ information, I want stress that editorial, Niagara At Large is opposed to any parking charges at publicly funded hospital.

It is also important to note that the Niagara Health System is not the only body operating hospitals in Ontario and the rest of Canada that uses parking fees as another way to make up for the fact that it is not receiving enough money from the provincial or federal government to cover the operating costs of hospitals.imagesrpqvkci3

We, as citizens, also have to remember that many of us have pressed governments for years to reduce progressing taxes like those on income, and that reduces the amount of revenue they take in to pay for health care, education and other services.

Then, to make up for the revenue losses, public bodies come in with user fees for parking and other services, only to have many of the same people who demanded tax cuts complaining about those.

In other words, as much as we continue to have our issues here with the Niagara Health System, this is not a black and white issue, and there is more than one party to point the finger at.)

Niagara, Ontario – Beginning this Friday, September 30th,, our patients and visitors will notice we’ve made some additions to the parking options in the gated lots at our Niagara Falls, St. Catharines and Welland sites.

Niagara Health System's super hospital in the north Niagara community of St. Catharines

The Niagara Health System’s super hospital in the Niagara, Ontario municipality  of St. Catharines. File photo by Doug Draper

In line with the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care’s new directive, we’ve now added multi-day H PASS parking packages that offer discounted daily rates to frequent visitors. The H PASS is a preloaded card available for 5, 10 or 30 uses and is valid for one year from the date of activation. Continue reading

Native Memorial To Be Unveiled On Queenston Heights In Niagara, Ontario

Come Celebrate The Unveiling Of This Long Overdue Memorial This Sunday, October 2nd  At 2 P.M

An Invite from Ontario’s Niagara Parks Commission

Posted September 30th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara-On-The-Lake, Ontario — After more than two hundred years the significant sacrifices and contributions made by First Nations during the War of 1812 will be permanently recognized.

Landscape of Nations: The Six Nations and Native Allies Commemorative Memorial, a public artwork of deep meaning, exquisite beauty, and power will be unveiled on the historic battlefield in Queenston Heights Park on Sunday, October 2, 2016 at 2:00 p.m.

landscape-1024x410

The memorial also recognizes the historic ceremony of peace and reconciliation held in Niagara on August 31 and September 1, 1815 that restored peace among the Native nations who fought on opposing sides. Continue reading

Buffalo Jazz Collective Inaugural Concert Series At The Buffalo History Museum – “Jazz on 2nd Sundays”

Beginning October, Second Sunday Concert Series Celebrating The Rich Jazz Heritage Of Western New York

An Invite  from the Buffalo History Museum

Posted September 30th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

What: The Buffalo Jazz Collective (BJC), the premier not-for-profit jazz organization in Western New York launches their inaugural concert series “Jazz on 2nd Sundays” this fall at The Buffalo History Museum (TBHM).

The Buffalo History Museum, overlooking the ponds of Delaware Park in Buffalo, New York

The Buffalo History Museum, overlooking the ponds of Delaware Park in Buffalo, New York

Beginning in October, concerts will be held on the second Sunday of each month at 2:30 pm with pre-concert talks at 2 pm.

Please visit www.buffalojazzcollective.com for complete details and ticket information.

“Jazz on 2nd Sundays” includes performances by Buffalo jazz legends and special guests such as George Caldwell, Bobby Militello, Don Menza, and Sam Noto. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Municipality Extends Waivers For Infrastructure Charges To Developers

Port Colborne’s City Council Votes To Extend Development Charge Waivers

A Report from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce

Posted September 30th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario –  On September 26th, Port Colborne City Council voted to extend the waivers of all development charges in the municipality for another year, after an address from the GNCC encouraging them to do so.greater-niagara-chamber-of-commerce

The city (located in the southern tier of the Niagara region) had decided to waive development charges two years ago, and the policy was up for renewal.

Citing the huge increase in the number of housing starts in the city, the attendant growth in construction jobs (which had outpaced general job growth in Port Colborne by a factor of six since the policy started), and the potential for the city to turn a housing boom into a lucrative construction boom, the GNCC advocated extending the waivers by another year. Continue reading

White Privilege Symposium At Brock U. This Friday, Sept. 30th-Saturday, Oct. 1st

Experts Will Explore Race, Privilege And Social Justice At Event Starting Friday, September 30th

 An Invite from Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario

 Posted September 29th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

 (This is the second time Niagara At Large has posted a piece on this first-of-a-kind symposium for Brock. An earlier piece on this symposium was posted earlier this month on September 7th)

White privilege knows no borders, says a world-renowned diversity scholar and founder of the White Privilege Conference.

