Year: 2021

  • Ottawa’s decision on controlling the fate of the GTA West Highway will come by May 4th

    By: Isaac Callan, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Pointer
    For more than a year, the PC government’s plan to build a sprawling GTA West transportation corridor flew under the radar.
    When Doug Ford and his colleagues moved to restart the highway’s environmental assessment (EA) in 2019, reversing the previous Liberal government’s decision to scrap it, few noticed. Subsequent advancements of the project also received little attention, despite sustained opposition by advocacy groups such as Environmental Defence.
    As 2021 dawned, something started to shift.
    While the PCs at Queen’s Park approved the highway’s route in August and then quietly moved to speed up the environmental assessment process to get the project started even faster (perhaps to get shovels in the ground before the next election) opposition to their actions mounted.
    First, Halton Region and the Town of Halton Hills took an aggressive stand against the plan late last year. Then early in the new year the NDP came out against the project, confirming they would scrap it if the party wins election in 2022, and the Liberals followed a few weeks later with the same pledge. Pleas from environmental groups and local residents who will be directly impacted by the massive stretch of six-lane highway grew louder.
    Early in February, Environmental Defence teamed up with an environmental law-group, Ecojustice, and sent a request to Ottawa. Take over the EA process being rushed through by Queen’s Park, they asked. The request, originally something of a hail mary that relied on a generous interpretation of federal legislation, has already borne fruit.
    In a series of unexpected votes, Peel’s lower-tier municipalities finally woke up.
    Caledon and Brampton had endorsed the highway’s progress for years, while Mississauga had chosen not to get involved. Suddenly, Mississauga passed a motion actively opposing the highway, while Caledon and Brampton both backed calls for the federal government to take over the environmental assessment process, meaning it could scrap the entire project, if it decides to get involved.
    On Tuesday, in another surprise move, the City of Vaughan, where the 400-series highway would run, voted to revoke its support for the project, passing a motion rejecting the plan, instead of simply debating how the assessment should proceed, which was the original plan for the council meeting.
    Clearly, politicians have been shocked into action by the mounting anger over the PC government’s decision to unilaterally ram through a project that will have devastating consequences on climate change, GTA watersheds, local ecosystems and the environment in general. The world’s largest protected green space, Ontario’s Greenbelt, would see the giant asphalt corridor run right along its southern edge and, in some places, right through the sensitive natural environment covered by provincial legislation.
    Sustaining the GTA’s watershed, which prevents flooding while ensuring clean water and healthy ecosystems is critical to the health of Ontario’s most populous region.
    Building a highway across these valuable lands goes against everything the Province has done over the last two decades to protect the environment.
    But with the blessing of the development industry, Ford ignored all the past work and the decision in 2018 to scrap the project.
    The tone deaf move at a time when the planet faces unparalleled challenges, is finally being reconsidered.
    Shaken by the swelling opposition, even the Province has softened its position, with the PCs stating this week in the legislature that the highway might not happen.
    Hanging over the process is the potential for the federal government to wrestle control of the EA from Queen’s Park and complete its own assessment. The Liberal government has made climate change a key pillar of its mandate, and a massive 400-series highway would only make it more difficult for Canada to meet its obligations under the Paris Accord.
    In 2016, when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau signed the document officially at a United Nations ceremony in New York, he said, “Today, with my signature, I give you our word that Canada’s efforts will not cease. Climate change will test our intelligence, our compassion and our will. But we are equal to that challenge.”
    His government now has a clear opportunity to make good on the pledge.
    If a federal EA is conducted and concludes the highway’s impact to the environment or Canada’s emissions targets would be too great, it could end the project once and for all.
    Under the Impact Assessment Act, the Minister of Environment and Climate Change has 90 days from the initiation of a request to decide whether or not to designate the project and take control. A spokesperson for the federal government confirmed to The Pointer a decision by the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada would be made by May 4
    “The agency is currently soliciting the views of the public, Indigenous groups and stakeholders to inform its analysis and prepare a recommendation for the minister,” the spokesperson said. “The agency’s recommendation will also be informed by science, input from the proponent, federal authorities, and other jurisdictions.”
    There are several concerns around the planned GTA West Corridor.
    Environmental groups and members of the public were alarmed when the PCs announced in the summer that the EA would be streamlined to get the project started faster. Critics said a shortened assessment would fall short of the rigorous scientific standards required to safely build highway infrastructure on or around protected lands. The issue of whether “the potential adverse effects can be adequately managed through other existing legislative or regulatory mechanisms” is one of the questions Ottawa will now consider in its deliberations.
    The federal government will also consider if the potential greenhouse gas emissions from the project “may hinder the Government of Canada’s ability to meet its commitments with respect to climate change”. This factor, something a new highway would clearly contribute to, suggests Ottawa could be motivated to intervene.
    The same legislation applied in the decision on the GTA West Highway is being challenged in Alberta. Court documents submitted by the Government of Alberta call the Impact Assessment Act a “trojan horse” and ask the province’s top court to rule it unconstitutional.
    “This overreach of federal jurisdiction threatens to eviscerate provincial authority over resource development and must be rejected by this court,” the Alberta government states in the court documents.
    It follows a theme of similar struggles, particularly in Alberta and Ontario, where Conservative  governments have found their policies at odds with aggressive national climate change commitments.
    Ontario Premier Doug Ford believes large-scale construction projects such as the GTA West Corridor will help reignite the economy when COVID-19 eventually retreats. But the federal Liberals have doubled down on their climate change commitments by significantly increasing the national carbon tax.
    The spokesperson explained the decision-making process to determine if Ottawa will take over the EA for the highway.
    “The recommendation will consider whether the carrying out of the project may cause adverse effects within federal jurisdiction or adverse direct or incidental effects, and public concerns related to such effects. It will also consider the potential impacts of the project on the rights of Indigenous peoples in Canada.”
    The Fording River Extension in British Columbia, formerly known as the Castle Project, serves as an example.
    The project was a result of a proposal by Teck Coal Limited to extend the life of its metallurgical coal mine north of Elkford. Between May 12 and July 17, eight separate requests for the Federal government to step in were submitted. They came from different parties, including Indigenous communities and the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
    On August 19, 99 days after the initial request, the federal government agreed to take over the project’s assessment.
    So far, the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada’s website only lists one request for the GTA West Corridor to be designated as a federal project, linking to the original February letter from EcoJustice on behalf of its client, Environmental Defence. Other requests in the form of council motions have since been sent, including resolutions passed in Brampton, Caledon and Mississauga. More than 50 comments have also been submitted by members of the public.
    A final decision will be publicly rendered by May 4.

