By: Michael Riley, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter,
Source: The Bancroft Times
St. Patrick’s Day has a lot of symbols attached to it like shamrocks, leprechauns, green clothing and eating corned beef and cabbage. Another notable part of this Irish holiday, perhaps to go with that corned beef and cabbage, is green beer. But, how did green beer become synonymous with St. Patrick’s Day in the first place? It all started down in New York with one Dr. Thomas Hayes Curtin, back in the early part of the twentieth century.
Curtin was an Irish American physician who made green beer for a St. Patrick’s Day party at the Schnerer Club of Morrisania in the Bronx in 1914. While there were reports of other green beers appearing around the same time, he is generally credited with being the first to come up with it.
While green beer today is made with a few drops of green or blue food colouring into your favourite lager, Curtin used a different method of turning his beer green 107 years ago. It was called wash blue, which is an iron powder solution embedded with a dye, which at one time was used to make white clothes that had faded bright again. Aside from the food colouring more commonly used today, some brewers have also experimented with using spirulina, a blue green alga, to colour their beers green in recent years.
Green beer actually had a very different meaning before Curtin made it into a symbol of St. Patrick’s Day, and still does within brewers’ circles. It referred to beer that was too young, or green. It still had acetaldehyde in it, giving it a bad taste because it has not yet fully fermented. In fact, this type of green beer could make people sick and no doubt not feeling very festive at all.
While it took a few decades to really catch on, by the 1950s green beer had become a popular symbol of St. Patrick’s Day, leaving the wash blue behind for the more palatable green or blue food colouring in the process. By the late 1980s it had caught on internationally, even in Ireland.
Nowadays, of course, green beer has become synonymous with St. Patrick’s Day. Millions of pints of it are consumed each year on March 17. So, raise a glass of green beer, and say this traditional Irish toast;
May the leprechauns be near you
To spread luck along your way
And may all the Irish angels
Smile upon you on St. Patrick’s Day!
Year: 2021
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History of green beer on St. Patrick’s Day
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Halton Region Prohibits Smoking, Vaping in Public Places
By: Laura Steiner
Halton Regional Council has voted to prohibit smoking and vaping in some public spaces. The bylaw came was effective as of March 15, 2021, and includes tobacco, cannabis, e-cigarettes and vaping.
“The by-law ensures we are helping protect our community from the harmful effects of second-hand smoke and vaping,” Halton Chief Medical Officer of health (CMOH) Dr. Hamidah Meghani said. The prohibition applies to following areas:- In public parks;
- within nine metres from any entrance or exit of municipally owned or leased buildings; and
- within nine metres from any entrance or exit of child care centres.
“Our top priority is the health and safety of our residents and our Public Health Inspectors will continue to educate the public about the by-law and respond to issues of no-compliance,” Regional Chair Gary Carr said.
Municipal-owned buildings include municipal offices, community centres, libraries, arenas, museum, public washrooms, recreational centres, police stations, fire halls and ambulance stations.To make a complaint about smoking or vaping in public places, email accesshalton@halton.ca or contact Halton Region Public Health by calling 311. To learn more about the by-law, visit the Halton Region Smoking and Vaping in Public Places By-Law No. 40-20 webpage on halton.ca. For additional information on where you can’t smoke or vape in Ontario, please visit ontario.ca.
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Canadian Football League and XFL in talks about potential collaboration
By: Vincenzo Morello
The Canadian Football League and the U.S. based XFL revealed on Wednesday that they are in talks about a potential partnership.
According to press releases from both leagues, CFL and XFL owners, Dany Garcia, Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson and RedBird Capital, have agreed to work together and identify opportunities for the leagues to collaborate and grow the game of football.
“Canada has an exciting game and devoted fans, and our discussion with the XFL provides a tremendous opportunity to build on that strong foundation,” CFL Commissioner Randy Ambrosie said in a statement.
