By: Willow Fiddler, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Globe and Mail
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is being widely condemned and faces calls to apologize to First Nations people after he accused an Indigenous MPP of vaccine queue-jumping.
During Question Period on Thursday, Mr. Ford criticized NDP MPP Sol Mamakwa for allegedly “jumping the line” by travelling to two remote communities, which were not his own, to receive shots. Mr. Mamakwa is the only member of the legislature who hails from a First Nation.
“I talked to a few chiefs that were pretty upset about that, for flying into a community that he doesn’t belong to,” Mr. Ford said in the legislature, without providing names or evidence.
Mr. Mamakwa, a first-term New Democrat who hails from Kingfisher Lake First Nation and represents the Northern Ontario riding of Kiiwetinoong, received two doses of the Moderna vaccine in February and March. He and First Nations leaders say he was invited to the communities of Muskrat Dam and Sandy Lake to help combat vaccine hesitancy.
Mr. Mamakwa said Mr. Ford’s comments amount to a lack of respect and compassion for Indigenous people.
“It’s about saving lives. It’s about a message that the vaccine is safe,” he said. “I think [Mr. Ford’s] comments are undermining and also damaging to the vaccination efforts that we’re trying to do.”
The remarks resulted in rebukes from the three opposition parties and Indigenous leaders, including Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde, who said vaccine hesitancy is a real problem: “Premier Ford’s comments are unacceptable and I encourage him to refrain from politicizing access to vaccines for First Nations.”
The Ontario government has prioritized First Nations communities in its vaccine rollout campaign. It launched Operation Remote Immunity on Feb. 1, the same day Mr. Mamakwa received his first vaccine dose, in Muskrat Dam First Nation.
The program, led by Ontario’s Ornge air-ambulance service and in co-operation with groups such as Nishnawbe Aski Nation, set out to reach adults in 31 fly-in First Nations communities and Moosonee in Northern Ontario. On Monday, the government said all communities had been offered a first dose. The government expanded eligibility on Feb. 14 to include to all Indigenous adults living anywhere in the province.
Prior to the vaccine clinic in Muskrat Dam, a preliminary survey indicated that about 66 per cent of eligible members would get it. But after the clinics for both Moderna doses, about 99 per cent have been vaccinated to date.
Sandy Lake has reported close to 1,200 eligible members having received the first dose so far.
The Premier’s Office declined to comment. Health Minister Christine Elliott on Thursday defended the Premier, saying he was expressing frustration because of the “continuing work” of vaccinating First Nations people.
“Everyone needs to wait their turn. I’m not sure whether [Mr. Mamakwa] was in the lineup for a vaccine or not,” she said.
Chief Gordon Beardy of Muskrat Dam says the Premier’s comments are an attack on him as chief, his council and community.
“That’s very irresponsible of him,” he said in a phone interview.
Chief Beardy said the leadership invited Mr. Mamakwa to participate in the vaccine clinic in February to help encourage community members who were reluctant about the safety of the COVID-19 vaccine.
“It was to show that it was safe and that we the leaders are in support of it,” Chief Beardy said. “I thought [Mr. Ford] was serious about people taking the vaccine.”
He said he hasn’t heard of any First Nations chiefs who were upset over Mr. Mamakwa’s visit to Muskrat Dam.
Like Muskrat Dam, Sandy Lake First Nation also invited Mr. Mamakwa to participate in its vaccination clinic, where he got his second dose earlier this month.
In a letter to Mr. Mamakwa dated Feb. 18, the Sandy Lake chief and council said their goal is to have most of the eligible adult population vaccinated.
“By being here with us, you will help this cause tremendously,” the letter states. “It is our hope that having our elected leaders be part of this will help ease any discomfort people may have.”
NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called on Mr. Ford to apologize to Mr. Mamakwa as well as to Indigenous leadership and people.
“The Premier rose in his place to insult the member and undermine the work of First Nations leadership and people in fighting COVID-19,” she said.
Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca called the remarks divisive and said he hopes Mr. Ford apologizes for his “really, really horrible mistake.” Through tears, Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner said the Premier’s comments made him sick to his stomach.
Year: 2021
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Doug Ford rebuked after accusing Indigenous MPP of vaccine queue-jumping
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Trudeau skates past questions about the future of the monarchy in Canada
By: Terry Haig
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he’s open to a constitutional debate about the role of the monarchy in Canada.
Just not right now.
“Obviously, I wish all members of the Royal Family the very best. But my focus, as we’ve said, is getting through this pandemic,” Trudeau said when he was asked Tuesday if Canada should rethink its ties to the House of Windsor.
“If people want to later talk about constitutional change and shifting our system of government, that’s fine. They can have those conversations. But right now, I’m not having those conversations.”
The subject was raised at Trudeau’s Tuesday news conference in the wake of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s interview Sunday night with Oprah Winfrey.
Markle, seated next to her husband, said an unnamed relative expressed concern with her husband about how dark their baby’s skin would be.
She said there were “several conversations” about that with Harry. He later clarified that the comments had not come from the Queen or her husband, Prince Philip.
The interview sparked debate–heated in some places–about racism at Buckingham Palace.
Trudeau took a pass.
Asked how he reconciled his support for the monarchy with his pledge to decolonize Canadian laws and policies, Trudeau replied that while many of Canada’s institutions, including Parliament itself, are built on a legacy of systemic racism, the solution is not to dump them altogether but to reform them from within.
“The answer is not to suddenly toss out all the institutions and start over,” he said.
“The answer is to look very carefully at those systems and listen to Canadians who face discrimination … to understand the barriers, inequities and inequalities that exist within our institutions that need to be addressed, that many of us don’t see because we don’t live them.”
A poll in February by the Angus Reid Institute shortly after the governor general, Julie Payette, resigned found support for the monarchy waning in Canada–with 43 per cent of respondents saying they would eliminate the position of governor general while 22 per cent said they would opt to keep the role as is.
The Queen is Canada’s head of state and is represented by the governor general.
Abolishing the monarchy in Canada would be difficult.
Under the Constitution, all 10 provinces and both chambers of Parliament would have to agree to the change.
With files from CBC News (John Paul Tasker), The Canadian Press -
Mississauga isn’t a dense, towering metropolis, yet
By: Isaac Callan, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Pointer
The sun casts its shimmering light on Lake Ontario, reflecting against the cluster of glass towers that rise up from the rehabilitated Lakeview parkland. To the west, Brightwater is bathed in a golden evening glow, residents wandering along the waterfront, sipping on an evening espresso.
If you venture north, the Hurontario LRT glides past 37 massive towers silhouetted by the sunset, looming over Mississauga’s iconic Square One shopping mall. Set back slightly are the unique, angular M City condos, where lights controlled by an automated energy-saving system turn on one by one.
As darkness settles and the city centre is illuminated by the soft hues of LED street lights, the Eglinton Liberty skyscrapers offer a comforting presence. With all the new developments and the iconic Marilyn Monroe towers to the south, the Mississauga skyline has emerged like a towering mountainscape that frames the modern metropolis.
It’s easy to get lost in the breathtaking renderings produced by architects and developers showing what Mississauga will become. It is tempting to jump ahead and already conceive the city as the towering urban hub it’s destined to be, wiping away the decades of sprawl that still defines so much of it today.
Open data maintained by City Hall shows just how different Mississauga’s current reality is from the future it has imagined. It lays bare the task Mayor Bonnie Crombie and the rest of council has before them to shift residents from cars into buses and replace single-family homes with the medium or high-density developments described in master plans and recent applications from developers.
An impressive list of tower projects currently being planned or already under construction includes: Lakeview Village, The Oxford Properties’ Square One plan, Brightwater, M-City, Amber Condos, Perla Towers, Oro at Edge Towers, Artform Condos, Gordon Woods, Canopy Towers and Westport Condos. There are many more.
When locals complain that modern, Manhattan-style projects don’t fit the character of their neighbourhood, they’re not entirely wrong.
