Monday, February 14, 2022

ALBERTA

Scrapped school mask mandates draw student walkouts, court challenge

The first day in months that Alberta students were not required to wear masks in class was marked with school walkouts and a failed court challenge, as the premier continued to downplay safety concerns.



© Provided by Calgary Herald
A group of students organized a walkout at Nelson Mandela High School due to the end of mask mandates in Calgary on Monday, February 14, 2022.

Jason Herring - 


Mask use is now optional in Alberta schools as of Monday, one of the first steps in the United Conservative government’s plan to ease nearly all COVID-19 restrictions by March 1.

In Calgary, about 50 students walked out of class at Nelson Mandela High School Monday afternoon in protest of the decision. A similar demonstration also took place at Central Memorial High School.

Navreet Sandhu said he took part in the walkout because he feels unsafe at school with masking rules removed and because students didn’t have a say in the mandate’s removal.

“I also think if we take our masks off now it’s going to affect all our summers, and we’ll be back in quarantine,” he said.

“I don’t want to get COVID too, because I have a little sister and my dad’s a truck driver … I don’t want to affect him from working.”

“The average student doesn’t feel safe not wearing a mask,” added William Devine, a Grade 11 student who helped organize the walkout.

Students who spoke with Postmedia said the majority of students were still wearing masks in the classroom Monday, but a small number had decided to forgo them.


© Darren Makowichuk/PostmediaA group of students organized a walkout at Nelson Mandela High School due to the end of mask mandates in Calgary on Monday, February 14, 2022.

Opposition to the province’s decision to axe the mandate ranged from the classroom to the courthouse, as an Edmonton judge dismissed an application for an emergency injunction which would have maintained in-school mask requirements until the issue could be argued in court.

Edmonton law firm Roberts O’Kelly Law filed for the emergency injunction late Sunday. Applicants included the Alberta Federation of Labour (AFL) and a group of parents of children with disabilities, who argue their children will face discrimination with mandatory masking in schools rescinded.

The emergency application was dismissed Monday afternoon, with a further hearing for the injunction adjourned to a yet-unscheduled date.

Premier Jason Kenney celebrated the court decision on Twitter, calling the application “ridiculous,” saying it would “force kids to wear masks indefinitely.”

“Common sense is prevailing,” said Kenney, who has advocated strongly against mask mandates in schools, saying the restrictions have unfairly impacted school-aged children.



Roberts O’Kelly Law argued the decision to remove mask mandates was rushed and carried out without giving school boards adequate time to prepare. They raised concerns with a letter from Education Minister Adriana LaGrange last week which said individual school boards do not have the authority to introduce their own masking requirements.

“Removing universal masking in schools forces many children to choose between their education and their health — and in some cases, their life,” said Orlagh O’Kelly, co-counsel on the injunction, in a news release.

AFL president Gil McGowan, meanwhile, called the lifting of mask requirements for children “premature, reckless and irresponsible.”

Kenney took exception to the AFL’s involvement in the legal application, telling reporters in Calgary Monday those upset with the government should “go down to the AFL headquarters and protest, peacefully.”

In a statement to Postmedia, Lagrange said she was pleased the emergency application was dismissed, also criticizing the AFL.

“Today’s application for an injunction is yet another stunt from the NDP’s union friends at AFL to spark more fear on Alberta parents and kids,” she said. “They want to keep masks on children indefinitely — and we know that this is not in the best interest of students.”


© Darren Makowichuk/PostmediaA group of students organized a walkout at Nelson Mandela High School due to the end of mask mandates in Calgary on Monday, February 14, 2022.

The government’s move to scrap masking for children has drawn criticism from Alberta doctors. A Calgary Herald column authored by three members of the Alberta Medical Association Section of Pediatrics and cosigned by 11 other pediatricians said the decision puts children’s health at risk.

“Although COVID is often milder in children, it is not harmless,” the column read.

“We also need a commitment to other evidence-based mitigations such as masking in schools to reduce the transmission of COVID amongst children and their families. There is currently no evidence that masking in these situations negatively impacts children’s mental health or development.”

Elsewhere Monday, Alberta announced 35 new deaths from COVID-19 since last reporting data Friday. Those deaths include two men in their 30s who did not have pre-existing health conditions.