“We look forward to exploring how we might work with one of the most innovative sports brands in the world to grow the game, engage fans in new ways, and reach new audiences.”
Last year, the CFL decided that it would not have a season due to the COVID-19 pandemic and decided to focus its efforts on 2021 and beyond.
The XFL was first established in 2000 by the wrestling executive Vince McMahon, however the league folded just after one year of play. It was then resurrected again in 2020, but was forced to suspend its season due to the COVID-19 pandemic and filed for bankruptcy.
That was until Johnson, Garcia and RedBird Capital bought the league.
“As an owner of the XFL, our discussions with the CFL have been very exciting,” Johnson said in an Instagram post.
“There’s a real pulse here because you can feel the unique opportunity we can potentially create together.”
Johnson already has a history with the CFL. He joined the Calgary Stampeders in 1995, but was released by their practice squad. “Wherever it all leads, I can tell you this one is personal to me and is driven by all my passion – because me being cut by the CFL was the greatest thing that happened. It set me on a path that years later would lead me right back to the league,” Johnson said.
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Peel Region Votes to Oppose GTA West Highway despite Caledon, Brampton
By: Isaac Callan, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Pointer
The Region of Peel is planning its growth 30 years into the future.
The employment and population figures it’s currently considering extend to 2051, by which time many around the council table will have long since retired.
But the decisions councillors make today will shape the world future generations inhabit.
“We want real, long-term solutions,” Lajanthan Prabaharan, co-presenting with Divya Arora on behalf of Community Climate Council, told councillors Thursday. The young pair presented to the Region of Peel begging officials to stand in opposition to the GTA West Corridor, a 400-series highway the Province hopes to build through Peel between Milton and Vaughan. “We want a sustainable, green future,” Prabaharan said.
Eventually, the majority of Mississauga and Brampton councillors, listened to the two young advocates and signed up to fight the route. Most Caledon members did not. They spent hours discussing the need for new highways, praising single-family homes and putting forward their positions on growth.
The Region of Peel’s position on the GTA West Corridor, also known as Highway 413, has been highly anticipated. Two weeks ago, councillors deferred a decision on the planned 400-series highway so staff could study what would happen if the Province listened to them and killed the project.
A lengthy staff report, which admitted it could not predict all the results of cancelling the GTA West, said opposing the project “would not be in conflict with the Region’s interests”.
Mississauga had already opposed the highway, while Brampton and Caledon supported calls for a federal environmental assessment (EA). If Ottawa decides by May 4 take over the process, it could kill the entire plan being pushed by Premier Doug Ford and his PC government.
More than 60 letters were sent to Peel council regarding the project, the vast majority calling for it to be scrapped. Five different delegations also presented; four voiced their opposition to the highway. The large volume of public engagement is uncommon at Peel council. According to the Clerk’s office, the number of letters sent to elected officials on the highway issue fell just short of the record.
Those who attended the meeting Thursday to support the highway represented Ontario’s development industry. Phil King, president of industrial real estate developer Orlando Corporation, told councillors Peel’s employment growth relied on the future corridor. A letter from landowners in Alloa, south Caledon, whose former agricultural properties are already being planned for residential and commercial development, said the Province should be “aggressively moving forward” with the project. The highway would dramatically increase the value of their properties. Real estate firm CBRE estimates GTA land for industrial use is currently worth $1.6 million an acre.
“This road is really being built for future generations who will thank you for your foresight,” Greg Sweetnam, executive vice president of James Dick Construction, wrote.
When future generations were asked, they wholeheartedly disagreed. Arora and Prabaharan explained induced demand to councillors, telling them the highway would fill up quickly and offer no benefits, while causing profound environmental damage. They asked elected officials to plan cities for them to live and thrive in.
“If we are to be this region’s next generation of talent, we need the region to be an attractive place to live and for us to raise our families in,” Arora said.
Mississauga Councillor Dipika Damerla pushed back against much of what the two young delegates said.