In total, 8,552 hectares of Mississauga is dedicated to residential development and 71 percent of that land is single-detached homes, generally located in planned subdivisions. Single-family homes, the developments councillors are now attempting to leave in the past, make up the largest form of land use in the city.
As of 2020, only 5 percent of Mississauga’s residential land was dedicated to apartments; making up just 1.5 percent of the city as a whole.
This style of detached, spacious development, massively popular during the post-war boom, is directly linked to climate change and high carbon emissions. Homes with large carbon footprints requiring cooling and heating for seldomly used interior spaces are built on the assumption residents will drive to stores or restaurants located in plazas with plenty of parking. Subdivision streets rarely host adequate sidewalks, while the winding cul de sacs can be impossible to serve with the public transit vehicles that offer an alternative to the car.
In order to meet its own, and Canada’s, ambitious climate target goals, Mississauga is trying to change how people live.
It’s not enough to pour money into buses if the population has sprawled out into houses transit can’t reach. Geoff Marinoff, director of the City’s transit service, MiWay, has previously identified density as a key to making his buses easier to run and more useful to residents.
As a suburban city built around the car, Mississauga has given over plenty of space to aging asphalt. Twenty percent of land in Canada’s sixth largest city is taken up by right-of-way roads, the second largest land use in the entire municipality. There are almost twice as many hectares of road in Mississauga as there are hectares of parkland and greenspace.
This too will have to change in the future, as sidewalks and patios replace six-lane thoroughfares to make the streets a place to live, not travel.
The city isn’t just hoping to change housing and streets. As a bedroom community, Mississauga’s early leaders imagined residents would commute to their jobs in Toronto, furnishing their city largely with industrial jobs that came as a direct benefit of hosting the country’s largest and busiest airport. A reliance on industrial land use, for warehousing and transportation, pharmaceutical manufacturing, automotive, plastics and home-building materials and aeronautical industries, has sent healthy tax yields to City Hall, but councillors now yearn to see more white-collar offices and technology startups call Mississauga home, as the global economy rapidly shifts toward information and innovation. These businesses, and the significant incomes they generate, will make the city a place to live, work and play.
“A fundamental mission of Downtown21 is to attract office employment back to Downtown,” the City’s downtown master plan, with this year as the target, explains. “A vibrant and expanding employment base is a critical component of a thriving and sustainable Downtown. While some office growth has occurred in the past, it has been stalled.”
That stall appears to remain as a bottleneck. Just 622 hectares in Mississauga are dedicated to office space, less than the 683 hectares currently occupied by utilities and public works.
Over the past decade, land use in the city has been changing. The biggest difference has been a dramatic reduction in vacant land or farmland, leading to an increase of commercial and industrial uses. The amount of dedicated parkland has also increased.
Mississauga’s push for densification shines through in data on land use between 2011 and 2022. More than 360-hectares of land have been converted from a previous status as vacant or farmland, but just 25 hectares have been re-designated as residential. Instead, 218 hectares are now commercial, 179 have been designated for greenspace and 91 for industrial use. Even the city’s reliance on the road is beginning to slowly wane with 95 hectares of roadway removed during that time.
These changes are significant. In the heyday of Mississauga’s sprawling birth, farmland was converted directly into single-family homes by gleeful developers, selling subdivisions and the suburban dream. The fact just seven percent of Mississauga’s vacant land or farmland since 2011 has been moved to residential shows that growth is reaching for the sky and not the flat stretches at the edge of urban boundaries.
Even with the positive planning moves of the past decade, the biggest changes are still to come.
The popular draw of waterfront destinations, particularly in Wards 1 and 2, are major attractions for much development across the coming decades. Currently, many of the neighbourhoods within walking distance of Lake Ontario, south of the QEW Highway, remain overwhelmingly defined by suburban land use policies created when Hazel McCallion allowed developers to run planning at City Hall. Roughly one third of the total land use in both wards is dedicated to single-family homes, something that will change in the near future, as a number of massive waterfront projects completely reshape the pre-Mississauga legacy of dirty industrial factories that polluted the future city’s shoreline.