Brock University in Niagara community of St. Catharines, Ontario

Brock University in Niagara community of St. Catharines, Ontario

Eddie Moore Jr. says that while many in Canada believe prejudice and racism are problems for the U.S., no country is immune to issues of racial inequality and injustice.

“White supremacy, white privilege and oppression is a global phenomenon,” he says. “It knows no borders.”

Moore said the way to change the status quo is to expose it, analyze it and take action.

“I really believe that some of the challenges associated with these issues are a result of not enough people naming it and examining it,” he says. Continue reading

Battle Against Waste Incinerators & For ‘Zero Waste Measures’ Continues In Niagara

By Liz Benneian, Founder, Ontario Zero Waste Coalition, Member, No Burn Niagara and Resident of Vineland

Posted on September 29th,2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Residents in Port Robinson and Allanburg nearly had a new neighbour — a toxic emission belching incinerator, fed by as many as 60 trucks a day, bringing garbage from who knows where, containing who knows what, to a site on Allanport Road.

Liz Benneian speaks for No Burn Niagara, File photo by Doug Draper

Liz Benneian speaks for No Burn Niagara, File photo by Doug Draper

That doesn’t exactly sound like a good fit for this quiet corner of Niagara that is promoting its local food, winery and tourism industries and that is advertising itself as a great community for both retirees and young families.

The good news is that citizens formed No Burn Niagara and came together, with the help of Port Robinson Proud, to successfully to oppose it.

At a Thorold City Council meeting this past September 6th, Thorold’s Council voted unanimously to rescind their support for the proponent applying for a taxpayer-funded subsidy for any energy produced. Continue reading

An NDP Government Would Create An Ontario Water Strategy – Ontario NDP Leader Horwath

A Message from the Ontario New Democratic Party

Posted September 29th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

This September 29th,  Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath held a roundtable discussion with residents in Guelph, Ontario to discuss the issue of water taking in Ontario and commit to creating a province-wide Water Strategy should the party form government in 2018.

The Horseshoe Falls at Niagara is one of the most spectacular staging areas for one of the world's largest basins of freshwater in the Great Lakes.

The Horseshoe Falls at Niagara is one of the most spectacular staging areas for one of the world’s largest basins of freshwater in the Great Lakes. File photo by Doug Draper

“Water is a public trust.  Under an NDP government, an Ontario Water Strategy will prioritize planning for water needs now and for future generations based on the public interest, and sustainable public access to water,” said Horwath following the roundtable.

An Ontario Water Strategy will be based on the principle that the public should have access to water for drinking, sanitation and food; ensuring that communities have the water needed for planned sustainable growth; the Strategy will create an inventory of water use and return across the Province and will prioritize sustainable long-term water use planning. Continue reading

Too Much Power In Ontario? Then Why Keep Pickering Nuclear Plant Running?

A Commentary by the Ontario Clean Air Alliance

Posted September 29th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Citing a surplus of power, Ontario’s Wynne government pulled the plug this past Tuesday, September 27th  on its Large Renewable Procurement (LRP) process for acquiring wind and solar power at highly competitive prices.

But what the Minister of Energy didn’t mention was that the reason we have a glut of power is the government’s insistence on keeping high-cost nuclear plants running despite plenty of better options.

Shut down the Pickering Nuclear Power plant and keep the solar panels coming.

Shut down the Pickering Nuclear Power plant and keep the solar panels coming.

The Pickering Nuclear plant is an excellent case in point. Our new factsheet shows that Pickering’s power is just not needed. Almost half of the power the station produces is exported, often at a loss. The rest can easily be replaced with lower cost water power from Quebec, energy efficiency improvements, Ontario green power or some combination of all three. This is true even if one or more of the aging Darlington reactors are shut down for re-building.

Pickering’s power it is also more costly than these other options. Just last week, Ontario Power Generation was at the Ontario Energy Board seeking a 180% increase in the price it is paid for nuclear power. Water power from Quebec and energy efficiency savings are both substantially cheaper than power from Pickering today. Meanwhile, power from renewable sources just gets cheaper and cheaper, with wind power already more economical than power from Pickering (based on the last LRP round’s prices) and solar likely to be competitive in the near future.

What our factsheet makes clear is that there is no excuse for continuing to run a 45-year-old nuclear plant surrounded by two million people beyond its design lifetime. And now OPG is applying for a license to run the station for another decade. This is not only reckless – it is economically backward because it is only going to lead to electricity bills going up and up, not down.

Please click here to sign our petition to close the Pickering Nuclear Station in 2018 when its license expires.

Please pass this message on to your friends and colleagues.

Thank you.