“A lot of people today who may have delegated one way or another, sometimes they’re not fully aware of the facts,” she said, repeating assertions she made earlier in the week that residents want a “patch of grass” and claiming vertical sprawl was as damaging as subdivisions. “Many of them probably live in large homes, but are now advocating for intensification,” she said. It’s unclear why she thought these claims are facts. Damerla did not explain how she concluded density is as bad for the environment as sprawl.
The motion before council eventually voted on after hours of debate, written by Mississauga Ward 5 Councillor Carolyn Parrish and added to by Brampton Wards 1 and 5 Councillors Paul Vicente and Rowena Santos, had several clauses. It included opposition to the construction of Highway 413, support for a federal EA, replacing the highway with an urban boulevard through northwest Brampton and reinvesting funds in public transit. Each issue was voted on separately and passed, with varying levels of support.
Damerla was not alone in her skepticism. Several Mississauga councillors, including Ward 4’s John Kovac and Ward 1’s Stephen Dasko, shared concerns about scrapping the highway. All 12 Mississauga representatives eventually voted to oppose construction of Highway 413, request a federal EA and to ask the Province to reinvest the funds in public transit.
After months of pursuing an optimistic plan to replace a portion of the planned highway with complete streets, supporting an urban boulevard in Brampton and a highway through the rest of the route, the city’s regional council members splintered.
Mayor Patrick Brown originally told his colleagues he could not support Parrish’s motion because it did not make reference to the boulevard. After Parrish added support for what Brown wanted into the motion, he still voted against opposing the highway. He has previously bragged that he was the one who put the GTA West Highway on the PC election platform in 2018, before he was ousted as party leader and after the previous Liberal government had scrapped the project.
His actions Thursday, will now make it difficult for Brown to continue sitting on the fence, using the boulevard idea to hide his support for the highway. His vote shows he will not oppose the developer-driven plan being pushed by Ford and his PC government.
Brampton Wards 2 and 6 Councillor Michael Palleschi and Wards 9 and 10 Councillor Gurpreet Dhillon also voted against opposing the construction of the highway. Dhillon, who told councillors his family had invested in a truck stop, voted against every aspect of the motion, including Brampton’s boulevard proposal. It’s unclear if his investment represents a possible conflict of interest. He did not declare one and participated in all votes.
Caledon members — including Mayor Allan Thompson and Wards 3 and 4 Councilor Jennifer Innis who have recently tried to rewrite their positions — were also split. Ward 5 Councillor Annette Groves and her Ward 1 colleague Ian Sinclair voted to oppose construction of the highway, but Ward 2 representative Joanna Downey, Innis and Thompson all voted against the move, once again revealing their position in support of the construction of a 400-series highway through the southern part of Caledon. They have recently said they have not shown support, and have only voted for an EA process to determine whether or not the project should move forward.
The EA is not a policy position, it is a requirement under the PC decision to have the highway built. A government-appointed panel in 2018 already detailed why the highway should be scrapped.
But Brown, Thompson, Innis and Downey have recently tried to distance themselves from previous support for the 400-series highway. The Caledon members now say they only support the EA and Brown says he only supports Brampton’s proposed boulevard concept.
The decision Thursday by the three Caldeon members was foreshadowed by their own council initiatives and communications intended to help get the highway built, such as their Caledon Council Work Plan for 2018 to 2022 which highlights advocacy to get the GTA West Corridor built and shows it was a top priority.
Mayor Thompson addressed a delegation by Sarah Buchanan, a policy analyst with Environmental Defence who had provided updated data projections showing the carbon emissions that would be created if the highway is built.
Thompson told her another policy, at the federal level, is the real issue.
“Immigration stops at the federal level and you’re Canadian Environmental Defence, maybe you should be asking the federal government: cut immigration. That way we can control our footprint.”
Downey and Innis also voted against a clause that asked the Province to reinvest funds from the GTA West Corridor into Peel Region public transit.