Hospital and intensive-care occupancy among COVID-19 patients declined slightly over the weekend. There are now 1,528 Albertans in hospital with the virus, down from 1,566, and 124 in ICU, down from 127.

The province also reported 2,647 new PCR-confirmed cases of the virus over the three-day period, with a test positivity rate of 25 per cent.

Daily case numbers provide an incomplete snapshot of COVID-19 prevalence in the community, however, due to restricted access to PCR testing over the course of the virus’s fifth wave.

— With files from Ashley Joannou

Parents, labour union seek injunction against Alberta's move to end mask mandates for students

Alberta's decision to eliminate mask mandates for school-aged children, which became effective today, is being challenged in court.


© Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press
Starting Monday, students are no longer required to mask up. An application for an emergency injunction, filed Sunday, asks that the public health order exempting students from wearing masks in school be rescinded pending a judicial review.

Wallis Snowdon - 
cbc.ca


Edmonton law firm Roberts O'Kelly Law filed an application Sunday for an emergency injunction to reinstate the mask mandate for students.

The applicants include the parents of five immunocompromised children and the Alberta Federation of Labour (AFL) which represents about 170,000 unionized Alberta workers.

The application asks that the public health order exempting students from wearing masks in school be rescinded pending a judicial review of the policy and how the decision to end the mandate was reached.

Lawyers involved are in an Edmonton courtroom Monday, waiting to have the application heard.

"Removing universal masking in schools forces many children to choose between their education and their health and in some cases, their life," Sharon Roberts, a partner with Roberts O'Kelly Law, said in a statement.

The application argues that the sudden end of the masking mandate infringes on the charter rights of immunocompromised children.

It alleges that the order is a policy based on politics, not public health — and that the decision was made not by Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta's chief medical officer of health, but by government officials who don't have jurisdiction over public health restrictions.

As of Monday, students in Alberta schools are no longer required to wear masks. Children 12 and under don't have to wear masks in any setting.

The decision was announced by Premier Jason Kenney last week. Hinshaw outlined the change in a public health order later in the week.

The injunction application asks that the mask mandate remain in place in schools until at least March 1, or until the application can be reviewed by the court

On Twitter, Premier Jason Kenney characterized the application as a political manoeuvre that threatens the well-being of Alberta children.
 
'Let kids be kids'


"The [Alberta Federation of Labour] is in court today seeking an order to force all kids to wear masks in school," Kenney said on Twitter Monday morning.

"The AFL is a legal affiliate of the NDP. Children have carried an unfair share of the burden during COVID. It's time for the NDP and AFL to stop. Let kids be kids!"

The case alleges that the decision to end the mask mandate was political, swayed by the demands of protesters at the Coutts, Alta., border blockade.

Only the chief medical officer of health or another medical officer of health have the legislative authority to render a decision under the public health act, the application says.

But it alleges that Hinshaw did not make the decision to end the mask mandate.

"The decision was made by the premier, ministers and/or cabinet, and therefore without jurisdiction under the Public Health Act," the application says. "Further and/or in the alternative, the decision is unlawful as it was improperly based on the demands of an illegal blockade to the exclusion of most if not all public health evidence."

The application calls on the courts to order Hinshaw to make "a new decision, herself, and in accordance with her obligations under the Public Health Act."

The applicants challenge what they describe as Education Minister Adriana LaGrange's strict "prohibition" against schools enforcing their own mask mandates.

Within hours of Tuesday's announcement about the pending end of masking for students, LaGrange issued a statement informing school boards they don't have the authority to enforce masking in the classroom.

"We are seeking an immediate pause of the decision to remove masking, as well as the incorrect assertion that school boards cannot continue their own mandates," Orlagh O'Kelly, co-counsel on the application, said in a statement.

The decision was made without adequate time for school boards to review and address the needs of all students, and without proper notice to families, O'Kelly said.

Banning schools from making their own decisions and from requiring masks violates the rights of school-aged children, she said.

"Parents want schools open, but open to all regardless of disability, which means keeping the mandate in place."

If the court agrees to hear the case, the applicants will bring evidence showing that the decision to lift the mask mandate was premature, AFL president Gil McGowan said.

"They will also argue that the decision was based on narrow political concerns, not a careful consideration of the public interest," McGowan said in a statement Monday.