Wards 3 and 4 already host significantly denser developments, with townhouses and apartments spread across the area.
Along the waterfront, locals will be forced to accept significant density as a GO Transit corridor and fully-funded bus rapid transit route open the area up to condominium towers and even the potential for inclusionary zoning, which would force a mix of affordable, middle-income and market-based housing.
These types of plans have traditionally been met with fierce opposition from many long-time Mississauga homeowners, many who are older and have voiced concern over the shift away from single-family enclaves toward more dense, affordable housing.
Planners and Mississauga’s council members will have to win over residents who express anxiety over changes to density and the possibility of altering the makeup of neighbourhoods designated for more urban-style growth.
Two years ago residents held community meetings where concerns were expressed over a mixed-use development application in the Lakeshore Road East area, near Dixie Road, with 8 and 12-storey towers alongside new townhouses.
Though the City’s master plan includes significant population growth for the area west of the planned Lakeview Village and the village itself, many residents have voiced opposition to the coming density.
When City Park Homes also put forward plans for a multi-storey development in the area, some residents raised concern over increased crime and other problems they claimed would result because of the density planned for the area.
More recently, last year, residents again expressed disappointment over a multi-storey application on Lakeshore Road, just east of Hurontario Street.
And Councillor Dipika Damerla caved last year to older residents who did not want to see a townhouse development in her ward.
Council had the option to support staff recommendations for a development plan to construct 101 stacked townhouse units on three vacant housing lots on Argyle Road, south of Dundas Street in Cooksville, with 30 percent of the build designated for middle-income earners. But the plan was rejected by councillors who went against staff advice after nearby residents made their strong opposition clear.
Sean Galbraith, an urban planner based in Toronto with 20 years experience, told The Pointer the City had no chance of beating an appeal to the Local Planning Appeal Tribunal (formerly the Ontario Municipal Board) made by the developer.
“They’ll lose,” said Galbraith, based on his experience with council decisions made in reaction to the will of residents, not official planning positions.
“If you have staff recommending approval and council goes against that, my money would be on the project getting approved at LPAT,” said Galbraith.
Despite city planners recommending approval of the development proposal, council instead sided with the residents, several of whom addressed the planning and development committee in February last year with their many concerns, from higher traffic and parking shortages to the health of the existing neighbourhood.
The planning committee voted 8-1, with Ward 5 Councillor Carolyn Parrish the lone holdover, to deny the application. Since full council was later deadlocked on upholding the committee’s decision, it passed as a tie meant the committee vote was upheld.
“I am very disappointed with the decision,” said Parrish, at the time. “We need more affordable housing, and this was a perfect [location].”
Damerla was strongly opposed to the project, bending to the will of older residents.
She told The Pointer she was not opposed to intensification, but, as proposed, the Argyle Road development was too dense for the area, she claimed. She claimed she would have supported the plan had it been for 60-70 units.
“I actually think intensification is great because we’re creating walkable communities. My concern is the street is already overdeveloped,” said Damerla.
The development, according to a staff report recommending the project, was seen as a transition from higher density buildings north on the street to the detached homes at the foot of Argyle and neighbouring area.
Despite approvals from city planners, in keeping with Mississauga’s broader strategy to grow up not out, Damerla said the recommendations didn’t address the concern she and residents had of putting dozens of stacked units into three lots meant for detached suburban homes creating “overcrowding”.
Even though city planners had approved the development, Damerla said that, as an elected representative, she couldn’t just rubber stamp the decision given the strong community concerns.
“My job as councillor is to bring an extra lens to the project, to make it better,” she said.
This type of leadership, with decision-making done at the whim of a small number of residents who oppose change, will see Mississauga challenged in its plans to modernize and create the type or urban growth central to the 2021 Master Plan.
Hurontario Street continues to attract ambitious development applications in anticipation of the Hurontario LRT, which will open in 2024 if there are no further delays. By the Civic Centre and Square One, a plan for scores of massive new towers will finally bring office space and residential towers to a transit oriented area of the city, if council members do not get in the way.