Some councillors who voted against opposing the highway made claims that appeared to contradict research and data that has been publicly presented by the former government and a number of organizations challenging Ford’s plan.
Projections show the highway will not improve congestion, will do irreversible damage to the area’s ecosystems and will contribute to temperature increase. Issues around flooding and species loss would also worsen.
Some who would not support the motions said they would oppose a major highway and “if” that’s what Queen’s Park settled on at the end of the EA process, they would fight it. None acknowledged that the plan has always been for a 400-series provincial highway and completion of the EA is the final step to allow construction to begin.
The positions taken by Brown, Palleschi, Thompson and Innis were hard to understand.
“If we come back from here a year from now and the Province says we’re not entertaining any of that [boulevard plan], then I would be the first to say no,” Brown said. He could have shown his words are not empty with support for the motion Thursday that included the boulevard. Innis claimed if the assessment process recommends a “six-lane mega highway” then she would oppose it. It’s unclear what she thought she has been supporting for years while pushing the 400-series highway plan.
“The new multimodal transportation corridor is anticipated to be a 4-to 6-lane highway,” the Province’s GTA West official webpage reads.
In August, September and now, again, in March, the Ministry of Transportation has dismissed Brampton’s boulevard plan. Despite Brown regularly referencing unsubstantiated backroom conversations with provincial officials, the line from Queen’s Park is that the boulevard is incompatible with the highway plan.
“Our review of Brampton’s boulevard option indicates that the roadway design, as presented, is not compatible with the functional and operational objectives established for the GTA West corridor,” Michael O’Morrow, senior issues advisor for the Ministry of Transportation, told The Pointer Thursday, restating what the ministry has previously stated, despite Brown’s claims he is hearing otherwise in private conversations.
He has failed to explain how a boulevard could work, sandwiched between two sections of 400-series highway on both sides. It’s unclear how he proposes to have trucks and cars slow down through the boulevard and then speed up again when the road transitions back to the highway.
The lengthy council discussion Thursday was a sharp contrast to the summer of 2019 when councillors quickly and enthusiastically declared climate emergencies. Conversations at the time were limited to self-congratulations and repeating the need for action, with no policy commitment to meet their stated goal of reducing carbon emissions.
Those who refused to help stop the GTA West Highway failed to explain their contradiction.
“It’s hard to hear these promises on climate change and on declaring climate emergencies and climate targets. It’s hard to hear them happen and then have the same old conversations again and again about pieces of infrastructure that will obviously increase greenhouse gas emissions,” Buchanan, presenting on behalf of Environmental Defence which has led recent campaigns to scrap the 413, told councillors.
Mississauga Ward 11 Councillor George Carlson also noted the contradiction: “Most of us in our career have said, ‘If we had a chance to build a city over again, we wouldn’t do it like those damn fools in the ‘40s did. We wouldn’t do what they did.’ And here we are, just replicating the same sort of system in the north end of the Region of Peel”.
In the end, the majority took a stand. Despite the votes of Brown, Dhillon, Downey, Innis, Palleschi and Thompson, council resolved to oppose any construction of the GTA West.
The others tried their best to keep pushing sprawl.
“I think the format of that was really the biggest problem,” Prabaharan told The Pointer. “Sitting here, four or five hours after we’ve done our delegation, it feels like they didn’t really take much of what we said in. When I was listening, for a lot of them it felt like a bunch of lip service.”
Pleased with the result, but disappointed by much of the discussion, Arora agreed.
“We are not seeing the type of innovation and bold leadership we want councillors to have,” she said, referring to those who continue to say one thing about the climate emergency then contradict themselves when it’s time to take action.