Judge rejects part of application to reinstate mandatory masking in Alberta schools, rest of case to be heard later

An Alberta judge has dismissed part of an application looking to reverse the government’s decision to end mandatory masking of students in schools.


© Provided by Edmonton Journal
Most students leaving Austin O'Brien High School to get on a bus wear masks on Monday, Feb. 14, 2022 even thought the provincial mandate to wear a mask in schools has been stopped.

Ashley Joannou
EDMONTON JOURNAL

But the fight over the change, and what it means particularly for disabled students, is expected to continue.

Lawyers representing a number of disabled students and the Alberta Federation of Labour (AFL) were in the Court of Queen’s Bench Monday looking for a judge to immediately reinstate the right of Alberta school boards to enforce their own masking mandates.

That part of the application was dismissed. However, lawyers say their broader application, which argues that ending mandatory masking appears to be arbitrary, unreasonable, and not founded in medical literature or current public health conditions, will still be heard by a judge. No date has been set yet.

The application says the students all have disabilities and/or complex medical conditions and will suffer discrimination if mandatory masking, particularly in schools, is discontinued.

“The decision made by the chief medical officer was rushed,” Sharon Roberts, a partner at Roberts O’Kelly Law who is arguing for the injunction, said in a statement.

“Removing universal masking in schools forces many children to choose between their education and their health — and in some cases, their life.”

Parents made decision prior to mask announcement


In an interview with Postmedia Monday, Orlagh O’Kelly, co-counsel on the injunction, said most parents had to decide by Feb. 1 whether their kids would attend online or in-person learning and they did that with the understanding that masks would be mandatory.

A week later the government announced it was ending the mask requirement and Education Minister Adriana LaGrange sent a letter to school boards saying they no longer had the power to institute rules of their own.

“For these vulnerable kids that changed their ability to attend in-person … they’re going to have to be homeschooled or have no school,” O’Kelly said.

“So I think that’s the harm here. Every day that goes by that a child has no access to school is unacceptable in our view.”

Masks are still optional in schools but O’Kelley said for her clients part of what helped keep them safe was that the rules were universal.

“This is just basic adverse impact discrimination. So, even though on its face it seems neutral — everyone can make a personal choice — at law, that neutral impact has adverse effects on the vulnerable and therefore is contrary to Section 15 which protects equality rights in the charter,” she said.

The court application argues that the decision was based on the demands of protestors at Alberta’s illegal border blockade and not public health evidence. It alleges the decision was made by politicians, who don’t have jurisdiction under the Public Health Act, and not Alberta’s chief medical officer of health Dr. Deena Hinshaw.

Premier Jason Kenney slams application

Responding to the court’s decision Monday on Twitter, Premier Jason Kenney called the application ridiculous and said that “common sense is prevailing.”

In a statement of her own, LaGrange called the application a “stunt” by the AFL and said the pandemic has impacted all Albertans, especially children.

“Alberta’s government has aimed to balance the risks of COVID-19 to children with the impacts caused by public health restrictions. Such measures can have an adverse effect on the physical, mental and social development of children,” she said.

Unions representing school employees, including educational assistants, are members of the AFL.

In a statement of its own, AFL president Gil McGowan called the decision to end the masking requirement “premature, reckless and irresponsible.”


© Ed Kaiser
Students in favour of wearing masks in school held a rally near the Alberta legislature, Monday, Feb. 14, 2022.

Meanwhile, some students co-ordinated a province-wide protest against the government’s decision by walking out of class at 2:45 p.m. Monday and rallying outside Alberta’s legislature.

Sam Clark, a Grade 12 student and one of the protest organizers, said demonstrators want the government to reimpose a mask mandate for students.

“We find that it was a dangerous decision that did not consider the well-being of students, staff and health-care professionals,” Clark told Postmedia in a phone interview. “Letting ‘kids be kids’ really involves letting them be safe.”

Masks are still required for those two and older in Edmonton’s indoor, public places despite the province’s removal of mask requirements for kids.

Edmonton’s mask bylaw remains in effect and supersedes the end of the provincial mandate. The city’s rule doesn’t extend to elementary schools, post-secondary institutions or child-care facilities.

The city’s mandate is slated to be in effect until at least 28 days after Edmonton’s case rate falls below 100 per 100,000 people. The current case rate is 470.

