Year: 2021

  • Meet The Parties: Conservative Party of Canada

    It’s time to meet the Conservative Party of Canada
    Leader: Erin O’Toole.  O’Toole has served as Member of Parliament since 2012.  He won the party’s leadership in 2020.  If the Conservatives win, it will be his first term as Prime Minister.
    Local candidate: Nadeem Akhbar.
    Contact info: website  Twitter:  Facebook
    Recent announcements

    • Rebuild Main St: Conservatives propose a plan to give tax 25% credit up to $100,000 on personal investments into small businesses.
    • EI benefits: A pledge from the Conservatives to expand EI benefits for seriously ill workers from 26 to 52 weeks.
    • Affordability: A six point plan that would increase penalties on price fixing to $100 million (currently at $24 million), and ordering the Competition Bureau to investigate bank fees

    For more on the Conservative Party of Canada visit their website
    Lingering Questions:

    1. Is O’Toole the guy to minimize (at the least) the social right of the party?
    2. 10 years to pay off an over $300 million deficit is a little optimistic.  How do they propose to do that when the pandemic is still with us?

    Local Coverage:
    Conservative Nadeem Akbar Opens Campaign Office – Milton Reporter
    Voting day is September 20, 2021.  For all the information on how to vote visit Elections Canada,
     

  • Trudeau says he won’t back down after protesters hurl death threats, racist and sexist slurs

    For the second time in a week, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has had a campaign event disrupted by protesters shouting obscenities, uttering death threats against the prime minister and hurling racist and misogynist insults at people of colour and women in his protective detail.
    While making a stump speech to promote his party’s climate change policies in Cambridge, Ont., Sunday morning, the Liberals were forced to delay Trudeau’s appearance for an hour because of the disruptions.
    Signs brandished by angry protesters displayed slogans such as Who benefits from the lock down? and the Liberals ruined the country, with one protester shouting through a megaphone decked out with the name; InfoWars, a U.S.-based far-right conspiracy theory website.
    When the event did start, it was disrupted by honking horns and foul and threatening language hurled from a crowd of people — almost all of whom were unmasked and were not maintaining physical distance from one another.
    Asked if he felt he could continue to hold campaign events safely, Trudeau said his message on climate change and vaccination was not one he would walk away from.
    No, I’m not going to back down on a message that Canadians know is the right path forward, and that’s why Canadians need to choose to move Canada forward in this pivotal time, Trudeau said.
    CBC News was present when a protester shouted a racist remark at a police officer of colour on Trudeau’s protective detail, while another protester was heard making misogynist remarks to a female police officer on the detail.
    First of all, I want to thank the police officers, local and national, who do an amazing job in both keeping people safe and allowing Canadians to express themselves, Trudeau said. That is what an election is all about. We may disagree with them, and of course, we will always condemn violence and hatred.
    This needs to make us ever more convinced of the importance of the choice in this election. Do we fall into division and hatred and racism and violence, or do we say no.
    On Sunday, the Conservative Party tweeted  The threatening images and behaviour are disgusting. This needs to stop immediately. Canada is better than this.
    Trudeau has been dogged by protesters at many of his campaign events. He was forced to cancel a campaign event in Bolton, Ont., Friday night when hundreds of angry protesters showed up at the Liberals’ outdoor rally.
    Among the protesters of Friday were anti-vaccination activists who shouted vulgarities at Liberal volunteers and carried anti-Trudeau signs and flags scrawled with obscenities. The crowd was frustrated with Trudeau’s push to make vaccines mandatory in some settings and his support for provincial vaccine passports to restrict entry into some non-essential businesses.
    Video footage from the event shows a handful of people with blue Conservative-branded T-shirts among the unmasked crowd assembled for the protest, which also included a strong contingent of people angry over the federal government’s ban on flavours in smoking cessation devices, such as e-cigarettes.