“They are still very backwards thinking.” -
Ten European nations suspend AstraZeneca vaccine as Saskatchewan holds drive-thru clinic
By: Brian Zinchuk, Local Journalism Initiative reporter, Estevan Mercury
Regina, Montreal – While Saskatchewan’s first batch of AstraZeneca vaccinations are taking place at a drive-thru clinic in Regina for 64 year-olds, ten nations across Europe have suspended its usage in recent days due to reports of blood clots in rare instances, and two reports of deaths.
That’s according to CNN, which reported on by noon on March 15 that Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Bulgaria, Ireland, Netherlands, Germany, Italy, France and Spain had all suspended usage of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine. Germany, Italy, France and Spain had announced their suspensions on March 15, while the others had done so since March 11.
CNN said, “On Thursday (March 11), Denmark suspended AstraZeneca vaccinations for 14 days as a ‘precautionary measure’ as it investigates ‘signs of a possible serious side effect in the form of fatal blood clots’ after one Danish person died following vaccination, according to Danish health officials.”
In another story, CNN noted that Norway also reported a death, saying, “A person who received the AstraZeneca vaccine in Norway has died following blood clots, bleeding and a low platelet count, the Norwegian Medicines Agency said Monday.”
CNN also reported, as of March 15, “Europe has nearly eight million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine sitting unused, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control data shows as of Sunday.
“That is more than half the total number of doses distributed to European nations, the data shows.”
Canada, however, is continuing to use the vaccine.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was asked about the AstraZeneca vaccine while at a press conference in Montreal, touting electric busses. He said, “Health Canada, and our experts and scientists have spent an awful lot of time making sure that every vaccine approved in Canada is both safe and effective. Therefore, the best vaccine for you to take is the very first one that is offered to you. That is how we get through this as quickly as possible and as safely as possible, and quickly on the announcement of the day.”
He noted, in French, that Canada has not received vaccines from the batch of vaccine in Europe in question. Canada’s AstraZeneca vaccine is coming from India.
Asked about the developments with the AstraZeneca vaccine in Europe, Saskatchewan’s Ministry of Health responded with this emailed statement: “Health Canada and public health officials across Canada are aware of the adverse events reported in Denmark.
“European safety bodies are monitoring the adverse events, but are indicating at this time that the incidents do not indicate that the vaccine is unsafe.
“The UK, which has used AstraZeneca extensively, has not reported adverse effects beyond that which would be expected with any vaccine.
“We will continue to monitor but are not suspending our use of AstraZeneca at this point in time.”
The Opposition New Democratic Party said by email on March 15 it wouldn’t be commenting.
Asked when he would get vaccinated, Trudeau said he was glad that his mother was vaccinated last week. He said, “Over the coming weeks we’re going to be receiving more than a million vaccines a week into Canada. Vaccinations are going to ramp up across the country and more and more essential workers are going to be able to get vaccinated. I’m focused on getting vaccines for as many Canadians as possible as quickly as possible, not overly focused on, when my turn will come when it comes, I will gladly get vaccinated. But I will wait my turn.” -
Acquiring Calgary-based Shaw Communications, Rogers adds to its portfolio
By: Terry Haig
The fierce battle for customers raging among Canadian telecommunications companies took another turn today, as the industry makes ready its 5G technology whose presence continues to grow as competition heats up.
Toronto-based Rogers Communications, the largest carrier in Canada, announced it was buying Calgary-based Shaw Communications in a deal valued at $26 billion, including $6 billion in debt Rogers will be taking on.
The deal would eliminate the fourth-largest carrier in Canada, Shaw’s Freedom Mobile, in a country that has some of the highest cell phone rates in the world.
Since 2016, when it got into the wireless business, Shaw has invested billions to build it out in order to attract internet customers in Western Canada.
The plan must still be approved by stockholders and government regulators.
That may not prove easy since Rogers, Montreal-based Bell and Vancouver-based Telus already control 90 per cent of the market and the government has said it wants lower prices.
Under the proposed deal, Rogers will pay $40.50 in cash for all of Shaw’s issued and outstanding class A and class B shares.