Angela Bischoff, Outreach Director

About the OCAA- The Ontario Clean Air Alliance is a coalition of over 90 organizations that represent more than six million Ontarians.   We led the successful campaign to phase-out Ontario’s five dirty coal-fired power plants.   We are now working to move Ontario towards a 100% renewable electricity future through an integrated combination of energy conservation and efficiency, water power imports from Quebec and cost-effective Made-in-Ontario green energy.

For more information on the Ontario Clean Air Alliance and its advocacy work for a clean environment and reasonable energy costs to consumers, click on – http://www.cleanairalliance.org/ .

JOIN THE CONVERSATION BELOWNiagara At Large encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie quote below. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

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

 

Enbridge Pipeline Hearings Planned For Hamilton Should Be Shut Down

“No new fossil fuel extraction or transportation infrastructure should be built, and governments should grant no new permits for them.” – from Oil Change International, a Washington, D.C.-based  research and advocacy organization

News from Hamilton, Ontario’s Citizens at City Hall

Posted September 29th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Hamilton, Ontario The embattled National Energy Board opens hearings in Hamilton in mid-October on an Enbridge oil pipeline proposal that runs 35 kilometres across the city’s rural area between Westover and Nebo Road.

It will face local protests aligned with a rapidly growing continent-wide movement that is challenging all projects that increase the extraction or transportation of fossil fuels.

One of many protests against Enbridge's Line 9 pipeline running through Ontario

One of many protests against Enbridge’s Line 9 pipeline running through Ontario

The Hamilton 350 Committee wants the October 18 hearings suspended until the Trudeau government’s promised reforms are put in place. That echoes the demands delivered to the Prime Minister earlier this month by fifty Canadian organizations.

And the climate-driven protest is also bolstered by a national aboriginal declaration last week, and a “spectacular” international investment shift away from fossil fuels that coincides with new evidence that any expansion of the sector will sink last year’s Paris climate agreement. Continue reading

Our water, Nestle’s $$ – Stand Up And Say NO To This Corporation Selling It!

A Call-Out from Avaaz, an international online citizens advocacy group

Posted September 29th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Dear friends,

Nestle just outbid an Ontario town for the right to purchase a local well, risking the town’s long-term water security. Let’s stop Nestle from sucking Ontario dry to line their pockets!ourwaterlogo-opt_0

The small town of Centre Wellington tried to purchase a nearby well to ensure its future water supply was secure. But Nestle beat their offer.

Now Nestle’s waiting for approval from the government to start testing water quality and quantity — so they can get to work profiting from their purchase.

Sign the petition to Premier Wynne saying to reject the permit, and tell Nestle to get their hands off our water supply! Add your name: Click to sign the petition Ontario sells millions of litres of ground water every day to companies like Nestle, at incredibly favourable rates, letting them profit from what should be a public good. Continue reading

Ontario Government Failing To Address Mental Health Crisis On University & College Campuses

Wynne Government’s Approach To Project-Based Mental Health Funding On Campuses Is Failing Ontario Students –  NDP MPP Peggy Sattler

A Message from Ontario’s New Democratic Party

Posted September 29th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Queen’s Park, Toronto – An alarming report released by the Ontario University and College Health Association confirms that there is a mental health crisis in Ontario postsecondary institutions, with 2016 survey results showing that student mental health has worsened since 2013.  Addressing the report, the President of the Association said, “lives are at stake.”imagesijice7ex

In Question Period today, London West MPP and NDP postsecondary education critic Peggy Sattler pointed out that “in my own community of London, the new 24-hour mental health crisis centre has been overwhelmed by college and university students since it opened its doors in January this year.” 

Satter called for a coordinated provincial strategy for student mental health, rather than project funding, and urged the Liberal government to “commit to moving forward immediately with a province-wide strategy for mental health services on Ontario campuses.” Continue reading

Legendary Rocker Neil Young Releases Song & Video In Support Of Native Groups Opposing Oil Pipeline

A Brief One by Doug Draper

September 28th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Canadian-born rock starNeil Young has been performing and composing protest songs going back to the  1960s in groups like Buffalo Springfield, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and on his own, right up to the last couple of years with songs that have slammed chemical and oil corporations and others for poisoning and suffocating the life-support systems of our planet.

petroleum corporation hires private cops to sick dogs on Native people attempting to stop construction of pipeline earlier this September

petroleum corporation hires private cops to sick dogs on Native people attempting to stop construction of pipeline earlier this September

Earlier this September, Neil Young released a song and video in support of Native American communities fighting to stop the Dakota Access oil pipeline in the mid-western United States – a David vs. Goliath battle being played out between Aboriginal and other peoples in the U.S. and Canada, and corporations and government determined to pipe dirty gas and oil to our east and west coasts, and south to refineries near the shores of the Gulf of Mexico.

