Tuesday, September 29, 2020

'It's not broken': Calgary City council votes to oppose consolidation of ambulance dispatch

Madeline Smith CALGARY HERALD/POSTMEDIA
© Provided by Calgary Herald Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi (L) and Minister of Health Tyler Shandro (R). Alberta Health Services is planning to consolidate EMS Dispatch. Calgary is one of four municipalities that has yet to be consolidated. Calgary city council is opposing the plan.

City council took an official stand Monday against a bid to centralize Calgary’s ambulance dispatch under Alberta Health Services.


The latest move in the dispute between the provincial government and the municipalities that still control local EMS dispatch comes after Mayor Naheed Nenshi joined three other mayors in Edmonton last week to make the case directly to Health Minister Tyler Shandro against consolidation.

Calgary council held a special meeting Monday to hear from a series of officials and experts about how the city’s 911 and emergency dispatch system works. Calgary Community Standards director Richard Hinse and Calgary fire Chief Steve Dongworth both said the current model, where dispatchers for police, fire and EMS work in the same room, shouldn’t be changed.

Council voted nearly unanimously to oppose moving Calgary’s EMS dispatch and to ask Shandro to overturn the decision. Coun. Sean Chu and Joe Magliocca voted against the statement because they said AHS and the province hadn’t been given a chance to explain the “other side” of the issue.


According to city data, Calgary 911 deals with 15,000 calls per year that require all three types of first responders at the scene.

“Calgarians have already had the gold standard for 15 years of this model based on 911,” Hinse said. “It’s not broken. Why would you fix it?”

Red Deer, Lethbridge and the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo are the other places in Alberta where ambulance dispatch is still done locally. Starting in 2009, across the rest of the province, AHS dispatches EMS from three centres in Edmonton, Calgary and Peace River.

Mayor Naheed Nenshi said if he believed that the change would improve patient outcomes or save a significant amount of money, that could convince him to hand over EMS dispatch.

“I don’t believe either of those things,” he said, adding he questions why the city is having this conversation again.

'He has to stand down': Calgary council vows to fight Shandro on EMS dispatch consolidation

AHS has tried several times over the last decade to consolidate the remaining municipally run EMS dispatch work, but health ministers across several governments have rejected it.

“I have yet to see any evidence that patient outcomes will improve or money will be saved,” Nenshi said.

In an interview with Postmedia last week, Alberta’s chief paramedic Darren Sandbeck said the move is about finishing the work AHS started in 2009 and creating a “truly integrated” EMS dispatch system.

“When we started this journey there was 37 EMS dispatch centres in Alberta. Those 37 dispatch centres were not connected in any way, shape or form and had no understanding of what resources were available,” he said.

“Emergency services, first response groups always want to have direct co-ordination over their resources. … We want to have the same thing. We want to have direct co-ordination with our staff, within our system of all of our EMS resources across the province.”
© Gavin Young/Postmedia Network Alberta Health Service’s chief paramedic Darren Sandbeck was photographed in Calgary on Tuesday May 30, 2017.

If consolidation goes ahead, EMS dispatch would move over to AHS in January. There are currently 45 ambulance dispatchers that work for the city, and they’d be replaced with 25 positions at AHS.

After meeting with Nenshi and the mayors of the other affected communities last week, Shandro said he would review their information.

And on Monday, he said if there’s evidence that shows emergency response times would “somehow be adversely affected” then he’d be against the change.

“But that’s quite frankly not the evidence I’ve seen right now from AHS.”
How Calgary 911 works

When a Calgarian dials 911, a municipal employee answers the call — and that would still be the case even if consolidation goes ahead.

But the process of sending out emergency services would look different. Currently, depending on whether the caller says they need police, fire or ambulance, they’re transferred to a municipal dispatcher who’s responsible for sending that service to the scene.

But if AHS takes over EMS dispatch, a call for an ambulance would be transferred to the AHS dispatch centre, while police and fire dispatch are in a different building.

Hinse said splitting emergency dispatchers into different workplaces means they won’t be able to communicate directly, and that opens them up to errors.

“For a purely medical emergency — a broken leg, a slip, a fall — an AHS dispatch centre may work well,” he said. “The problem is that emergencies are messy.”


In Calgary’s 911 call centre, police, fire and EMS dispatchers are intentionally seated adjacent to each other, and Hinse said there are times when dispatchers simply “twist and shout” to their colleagues that they need additional first responders on their call.