Shaw’s class B shares closed at $23.90 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Friday.
Rogers said it plans to invest $6.5 billion in Western Canada, including $2.5 billion in the development of a 5G network over the next five years.
A $1-billion fund would also be created to connect remote regions, including indigenous communities, to a high-speed internet network.
As well, $3 billion will be devoted to developing its network, offering new services and investing in new technologies.
Rogers said the investments are expected to create 3,000 jobs in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Shaw executive chair and CEO Brad Shaw and another director to be nominated by the Shaw family will be named to the Rogers board as part of the deal.
If the deal is approved, Shaw’s head office will remain in Calgary and the Shaw family would become one of the company’s largest shareholders.
It is still subject to approval by shareholders and Canadian regulators, including Innovation Canada, which said the transaction will also be reviewed by the Competition Bureau of Canada as well as the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission.
The companies hope to complete the deal in the first half of next year.
With files from The Canadian Press, Radio-Canada, CBC News -
From fixing backs to serving plates, retired chiropractor says ‘variety is the spice of life’
By: Dariya Baiguzhiyeva, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, TimminsToday.com
For Merv Russell, as long as the meal has flavours you put your heart into, people will appreciate it.
Born and raised in Timmins, Russell, 62, worked as a chiropractor for more than three decades until he retired about five years ago. When he was 16, he was injured in a motorcycle accident and it was a chiropractor who got him back up. Since then, Russell knew he wanted to have his own chiropractic practice.
Russell says he enjoyed being a chiropractor but he also wanted to do other things.
He recently started working as a part-time cook assistant at The Walford, cooking for seniors.
“It’s different because there are always alternative meals that have to be prepped. The diet is different as opposed to French or Canadian cooking or Italian,” he says. “Here, very limited in salt and you have to respect that because of their needs. It’s different but it’s fun.”
He also does online cooking classes for a couple of local high schools where teachers provide the ingredients and students follow along.
Cooking has always been his background, Russell says. His mother and grandmother were camp cooks. Whenever he travelled and whenever he could, he would take cooking classes and wouldn’t shy away from helping other people in the kitchen.
“Different ideas for me are fun,” he said. “I’m a foodie, I love all kinds of food.”
For several years, he helped teach culinary classes at Collége Borèal . He also taught basic cooking skills to students who needed two credits for high school.
“I did that three years in a row, I had such a great time with that,” he says.
He has a Cooking with Merv Facebook group where his students and food lovers share recipes and post photos of their dishes.
“My philosophy is we were put on the Earth to serve, so if we serve each other well, then we can survive and we should have a better place,” he says. “I’ve been serving fixing backs, and now I serve plates.”
Russell, who once won Cottage Life’s Best Rib Recipe, welcomes feedback and likes tweaking recipes to add something of his own.
Baking for him isn’t the same as cooking as it requires patience and precise measurements. Anybody can cook, he says, but baking is like chemistry.
He strives to use local produce as much as he can. He has chickens for fresh eggs every day and a garden where he grows potatoes, celery, carrots and beets. Even if cooking healthy meals with fresh herbs takes an hour, so what, he says.
“You try to do it as much as you can so that you can show you can do that,” Russell says, pointing out it’s not possible to do it all the time but he tries to.
“I’m as guilty as anybody else. I’m the king of junk food, I have a pantry and there’s chips, candy, chocolate bars and cookies. However, I do like to cook.”
If the pandemic restrictions allow, this summer he is hoping to hold a cooking camp for children out of his garage.
“I enjoy teaching kids,” he says. “For three or four days, we’d learn how to make bread, pizza dough, soups, sauces. And then Friday, they would invite the parents and we would cook for them.”
Nowadays, people are often too busy and opt for drive-thru food, he says, whereas he enjoys sitting down at a table to enjoy a meal.