Here are some of the lyrics to Neil Young’s new song ‘Indian Givers’, followed by the video you can click on and view. Please contact your elected representatives and do whatever else you can to fight climate change and the criminal corporations operating these tar sands and constructing these pipelines with greed in their eyes and no real regard for the future of our planet and all who depend on it for survival.

“Bring back the days when good was good Lose these imposters in our neighborhood Across our farms and through our waters All at the cost of our sons and daughters. …

Our brave sons and daughters We’re all here together fighting poison waters Standing against the evil way That’s what we have at the end of day. …

I wish somebody would share the news.”

To hear the song and view the video ‘Indian Giver’, click here –

For more of Neil Young taking musical shots that those who are poisoning the planet, check out his latest CDs – ‘The Monsanto Years’ and, most recently, ‘Earth’.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION BELOWNiagara At Large encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie quote below. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

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

 

 

 

 

Fifty Years Ago This Summer, Pop Music Took A Giant Leap Forward With Albums Like Pet Sounds & Revolver

By Doug Draper

Posted September 28th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Summer may officially be over, but that isn’t stopping the boys of summer from invading the Greater Niagara Region this last week of September.

By boys of summer, I’m talking about ‘The Beach Boys’ or what is left of them with founding member and singer Mike Love putting on the first of four shows under the Beach Boys brand this September 29th through October 1st at the Fallsview Casino in Niagara, Falls, Ontario, and the band’s legendary songwriter and singer/musician Brian Wilson performing at the University of Buffalo’s Center for the Arts this September 28th.pet-sounds-album

It is the Brian Wilson part of this late September reach back to the band’s fabled “summer days and summer nights” that I want to focus on because it is the suite of songs he wrote and is paying tribute to on this tour through our region and much of the world this year that played such a profound and last role in the evolution of pop music.

One of those Brian Wilson songs, in particular, will forever remain part of the soundtrack of my life as I will never forget the first time I heard it while sitting in the back seat of my father’s car with the radio on during a family vacation 50 years ago this summer.god_only_knows_single_cover

A bright sunlight was reflecting off the blue waters of the Potomac River as my dad was driving us to see the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. when the first symphonic chords of ‘God Only Knows’, the B side of a single that had “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” achieving Top 10 status earlier that summer.

From those first few chords to lyrics that turned so many of the “kiss me, hold me tight” lines  in other songs inside out– “I may not always love you, but long as there are stars above you, you’ll never need to doubt it, I’ll make you so sure about it. God only knows what I’d be without you …” – it was a song that, at that time in pop music, sounded radically different than almost everything else on those transistor radios that, in those days, almost everyone between the age of 13 and 30 had glued to their ears. Continue reading

Private Clinic Supreme Court Challenge in B.C.Could Threaten Public Health Care Across Canada

By Natalie Mehra, Executive Director, Ontario Health Coalition

Posted September 28th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Mariel Schoof was referred to a private clinic in B.C. for sinus surgery. She was appalled when she was charged more than $6,000. So she wrote to her provincial government to have them take action.

Ontario Health Coalition executive director & long-time citizen advocate for public health care Natalie Mehra

Ontario Health Coalition executive director & long-time citizen advocate for public health care Natalie Mehra

Like most Canadians, she expected health care to be provided without charge, paid through our public taxes. But the provincial government did nothing in response to her complaint.

Her experience touched off a set of legal challenges that could change the face of health care in Canada.

In provinces like B.C. and Quebec, recently Saskatchewan, and to a lesser extent, Ontario, private clinics have been taking over more and more from public hospitals. These private clinics sell diagnostics and surgeries as profit-seeking businesses. They make their profits from government contracts and, too often, from charging patients extra user fees for access to health care.

Concerned about other patients being denied care if they couldn’t afford to pay thousands of dollars in extra fees, Mariel Schoof and four other patients took the B.C. government to court for failure to enforce the laws that protect patients against extra-billing by private clinics. (Extra-billing is when doctors charge OHIP – or the equivalent in other provinces such as BC’s MSP – and then also charge patients on top. Continue reading

Brock U. Announces New Sexual Violence Response And Education Coordinator

Coordinator Will Assist In Implementing Sexual Violence & Harrassment Policy For University

News from Brock University in Niagara, Ontario

Posted September 28th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

St. Catharines, Ontario – Brock University’s new Sexual Violence Response and Education Coordinator, Allison Cadwallader, has been on the job for less than a month but her important work is already well underway.

Allison Cadwallader, Sexual Violence Response & Education Coordinator at Brock University. Photo courtesy of Brock U.

Allison Cadwallader, Sexual Violence Response & Education Coordinator at Brock University. Photo courtesy of Brock U.

Cadwallader comes to Brock with experience in the area of sexual violence prevention and support to survivors of sexual violence through her various roles at the University of Windsor and the Sarnia Sexual Assault Survivors’ Centre. She started her new position at Brock on Sept. 6.