Alerting Calgary fire to calls is one of the city’s main concerns. Firefighters are currently first on the scene of a medical emergency slightly more than half the time, and they can offer medical help before the ambulance arrives. But that requires co-ordination between ambulance and fire dispatchers to make sure resources are sent out as soon as possible.

Chief paramedic Sandbeck maintains that emergency response times won’t be affected, and firefighters will continue to be first on the scene for the same percentage of calls.

Calgary ambulance dispatchers started using an AHS computer-aided dispatch (CAD) system to handle calls in 2017, and Sandbeck said that means the only thing that changes under consolidation is the dispatcher’s employer and location.

“There’s CAD to CAD interface, which means our dispatch software immediately talks to fire dispatch software and alerts them that we need them for a response,” he said.

“If the call triggers up as unconscious and not breathing, that will automatically send a notification to the fire dispatcher that we need a medical first response.”
© Gavin Young Calgary Fire Chief Steve Dongworth speaks at a media press conference on Wednesday, June 3, 2020.

But Calgary fire Chief Dongworth told council Monday the AHS CAD system added extra steps that actually set firefighter response times back by 49 seconds, on average, since 2017.

And Hinse said waiting for call takers in another building to let fire dispatch know whether they’re needed is a waste of precious seconds when firefighters could be pre-alerted that they’re needed. And in the meantime, the caller has to wait to be transferred to the AHS centre.


Replying to @meksmith
Nenshi says he doesn't like the implication that city staff telling #yyccc their professional opinion "is just one side of the story."
Nenshi: "This is not a matter of council mediating between both sides," says calling city staff "just one side" is "troubling" to him. #yyccc



Replying to @meksmith
Hinse: "If AHS consolidates EMS dispatch, they will do a great job at dispatching ambulances. The problem is emergencies are messy," and they often require multiple first responders. #yyccc
This is an example about how emergency dispatchers are sitting together in Calgary's call centre. Hinse says the CAD system that AHS uses to transfer calls with the push of a button sometimes doesn't work, and communication is crucial. #yyccc
Image

Foothills County opposition

Foothills County Reeve Suzanne Oel also told council about her community’s experience with consolidated dispatch.

AHS took over EMS dispatch across most of southern Alberta in 2009, and Foothills has been advocating to take it back for years, citing particular problems with dispatching firefighters for medical first response.

“Because of the logistics of transferring the call back and forth, the total time to dispatch a medical fire response averages about five minutes now, or three times longer than before,” Oel said.

Sandbeck said a CAD to CAD interface was put in place between EMS and fire dispatch over the summer to address concerns from Foothills.

Coun. Jyoti Gondek said she was dismayed to see the province consider changing Calgary’s emergency dispatch system without adequate data.

“I’m really at a loss of understanding how we’re going to build a relationship or collaborate with a government that continually degrades, defunds and dismisses anything that municipalities have to say. This is a perfect example.”

Council also voted to ask for representatives from AHS to meet with them as soon as possible.

“This is the beginning,” Coun. Diane Colley-Urquhart said. “And we’ve got several months ahead of us where we’re going to stay the course and fight a good fight on behalf of Calgarians.”

masmith@postmedia.com

Twitter: @meksmith




East Asia poverty could rise for first time in 20 years due to the pandemic, World Bank says


Yen Nee Lee

The number of people living in poverty in developing East Asian and Pacific countries could increase for the first time in 20 years, a World Bank forecast showed on Monday. 

The bank said as many as 38 million more people could fall below below the poverty line this year, including 33 million who would have escaped poverty if the Covid-19 shock didn't happen.

World Bank defined the poverty line as income of $5.50 a day.

© Provided by CNBC People gather at one of slums in Jakarta, Indonesia in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic.

SINGAPORE — The number of people living in poverty in developing East Asian and Pacific countries could increase for the first time in 20 years, as the coronavirus pandemic erased much of this year's economic growth, a World Bank forecast showed on Monday.

The bank defined the poverty line as income of $5.50 a day. It said as many as 38 million more people could fall below that income level this year, including 33 million who would have escaped poverty if not for the Covid-19 shock.

That World Bank forecast was published in an economic update for the region, which includes China, Southeast Asian countries and the Pacific Islands, such as Fiji and Samoa. The report doesn't include India and other South Asian countries.