At City Hall, forward-thinking developers and staff are pushing council toward change. Many applications have challenged the City’s more conservative Official Plan and, based on provincial growth guidelines, have received the blessing of staff.
Exactly what the city will look like in a decade is not yet set in stone, or glass or concrete. Thousands of hectares of sprawling single-detached family homes and wide roads stand in the way of Mississauga’s vision to transform into a future-ready destination. -
Military member who sought to ‘arrest’ PM is sentenced to six years in jail
By: Terry Haig
A heavily-armed member of the Canadian military who drove his truck filled with weapons into the main gates of Rideau Hall, the governor general’s residence, last summer before setting out on foot to “arrest” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was sentenced to six years in prison on Wednesday.
Corey Hurren, a 46-year-old sausage-maker and military reservist, had faced 21 weapons charges and one of threatening the prime minister.
Last month he pleaded guilty to eight of the charges.
In delivering the sentence, Ontario Court Justice Robert Wadden said Hurren was given one year of credit for time spent in custody, meaning he still faces five years in prison.
At the time of the incident, Hurren was a member of the Canadian Rangers, part of the Canadian Army Reserve.
The 5,000-strong force is made up of volunteers from remote northern and Indigenous communities who act the military’s eyes and ears in the sparsely populated northern and coastal areas of Canada.
Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) officials said Hurren held the rank of master corporal at the time of the incident.
In August, the CBC’s Murray Brewster reported that Hurren had been singled out for good conduct earlier in the year.
On July 2, Hurren drove a truck onto the grounds of the governor general’s official residence and rammed through the gate, causing the vehicle to stall and its airbags to deploy.
He then set out on foot toward Rideau Cottage, where Trudeau and his family were living because of renovations and repairs taking place at the prime minister’s traditional official residence at 24 Sussex Drive.
Neither Governor General Julie Payette nor Trudeau was home at the time.
Police were able to talk Hurren down and arrested him peacefully after about 90 minutes.
At a court appearance last month, Hurren said he had lost his small sausage making business in Swan River, located 385 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, during the pandemic and hadn’t qualified for the emergency benefit, and felt “betrayed by his government” and angry, according to a report by the CBC’s Catharine Tunney,
Hurren, Tunney reported, said he wanted to make a statement to the prime minister by showing up during one of his daily media briefings, sayin he hoped his actions would be a “wake-up call” and a “turning point.”
Hurren went on to say that he drove from Manitoba to Ottawa because he wanted to arrest Trudeau over the federal government’s COVID-19 restrictions and its ban on assault-style firearms.
“He wanted to ‘show prime minister Justin Trudeau how angry everyone was about the gun ban and the COVID-19 restrictions,’” according to Tunney.
Hurren stated that “Trudeau is a communist who is above the law and corrupt.”
An agreed statement of facts said Hurren didn’t make any comments about wanting to kill Trudeau.
Tunney reported that data retrieved from Hurren’s cellphone and social media accounts included exchanges with friends about “conspiracy theories related to the Canadian government” and COVID-19.
As well: “He and a friend also talked about the mass shooting in Nova Scotia that April, speculating on a ‘sacrifice theory,’” Tunney reported.
In addition to his prison sentence, Hurren will also be banned from possessing any firearms, ammunition or explosive substances for life.
In delivering the sentence, Justice Wadden said Hurren had not expressed remorse for his actions.
“I find that Mr. Hurren represents an ongoing risk,” Wadden said.
“This was an armed aggression against the government, which must be denounced in the strongest terms,” adding there was a risk that Hurren’s guns could be used to cause serious bodily harm or death.
“The deliberateness of Mr. Hurren’s actions and his intentional use of loaded weapons to make a political statement bring him a long way from a usual first offender caught with a single gun.
“Corey Hurren committed a politically motivated, armed assault intended to intimidate Canada’s elected government.”