Cadwallader will provide support to Brock community members who are affected by sexual violence and she will offer education and training on sexual violence prevention and response to members of the Brock University community. Continue reading

Niagara MP Hosts Public Consultation Sessions On Climate Change, Electoral Reform

From the Constituency Office of Niagara Centre MP Vance Badawey

Posted September 28th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

The following poster, for public consultation sessions scheduled for Friday, September 30th, was circulated for publication by Niagara Liberal MP Vance Badawey.

The sessions focus on two issues that have received a great deal of national discussion and debate since the new government of Justin Trudeau was sworn in late last year.

These sessions are another opportunity for Niagara, Ontario area residents to join in the discussion.

public-consultations

JOIN THE CONVERSATION BELOWNiagara At Large encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie quote below. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

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

Now I Get It – Stupid People Love Rich People Who Don’t Pay Taxes

Thank You, Donald, For Sharing That With Us

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted September 27th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

In the weeks leading up to last year’s federal election in Canada, a few candidates and even fewer media outlets attempted to make an issue of the fact that members of super-rich in this country are flying billions of dollars to off-shore tax havens so they don’t have to do what most mortal Canadians have to do to avoid criminal charges – pay taxes.trump-money-taxes

A public broadcaster, to its credit – TV Ontario – aired a documentary a number of times before the election called “The Great Canadian Tax Dodge” – detailing how government-sponsored loopholes in the tax laws care allowing an estimated $200 billion a year to fly off to tax havens, leaving the rest of us holding the bag for covering the costs of health care and other necessary public services.

I’m watching and reading  reports about all of this high-flying tax dodging, and I’m thinking – naively or stupidly perhaps – where is the outrage? Why aren’t Canadians standing up, en masse, and demanding that this be an issue in the election, and that candidates and the parties they were running for either draw up a plan to address it or get creamed at the polls. Continue reading

Ontario NDP Leader Promises Relief For University And College Students Burdened With Debt

By Doug Draper

Posted September 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath made a stop at Brock University in St. Catharines this September 26th to meet with students about the burdening tuition fees and debt loads they are carrying these days.

While on the campus, Horwath, who was accompanied by Niagara NDP representatives Cindy Forster and Wayne Gates, pledged that if her party forms the next Ontario government, it will erase the interest students are forced to pay back on student loans they receive from the province.

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwth,, flanked by Niagara representatives Wayne Gates and Cindy Forster, and a gathering of Brock University students, announces pledge to eliminate interest from student loans if her party wins 2018 provincial election.

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwth,, flanked by Niagara representatives Wayne Gates and Cindy Forster, and a gathering of Brock University students, announces pledge to eliminate interest from student loans if her party wins 2018 provincial election.

“The government should not be making a profit off of the fact that students in Ontario need to take out laonds to afford post-secondary education,” said Horwath. “It’s just not right.” Continue reading

Look At All Of Justin’s Piggies, Living Piggy Lives

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted September 25th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

“Everywhere there’s lots of piggies, living piggy lives. You can see them out for dinner, with their piggy wives, clutching forks and knives, to eat their bacon.”    from the George Harrison song, Piggies

Who do you know in the world of everyday Canadians, who needs more than $100,000 to cover the costs of moving their families from one home to another, just a couple of hours’ drive away in the same province.

Probably no one, unless you are unfortunate enough to know someone who works in a senior position in federal government.katie-tuflord-gerald-butts-highflying-elites

And if they happen to have a job working for the prime minister of the country, it’s a free-for-all on what you can charge the taxpayer for expenses – right up to the time you get caught, of course. Then you might have to practice looking contrite while you are paying some of it back.

You know, it was just about a week ago when I was standing in a long check-out line at a local grocery store that people in the line began engaging in a discussion about how corrupt and how wasteful of our money they feel the still relatively new Liberal government of Justin Trudeau is. “They’re no better than Stephen Harper,” said one to the nodding approval of others.”

Never one to shrink from a discussion about politics, I took a stab at defending Trudeau and company. Continue reading

Goodbye, Mr. Golf

Arnold Palmer Dies At Age 87

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted September 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

The year 2016 is continuing to take a depressingly high toll when it comes to heavy weights and legends in a number of fields.

In the area of pop music, we’ve seen the loss of David Bowie, Prince, Eagles co-founder Glenn Frey, Earth, Wind & Fire bandleader Maurice White and Beatles producer George Martin, just to name a few.