  • Canada approves the Johnson vaccine

    By: Vincenzo Morello
    The Canadian government has approved use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine in Canada.
    “After a thorough, independent review of the evidence, the Department has determined that the vaccine meets Canada’s stringent safety, efficacy and quality requirements,” a statement from Health Canada said today.
    The vaccine, which is produced by Johnson & Johnson’s pharmaceutical subsidiary Janssen Inc., can be stored and transported at refrigerated temperatures of from 2 C to 8 C for at least three months.
    At a news conference on Friday, Health Canada’s chief medical adviser, Dr. Supriya Sharma, said that the single-dose Janssen vaccine had been authorized for use for people over the age of 18 and was shown to be 66 per cent effective in preventing moderate to severe cases of COVID-19.
    Sharma said the Janssen vaccine shares common side effects such as pain and tenderness at the injection site, headache, muscle pain, fever and chills. She added that the majority of adverse reactions in clinical trials were mild to moderate in severity and resolved in a few days.
    “Assessing all the data, we concluded that there was strong evidence that showed that the benefits of this vaccine outweigh the potential risks,” Sharma said.
    Sharma also said that ongoing studies expect to provide more data on the safety and efficacy of the vaccine in other populations, such as children, and that a clinical trial in children aged 12 to 17 has already been authorized by Health Canada.
    The Janssen vaccine is a viral vector-based vaccine, which means it uses a harmless virus as a delivery system. Once injected into the body the virus within the vaccine produces the SARS-Cov-2 spike protein.
    Through this process the body is able to create a strong immune response to the spike protein without exposing you to the virus that causes COVID-19.
    Canada has already ordered 10 million doses of the Janssen vaccine with an option to purchase 28 million more, and expects the first 10 million doses to arrive before the end of the third quarter.
    The Janssen vaccine is the fourth vaccine Canada has approved.
    The others are the Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccines, as well as another version of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine that is being produced by the Serum Institute of India.
    With files from CBC News (Ryan Patrick Jones, David Cochrane)