The report adds to an expanding body of research on how the pandemic is disproportionately hurting the poor. In July, the United Nations projected that 8.8% of the world's population will live in extreme poverty this year, an increase of 8.2% in 2019. Extreme poverty is defined as income below $1.90 a day.

"Scars" left behind by the Covid-19 crisis could last for many years, said the World Bank.

"Sickness, food insecurity, job losses, and school closures could lead to health and learning losses that could last a lifetime. The poor will be disproportionately disempowered because of worse access to hospitals, schools, jobs, and finance," it said in the report.

But greater adoption of technology as a result of the pandemic could help the poor better access opportunities and public services, the bank added.

"For these benefits to arise, these technologies must be broadly available."
Weakest economic growth since 1967

The poverty forecast for developing countries in East Asia and the Pacific comes as the region is expected to grow just 0.9% this year — the weakest growth rate since 1967, according to the World Bank.

"COVID-19 has delivered a triple shock to the developing East Asia and Pacific (EAP) region: the pandemic itself, the economic impact of containment measures, and reverberations from the global recession brought on by the crisis," it explained.


China, the world's second-largest economy, is expected to grow by 2% this year — one of the only three countries in the grouping expected to register growth this year, the bank said.

But economic growth in the region is forecast to jump by 7.4% next year, with China projected to register the largest expansion of 7.9%, the report showed.

"Prospects for the region are brighter in 2021," said the World Bank. "However, output is projected to remain well below pre-pandemic projections for the next two years."
#FIREWILBURROSS

US official: 2020 census to end Oct. 5 despite court order

© Provided by The Canadian Press

ORLANDO, Fla. — U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross says the 2020 census will end Oct. 5, despite a federal judge's ruling last week allowing the head count of every U.S. resident to continue through the end of October, according to a tweet posted by the Census Bureau on Monday.

The tweet said the ability for people to self-respond to the census questionnaire and the door-knocking phase when census takers go to homes that haven't yet responded are targeted to end Oct. 5.

The announcement came as a virtual hearing was being held in San Jose, California, as a follow-up to U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh's preliminary injunction. The injunction issued last week suspended the Census Bureau's deadline for ending the head count on Sept. 30, which automatically reverted back to an older Census Bureau plan in which the timeline for ending field operations was Oct. 31.

The new Oct. 5 deadline doesn't necessarily violate the judge's order because the injunction just suspended the Sept. 30 deadline for field operations, as well as a Dec. 31 deadline the Census Bureau has for turning in figures used for determining how many congressional seats each state gets in a process known as apportionment. The census also is used to determine how to distribute $1.5 trillion in federal spending annually.

Koh asked federal government attorneys during Monday's hearing to provide documents on how the new decision to end the head count on Oct. 5 was made. When a federal government lawyer suggested that the decision-making was a moving target without any records, the judge asked, “A one sentence tweet? Are you saying that is enough reason to establish decision-making? A one sentence tweet?"

Given the judge's preliminary injunction and a temporary restraining order she had previously issued prohibiting the Census Bureau from winding down 2020 census operations, the decision was made that the Sept. 30 deadline was no longer viable, said August Flentje, special counsel to the assistant U.S. Attorney General.

“It's day to day adjustments and assessments," Flentje said.

Koh said in her ruling last Thursday that the shortened schedule ordered by President Donald Trump’s administration likely would produce inaccurate results that would last a decade. She sided with civil rights groups and local governments that had sued the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Department of Commerce, which oversees the statistical agency, arguing that minorities and others in hard-to-count communities would be missed if the counting ends this month.

Attorneys for the federal government said they were appealing the decision. During hearings, federal government attorneys argued that the head count needed to end Sept. 30 in order to meet a Dec. 31 deadline for handing in figures used for apportionment.

Monday's statement was noteworthy in that it was solely attributed to the commerce secretary, while previous announcements about census schedule changes had been made either by Census Bureau director Steven Dillingham or both men jointly.

“It is time that the Trump Administration stopped working to politicize and jeopardize the 2020 Census," said U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, a Democrat from New York, who chairs the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, which has oversight over the Census Bureau.

The decision by the Commerce Department came as census takers across the U.S. told The Associated Press that they were being pressured to meet the Sept. 30 deadline, even after Koh issued her injunction.

In upstate New York, a census supervisor told her census takers Friday that the Buffalo office was operating with Sept. 30 as the end date, according to a text obtained by AP. “5 days left (no matter what the court status),” the text said.