    Conservatives ban protesters from volunteering

    In response to the behaviour, Conservative candidate Kyle Seeback said that the volunteers from his campaign who attended the protest are no longer welcome on his campaign team.
    My campaign has zero-tolerance for obscenities or threatening behaviour against any candidate, Seeback said.
    Speaking at an event in Fredericton on Saturday, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole said he is trying to run a positive campaign, and he strongly condemns any form of harassment on the campaign trail.
    We should be having a healthy and respectful debate. We have no time for people who bring negativity to campaigning. I urge everyone to put the country and our democracy first — let’s have a positive debate of ideas on the future. That’s my approach, and that’s my expectation for every single member of our team, he said.
    I expect professionalism, I expect respect. I respect my opponents.
    Conservative campaign spokesperson Cory Hann said party officials spoke with Gallant Sunday about the views she expressed in the video and that she removed them as a result of that conversation. Gallant posted the tweet after the party asked her to publicly confirm her support for the party platform, he said.
    Asked about Gallant earlier Sunday, Trudeau said it was extremely disappointing to see elected politicians peddle in conspiracy theories.
    It’s not enough for leaders like Erin O’Toole to simply distance themselves from those comments. He has to flat-out condemn them and then correct the record, he said.
    Drawing a link to the aggressive protests outside of his event, Trudeau said the Conservative leader can help people shouting out here today understand they are misinformed on matters such as climate change and vaccines.
    We know they don’t listen to me. Perhaps they will listen to Erin O’Toole, he said. That’s the choice that Erin O’Toole needs to make right now around Cheryl Gallant and all of these conspiracy theories being peddled.
    Peter Zimonjic Ryan Maloney  · CBC News ·with files from from the CBC’s Janyce McGregor and Travis Dhanraj

  • Halton CMOH Recommends COVID-19 workplace vaccination policy

    By: Laura Steiner
    Halton Region is asking local employers implement a workplace COVID-19 vaccination policy.  The recommendation comes from the Medical Officer of Health (MOH) Dr. Hamidah Meghani.
    “The rapid and continuing spread of the Delta variant of concern- with increased transmissibility and disease severity- means that we must fully engage to protect our community and our health capacity.  Getting fully vaccinated for COVID-19 is the best defense against the virus, including the Delta variant,” Meghani said.  The region provides business resources on their website
    The Region would also like to remind employers they can also serve as a resource for:

    • Vaccine information from credible sources in multiple languages
    • Encouraging  ‘vaccine champions’ to have conversations with their fellow workers
    • Reminding workers they are eligible for three paid sick days if they experience side effects from the vaccine
    • Providing transportation to and from vaccine appointments

    Meghani believes placing the emphasis on the employers is one of the best ways to protect workers who work in a location where they have close contact with other workers or the public.  Vaccinations should be used in combination with other public health measures such as physical distancing, and wearing a mask.
    Halton Region COVID-19 vaccine clinic September hours
    Over 80% of Halton residents have two doses of the vaccine. First and second dose of the vaccines are available in over 100 area pharmacies as well as primary care officers to anyone born in 2009 or earlier.
    The Region’s September clinic hours:

    • As of September 1, clinics at Compass Point Bible Church in Burlington, Gellert Community Centre in Halton Hills, as well St. Vlodymyr Cultural Centre
    • September 2: FirstOntario Arts Center will begin offering walk-in appointments
    • September 3: YMCA in Oakville will begin offering walk-in appointments

    Appointments can be booked through the Region’s official website
    The province of Ontario is set to announce a vaccine passport for residents early next week. Halton Region’s would prefer a broader “COVID certificate” which would include recent test results much like they do in the European Union.
    Ontario today recorded an increase of 835 cases. 675 of those are in people who aren’t fully vaccinated, or whose vaccine status is classified as unknown.  160 are in fully vaccinated individuals.
    Halton recorded an increase of 18 cases as of Friday.  Three of those are from Milton.  Seven cases are confirmed in  Intensive Care Unit of Halton hospitals.  The Region of Halton doesn’t update its dashboard on weekends.