But Kenney said the provincial government is looking at potentially changing legislation to prohibit municipalities from making their own decisions when it comes to masking.

“We’re looking at our options, we have not made a final decision,” Kenney said Monday. “I think it’s much better if the province, as we try to get life back to normal, has one simple, easy to understand and consistent policy on public health.”


© Provided by Edmonton Journal
2,647 new COVID cases over weekend

Alberta reported 2,647 new cases of COVID-19 Monday, which includes 1,146 cases from Friday, 866 from Saturday and 635 Sunday. There are currently 20,865 active cases in the province, 3,289 fewer cases than reported Friday.

The province also has 1,528 people in hospital infected with COVID-19 (38 fewer than reported Friday), which includes 124 intensive care patients.

Alberta’s COIVD-19 death toll has climbed to 3,776 after the province reported 35 more deaths Monday.




© Provided by Edmonton Journal

– With files from Dustin Cook and Hamdi Issawi




Dismantling 'freedom convoy' must be coupled with education on the dangers of extremism

Kawser Ahmed, Adjunct Professor at the Political Science department, University of Winnipeg
The Conversation

The “freedom convoy” that has taken over downtown Ottawa and inspired other protests is a diverse group of people who have shown themselves not to be interested in “freedom,” “unity” or “vaccine mandates.”

Over the past two weeks, the protest has caused un-freedom; it has allowed extremist groups to gain space, ushering in counter-protesters. Their demands have become a laundry list that began with talk of protesting a vaccine mandate for truckers and overthrowing a democratically elected government (a notion protest leaders now say they reject).

But also worthy of note is that protesters in Ottawa raise some topics of concern for those traditionally on the right and the left of the political spectrum. If some Canadians empathize with some convoy concerns while disagreeing with tactics and visible signs of hate, they must also take a closer look at the sustained mayhem protesters are causing.

This should be seen in the context of extremist white supremacist views emphasizing how corrupt western governments can be undone by creating chaos.

Extremism in many forms and shapes are seen in this protest movement that drive radicalization to violence. Counter-radicalization efforts will be needed by governments in collaboration with other non-government representatives. But the immediate vexing question seems to be finding a peaceful resolution to the conflict. Similar protests were emulated in New Zealand and elsewhere, setting a dangerous precedent in the global West.


© THE CANADIAN PRESS/Patrick Doyle
Counter-protesters gather in Ottawa on the third weekend of the convoy.

Far-right support

By now, the public is familiar with some detail about protest leadership and social media influencers behind the Ottawa event. These include James Bauder, founder of the group Canada Unity, a conspiracy theorist who participated in another convoy linked to white nationalist hate groups, and Pat King, a far-right figure who previously broadcast rants about the “depopulation of the Caucasian race.”

Wired reports many of successful social media posts about the protests are coming from familiar figures from the American far right.

As the protest spread to multiple communities, patience of the mayors of Ottawa and Winnipeg, where I live, has seemed to wane.

Nonetheless, in Ottawa and elsewhere, many protesters are digging in their heels and have promised not to concede to pressure.

Some experts have suggested the ability of Ottawa protesters to barricade themselves and keep the siege going is related to their knowledge of military tactics and law enforcement — including some endorsement and support from retired or active police.

Political leaders are now faced with a dilemma: whether to end vaccine mandates at the cost of public health hazard (in order to acquiesce to the demands) or to quash the rebellion and restore public order.

Even though there may not be an easy way to fix this, some believe if the government doesn’t act now, it would expose the fragility of our society.
‘Hard’ and ‘soft’ tactics needed

Some protesters have brought young children with them, which makes it even more difficult to enforce violation. That means a mix of hard and soft tactics should be used to reach a quick resolution.

Although every protest has a shelf life, a protest’s trajectory can be difficult to predict. The fact that the “freedom convoy” has garnered support from from elected Conservative party members contributes to its unpredictable nature.

A carefully crafted two-pronged strategy might be advisable in ending the protest peacefully.

Hard security should be based on a containment approach using court injunctions, combined with measured police action. While enforcement remains a sensitive matter, necessary intervention must be carried out according to the law. Violence begets violence and must be avoided.

As such, clear rules of engagement must be determined. The fact that counter-protests are gaining momentum could imply greater challenges for police managing conflict.


© THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
The presence of children at the Ottawa protests is one reason that soft tactics are important.