In northern California, a manager told supervisors working under him on Sunday, “We’re in the home stretch with only 3 days left,” according to an email obtained by AP.

In that same region, a different manager told the census supervisors working underneath her Monday that they needed to complete 99% of households in the the Santa Rosa region by Wednesday, including 12,000 households yet to be counted in Mendocino County. In the conference call, area manager Nicole Terrazas pleaded with her supervisors to ask their census takers to head to Mendocino County, even though that part of California is under threat of wildfires.

“We need as much help as we can get. We only have three days to do it,” said Terrazas on a call that an AP reporter listened in on.

When a census supervisor asked why they were being pressured with the Sept. 30 deadline when Koh’s preliminary injunction prohibits the count from ending at the end of this month, Terrazas called the judge’s order “something completely different.”

Other census takers and supervisors, including one from Texas, have sent emails to Koh’s court, saying that field operations in their areas are slated to shut down Sept. 30.

In response to the pandemic, the Census Bureau last April pushed back the deadline for ending the 2020 census from the end of July to the end of October. The bureau also asked Congress to let it turn in numbers used for apportionment from the end of December to the end of April.

The deadline extension passed the Democratic-controlled House but it stalled in the Republican-controlled Senate after President Donald Trump issued a memorandum seeking to exclude people in the country illegally from being used in the apportionment count. A panel of three judges in New York said earlier this month that the memorandum was unlawful.

___

Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter at https://twitter.com/MikeSchneiderAP

Mike Schneider, The Associated Press




A boy sent his Baby Yoda doll to Oregon firefighters. Now they take it on their calls


By Marika Gerken, CNN

© Courtesy Tyler Eubanks

When 5-year-old Carver learned about the wildfires ravaging his home state of Oregon, he told his grandmother Sasha Tinning he wanted to do something to help the heroes on the front lines.

So, when Tinning heard about a local donation drive for firefighters in Molalla and Colton, Oregon, she took Carver shopping to buy groceries and other items they thought the firefighters might need.

While at the store, Carver's eyes fixed on something in the toy aisle -- a Baby Yoda doll.

For those not familiar with "The Force," Baby Yoda -- or "The Child" -- is a character from the Star Wars Disney+ original series "The Mandalorian." He is an infant member of the same alien species as Yoda. The character took over the internet last year with its big ears and adorable doe eyes.

Carver had a feeling the firefighters would need the doll more than he did, so he sent it off in a care package along with a note.

"Thank you, firefighters," he wrote. "Here is a friend for you, in case you get lonely <3 Love, Carver."

A couple of days later, Tyler Eubanks, who runs the donation drive, told Tinning how much all the firefighters loved Baby Yoda.

"These firefighters are putting their lives on the line," Tinning told CNN. "To have a little bit of sunshine during such a dark time, I think that's really special for them. He (Baby Yoda) is also just cute as the dickens."

The firefighters now bring Baby Yoda with them everywhere and even document his travels in a Facebook group -- with more than 20,000 followers -- so that Carver and others can see how much Baby Yoda has helped them along the way.

"These firefighters are away from their children, their loved ones. This is a little pal that brings a bit of normalcy to a crazy time," the proud grandmother said.

May the force be with you, Carver.




Canadian Women's Soccer international Quinn hopes to start conversation, help young trans folk
© Provided by The Canadian Press

There is only one name before Janine Beckie, Kadeisha Buchanan, Gabrielle Carle and the rest of the alphabetized Canadian women's soccer roster on the Canada Soccer website.

Quinn. No first name. Just Quinn.

Family, friends and teammates have long known it but now Rebecca Quinn wants everyone to be aware after coming out as openly transgender.

Quinn said the decision to share — through a social media post earlier this month — came partially out of frustration at being portrayed "in society and social media and news ... without my true identity."

"It's really hurtful over time and I think it does take a toll on you," the 25-year-old, who no longer uses Rebecca, she or her and goes simply as Quinn or Quinny, said in an interview.

"I wanted to be my authentic self in all spheres of my life. And one of those is being in a public space. So that was one of the reasons behind it. Because I was tired of being misgendered and everything like that."

Quinn also wanted to be "a visible figure for young trans folks or people questioning their gender, people exploring their gender."

"Because unfortunately when I was growing up, and even going through that process of figuring out myself in college, I didn't have those people in the public sphere to look up to really.