  • Ryerson University to Change Its name

    By: Morgan Sharp, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Canada’s National Observer
    Ryerson University is no more.
    The institution in downtown Toronto named after a man increasingly tarnished by his role in creating Canada’s residential school system will find itself a new name, possibly in time for the 2022 academic year.
    That is one of 22 steps its board of directors agreed to take on Thursday, part of a reckoning with the country’s colonial past that has also seen the city agree to rename Dundas Street, which divides parts of the downtown campus.
    “We recognize that a name change alone will not erase the systemic barriers and inequities that Indigenous and Black community members face within the institution,” Mash Koh Wee Kah Pooh Win (Standing Strong) Task Force co-chairs elder Joanne Dallaire and Catherine Ellis wrote in their report, which followed 10 months of community engagement, research, and reflection.
    “The university must also actively address the legacy of Egerton Ryerson and other colonial figures through meaningful financial, educational, and cultural initiatives, as well as principles and practices for commemoration that uphold our institutional values,” it said.
    Mohamed Lachemi, the university’s president and vice-chancellor, said it would heed the call to develop an action plan by Jan. 31, 2022, and the rest of the report’s recommendations in an “equitable, transparent, inclusive and timely manner.”
    The residential school system, deemed a cultural genocide by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, forcibly removed Indigenous children from their families and sent them to schools run by Christian churches where they were often punished for speaking their own language. Many students also experienced physical, sexual and psychological abuse at the hands of school staff or other students.
    The contention around keeping the name grew during the consultation period when several First Nations discovered the remains of hundreds of children buried on or near former residential schools.
    Egerton Ryerson is recognized as a key influence in the design of the system, with his expert advice sought in the mid-1800s and referenced after his death 50 years later in an official publication.
    “For as long as the university is named after Egerton Ryerson, our narrative will be centred on his legacy,” the report said, noting the institution has had four names since its founding in 1948 when the Ryerson name was thought to deliver credibility.
    A statue of the man was felled earlier this summer and its head removed and dipped in Lake Ontario, before it later showed up on a pike at 1492 Land Back Lane in Caledonia, Ont.

  • Trudeau promises $1B to help provinces pay for vaccine passports

    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau today announced a billion-dollar fund to help provinces create their own vaccine passports — credentials people vaccinated against COVID-19 can show to businesses to make everyday activities safer.
    Speaking to reporters at a campaign stop in Mississauga, Ont., Trudeau said he wants to see Canadians moving again in a safe and responsible way. He said the best way to do that is to create a tool the vaccinated can use to prove they’ve had their shots before entering a store, arena or office.
    If a province requires that everyone at a local restaurant, gym or other non-essential business location be fully vaccinated and show proof of vaccination, Trudeau said, Ottawa would pay for the development and the rollout of that program.
    It keeps people safe. It encourages everyone to do the right thing. It keeps our businesses open and it keeps our economy rebuilding, he said.
    Some provinces, notably B.C. and Quebec, already have created smartphone-based vaccine passports that people can use to prove their COVID-19 immunization status in commercial or public spaces — everything from bars and restaurants to bowling alleys and hockey rinks — where provincial law will soon require proof of a shot before entry. Manitoba is also expected to make its passport system mandatory for some nonessential businesses  in the coming weeks.
    ut in two of the country’s largest provinces — Alberta and Ontario — provincial leaders have refused to implement such a system.
    Ontario Premier Doug Ford has said a vaccine passport would lead to a split society and claims the paper receipts people receive at vaccine clinics are sufficient proof of status. In the absence of a provincewide vaccine mandate for some venues in Ontario, private businesses and universities have stepped into the void by creating their own vaccine verification programs.
    In Alberta — where COVID-19 case numbers are high and vaccination numbers comparatively low — government officials have been insisting that a proof-of-vaccination program is a non-starter.
    The federal government has long promised its own vaccine passport-style program for international travel but Canadians are still waiting.
    At a press conference before the election, the government said work is underway on a smartphone app  and it could be available sometime this fall. Other countries  have had this sort of regime in place for months. Ottawa has explained away the delay by pointing to the provinces, which control vaccination records.
    Trudeau has tried to present himself as a vaccine champion on the campaign trail, routinely pillorying his main opponent, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole, for opposing vaccine mandates for federal public servants and the travelling public. O’Toole also hasn’t forced his candidates to get vaccinated, something Trudeau has said puts voters at risk.
    O’Toole ducked questions Friday about whether a federal government led by him would make a similar financial commitment to help provinces stand up a vaccine passport system. He said the development of these programs should be left to the other jurisdictions to figure out.
    We will respect the provinces and their decisions with respect to health measures and balancing the needs of keeping people safe and keeping the economy going. We will support and respect what the provinces decide to do, O’Toole said.
    We’re in the midst of a fourth wave election because Mr. Trudeau has put his own political interests ahead of fighting the fourth wave together. I will partner with the provinces to fight COVID-19.
    Trudeau talked up his government’s vaccine procurement record Friday, reminding voters that Canada is among the top countries in the world for COVID-19 vaccinations. While the immunization campaign got off to a slow start in the early months of this year, nearly 84 per cent of all eligible Canadians have now had at least one dose.
    Trudeau said a re-elected Liberal government would aggressively procure enough vaccines to ensure all Canadians have access to free COVID-19 booster shots and second-generation vaccines as needed, across all provinces and territories.
    He also said a government led by him would invest more money into studying the long-term health impacts of COVID-19, including the effects of ‘long-COVID’ on groups, including vulnerable populations and children.
    We can’t afford to stop now and we certainly can’t afford a party that would roll back our progress. That’s why this election matters so much, Trudeau said.
    John Paul Tasker · CBC News
     