Lines of communication with protesters

In the soft approach, a line of communication with the protesters must be kept open with appointed negotiators, as dialogue is one of the best means to diffuse tense situations.

Appointed negotiators should be able to connect with some protesters and convince them to speak against the rest. Political leaders from all stripes should emphasize the dangers of extremism and economic impacts caused by the protest.

Scanning through posts on Facebook in groups supportive of the protests, it is evident that many users are either ignorant of extremist infiltration in the protest or portray far-right presence as a few bad apples only.
Spotting the rhetoric of violence

That means there’s a need to expose links to extremism by raising awareness through education. Greater awareness about the signs, symbols and rhetoric of violence should be made available not only to the protesters but also to the broader public to build opinion against the protest.

Civil society and faith-based organization representatives should be invited to speak against polarization and the risk of violence, since these organizations enjoy legitimacy and bipartisan support. Negotiators could be considered from among the leadership of such organizations.

Read more: Donald Trump is hardly the 'Republican Jesus'

In this movement, when the mainstream media is accused of spreading “fake news,” information in the form of education from people who aren’t part of the mainstream media might get more traction.

In the past decade, we have observed numerous cases where “lone wolf” terrorists picked up guns and went on mass shootings. Experts with the National Consortium for Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism in the United States highlight that research on deradicalization has noted a difference between people having extreme opinions and taking extreme action. “Lone-wolf” terrorists are likely to have depression or other mental disorder, to have weapons experience and to experience social isolation.

Such figures have taken their cues from accelerationist ideology, which stresses corruption of western governments and bringing change through chaos and violence.
Troubling fault lines

In the end, it all depends on how unified we become first by understanding the social fault lines exposed by the protesters and then take actions to become resilient.

Right now, public discourse is hinting towards a perceived double-standard in policing white people-led protests compared to the Black Lives Matter and Indigenous ones. There are also concerns about potential negative reverberations in the trucker community, particularly for racialized truckers.

And finally: when provincial governments eventually end restrictions or pandemic measures, will this be understood as a victory for the protesters and encourage similar civic unrest in the future?

As the adage says, united we stand, divided we fall. A broader social reconciliation is urgently needed to heal the wounds that have been caused by the “freedom convoy.”

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.

Read more:

Communities can combat racism, hate and extremism with education

The occupation of Ottawa by the ‘freedom convoy’ has the potential for an urban siege


Kawser Ahmed has received Community Resilience Fund to develop guidelines for educators to prevent extremism in MB schools.





Civil servants, NASA employees and an American billionaire among donors leaked in GiveSendGo hack

Bryan Passifiume - 
National Post

An American tech billionaire, two NASA employees and Canadian civil servants are among a leaked list of nearly 100,000 Freedom Convoy donors, according to information released by hackers responsible for taking down the group’s crowdfunding site.

Late Sunday night, hackers took down the website of GiveSendGo, the U.S.-based crowdfunding website flocked to by convoy organizers after GoFundMe cancelled their multi-million dollar campaign earlier this month.


The hackers also released a spreadsheet of raw donor data containing names, emails and dollar amounts of nearly 93,000 individuals who purportedly donated money to the Freedom Convoy.

GiveSendGo’s website was still offline by late Monday afternoon.

On Sunday night the site’s homepage was replaced with “GiveSendGo IS NOW FROZEN!” in bold, blue text, as well as a manifesto scrolling over a clip from the Disney film Frozen II , depicting Elsa singing Show Yourself while riding across the Dark Sea on a horse made of water.

“Attention GiveSendGo grifters and hatriots,” read the manifesto.

“The Canadian government has informed you that the money you a–holes raise to fund an insurrection is frozen.”

The hacker accused Boston-based GiveSendGo of being complicit in funding last year’s Jan. 6 raid on the U.S. Capitol by Donald Trump supporters, and likewise funding of ongoing blockades and protests in Ottawa and across Canada.

“You are committed to funding anything that keeps the raging fire of misinformation going until that it burns the world’s collective democracies down,” the manifesto read.

While the hacker didn’t identify themselves, an individual claiming responsibility told British news outlet The Guardian they intended to prove Canada was’t immune to foreign political interference.

The immense spreadsheet, available for download Sunday night on GiveSendGo’s hacked website, accounts for $8,421,806.50 in donations from 92,844 individuals.