Arnold Palmer, as many will remember him on those black & white television screens back in the late 1950s and early to mid 60s when he dominated as a player

Arnold Palmer, as many will remember him on those black & white television screens back in the late 1950s and early to mid 60s when he dominated as a player

We’ve lost towering voices for peace and human rights like Elie Wiesel and Ursula Franklin, beloved comedian and actor Gene Wilder and one of the most brilliant and daring play writes of the past 50 years, Edward Albee.

In the world of sports, we’ve lost Muhammid Ali, whose heroism as a person all but eclipsed his remarkable boxing career, then we lost Mr. Hockey Gordie Howe and now, Mr. Golf (or “the King of Golf,” as many also called him) Arnold Palmer, who died this September 25th at age 87.

Arnold Palmer’s impact as a cultural icon and on the game he was one of the undisputed masters of can hardly be over-estimated. Continue reading

BLACK LIVES MATTER! – As Embers Of Hate Light Up The Night From The Fire This Time

Posted by Doug Draper, September 26th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

“If we – and now I mean the relatively conscious whites and the relatively conscious blacks, who must, like lovers, insist on, or create, the consciousness of the others – do not faulter in our duty now, we may be able, handful that we are, to end the racial nightmare, and achieve our country, and change the history of the world. If we do not now dare everything, the fulfillment of that prophecy, recreated from the Bible in song by a slave, is upon us:   God have Noah the rainbow sign, No more water, the fire next time.”

from the late American writer James Baldwin’s epic 1960s epic essay ‘The Fire Next Time’ which still stands to this day as one of the most eloquent and stirring plea for racial reconciliation ever written.
Flames light up the night in Charlotte, North Carolina following another fatal shooting of a black man in the streets.

Flames light up the night in Charlotte, North Carolina following another fatal shooting of a black man in the streets.

When ‘The Fire Next Time’ was first published in the early 1960s, Harper’s and Atlantic magainzes .took turns praising it as “a compassionate and eloquent sermon, demanding the most agonizing self-examination from anyone who reads,” and as a work that is “scorching in its candor” and “plunges to the human heart of the matter.”

Yet apparently even Baldwin’s passionate words – still very much available in numerous newer editions of his writings on racial relations for anyone who cares to read them, have not been enough to dampen down the level of racial violence documented on American streets in recent years, or the hateful rhetoric spewing from the mouth of a certain candidate who is dangerously close to being voted in as the next president of the United States.

And for those of us in Canada who believe this is mostly an American problem, we might want to remind ourselves that the kind of prejudices and intolerances we are seeing play out south of the 49th parallel are still alive in this country for millions of people who vote for politicians at the federal, provincial and municipal level who want to ban from entry or screen certain classes of immigrants for whatever their definition is of “Canadian values” or who engage in bashing members of the LBGT community or others they viewas a threat to those values.

More than 50 years after James Baldwin wrote ‘The Fire Next Time’, we still have a long way to go in the peace and tolerance department and it might not hurt both Americans and Canadians to start with a collective re-reading of that essay and national discussions on what the essay was trying to say.

In that spirt, I’ll finish here with a few more words from ‘The Fire Next Time’.

“In short,” writes Baldwin in the final pages of the essay, “we, the black and the white, deeply need each other here if we are to become a nation – if we are really, that is, to achieve our identity, our maturity, as men and women.”

charlotte-fires-riots

Find out about a new book of essays and poems inspired by James Baldin’s original essay, called ‘The Fire This Time – A New Generation Speaks About Race’, compiled by award-winning writer Jesmyn Ward by clicking onhttp://www.simonandschuster.ca/books/The-Fire-This-Time/Jesmyn-Ward/9781501126345 .

JOIN THE CONVERSATION BELOWNiagara At Large encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie quote below. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

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

 

 

– – a on …..

Niagara Economic Summit Will Bust Economic Myths

Summit To Focus On Niagara’s Job Market, Skills Gap & ‘What Makes Millennials Tick’

An Invite from the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce
Posted September 23, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Niagara, Ontario – On October 27th, Niagara’s leaders in business, government, non-profits and community will convene again for this year’s Niagara Economic Summit, hosted by the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce at White Oaks Conference Resort and Spa.

millennialsThis year, the Summit will dive into myths and misconceptions about Niagara’s economy. A range of panellists and speakers from business, government, and non-profits will bring out the truth about Niagara’s most pressing economic concerns.

The first theme to be explored is Niagara’s job market. Some say it’s a slack labour market and that it’s hard to find work here. Others believe Niagara has plenty of jobs if you know where to look, and the biggest problem is that employers can’t find good people.

Helmut Pastrick, chief economist of Central 1 Credit Union and editor of Economic Analysis of Ontario and Economic Analysis of British Columbia, will deliver a plenary address on the labour market, and then join a panel of experts that will attempt to answer this burning question.