A research report by the Department of National Defence published in January suggested that the longer the COVID-19 pandemic continued, the stronger right-wing extremism and other threats in Canada and around the world are likely to become.
Last December, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan launched a panel to investigate reports of racism, intolerance and white supremacy in the armed forces, which has come under fire as revelations of some members’ links to right-wing groups and reports of sexual misconduct became public.
With files from CBC News (Catharine Tunney, Murray BrewsterKimberley Molina, Trevor Pritchard, Elizabeth Thompson ), The Canadian Press (Lee Bertiaume), RCI (Levon Sevunts) -
Ontario Pharmacies and Primary Care to begin offering COVID19 vaccines
By: Laura Steiner
Ontario pharmacies will begin distributing the COVID19 vaccine on Friday March 12, 2021. The announcement came from Ontario Premier Doug Ford, Solicitor General Sylvia Jones, and Health Minister Christine Elliott.
“We are just ramping up and mobilizing even more members of Team Ontario in our pharmacies and primary care settings,” Ford said. 325 pharmacies will be offering the AstraZeneca/COVISHIELD vaccine to eligible Ontarians 60-64 years of age. The age range is defined as those born between 1957-1961.
Appointments are being booked effective today in Toronto, Windsor-Essex, and Kingston, Frontenac, Lennox and Addington. “Opening up new channels to deliver the vaccine, through trusted health care partners like pharmacies and primary care providers, will enable us to reach even more people,” Jones said. Physicians’ offices in Hamilton, Toronto, Peterborough, Simcoe-Muskoka, and Peel, will begin offering the vaccine as of Saturday March 13, 2021.
Health Canada approved AstraZeneca/COVISHIELD February 26, 2021. Johnson & Johnson was approved March 5, 2021 for use in Canada. Ontario will be activating its online booking system Monday March 15, 2021. Some Public Health Units, including Halton have been taking bookings for residents 80 years of age and older who live in the community.
To find a pharmacy location offering the vaccine visit the province’s website. -
The Queens of Egypt to visit the Canadian Museum of History
By: Laura Steiner
The Canadian Museum of History will host some royal guests this summer. The Queens of Egypt exhibit will make its home at the museum from May 19- August 29, 2021.
The exhibit is a collection of treasures focusing on the roles of seven influential women in the “New Kingdom.” It will take visitors back 3,500 years in history in an immersive space designed for families. The treasures come from the Museo Egizio of Turin, which houses the largest collection of Egyptian antiquities. It was developed by Pointe-a-Calliere Montreal Archaeology and History complex in collaboration of Museo Egrizio of Turn.
Tickets are available on a timed basis through the museum’s website.
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Military names first-ever female second-in-command after misconduct allegations
By: Terry Haig
The Canadian military has named its first female vice chief of defence staff as part of a wide-ranging shakeup that follows accusations of alleged sexual misconduct by its top brass.
Lt.-Gen. Frances Allen, who has been serving as Canada’s military representative to NATO headquarters in Brussels, takes over as the military’s second-in-command as the previous two chiefs of staff, Admiral Art McDonald and Gen. Jonathan Vance, remain under investigation by the Canadian Forces National Investigative Service for alleged sexual misconduct.
Vance retired in January and McDonald stepped away voluntarily last month after learning he was under investigation.
The vice-chief is responsible for much of the day-to-day financial oversight and management of the Canadian Armed Forces, which includes leading efforts to change the military’s culture when it comes to sexual misconduct.
Allen previously served as the military’s director general for cyberspace, director general for information management operations at National Defence Headquarters and joint force cyber component commander.
The second woman to attain the rank of lieutenant-general in the Armed Forces, she replaces Lt.-Gen Mike Rouleau, who normally would have replaced McDonald.
Rouleau was passed over to replace McDonald in favour of the head of the Canadian Army, Lt.-Gen. Wayne Eyre, who was given the temporary appointment by Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.
Rouleau has now been moved into a new role as senior adviser on future capabilities.
Last December, Sajjan launched a panel to investigate reports of racism, intolerance and white supremacy in the armed forces, which has come under fire as revelations of some members’ links to right-wing groups and reports of sexual misconduct became public.