  • Halton residents over 80 can book appointments for COVID-19 vaccines

    By: Laura Steiner
    Halton Region’s booking system for COVID-19 vaccine appointments is now live.  Residents over the age of 80, can book their appointment at one of four vaccination clinics throughout the region.
    “Our book system is now live, and taking appointments for our 80+ community,” Halton region Gary Carr said in a news release.  Clinics run on an appointment-only basis through an online system   Phone assistance is available by calling 311.
    The clinics are located in the following locations:

    Bookings can only be made through the Halton Region.  Residents are asked not to call clinic locations direct.  Additional locations may be added as required.
    Halton Chief Medical Officer of Health (CMOH) Dr. Hamidah Meghani urges caution. “While we continue to focus on vaccinations for priority populations identified by the province, please be patient and prepared to be vaccinated when it is your turn.  Please make sure you are accessing accurate information on vaccine safety and effectiveness including information on our website,” Meghani said.  Residents are still advised to stay inside accept for essential trips, such as grocery shopping, and medical appointments and continue wearing non-medical face coverings.

  • Ontario Reveals Plans for Phase 2 of COVID-19 Vaccine Plan

    By: Laura Steiner
    Ontario has revealed plans for phase 2 of the COVID-19 vaccine rollout.  The announcement was made by Premier Doug Ford, Health Minister Christine Elliott, and Vaccine Distribution Task Force Chair General Rick Hillier (Retired).
    “This is a true team Ontario effort and we are mobilizing our greatest asset- the people of Ontario,” Ford said.  Phase 2 will focus vaccinating populations by age and risk for COVID-19
    The announcement follows Health Canada’s approval of the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine earlier today.  “Vaccines will be administered in hospital clinics, primary care settings, mass vaccination sites, mobile clinics and pharmacies  across the province by dedicated, caring and compassionate frontline health care heroes,” Ford said.  The province is expecting 2 million doses by the end of March.  Pfizer has agreed to accelerate shipments with 1.5 million doses delivered before the end of the month.  The delivery schedule for the Johnson & Johnson has not yet been announced.
    Groups that will receive the vaccine include:

    • Older adults between 60-79 years of age;
    • Individuals with specific health conditions and some primary caregivers;
    • People who live and work in congregate settings and some primary caregivers;
    • People who live in hot spots with high rates of death, hospitalizations and transmission; and,
    • Certain workers who cannot work from home.

    Phase one of the province’s rollout is currently underway with approximately 269,000 Ontarians fully vaccinated.  “We continue to ramp up capacity and are committed to administering as many doses as possible to every Ontarian who wants a vaccine,” Elliott said.  The province also plans a pilot project in pharmacies in Toronto, Windsor, and Kingston areas beginning the middle of this month.
    The province is launching an online booking system opening to residents age 80 and over.  The plan is to extend it to more groups, as the vaccination process progresses.  They expect Public Health Units (PHU) to migrate over.  Some public health units, including Halton Region have begun booking appointments.
    “With the approval of the AstraZeneca vaccine, and now the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, and with increased supplies coming into the province, this gives us renewed focus to get even more Ontarians vaccinated sooner,” Solicitor General Sylvia Jones said.
    The National Advisory Council on Immunization has recommended the extension of the interval between the first and second doses up to four months.  The province will be following this recommendation effective March 10, 2021.
    “The vaccine developments this week mean that we can expect things to move faster than anticipated which is fantastic, said Gen. (ret’d) Rick Hillier.  Ontario will enter phase three as vaccine supplies allow.  Vaccines will not be mandated, but strongly encouraged by the provincial government.