  • Meet The Party: Liberal Party of Canada

    By: Laura Steiner
    Welcome to  Meet the Parties.  First up is the incumbent Liberals.
    Party: Liberal Party of Canada
    Leader: Justin Trudeau.  Trudeau is running for his third term as Prime Minister as Liberal Leader.
    Milton candidate: Adam van Koeverden, who is trying for his second term as Member of Parliament.
    Candidate contact info:
    Website
    Twitter
    Facebook
    Recent announcements:

    • Housing: Promising to allow younger homeowners under 40 to save up to $30,000 tax free for a new home, and a Homebuyers’ Bill of Rights
    • Seniors: $9 billion commitment that will see the Guaranteed Income Supplement increased by $500 for single seniors, and $750 for couples
    • Healthcare: A $10 billion investment to be used on the elimination of waitlists ($6 billion is in the 2021 budget).  $3 billion over four years to hire 7,500 health practitioners (Nurses, Doctors, and nurse practitioners, as well as the expansion of virtual medicine.

    For more information on these, and much more visit the Liberal website
    Lingering questions:

    1. Will the Liberals be able to get past lingering controversies including sexual misconduct in the military which has seen the resignation of one Chief of Staff, while a second is on leave?
    2. What’s the plan to get out of the COVID-19 spending?
    3. How will the crisis in Afghanistan affect the campaign?
    4. What about Indigenous issues?

    Local coverage:
    Campaign Office opening
    Transit Announcement with  Transportation Minister: Omar Alghabara 
    Voting day is September 20, 2021. Visit Elections Canada for more information on where, and how to vote .

  • ‘My nation is burning’: Halifax community urge Canada to do more for Afghanistan

    By: Nebal Snan, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Chronicle Herald
    With less than one week left until the evacuation deadline set by the Taliban, some Afghans in Halifax are calling on Canada to do more to help those left behind, especially women and marginalized ethnic groups.
    Countries across the world have been scrambling to get people out of Afghanistan after the country was overtaken by the Taliban in mid-August. Priority has been given in most cases to foreign nationals and Afghans who previously worked with foreign governments. Canada has airlifted 2,700 people to safety so far.
    About 50 people gathered in the Peace and Friendship Park in downtown Halifax Wednesday afternoon to show solidarity and raise awareness of the dire situation and human rights violations in Afghanistan.
    The crowd broke into chants demanding freedom for the country as they marched to Province House and City Hall.
    “It’s very hard, you know, being on this side of the world. What I can do is limited,” said Roya Alimadad, one of the organizers and a nursing student in Halifax.
    But educating those around her about what’s happening in Afghanistan helps her feel that she’s making a difference, she said.
    Minorities, women targeted by Taliban
    While she is safe in Halifax, her family in Kabul and Herat are in hiding. Alimadad and her family belong to the Hazara community, one of Afghanistan’s minority ethnic groups. The Hazara practise Shia Islam and have faced historical persecution and discrimination in the country.
    Amnesty International said in a report released last week that the Taliban killed and tortured several Hazara men in Ghanzi province in early July. Amnesty’s secretary general Agnès Callamard said the “targeted killings are proof that ethnic and religious minorities remain at particular risk under Taliban rule in Afghanistan.”
    Alimadad said Hazaras have also been blocked from reaching the airport.
    “Now that (the Taliban) have full control, Hazaras are very scared of what the Taliban is going to do to them.”
    Alimadad said she hoped Wednesday’s protest will urge the government to bring more refugees, especially woman and children. Canada had vowed to resettle 20,000 Afghans in mid-August.
    ‘A dark night’
    Mujeeb Ur Rehman, who was at the protest, has been trying to reach his friends in Afghanistan for days but his attempts so far have failed.
    Between worrying they might have gone missing and hoping they are in hiding, Ur Rehman’s anxiety has reached new heights.
    While medication and rest sometimes help him relax, nothing can soothe the pain he feels as he watches 20 years of rebuilding and reform in Afghanistan turn to nothing.
    “I feel burning, burning because my country is burning, my nation is burning,” he said in an interview Wednesday.
    “It’s like a dark night. No one knows what happened and what will happen tomorrow.”
    While Ur Rehman supports and appreciates the international community’s efforts to evacuate Afghans, he said relocating people is not the only option.
    “We request that Canada, the U.S. and other countries to pressurize the Taliban and their main supporters … to change their policies,” he said.
    “Don’t kill people. Let women to continue their education, let women work … allow journalists freedom of speech, freedom of religion.”
    Before coming to Canada, Ur Rehman was a correspondent for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) in Pakistan. He said his reporting on terror, war, and the relationship between the Taliban and Pakistan put his life in danger multiple times, eventually leaving him no choice but to immigrate with his family to Nova Scotia in 2013.
    Life in Canada was a challenge for Ur Rehman as he couldn’t find a job in his field. But he is happy to see his daughters get a good education, a right they couldn’t have had if they were now in Afghanistan.
    “It was not easy to adjust myself here, but if you have a family, if you have children, you need to sacrifice yourself for their future.”