"There are several trans athletes and there are amazing trans people in media and in politics but I just think those faces are not common enough. I want to be a visible trans person succeeding in my job so that younger trans folks could see that they did have an avenue to go and that they would have a future and career ahead of them."

Quinn also wanted to start a conversion on the topic, to show what people can do "to be better allies" to the trans community.

Quinn made the announcement in a Sept. 8 Instagram post.

"Coming out is HARD (and kinda bs)," they wrote. "I know for me it's something I’ll be doing over again for the rest of my life. As I’ve lived as an openly trans person with the people I love most for many years, I did always wonder when I'd come out publicly."

The post drew headlines from England's Daily Telegraph and Sun to People magazine and France's Paris-Match.

The world governing body of football issued its own statement.

"FIFA congratulates Rebecca Quinn for being out and proud, and we wish them continued success in their career and for the future," said FIFA, whose Gender Verification regulations cover 16 pages.

Quinn's post drew support from teammates and others. But there was also some negative feedback.

"Unfortunately I knew that was coming out, that there would be some backlash. It's sad to say but that's the reality of it," Quinn said. "That can be a little hard to digest but it hasn't been my first experience with it."

"I think I've faced my fair share of transphobia in my life," they added.

Quinn, who played college soccer at Duke, is the highest-drafted Canadian in NWSL history — taken third overall by the Washington Spirit in 2018.

Quinn has won 59 caps for Canada with five goals and three assists and was a member of the 2016 Olympic team that won bronze in Rio and the 2019 World Cup squad.

Quinn's scoring account for Canada opened with a bang in February 2016, recording a hat trick in a 10-0 win over Guatemala in the CONCACAF Olympic qualifying tournament. The goal spree came in a seven-minute span.

A holding midfielder/centre back, Quinn went on loan to Sweden's Vittsjo GIK in August from the NWSL's OL Reign. Quinn has also had a stint with Paris FC in France.

Quinn's new teammates have been "fantastic" and "super-inclusive."

"I think that's maybe a testament to the Swedish culture," said Quinn.

At Duke, Quinn helped organize their team's first Pride Game and served on the executive board of the school's Athlete Ally chapter. According to its mission statement, the organization "believes that everyone should have equal access, opportunity, and experience in sports — regardless of your sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression."

"If I can make an impact in the LGBTQ community, then I'm doing something greater with my time in sports," Quinn said in an interview at the 2019 World Cup in France. "It's something that I think gives me value just beyond soccer within my athletic experience."

That journey continues. Quinn says trying to deconstruct society's rigid gender binary is a "continuous process that I'm constantly doing."

"But I think definitely if I'm looking back at a young age, there was me pushing back against that rigid gender binary and I continue to do that today."

Quinn comes from a supportive, sporting family.

Their father played rugby at Western and mother basketball at Waterloo while sisters Lauren (swimming, Western) and Jillian (a fraternal twin, soccer, Northeastern) also competed.

"Obviously there was a learning curve, like I was saying for everyone," said Quinn. "We don't get taught this in our formal education or primary school or whatever else. Trans people unfortunately aren't woven into the fabric of our teaching.

"They've been such a testament to how people can learn and can change, just even in terms of using pronouns," Quinn added referencing their family. "My parents are 60 years old and they don't mess up."

Quinn is grateful that their sport is open to trans players, although there always is concern that regulations could change. Many trans players are being excluded in sports, they added.

Canada Soccer has been supportive and teammates "really amazing."

Quinn wants to show that there is a future for trans people.

"That's not to say it's not going to be difficult ... for people who are exploring their gender or think that they might be trans or non-binary. But yeah, that they should be hopeful for their future. And that it will get easier, for sure.

"And that hopefully we continue to move the needle forward in creating a space and that future generations will be more inclusive. And it will be easier to operate in society as a trans person, a gender-expansive person."

Quinn is living proof, having experienced the good and bad.

"I continue to face transphobia every single day that I operate in this world. I think I'm just really proud of myself that I've been able to do this. And I've been able to grow that shell. I'm really happy that I'm living authentically in my life. I think it's really beautiful."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 23, 2020.
CANADA
Military member with links to far-right groups says he's 'done nothing wrong'

Murray Brewster  CBC
4 hrs ago

© Facebook/CBC News A Facebook photo of Erik Myggland on Aug. 24, 2019 wearing a Three Percenter patch.