  • Walter Gretzky, the ultimate hockey dad who won Canada’s heart, is dead at 82

    By: Terry Haig
    To be a great hockey parent requires patience, perseverance and great love.
    Any Canadian who’s ever gotten up at the crack of dawn to take a child to practice, flooded a backyard to turn it into an mini rink or consoled and/or celebrated with a kid after a particularly tough game, will tell you this.
    Walter Gretzky, who possessed all those qualities, died Thursday at the age of 82, following a nine-year battle with Parkinson’s disease.
    Wayne Gretzky, the greatest scorer in National Hockey League history, confirmed his father’s death on Thursday night on social media.
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    It’s pretty certain that many Canadians will take Walter Gretzky’s death personally.
    He was, after all, blue collar to the core–the neighbour down the street you could trust your kids with, a man who spent 34 years as an installer and repairman for Bell Canada, a guy who raised a son good enough to ultimately be hailed as “The Great One,” a coach that made sure that son never got too caught up in his own self-importance.
    It was some ride for the Gretzkys and for Canadians.
    As Wayne’s star rose, so did Walter’s.
    The two spent a lot of time in public view–Wayne on the ice and Walter in commercials and in joint public appearances with his famous son.
    And, the more Canadians saw of Walter, the more they liked him.
    He was one of them.
    Eventually, he became the most famous hockey dad on the planet.
    The Gretzkys came across the way Canadians like to view themselves: humble and self-effacing.
    And the success they had, they had together.
    Becoming a successful hockey player is, as most Canadians will quickly tell you, a team effort.
    “Everything I am is because of him. It’s as simple as that,” Wayne said in this 1996 CBC interview.
    Everything, however, did not run smoothly.
    A chain smoker, five days after his 53rd birthday in 1991 and and just months into his retirement, Walter Gretzky suffered a near-fatal brain aneurysm that impaired his short-term memory.
    “Those were dark times,” he wrote about the early days after the stroke, “and I wouldn’t want to go back there for anything in the world. It’s an awful thing not to know who or where you are, to feel confused and hopeless and not know whether you are ever going to be able to do all the things you used to.”
    But, as the Canadian Press’s Neil Davidson wrote in his obituary last night, Walter carried on, raising money for charities and running hockey camps and being, well, Wayne’s father.
    “Hockey helped his recovery as he started working with kids in the Brantford Minor Hockey Association. The four- and five-year-olds used to call him Wally,” Davidson reports.
    “He was a much sought-after speaker by groups organizing sports awards dinners, and he worked tirelessly as national spokesman for the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada.”
     
    Gretzky was never far from the spotlight and, it seemed, the older he got the better he felt.
    “In 2010, Walter carried the Olympic torch on the last day of the Olympic relay in the leadup to the opening ceremonies in Vancouver, where Wayne lit the Olympic flame,” Davidson reports.
    “In his remaining years, he was more outgoing and carefree. After one game when his minor hockey team was downcast, he invited everyone to his home to see Wayne’s memorabilia. There were 61 of them. He also became an avid golfer.”
    In December, of 2005, Gretzky’s wife, Phyllis, died of lung cancer.
    Seven years later, in 2012, he was diagnosed with the degenerative disorder Parkinson’s disease when tremors in his left hand prompted a doctor’s visit.
    He carried on…ever helpful, ever smiling, ever humble.
    ‘”I really don’t like to sit still for too long,” Davidson quotes Gretzky once saying.
    “I’m most comfortable when I’m active.”
    He is survived, Davidson reports, by his five children: Wayne, Kim, Keith, Glen and Brent, as well as numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
    With files from The Canadian Press (Neil Davidson), CBC News
     