  • ‘Several explosions’ outside Kabul airport, French president says

    French President Emmanuel Macron said “the situation has seriously deteriorated” near Kabul’s airport after “several explosions happened in the last hours.” The Pentagon had also confirmed the explosions and said there were a number of casualties.
    Speaking at a news conference during a visit to Dublin, Ireland, Macron said we are facing an extremely tense situation that makes us co-ordinate obviously with our American allies and call for the utmost caution in a context we don’t control. He said France will seek to protect and evacuate French nationals, people from allied countries and Afghans as long as the conditions will be met at the airport.
    Macron said he did not have more details about the circumstances of the explosions.
    The French president’s update came after the Pentagon confirmed that there was an explosion Thursday outside Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport, where thousands of people have flocked as they try to flee the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.
    Western nations had warned earlier in the day of a possible attack at the airport in the waning days of a massive airlift. Suspicion for any attack targeting the crowds would likely fall on the Islamic State group and not the Taliban, who have been deployed at the airport’s gates trying to control the mass of people.
    Adam Khan, an Afghan waiting outside the airport, said the explosion went off in a crowd of people waiting to enter. Khan, who said he was standing about 30 metres away from the blast, said several people appeared to have been killed or wounded, including some who lost body parts.
    An explosion went off Thursday outside the Kabul airport, where thousands of people have gathered to try to flee the country in a Western airlift since the Taliban seized power earlier this month. The Pentagon confirmed the blast, but there was no immediate word on casualties.
    Western nations had warned of a possible attack in the waning days of the massive evacuation efforts, and several countries urged people to avoid the airport, where an official said there was a threat of a suicide bombing.
    But just days — or even hours for some nations — before the evacuation effort ends, few appeared to have heeded the call.
    Over the last week, the airport has been the scene of some of the most searing images of the chaotic end of America’s longest war and the Taliban’s takeover, as flight after flight took off carrying those who fear a return to the militants’ brutal rule.
    Already, some countries have ended their evacuations and begun to withdraw their soldiers and diplomats, signalling the beginning of the end of one of history’s largest airlifts. The Taliban have so far honoured a pledge not to attack Western forces during the evacuation, but insist that foreign troops must be out by America’s self-imposed deadline of Aug. 31.
    Overnight, warnings emerged from Western capitals about a threat from Afghanistan’s Islamic State group affiliate, which likely has seen its ranks boosted by the Taliban’s freeing of prisoners during their blitz across the country.
    The acting U.S. ambassador to Kabul, Ross Wilson, said the security threat at the Kabul airport overnight was clearly regarded as credible, as imminent, as compelling. But in an interview with ABC News Thursday, he would not give details and did not say whether the threat remained.
    Shortly after, the blast was reported.