The Summit will also dive into the question of the skills gap, aiming to establish whether it’s real, and if so, what its extent and nature are. A panel of experts from diverse backgrounds including recruiting agencies, major HR departments, trades education and organized labour will join plenary speaker David Tsubouchi, President of the Ontario College of Trades, on this subject.

Finally, the subject of the millennial generation will be addressed. Educators, entrepreneurs, and community leaders will investigate what makes the millennials tick, and how there’s good business in hiring and marketing to that generation. Brand Blvd. Vice-President Chris Sinclair will explain how his business prospered with both.

For anyone interested in Niagara’s economy and the future of business in the region, this is one event that cannot be missed. For a complete list of speakers, further information, and to register for the Summit, visit  http://www.gncc.ca/economicsummit/ .

The Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce is the champion for the Niagara business community. With almost 1,600 members representing 50,000 employees, it is the largest business organization in Niagara and the third largest Chamber in Ontario. The Chamber Accreditation Council of Canada has recognized the Greater Niagara Chamber of Commerce with its highest level of distinction.

For more information click on@GNCCadvocacy  www.greaterniagarachamber.com

Niagara At Large now encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie quote below. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

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

Ontario’s Natural Resources Minister Focusing On Wetlands, Biodiversity Strategies & Review Of Province’s Conservation Authorities Act

Now Madam Minister, It Is Also Time To Focus On Taking Action On Protecting Wetlands, Biodiversity & On Auditing A Conversation Authority Many Have Lost Trust In

A News Commentary by Doug Draper

Posted September 23rd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne unveiled a set of mandates for members of her cabinet this September 23rd, with one for her Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry, Kathryn McGarry, focusing on issues that have become a focus on quite a bit of public debate in Niagara lately.biodiversity-sign-better

Those issues include what to do about protecting wetlands and strengthening biodiversity in the province, and how Conservation Authorities should be government in the future.

All three of these issues have generated a good deal of heated discussion and debate in recent months as growing numbers of residents across Niagara have joined efforts to save hundreds of acres of forest, savannah and wetlands – located in the southwest end of Niagara Falls and known to many as Thundering Waters Forest – from being bulldozed away for urban development. Continue reading

Indigenous Peoples In Canada And U.S. Join Forces To Stop All Tar Sands Pipelines

Here’s Some Great News For Those Of Us Who Want To See Canada’s God-Awful Tar Sands Shut Down

Posted September 23th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

News from a Coalition of First Nations & Tribal Chiefs in Canadan and the United States

First Nations and Tribes Sign New Treaty Joining Forces To Stop All Tar Sands Pipelines

Montreal/VancouverFirst Nation and Tribal Chiefs gathered this September 22nd in Musqueam Territory (Vancouver) and Mohawk Territory (Montreal), to sign a new continent-wide Indigenous Treaty — the Treaty Alliance Against Tar Sands Expansion — that commits already some 50 First Nations and Tribes from all over Canada and the Northern United States to working together to stop all proposed tar sands pipeline, tanker and rail projects in their respective territorial lands and waters.

great-one-tar-sands-oklahoma-protest-2

The First Nations and Tribes are committed to stopping all five current tar sands pipeline and tanker project proposals (Kinder Morgan, Energy East, Line 3, Northern Gateway and Keystone XL) as well as tar sands rail projects such as the Chaleur Terminals Inc. export project at the Port of Belledune in New Brunswick. Continue reading

Goodbye To The Summer, Hello T0 Fall

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted September 22nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Can you believe it, it’s September 22nd and the summer of 2016 – the hottest one on record for most regions of Canada and the U.S. (unless you are a climate change denier) – is officially over.

And with it goes that (actually its been gone for about three or four weeks now) is that giant yellow duck – billed as “the world’s largest rubber duck” – in the Canalside waters of Buffalo, New York.

rubber-duck-buffalo-2016-august

Actually, I could not figure out what the huge yellow duck was doing there, with the old grain mills of Buffalo looming in the background but like numerous others, I had to stop and take a picture of it and here is my dumb excuse to use it here – as passing memory of a summer dominated by a nut-bar billionaire, yelling about building a wall and banning Muslims while sporting a comb over just as yellow as that duck.

So goodbye to Donald Duck and hello to pumpkin patches in the Short Hills of Niagara, and here is bidding us all  a warm and peaceful Fall season.

Pumpkins in the Shorthills of Niagara, Ontario. File photo by Doug Draper

Pumpkins in the Shorthills of Niagara, Ontario. File photo by Doug Draper

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

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

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

 

 

 

 

Wake Up People, Before All Of What’s Left Of Our Access To Quality Public Health Care Is Gone!