  • Poetry in the time of COVID

    By: Mark Squibb, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter,  The Shoreline News
    The COVID-19 pandemic has elicited strong emotional reactions across the globe, and a St. John’s author and her extended family are using poetry to bottle and preserve those emotions.
    Though written in verse, Lillian Bouzane said the collection of poems is as much a historical documentation of the early days of the pandemic as it is a book of art.
    “I imagine that a hundred years down the road, some graduate student is writing about the pandemic of 2019 and 2020 (or however long it lasts,) and comes across this book of poetry, or the manuscript of poetry, which I have every intention of putting in the archives, and what they get is a picture of the beginning of the pandemic, when very few people, including the doctors and scientists, knew what to do about it,” said Bouzane. “So, I see it more as a historical document written in verse.”
    The poems, written by siblings, children, parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and spouses, reflect a wide range of emotions, emotions that we’ve all felt at some point during the pandemic: anguish, fear, boredom, uncertainty, contentment, bravado, and joy. One poem paints a picture of planting gardens and snaring rabbits during isolation, while another highlights the heartache of grandparents who are not able to properly visit growing grandchildren.
    The poems, written by everyday folk who would never style themselves as ‘poets’, portray how folks felt in all the moments, little and big, of unprecedented times.
    Bouzane, herself the author of In The Times of Wolves, a suite of poems on the Mount Cashel crimes, and the novel In The Hands of the Living God, which was long listed for the International IMPACT Dublin Literary Award in 2000, said that creativity provides an emotional lift, especially during times such as these.
    “The joy of writing the poems makes you feel good,” said Bouzne. “To write a poem, as one person said, makes you feel as if you’ve had a glass of wine… I heard on the radio that somebody has composed a song to Janice Fitzgerald, the Chief Medical Officer.”
    Bouzane said she was ‘surprised by joy,’ a line borrowed from poet William Wordsworth that expresses the feeling of being caught off guard by a sudden burst of joy in a dark moment, when her family embraced her suggestion to write and publish the collection.
    “I was so surprised by all of the members of the family who were writing poems,” said Bouzane. “I thought, ‘Am I going to get 30? Am I going to get 20? Am I going to get any at all?’ And I got 75.’”
    The collection, the cover of which is a photo of The Rower statue at Quidi Vidi Lake adorning a facemask, is available as an eBook from Amazon at $3.94.