    Late Wednesday, the U.S. Embassy warned citizens at three airport gates to leave immediately due to an unspecified security threat. Australia, Britain and New Zealand also advised their citizens Thursday not to go to the airport, with Australia’s foreign minister saying there was a very high threat of a terrorist attack.
    Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid earlier denied that any attack was imminent.
    Earlier Thursday, the Taliban sprayed a water cannon at those gathered at one airport gate to try to drive the crowd away, as someone launched tear gas canisters elsewhere. While some fled, others just sat on the ground, covered their faces and waited in the noxious fumes.

    ‘We have no chance except escaping’

    Nadia Sadat, a 27-year-old Afghan, carried her two-year-old daughter with her outside the airport. She and her husband, who had worked with coalition forces, missed a call from a number they believed was the U.S. State Department and were trying to get into the airport without any luck. Her husband had pressed ahead in the crowd to try to get them inside.
    We have to find a way to evacuate because our lives are in danger, Sadat said. My husband received several threatening messages from unknown sources. We have no chance except escaping.
    Gunshots later echoed in the area as Sadat waited. There is anarchy because of immense crowds, she said, blaming the U.S. for the chaos.
    Aman Karimi, 50, escorted his daughter and her family to the airport, fearful the Taliban would target her because of her husband’s work with NATO.
    The Taliban have already begun seeking those who have worked with NATO, he said. They are looking for them house-by-house at night.
    Many Afghans share those fears. The hard-line Islamic group wrested back control of the country nearly 20 years after being ousted in a U.S.-led invasion following the 9/11 attacks, which al-Qaeda orchestrated while being sheltered by the group.
    Senior U.S. officials said Wednesday’s warning from the embassy was related to specific threats involving the Islamic State group and potential vehicle bombs. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss ongoing military operations.
    The Islamic State affiliate in Afghanistan grew out of disaffected Taliban members who hold an even more extreme view of Islam. The Sunni extremists have carried out a series of brutal attacks, mainly targeting Afghanistan’s Shiite Muslim minority, including a 2020 assault on a maternity hospital in Kabul in which they killed women and infants.
    The Taliban have fought against Islamic State militants in Afghanistan, but ISIS fighters were likely freed from prisons along with other inmates during the Taliban’s rapid advance. Extremists may have seized heavy weapons and equipment abandoned by Afghan troops.
    Amid the warnings and the pending American withdrawal, Canada ended its evacuations, and European nations halted or prepared to stop their own operations.
    CBC’s Ashley Burke brings you the latest  on Canada’s efforts in Afghanistan, and what officials had to say about the end of the evacuation effort:

    Taliban ‘tightened the noose,’ Canadian general says

    The reality on the ground is the perimeter of the airport is closed. The Taliban have tightened the noose, said Canadian Gen. Wayne Eyre, the country’s acting Chief of Defence Staff. It’s very, very difficult for anybody to get through at this point.
    French Prime Minister Jean Castex told RTL radio his country’s efforts would stop Friday evening. Danish Defence Minister Trine Bramsen bluntly warned: It is no longer safe to fly in or out of Kabul.
    Denmark’s last flight has already departed, and Poland and Belgium have also announced the end of their evacuations. The Dutch government said it had been told by the U.S. to leave Thursday.
    But Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby said some planes would continue to fly.
    Evacuation operations in Kabul will not be wrapping up in 36 hours. We will continue to evacuate as many people as we can until the end of the mission, he said in a tweet on Thursday, not long before the blast was reported.
    The Taliban have said they’ll allow Afghans to leave via commercial flights after the deadline next week, but it remains unclear which airlines would return to an airport controlled by the militants. Turkish presidential spokesperson Ibrahim Kalin said talks were underway between his country and the Taliban about allowing Turkish civilian experts to help run the facility.
    The Taliban have promised to return Afghanistan to security and pledged they won’t seek revenge on those who opposed them or roll back progress on human rights. But many Afghans are skeptical.
    An Afghan journalist from private broadcaster Tolo News described being beaten by Taliban. Ziar Yad said the fighters also beat his colleague and confiscated their cameras, technical equipment and a mobile phone as they tried to report on poverty in Kabul.
    The issue has been shared with Taliban leaders; however, the perpetrators have not yet been arrested, which is a serious threat to freedom of expression, Yad wrote on Twitter.
    The Associated Press

  • O’Toole says he wants more private ‘innovation’ in health care but supports ‘the system we have’

    Responding to Liberal claims that a government led by him would privatize parts of the public health care system, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole said today that he supports the current system — but wants to see more private sector « innovation » to improve outcomes.
    Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, where he is hosting a series of virtual roundtables, O’Toole said Trudeau is running a misleading campaign to convince voters that he doesn’t support a public and universal system of care.
    He said that, rather than cut health care, a Conservative government would make record high transfers to the provinces to ensure every Canadian can benefit from free, high-quality health care.
    O’Toole has promised to boost the annual growth rate of the Canada Health Transfer to at least six per cent from its current rate, which is tied to how much the economy grows in a given year, with a floor of three per cent — a $60 billion commitment over 10 years.