“A long time ago, everybody sat at the table. No matter where you went: Italy, France, Poland, Belgium, Jamaica. Everybody would come to the table and I was raised that way. Everybody shared either a good event, a bad event or a feeling they have,” he says. “To me, I always enjoyed it because when we cooked, people sit at the table.”
If people want to try something different, Russell says he also offers catering services for small events.
For several years, Russell has also been volunteering with Timmins Empty Bowls. He says he enjoyed the experience of making different kinds of soups that people wouldn’t be able to order at a restaurant.
“Variety is the spice of life,” he says. -
Former Bank of Canada governor touts pandemic lessons for climate battle
By: Terry Haig
he former governor of the Bank of Canada who later held the same post at the Bank of England is drawing a glass half-full lesson from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Mark Carney says the way scientists and governments around the world worked collectively to combat the pandemic could provide the momentum for a similar approach to the climate change crisis, adding that the collaboration highlighted the vital role that scientists and expert advice played in solving large problems.
Carney, who is now UN’s special envoy for climate change and finance, made the comments Sunday in an interview on CBC’s Rosemary Barton Live, noting that virtually no country had escaped the health and economic effects of the coronavirus.
“We can’t self-isolate from climate change,” Carney told Barton. “Ultimately, we’ll all be affected. So we all have to act.”
“There’s a recognition that the advice of scientists should be listened to. They advised on the risks of pandemics and we didn’t fully listen to them anywhere in the world,” he said.
“They’ve been advising for a long time of the risks on climate change. It is time to listen.”
In a new book to be released tomorrow, Value(s): Building a Better World for All ,Carney argues that the pandemic has given people an opportunity to “sit back and reflect” on what they value most, adding that values he’s seen emerging are sustainability, solidarity and fairness across generations–all of which, he said, require more comprehensive action on climate change, according to report by CBC News.
Carney is currently advising the United Kingdom government to help it prepare to host the next UN climate summit, COP 26, in Glasgow, Scotland in November.
He said that part of that meeting will focus on how the private financial sector can “retool” so that companies take climate change into account when making financial decisions.
In the CBC News report, Carney said a move to a sustainable, low-carbon economy offers a “huge economic opportunity” for Canada.
“If we can take this opportunity as Canadians to address the issue, respect that there are multiple ways to improve sustainability in this country, build a sustainable future but also build a very strong economy alongside, that would be a tremendous outcome from what has been an extraordinarily difficult year,” Carney said.
With files from CBC News, -
Ontario Launching COVID-19 Vaccine Booking System
By: Laura Steiner
Ontario will launch its provincial booking system for COVID-19 vaccines March 15, at 8:00 a.m. The process will be an online portal where residents 80 years of age and older living in the community to book their first appointment for a COVID-19 vaccine.
“In this phase of our plan we are still offering vaccines to our most vulnerable, so I encourage everyone aged 80 and older to use the portal to book an appointment,” Ontario Premier Doug Ford said. The appointments will only be open to those born in 1941 or earlier.
Residents will be able to book appointments through the provincial website, or their local Public Health Unit (PHU) if they’re accepting bookings. Residents will be asked for information on their green health cards as part of the process such as birth date, postal code and email address or phone number. They’re being asked to book two appointments at the same time. If they have the red & white cards, or need assistance booking, a provincial hotline has been set-up at: 1-888-999-6488. All PHU’s are expected to transition over to the provincial system.
“We know everyone is eager to receive the vaccine, and as we continue to build capacity we are making it easier and more convenient for individuals to book and receive the vaccine as quickly as possible,” Health Minister Christine Elliott said. Halton Region’s Public Health Unit has begun booking vaccine appointments, and has opened some clinics.
This will complete phase one of the province’s vaccine rollout plan. “The portal and customer support number will prove instrumental through Phase 2 as we open mass vaccination sites and inoculate more Ontarians,” Solicitor General Sylvia Jones said. Phase two will focus on vaccinating populations based on age and risk. Milton’s mass vaccination site will be at the FirstOntario Centre for the Arts at 1010 Main St. East, Milton.