  • Local podcaster looks to uncover the truth about the famous sasquatch

    By: Morgan Hampton, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Merritt Herald
    For decades now many have been asking the question, does sasquatch exist?
    Sheldon Quewezance believes that they do, and he has now launched a podcast aimed at educating people about the creature and interacting with fellow sasquatch enthusiasts.
    “I’ve always been fascinated with sasquatch, ever since I was a boy,” said Quewezance.
    “When me and two of my best friends started carpooling to work, the subject of sasquatch came up after someone on Facebook posted a picture of some tracks that were found about four years ago. We decided then to try an excursion to an area known for its sasquatch activity.”
    Quewezance and his friends embarked on several “field trips” as he calls them, searching at least twice a month for the elusive creature with the help of some sophisticated equipment.
    “We have a few guidelines we all follow and gear to help us look such as sound amplifiers, infrared camera, flashlights and of course, bear spray,” said Quewezance.
    “There are a lot of creatures in the forest to worry about other than sasquatch.”
    Finally, the group was rewarded with a sighting.
    “The sighting itself happened in 2018 and actually not far from the city limits, although we never give away locations as we don’t want them to be disturbed,” explained Quewezance.
    “The creature had made its way towards the truck as the four of us sat inside and were talking and scanning the forest every so often. I noticed some ‘eye shine’ off in the distance and there it was, peeking from behind a tree and watching us. It didn’t make a move or any noise but just stood there. We began to panic and as I turned away to tell one of the other people in the truck to calm down, I turned back, and it was gone. It lasted about 15-20 seconds in total but that is the second I knew I was hooked on the subject and needed to know more.”
    Although Quewezance has been dedicated to continuing the search since his first and only bigfoot sighting, COVID put the expeditions on hold. It was through this downtime that Quewezance decided to launch his podcast as a means of staying connected to his passion.
    “The hope with it is to try and normalize the talk about sasquatch because people really need to know that these creatures are out there and deserve respect,” said Quewezance, who has seen the appetite for his work increase to the point that he now releases a new podcast twice weekly.
    The podcast features not only Quewezance’s work and experiences, but those of guest speakers as well.
    “I’ve interviewed everyone from everyday people to university professors to sasquatch researchers,” said Quewezance.
    “99% of them have had sightings, but I find my favourite guests have been everyday folks who have sightings. I also have a lot of people who don’t want to be on the show, but tell me about their encounters because they have no one else to turn to. That honours me to a degree I cannot explain,” Quewezance continued.
    “A side effect of the podcast is I am actually helping people talk about their encounters and get that weight off of their chest, and to reassure them that they are not crazy. I just did an episode with a man named James who held in his encounter for 30+ years because he had a fear of being noted as crazy (Ep. #27 – It Was Moving on The Ground Like A Soldier). His encounter actually traumatized him for more than three decades and it really gives my show purpose when I know I am helping someone out.”
    There is often a division between believers and non-believers which has only intensified in the more than 50 years since the infamous, controversial video of an alleged female bigfoot nicknamed ‘Patty’ was released by Roger Patterson and Robert Gimlin.
    As for the podcast ‘Nicola Valley Bigfoot’, which is available on Spotify, Quewezance notes it has been a learning process and a very different venture from his usual role which is manager of the Shulus Community Arena in Lower Nicola.
    “It’s a lot of work but is worth the time spent editing and brainstorming ideas for future episodes,” said Quewezance.
    “I’m definitely still learning the process, but the show quality has improved drastically over the course of a few months and I am excited about where the show is going. I was asked recently if I will give it a rest once I am able to get back out in the field. That was always the plan, but with the demand from the audience, I don’t think I could if I wanted to.”
    The work has been well worth it, with Quewezance happy to have met new people and made many new friends through the podcast. He hopes to attend sasquatch-related conferences this year should restrictions allow. This will also allow him the chance to make new connections and draw more guest speakers.
    “I usually aim for guests who have had encounters but am not limited to only them.
    “I’ve interviewed researchers who have never had an encounter but are out in the field searching whenever they have a chance, so I encourage everyone to reach out.”