A Canadian military reservist whose membership in two far-right groups is being investigated by the army has spoken publicly about the matter for the first time, telling a local print and online publication in British Columbia that the allegations against him are "rubbish."

Erik Myggland, who belongs to the Canadian Ranger Valemount, B.C. patrol, spoke recently to The Rocky Mountain Goat, a weekly publication, about the military's effort to release him from the service.

A CBC News investigation last month chronicled Myggland's prolific online support for the Three Percenter movement — a survivalist organization originally from the U.S. that conducts military-style training — and the Soldiers of Odin, a group with white supremacist roots in Europe.

Myggland was interviewed by the military's counterintelligence branch, which is charged with keeping tabs on possible threats within the service.

He is still serving as a Ranger, although his own unit recommended he be removed more than a year ago. The army is now investigating to learn why he hasn't been ejected from the Rangers to date. Lt.-Gen. Wayne Eyre, commander of the Canadian Army, said recently that Myggland is not expected to be formally released until later this fall.

"I'm fine with being released, but it absolutely matters why," Myggland told the newspaper, adding that he "can't stand for" being publicly linked with hate groups.

CBC News reached out to Myggland — who has posted anti-government screeds online and described Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as a "treasonous bastard" in one social media post — on several occasions before its first story on him was published in late August. He initially agreed to talk but then went silent.

After publication of his recent interview with the local weekly, CBC News again reached out to Myggland to verify his remarks and again offer him the opportunity to comment on his online posts and involvement with both groups.
© Twitter/CBC News A tweet by Erik Myggland responding to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Vimy anniversary tribute on April 9, 2018.

Myggland refused to be interviewed by CBC News. In an email, however, he claimed that coverage of his story has been biased and has failed to cite his years of community service, working with troubled teenagers and teaching self-defence courses to women, and his work with the Rangers and the local volunteer fire service, which he said included 400 emergency responses and life-saving calls.

"You see you have no interest in these things. You have no interest in the truth," he wrote. "You are more interested in trying to destroy a good man that has done NOTHING wrong!"

His email did not address his involvement in either right-wing group and did not answer questions related to his case.

In his interview with The Rocky Mountain Goat, Myggland did address the military counterintelligence investigation of his activities.

The media outlet quotes him saying that he was asked by his commanding officer to meet with counterintelligence officers and insisting that he "promptly complied and fully briefed them on his past activities with the Soldiers of Odin and his current activities with Three Percenters in B.C."
'We weren't doing anything wrong'

The army launched a summary investigation after a CBC News investigation reported that the Canadian military counterintelligence branch interviewed Myggland about his affiliations but allowed him to continue serving.

There was no mention of Myggland's social media posts in The Rocky Mountain Goat article, although it does quote him strenuously insisting he is not racist.

"The most intriguing question [asked by CBC journalists ...] in that article was why did the Armed Forces allow me to serve for two years after being investigated? It's a pretty simple answer: because we weren't doing anything wrong," the article quoted Myggland as saying.

The story also paraphrased his patrol commanding officer, Clayton Gee, as saying Myggland did not preach hate or try to recruit other Rangers while serving.

Myggland vehemently denied being "racist or hateful" in his interview with the weekly and claims that, as a Facebook administrator for the Three Percenters of B.C., he would call out those who displayed such behaviour.

He said the Three Percenter movement is all about teaching survival techniques and preparing people for the collapse of society — something which its members believe is inevitable.
'Anathema'

Myggland is quoted as saying the B.C. Three Percenters would practice with firearms at a local firing range and "conducted military drills with Airsoft rifles."

Section 70 of the Criminal Code of Canada gives the federal government the power to prohibit assemblies without lawful authority for the purpose of conducting military exercises.

Barbara Perry is an expert on far-right groups at Ontario Tech University, in Oshawa, Ont. She said she was surprised to see a case of suspected far-right activity within the military handled so "nonchalantly, or so informally."

A counterintelligence investigation should have sounded the alarm all the way up the chain of command to 4th Canadian Ranger Group headquarters and beyond, said Evan Balgord, executive director of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network.

"It really needs to be communicated to every level of commanding officer in the Armed Forces that membership in a hate group is anathema to serving in the Forces," Balgord said.

The Department of National Defence (DND) would not comment on Myggland's public statement, saying that in light of the army's investigation, "it would be inappropriate for us to publicly discuss further."