“There is now a fulsome range of options for the people of Ontario to book an appointment and receive their vaccine,” General (Ret’d) Rick Hillier said. He went to caution Ontarians to only book appointments when it’s their turn.
Ontario recorded an increase of 1,747 cases of COVID-19 over yesterday, with 1,167 resolved. Experts believe that the increase in cases is fueled by the more contagious variants. “There are now two pandemics playing out, one with the early variants under control, and one with new variants not under control,” Dr. Adalsteinn Brown told reporters Thursday. Brown is co-chair of the COVID-19 science advisory table.
As of Sunday, Halton recorded an increase of 43 cases. 12 of those are in Milton. 59 cases of COVID19 have been screened as positive for variants. -
Grey-Bruce MOH discouraging non-essential travel
By: Pauline Kerr, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Walkerton Herald Times
BRUCE COUNTY – Dr. Ian Arra, medical officer of health for Grey-Bruce, updated county council on three matters involving COVID-19 during the March 4 council meeting.
The first was good news. With the daily number of new cases of COVID-19 averaging between zero and four, there is full control over the pandemic in this area. The single outbreak at one long-term care facility (as of the March 4 date of the meeting) is well controlled, Arra said.
He thanked council and the general public for their efforts in achieving this.
The second issue involved non-essential travel, in particular, people travelling from other health unit areas to this one. Arra said Grey Bruce Public Health has issued a media release “urging ongoing vigilance.”
He said businesses such as hairdressers are being asked to turn away people from outside the area.
Non-essential travel is of concern because of the variants in different areas.
The issue received further discussion later in the meeting.
The third matter on which Arra provided an update was vaccines.
“We have robust plans ready; everything is in place. The main barrier is supply,” he said, adding that he expected “plenty of supply by late March.”
Those in the long-term care sector have begun receiving their second dose of the vaccine. Others being vaccinated are EMS, police, fire and people aged 80-plus.
He noted there’s some concern being expressed about how people without a family physician will be able to arrange to get their shot.
“We have been piloting software for the province. By March 15, people will be able to register themselves,” Arra told council.
He said that had the province not provided this, the local health unit had their own plan ready.
During the question period, the conversation shifted back to travel.
“Travel is discouraged,” said Arra, adding there’s always a danger people will bring the virus with them when they travel outside their area.
Coun. Luke Charbonneau drew attention to the border between Grey-Bruce, and Simcoe County.
“We’re green and they’re in lockdown,” he said. “We know about (sports) teams, but what about individuals travelling outside our area to play sports.”
Arra said the border is a source of his own concern. It won’t be an issue right away, but over a couple of weeks, as food supplies run out and people start needing haircuts, he anticipates there may be an issue.
As for controlling travel between zones, Arra prefers the least invasive method – education and information.
County Coun. Chris Peabody, mayor of Brockton, said his municipality had banned outsiders from the local arena – there’s a hockey school that used to take people from Simcoe, he said.
“We’re going to double down on our decision,” said Peabody.
County Coun. Anne Eadie, mayor of Kincardine, drew attention to a place like Lucknow, which has no grocery store and is situated on the border between counties. There are three places people go for groceries – Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine, and especially in winter, they choose the closest.
“Your approach – education and common sense – is good,” she said.
Warden Janice Jackson, mayor of South Bruce Peninsula, told council about the spring edition of the quarterly publication, Niagara Escarpment Views. The front page of the spring edition has the headline, “COVID Escape to the Bruce Trail.”
“They’re encouraging people to escape COVID to the Bruce Trail!” said Jackson.
She invited her Northern Bruce Peninsula counterpart, Milt McIver, to co-write with her a letter to the editor of the publication.
Arra said grocery shopping is a lower-risk activity than some, like hockey. Business owners are being encouraged to look at their own level of risk.