  • NGOs and survivors want ‘full criminal investigation’ into Pornhub’s owner

    By: Terry Haig
    The Montreal-based owner of the pornographic internet website Pornhub is pushing back against charges that it violates child protection laws and shares intimate images without consent.
    The charges are contained in a letter sent this week to the House of Commons ethics committee by a coalition of 100 survivors of sexual exploitation and hundreds of non-government organizations from around the world.
    Signatories want a “full criminal investigation” into MindGeek, Pornhub’s parent company.
    The letter–signed by 104 individuals and 525 NGOs–calls on the federal government to encourage an investigation by the RCMP and to take “immediate legislative and regulatory action to protect children from this predatory and unethical corporation.”
    But in a story published today, The Canadian Press’s Christopher Reynolds reports that MindGeek executives are rejecting any wrongdoing, saying their company is a “world leader” in preventing the distribution of content showing child sexual abuse and non-consensual acts.
    “MindGeek has zero-tolerance for non-consensual content, child sexual abuse material (CSAM), and any other content that lacks the consent of all parties depicted,” the company said in an email to CP, according to Reynolds.
    “The harrowing stories of the survivors of CSAM and non-consensual imagery shake us to our core.”
    MindGeek and Pornhub have drawn heightened attention since last December when New York Times opinion columnist Nicholas Kristof published a highly-critical column entitled The Children of Pornhub, noting that Pornhub attracted 3.5 billion visits a month, more than Netflix, Yahoo or Amazon, and took in money from almost three billion ad impressions a day.
    One ranking, Kristof wrote, listed Pornhub as the 10th-most-visited website in the world.
    Shortly after Kristof’s column was published several major credit card companies suspended payment services to Pornhub, prompting the site to scrub some 10 million videos posted by unverified users.
    Users, the company said, would now need to be verified in order to upload videos, making it easier to hold those who upload to the site accountable for the way the videos are obtained and produced. 
    As well, the “download” button was also removed, making it harder for videos of rape and child molestation to be reuploaded or spread.
    Last month, MindGeek CEO Feras Antoon and chief operating officer David Tassillo told the House of Commons Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics that all content on the Pornhub website is screened using multiple software tools before being approved by human moderators.
    This week’s letter says MindGeek is profiting from “a range of criminal content” distributed across some of its 160-odd platforms.“It also appears that MindGeek has violated Canada’s laws on publication of intimate images without consent,” the letter states.
    According to CP’s Reynolds, the company said in a statement that it goes “above and beyond” the demands of Canadian law.
    “Those who post CSAM and nonconsensual imagery are criminals — we will not stop working to improve our security until we have prevented every one of these criminals from abusing our platforms,” MindGeek said.
    The company said it works with more than 40 non-profit organizations to moderate and report content on its platforms.
    MindGeek currently faces at least five lawsuits filed in the past year in Canada and the U.S. on behalf of survivors of child abuse, sex trafficking and non-consensual image uploads.
    They include a suit by 40 women in California who claim the company continues to profit from pornographic videos of them that were published without their full consent and a class-action lawsuit that alleges the company profited off material showing  child sexual abuse and non-consensual activity since 2007.
    Last month, the RCMP said it was  investigating all claims about sexual abuse material being hosted by MindGeek — but most of the referrals to date did not meet the Criminal Code definition of child pornography.
    MindGeek is legally headquartered in Luxembourg, but operates from Montreal, where it employs about 1,000 people.
    With files from The Canadian Press (Christopher Reynolds), CBC News
     
     
     

  • Toronto lost $8.35 billion in economic activity due to COVID-19 pandemic

    By: Vincenzo Morello
    Toronto lost $8.35 billion in economic activity from tourist spending due to the travel restrictions and lockdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to an analysis Destination Toronto released on Thursday.
    The analysis found that the industries most affected by the reduction in tourism spending were retail, which had a $1.67 billion loss in economy activity, food and beverage lost $1.3 billion, accommodations lost $1.2 billion and attractions and entertainment lost $707 million.
    “Simply stated, 380,000 attendees didn’t come to Toronto over the past year. As a result, they didn’t stay in hotels or visit attractions, didn’t spend money in our retail shops, or eat in our restaurants,” Scott Beck, the president and chief executive officer of Destination Toronto said.
    “Prior to the pandemic, Toronto had been riding a wave of momentum and experienced annual growth in visitor spending for over a decade.”
    The analysis from Destination Toronto stemmed from a visitor economy study that was produced by Tourism Toronto in partnership with the Toronto Region Board of Trade and released in 2019. According to the study, Toronto’s 27.5 million visitors generated an economic impact of $10.3 billion and supported 70,000 jobs.
    Another sector that was hit hard by the pandemic was the meetings and events industry. Destination Toronto tracked 463 conferences and events that were cancelled or postponed since the pandemic began, costing $833 million in losses.