A Comment from Linda McKellar, a retired health care worker and Niagara,Ontario resident living in the Town of Fort Erie

Posted September 22nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

This past Tuesday, September 20th, I had occasion to go to the “marvellous” (sarcasm) new St Catharines hospital from Fort Erie for the first time.

A sunny day, late morning, not rush hour, no accidents, some construction, but it took almost an hour. Lots of traffic on the adjacent streets and numerous stoplights to go through. ER wait time was listed as four hours, which I realize is inconvenient but not dastardly for non urgent issues.

The Grim Reaper in this 2010 rally to save the Fort Erie Hospital ultimately got his way. That hospital is now a shell of what it was a decade ago. File photo by Doug Draper

The Grim Reaper in this 2010 rally to save the Fort Erie Hospital ultimately got his way. That hospital is now a shell of what it was a decade ago. File photo by Doug Draper

I had to wait for someone to leave to find a parking space costing $8. (Even staff pay for parking. Imagine demanding GM employees pay for parking so they could go to work!).

Meanwhile, I’m SO glad I wasn’t sick myself or having a major acute incident of any type. Lovely lobby but who cares? If I want a lovely lobby I can go to a Hilton or the Savoy. Also interesting that it is adjacent to a rail line carrying who knows what? The bed space is less than in the hospitals it replaced.

Meanwhile, Fort Erie (the one-time hospital there) is reduced to a clinic and palliative care (where people are sent to die, often from other communities inaccessible to their elderly loved ones) and Port Colborne is reduced to a clinic. Even a lot of equipment acquired through local donations to the auxiliaries were pilfered for other sites.

Next will be Welland. Continue reading

Candlelight Vigil Set In St. Catharines For Abused Animals

From Niagara Action For Animals and Brock Students for Animal Liberal

Posted September 22nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

animal-vigil-poster

For a related post on the reasons for this vigil click on https://voiceofniagara.wordpress.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=21245&action=edit .

Niagara At Large now encourages you to join the conversation by sharing your views on this post in the space following the Bernie quote below. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

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

 

Residents Living Near Peace Bridge Don’t Find Air Quality Results “Assuring”

A Message from Peter Joe Certo for the Columbus Park Association, a neighbourhood group in Buffalo, New York

Posted September 22nd, 2016 on Niagara At Large

A Brief Foreword Note from NAL publisher Doug DraperRegular NAL readers may note that this is the third post in as many days on concerns over air pollution from traffic bottlenecks at the Peace Bridge crossing between Fort Erie, Ontario and Buffalo, New York.

peace-bridge-bestIf three posts in a row seems like overkill to some, I would repeat a few points I have made in the past.

Concerns over the health impacts of breathing poisons spewing from the exhaust pipes of cars and trucks gearing up and down while waiting for clearance at the Peace Bridge crossing have been longstanding for people living and working in neighbourhoods near the bridge. And the contamination in question has no respect for the border and can be just as harmful to people on both sides.

A further point we may want to consider is the responsibility we collectively have to address the concerns of those who are most impacted by a car and truck dependent world of our own making.

In that spirit, Niagara At Large is posting below a message we have received from residents living on the Buffalo side of the Peace Bridge in response to a front-page story published in the September 21st edition of The Buffalo News and to a media release that was circulated by he New York State Department of Environmental Conservation on air quality tests conducted in the vicinity of the bridge.

That DEC release was posted on Niagara At Large this September 21st and we believe it is only fair and right to post the following response to it and The Buffalo News story.

From the Columbus Park Association –

We wish to point out, on behalf of the Peace Bridge neighborhood–and specifically the Columbus Park Association (on the Buffalo, New York side of the border —we most certainly were not “collaborators” on the DEC (New York State Department of Environmental Conservation air monitoring) project. Continue reading

Happy 82nd Birthday To Leonard Cohen – Our Canadian Treasure

A Brief One from Doug Draper

Posted September 21st, 2016 on Niagara At Large

May seem hard to believe for any of us who can remember when he first emerged on the scene as a poet/songwriter/singer out of Montreal, Quebec with a captivating album of lyric rich songs like Suzanne, Sisters of Mercy and So Long, Mariane.

Leonard Cohen as some of us remember him when he first arrived on the scene in the 1960s.

Leonard Cohen as some of us remember him when he first arrived on the scene in the 1960s.

Yes, it may seem hard to believe, but this September 21st is (was)Leonard Cohen’s 82nd birthday. And fortunately, Canada’s poet of darkness and a treasure of an artist we share with the world, is still writing and recording songs.

His latest song, released on this birthday and played a couple of times in celebration to him on CBC radio, is called ‘You Want It Darker’ and is everything you want want from someone who can take us on a long day’s journey into night like practically no one else on the planet.

Happy Birthday Leonard, and here are the complete lyrics of  You Want It Darker – Continue reading