When he was sworn in January, McDonald apologized to members of the military who have faced discrimination and harassment while serving.
“I apologize to you, my teammates, our teammates, who have experienced racism, discriminatory behaviour and or hateful conduct. I’m deeply sorry,” McDonald said.
“I want you to know that I will do all that I can to support you, to stop these unacceptable acts from happening, and to put into practice our guiding principle: respect the dignity of all persons. Creating a respectful environment is a responsibility that we all share.”
The military’s problems are now spilling over into Parliament.
On Monday, the governing Liberals and the Official Opposition Conservatives marked International Women’s Day debating reported threats against a senior naval officer who brought forward an allegation of misconduct against McDonald.
The debate, at hearings of the House of Commons defence committee, followed a Global News report on Sunday that a senior naval officer who brought forward an allegation of sexual misconduct against McDonald had received anonymous threats warning his career would be in jeopardy for taking action.
He was also told to take the report elsewhere after first bringing the allegation to the defence ministry, sources told Global News.
The committee agreed to expand its hearings into military sexual misconduct.
Yesterday, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole and his NDP counterpart, Jagmeet Singh praised the appointment of Allen but said more needs to be done to fight sexual misconduct in the military.
The details of the allegations against McDonald have not been revealed.
In February, Global News reported allegations that Vance had an ongoing relationship with a subordinate and sent a lewd email to a much more junior soldier in 2012, before he became defence chief.
Vance has not responded to requests for comment and the allegations against him and McDonald have not been independently verified.
Global says he has denied any wrongdoing.
With files from CBC News (Murray Brewster), The Canadian Press (Lee Berthiaume) -
Survey suggests Canadians’ willingness to get vaccine is inscreasing
By: Vincenzo Morello
A new survey suggests that Canadians’ willingness to get the vaccine right away has increased.
The online Angus Reid Institute poll, published Monday, was conducted with a randomized sample of 1,748 Canadian adults who are members of the Angus Reid Forum between March 1 and March 4.
According to the survey, 66 per cent of respondents said that they would get a vaccine as soon as it is possible, an increase when compared to a survey in November where only 40 per cent of respondents said they would get a vaccine when it was available.
Meanwhile, 16 per cent of respondents said they would eventually get a vaccine, but would wait, and 12 per cent said they would not get the vaccine when it was available to them.
Canadians are still critical of the federal government’s effort to acquire vaccine doses.
The survey found that over half, 56 per cent, of respondents said that the government has done a poor job of acquiring doses, and only 28 per cent said that the government was doing a good job.
The survey also found that just over half of respondents, 54 per cent, said they were not confident that the federal government will effectively manage vaccine distribution when they become available, and 41 per cent said they were confident.
Canadians also had different opinions about when to expect the vaccine to be available to them.
Only seven per cent of respondents said they expected the vaccine to be available in March, 12 per cent said April or May, 17 per cent said June or July, and 23 per cent said August or September.
Another group, 20 per cent, said they expected the vaccine to be available later in 2021, and eight per cent said it will not be available until 2022. -
Well-loved sitcom about Canadian immigrant experience to end
By: Lynn Desjardins
In a surprise announcement, the producers of the television series Kim’s Convenience have decided the show’s last episode will air on April 13, 2021. The award-winning show is based around a convenience or corner store owned by a Korean family of four in Toronto. It won hearts for its excellent storytelling, authenticity and diversity.
(Almost all Korean immigration to Canada has been from South Korea. The census of 2016 recorded 198,210 Canadians of Korean origin. Most of them are skilled workers or professionals or have businesses such as food stores, gas bars, restaurants, real estate and insurance agencies, according to the Canadian Encyclopedia)An immigrant story of ‘struggle to build a life in a new country’
On Kim’s Convenience, Andrew Phung plays a friend and roommate of the family’s son, Jung who is estranged from his father. On Twitter, Phung said: “This truly Canadian show allowed people to see themselves on television…We saw Appa (father) and Umma (mother) and connected to their immigrant story and struggle to build a life in a new country. We saw Jung and Janet (the daughter) and watched second-generation Canadians grow into their own.”