    In addition, the reduced visitor spending resulted in $1.44 billion in unrealized tax revenue for the municipal, provincial and federal government.
    “We are working non-stop to get through this pandemic so that we can safely restart and reopen our city,” said Toronto Mayor John Tory. “One of the hardest hit areas during the pandemic has been the hospitality and tourism sector but I am absolutely confident that this sector will come back strong with more jobs than ever before.”
    Destination Toronto works in partnership with the City of Toronto, the Greater Toronto Hotel Association and the Ontario Ministry of Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Culture Industries to market and promote the city to global travellers.
  • Essa appeals to young homebuyers from GTA

    By: Cheryl Browne, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Barrie Advance
    When Carolyn Court’s husband landed a job in Simcoe County, they packed up their Milton home and moved to Thornton in a heartbeat.
    That was 11 years ago and the now 40-something couple haven’t looked back.
    “There was more land up here and everyone’s fleeing the city and  coming up here for the cheaper prices,” Court said while walking her dog  along Thornton Avenue.
    “I think we broke even when we bought up here, but the prices have risen a lot since then.”
    The Courts are among hundreds of couples who saw the prices rise south of Essa and the lots shrink.
    According to a Statistics Canada 2016 census, more well-heeled families are making their way north.
    The median total household income in Essa Township was $87,243 in  2015 (latest figures available) with about 15 per cent of the population  earning that income, compared to the provincial average of 11 per cent.
    In contrast, Barrie’s median household wage sat around $77,900 at that time and Simcoe County’s  median was $76,489.
    Essa’s inhabitants are younger, too.
    While the average age of residents in Oro-Medonte is 43.7 years and a  little less in Springwater at 43.4, Essa’s average resident is 37 years  old.
    Simcoe-Grey MP Terry Dowdall rhymes off Essa’s attributes: it’s near  the Blue Mountains and Mount St. Louis Moonstone ski hills, it’s not far  from the Toronto or Lake Simcoe Regional airports, and it’s accessible  to both Georgian Bay and Lake Simcoe.
    “It’s not too far from Toronto and a lot of new people came up just  because of the price of the houses,” Dowdall said. “They’re 30 years  old, they’ve saved their down payment, and they just can’t buy down in  Toronto, even if you want to, so they come up here. And, it has a really  good tax rate. Tax rates in Essa are phenomenal in comparison to a lot  of the other municipalities; we’re very attractive to people.”
    The Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) determines  municipal taxes by multiplying a home’s current value by the total tax  rate and then dividing by property class.  Essa’s residential property  tax is calculated at 0.678, whereas Springwater is rated at .0768 and  Oro-Medonte is 0.856.
    Once families move to Essa, Dowdall said, they invite their friends and families to visit and they see Essa’s possibilities.
    “Essa now has a lot of amenities; you know, the grocery stores, more  restaurants that are coming, the high school was a huge, huge addition  that completed the community,” he said of Nottawasaga Pines Secondary  School that opened in 2011. “We have the opportunity for people to buy  and stay and watch their kids go through their whole schooling. That  made quite a difference in the area.”
    If there is any downside, both Dowdall and Essa Mayor Sandie  Macdonald agree it’s the dearth of homes for the boomer generation.  Looking 10 years down the road, Macdonald can see which amenities  communities will need to keep older residents satisfied.
    Also on the mayor’s wish list would be more industrial businesses  taking up residence. Currently, Essa has a “huge commuting” population  heading south for the better-paying jobs, she said. However, there are  still good jobs to be had at Honda, Baxter and many residents work at  Canadian Forces Base Borden.
    “Industrial (businesses) are a much higher paying tax (base) and it  balances taxes. Housing does not pay for itself,” Macdonald said.
    Maintaining parkland and opening trails will become more vital than ever, she said.
    “Just look at having the COVID-19, this pandemic, at least we have  green space where people can get out and walk,” she said. “We need to go  the way we’re going now, increase our trails, increase our green  spaces, and if this is a way of life for at least a few years of social  distancing, at least they can get out and (know) that it’s safe to go.”