While most donations came from the United States — 52,000 American donors were listed compared to 36,000 originating in this country, Canadians gave the most money overall, about $4.3 million compared to $3.62 million from U.S. donors.


'An occupation': GoFundMe pulls plug on fundraiser for convoy protesters

Trudeau wants the 'foreign money' funding illegal protests in Canada to stop

While GiveSendGo has yet to issue a statement on the hack or the veracity of the leaked donors list, several names on the spreadsheet were independently confirmed as donors by the National Post. Inquiries for comment were also made to email addresses for major donors on the list but were not immediately acknowledged.

As well, it’s impossible to determine how many opted to donate via bank transfer or cryptocurrency.

All but 686 of received donations were under $1,000.

The largest donation is $215,000 made on Feb. 6, listed as ‘Processed but not recorded’ and without any further data.

The largest named donation — $90,000 — was apparently made on Feb. 9 by American tech billionaire Thomas Siebel, including a $9,000 donation towards GiveSendGo.

That same day saw the largest Canadian donation, $75,000 — plus an extra $1,000 in GiveSendGo’s tip jar— by the president of a New Brunswick-based pressure washer manufacturer.

Other large donations include $25,000 from a London, Ont. based vice-president of the AutoCanada car dealership chain, and $20,000 from the chair of a Cannington, Ont.-based community and family support organization.


Dallas, Texas-based construction magnate Ben Pogue appears to have donated $20,000. According to reports by both ABC News and the Associated Press, Pogue donated over $200,000 to help re-elect former U.S. president Donald Trump, including providing private jet access for Trump’s re-election campaign.

Canadian public employees are also listed as donors, including a Quebec man who used a Correctional Service of Canada email address to donate $102.


Several U.S. donors apparently gave money using U.S. government emails, including the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, the U.S. Department of Justice, and NASA.

A Conservative Party of Canada spokesperson confirmed a $200 donation from a “Candace Bergen” in Saskatchewan was not made by the interim CPC leader, pointing to differences in the spelling of her first name.


Sunday’s hack comes a little over a week after TechCrunch reported security lapses in GiveSendGo’s website , specifically 50 gigabytes of unencrypted cloud storage space that exposed thousands of scanned drivers’ licences and passports submitted by donors as part of the site’s payment process.

Experts say Sunday’s attack highlights the importance of security for those with high-profile online presences.

“Attackers only have to be right once, while defenders have to be right all of the time,” said Richard Henderson, chief information security officer with cybersecurity firm WithYouWithMe.

“It just takes a single mistake to allow a skilled attacker in, and once they’re inside its game over.”

The scope of the attack, which saw intruders not only take control of GiveSendGo’s DNS records but also get their hands on their donor lists, suggests they had “free rein” inside the company’s data.

“We’ve seen this multiple times in the past with other ‘copycat’ sites quickly thrown up rapidly by right-leaning groups,” he said.

“Get something online quick with little to no attention paid to security or secure deployment, and all it takes is a skilled hacker to come along and rip it all to shreds.”

As GiveSendGo’s first data leak involved thousands of donors’ scanned identity documents left out in the open, Henderson suggested people give serious thought about who they share sensitive information with online.

“People regularly just hand over their personal information without taking even an extra second to consider the security implications of doing so,” he said.

“You really have no idea what protections a company have in place to protect your personal information.

“Clearly in this case, there was very little.”

• Email: bpassifiume@postmedia.com


Feds go after blockade financing with expanded Fintrac powers, directions to banks

OTTAWA — The federal government is broadening the scope of anti-money laundering rules and directing banks to cut off services to those suspected of aiding the trucker protesters as it looks to put an end to what it says are illegal blockades.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland also said in a late afternoon news conference Monday that crowdfunding sites, some of which are being used to channel money to the protesters, will now be required to report to the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada


The move, to be made permanent, will allow Fintrac to make more information available to police and other enforcement agencies, she said.

"We are making these changes because we know that these platforms are being used to support illegal blockades and illegal activity, which is damaging the Canadian economy," she said.

Freeland said that under the Emergency Act, the government has also authorized banks to cut off services to both individual and business clients who they suspect are aiding the blockades.

She said the banks would be protected against civil liability in doing so.