Authenticity…at the centre of the success’
The series will have run only five of the six seasons that play on the public broadcaster, CBC’s platforms. In a statement, the show’s producers said they could not carry on with the series because co-creators Ins Choi and Kevin White wanted to to pursue other projects:
“Authenticity of storytelling is at the center of the success of Kim’s Convenience. At the end of production on Season 5, our two co-creators confirmed they were moving on to other projects. Given their departure from the series, we have come to the difficult conclusion that we cannot deliver another season of the same heart and quality that has made the show so special. Kim’s Convenience has meant so much to our cast, writers, crew, and audiences around the world.”
Paul Sun-Hyung Lee who plays the father and Phung each won a pair of Canadian Screen awards for their roles in Kim’s Convenience. Simu Liu who plays the son said he was heartbroken upon learning the series would end. He will go on to star in the upcoming Marvel movie Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. -
Caledon calls on Province for public consultations on Highway 413 Plan
By: Alyssa Parkhill, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Caledon Citizen
After hearing from the community regarding the GTA West Corridor, the Town of Caledon is hopping on board to gain more understanding on the proposed highway and the impacts it will have on the Town.
During a February 16 meeting, local resident and environmentalist Jennifer Leforestier delegated to Council encouraging lawmakers to reverse their support for the proposed 400-series highway.
Council originally showed their support in 2018 claiming it has been a priority for several years.
“My requests are that Council reverse support and endorsement for Highway 413,” said Leforestier at the session last month, “[and] officially request the Federal government to conduct an environmental impact assessment of the proposed highway.”
Since then, the Town of Caledon has consulted with staff and is calling on the Province to conduct further studies to ensure that the proposed highway is in line with their future projected population numbers.
Caledon is projecting an increase from 75,000 residents to 300,000 by 2051.
“Caledon is set to grow by leaps and bounds over the next few years, regardless of what happens with the GTA West corridor. We need to plan smart so that we have a system for moving people, goods and services in a responsible and sustainable way,” said Mayor Allan Thompson.
Additionally, the Town is also completing Leforestier’s request by asking the federal government to perform an environmental impact assessment on the project.
An environmental assessment is done to support or clarify any planning and decision-making, according the federal government, stating “an environmental assessment is a process to identify, predict and evaluate the potential environmental effects of a proposed project.”
“Ontario needs to build a transportation corridor that allows for the best of current and future efficient technologies to be incorporated into the infrastructure,” continued Thompson.
The Town is also asking for the provincial government to hold public consultations to allow Caledon residents to have their say in the matter.
Fellow Peel municipalities have also voiced their thoughts on the highway but are strongly opposing the highway completely.
Approved at the Mississauga Council meeting on February 24 was a motion that opposes the construction of the highway because of the impacts Highway 413 will have on the farming and agriculture lands, the natural heritage such as the Golden Horseshoe.
“As a Council, we’ve been so dedicated to trying to combat these issues, so we could no longer stand idle. Too many experts and organizations have come out against this planned highway, and today we stand with them,” said Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie.
These organizations include, Environmental Defence, the David Suzuki Foundation, the Federation of Urban Neighbourhoods, Gravel Watch Ontario, Halton Environmental Network, Natural Farmers’ Union-Ontario, Rescue Lake Simcoe Coalition, Sustainable Vaughan, Transport Action Ontario, the Wildness Committee and Sustainable Mississauga.
The Town of Caledon is hopeful for the support from both municipalities Mississauga and Brampton to have the assessment completed.
“Both Brampton and Mississauga have seen what happens when sprawl goes unchecked without the proper infrastructure in place,” said Thompson. “We want to ensure that Caledon’s distinctive natural, agricultural and environmental character is preserved and to do that I urge my colleagues to support a stringent, thorough and comprehensive EA and consultation process.”
For further information, visit Caledon.ca.