It also refused to discuss "the sensitive nature of its intelligence work," adding that information collected during an investigation by counterintelligence officers is protected under the Privacy Act and needs to be safeguarded to protect current and future investigations.

"That being said, we can firmly say that the entire institution remains unwavering in its commitment to fighting hateful conduct," said Dan Lebouthillier, DND's head of media relations.

"We will not tolerate racist or harmful behaviour in our ranks or among our civilian personnel."

Myggland pointed out in his interview that neither the Three Percenters not the Soldiers of Odin are on any state lists of terrorist organizations.

That's true, said Perry — but even a simple Internet search five years ago would have revealed the anti-Muslim rhetoric being traded among members of the Three Percenters in the U.S., and the blatant white supremacy and anti-immigrant commentary dominating the discourse among Soldiers of Odin organizers, especially in Europe.

"You would have to have been willfully blind" to claim ignorance about those groups because of the "explicitness of the narratives" at the time Myggland joined, said Perry.

Even before the recent introduction of the anti-racism policy framework, Canadian military policy officially barred members from joining groups "that they knew or ought reasonably to have known" would promote violence and hatred.




After a child's accidental shooting death, Pennsylvania appeals court rules federal gun industry protection law unconstitutional


By Laura Ly, CNN
3 hrs ago

© Brady United J.R. Gustafson, who was killed in March 2016 after his 14-year-old friend unintentionally shot him with a semi-automatic handgun that he believed was unloaded.


A Pennsylvania state appeals court has decided that the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act of 2005 is unconstitutional, court documents filed on Monday show.

The PLCAA is a federal law that prohibits civil lawsuits from being brought against gun manufacturers and distributors as a result of misuse of their products by others.

The law says businesses should not "be liable for the harm caused by those who criminally or unlawfully misuse firearm products or ammunition products that function as designed and intended."

But the PLCAA violates the 10th Amendment, Pennsylvania Superior Court Prothonotary Joseph D. Seletyn said, which guarantees states' rights -- essentially stating that matters which are not delegated to the federal government by the US Constitution and are not Constitutionally prohibited, fall under the authority of the state government.

"The only portions of the PLCAA that do not offend the Constitution are its findings and purposes ... and a few definitions," Seletyn wrote.

The 63-page decision also took issue with arguments that the law falls under Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce.

"We hold that merely because, at some point in time, that gun passed through interstate commerce, does not give Congress perpetual authority to regulate any harm it may cause," Seletyn wrote.


The case that took this to court

The decision came down as part of a case against gun manufacturer Springfield Armory, Inc. and firearms store Saloom Department Store. In March 2016, a 14-year-old unintentionally shot and killed his friend J.R. Gustafson in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, with a semiautomatic handgun that he believed was unloaded.

Gustafson's parents sued both Springfield Armory and Saloom Department Store, asserting that they "were negligent and strictly liable for manufacturing and/or selling the defective handgun that caused their son's death," court documents state, alleging the gun's design was defective because it lacked a safety feature "to disable it from firing without the clip attached."

In January, a trial judge in Westmoreland County dismissed the lawsuit after ruling that the PLCAA gave immunity to both the gun manufacturer and firearms store.

The Gustafsons appealed. Following Monday's court decision, the case will be sent back to the trial court.

CNN has reached out to attorneys for Springfield Armory, Inc. and Saloom Department Store for comment on Monday's court decision. They previously attempted to have the case thrown out and argued the PLCAA protected them from being held civilly liable for the child's death, court documents show.


Lead attorney calls decision a win for Gustafson's parents

The Gustafsons' lead attorney, Jonathan Lowy, is also Vice President of the Brady Campaign, a nonprofit organization that advocates for gun control and against gun violence.

Lowy called Monday's decision a "win for the parents of J.R. Gustafson and other victims of gun industry negligence and misconduct, who will now have their day in court."

"In finding that PLCAA is unconstitutional in its entirety, the Superior Court of Pennsylvania properly recognizes that states have the authority to hold negligent gun makers accountable in court, and to ensure that all victims have the right to seek civil justice against wrongdoers who cause them harm," Lowy said in a statement.

In a news release Monday, the Brady Campaign said the Pennsylvania superior court is the first appeals court to hold PLCAA unconstitutional in its entirety.

"This access-to-justice victory for gun violence victims shows why it matters who sits on our nation's court," Brady Campaign President Kris Brown said in a statement.

The next court date for the case has been scheduled for October 28, online court records show.