    ‘I trust the premiers’

    He also said he also wouldn’t stand in the way of provinces working with the private sector to make changes to how care is delivered.
    I view innovation as a good thing. I trust the premiers to do what is best for patients in their provinces. If Saskatchewan, Alberta, Ontario or Quebec want to innovate to provide better health care, I support that, O’Toole said.
    Why? Because it gives Canadians more choice. The more choices Canadians have in health care, the better.
    He said private, for-profit services could help alleviate the pressure on publicly run facilities, reduce wait times and save money.
    Critics of privatization claim it threatens to undermine the current system, where access to health care is not dictated by an individual’s ability to pay.
    O’Toole’s comment come a day after Liberal candidate Chrystia Freeland posted to Twitter a selectively edited clip of O’Toole speaking about health care. In the video, O’Toole said he would be open to more for-profit health care in Canada to help address some of the current system’s failings.
    Left out of Freeland’s edited video montage was O’Toole’s subsequent statement — that universal access to health services must be maintained. Twitter has since flagged the clip as manipulated media.
    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Tuesday the edited clip accurately reflects O’Toole’s attitude toward private health care.
    Erin O’Toole has clearly and directly said he is a long-standing believer in for-profit models of health care. Trudeau said. He needs to come clean with Canadians on what exactly he means when he says that.
    O’Toole hit back, saying that on Trudeau’s watch, the private sector’s role in health care has grown considerably.
    In Quebec, for example, the province recently signed 20 contracts with private clinics to outsource some surgeries and reduce waiting times. Radio-Canada reported in February that some 20,000 surgeries in that province have been done at private clinics already.
    Saskatchewan has outsourced some diagnostic imaging to private operators to reduce wait times for MRIs and CT scans. Under this so-called two-for-one initiative, for-profit clinics can charge patients for scans as long as they provide an equal number of scans to patients on the public waiting list.
    In a 2016 letter, former federal health minister Jane Philpott said she wanted the province to put an end to encouraging private payment for medical scans — but the practice has continued.
    Meanwhile, dozens of for-profit COVID-19 testing sites  have popped up all over the country during the pandemic, offering a service that is also available at public clinics.
    O’Toole said that, as prime minister, he would let this sort of innovation flourish but he’d draw the line at more radical reforms that would fundamentally alter the nature of the single-payer health care system.
    Health care must be free for every Canadian. No one can ever be left behind and all personal health decisions should be made by patients and their doctors, not insurance companies or anyone else, he said.

    Provinces could face penalties for private care: Trudeau

    Asked why Ottawa hasn’t done more to rein in private elements like the Saskatchewan imaging program, Trudeau said the federal government could impose financial penalties on provinces that allow for the private delivery of services by curbing how much they get each year through the Canada Health Transfer.
    We will continue to stand up for a public, universal health care system, unlike Erin O’Toole, Trudeau said.
    He said Ottawa has had discussions with Quebec about its reliance on private operators for some surgeries.
    Trudeau has promised $10 billion in new spending to clear surgical backlogs, hire 7,500 more doctors, nurses and nurse practitioners, and expand virtual options for primary care.John Paul Tasker  · CBC News

  • Milton unveils its plans for fall recreation

    By: Laura Steiner
    The Town of Milton is starting to plan for fall recreation programming.  In order to register, residents will need to create an online account through their website.
    Key dates:

    • August 26, 2021: Online viewing
    • September 1, 2021: Registration begins.  Non-residents will be able to register for programs beginning September 3, 2021
    • September 26, 2021: Programs begin

    Register for programs using this link.  Residents don’t need to log on, or create an account if you’re browsing for programs.  An questions about registering for programs, on an account please call: 905-864-4132, or contact the town via email