The government has directed financial institutions to review their relationship with anyone involved in the blockades and to report findings to the RCMP or CSIS, she said.

"This is about following the money. This is about stopping financing of these illegal blockades."

The measures allow for such actions as an insurer suspending coverage and a bank freezing a truck owner's corporate or personal accounts.

As well as chartered banks and credit unions, Fintrac requires reporting from institutions such as insurers and securities dealers, and from professionals such as accountants and real estate brokers.

Freeland said federal institutions have broad new authority to share information with the banks and work to end funding for the groups behind the blockades.

Canada's big banks did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Canadian Bankers Association declined to comment.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act to bring to an end to antigovernment blockades he says are illegal and not about peaceful protest.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 14, 2022.

The Canadian Press


JUST LIKE DADDY DID
Trudeau mulls invoking emergency powers to quell protests
By ROB GILLIES and TED SHAFFREY
28 minutes ago

1 of 9
Don Stephens, 65, a retired graphic designer, holds a sign on Parliament Hill to support trucks lined up in protest of COVID-19 vaccine mandates and restrictions in Ottawa, Ontario, on Saturday, Feb. 12, 2022. Stephens said he’s come into Ottawa twice to show support for protesters there. He views them as representatives of a “silent majority that had been longing to have their voice heard.” (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey)

OTTAWA (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government weighed whether to invoke emergency powers Monday to quell the protests by demonstrators who have paralyzed Ottawa and blocked border crossings in anger over the country’s COVID-19 restrictions.

For the past two weeks, hundreds and sometimes thousands of protesters in trucks and other vehicles have clogged the streets of Ottawa, the capital, railing against vaccine mandates and other virus precautions and condemning Trudeau’s Liberal government.

Members of the self-styled Freedom Convoy have also blockaded various U.S.-Canadian border crossings, though the busiest and most important — the Ambassador Bridge connecting Windsor, Ontario, to Detroit — was reopened on Sunday after police cleared out the last of the demonstrators and broke the week-long siege that had disrupted auto production in both countries.

In recent days, the prime minister rejected calls to use the military but said “all options are on the table” to end the protests, including invoking the Emergencies Act, which gives the government broad powers.

“Our government is prepared to do what is required to uphold the rule of law and to restore order in our communities and in particular to protect critical infrastructure, particularly at our borders,” Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair said when asked Monday about whether the Emergencies Act should be invoked.

In other developments, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said they arrested 11 people at the U.S. border crossing at Coutts, Alberta, after learning of a cache of guns and ammunition. Demonstrators in trucks and other vehicles have been blocking that crossing since late January.



Police said a small group within the protest was said to have a “willingness to use force against the police if any attempts were made to disrupt the blockade.” Authorities seized 13 long guns, handguns, sets of body armor, a machete, a large quantity of ammunition and high-capacity magazines.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney also said protesters in a tractor and a heavy-duty truck tried to ram a police vehicle at Coutts on Sunday night and fled. “This underscores the severity of what has been happening,” he said. 
AND HE STILL HAS DONE NOTHING ABOUT IT DESPITE UCP DRACONIAN ANTI PROTEST LAW BILL 1 CAUSE THIS IS THEIR BASE

Over the past weeks, authorities have hesitated to move against the protesters around the country. Local officials cited a lack of police manpower and fear of violence, while provincial and federal authorities disagreed over who had responsibility for quelling the unrest.

“This is the biggest, greatest most severe test Trudeau has faced. And if using the Emergencies Act they fail to clear the protest, I think he’s done,” said Wesley Wark, a University of Ottawa professor and national security expert.


Invoking the Emergencies Act would allow the federal government to declare the Ottawa protest illegal and clear it out by such means as towing vehicles, Wark said. It would also enable the government to make greater use of the Mounties, the federal police agency.

An earlier version of the Emergencies Act, called the War Measures Act, was used just once during peacetime, by Trudeau’s late father, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, to deal with a militant Quebec independence movement in 1970.

 Trudeau: Just Watch Me

Former CBC reporter Tim Ralfe discusses the famous interview in which Pierre Trudeau said "Just Watch Me."

 

Trudeau planned to meet virtually Monday with the leaders of Canada’s provinces and with lawmakers.

Invoking emergency powers would be “a signal to both Canadians across the country and also an important signal to allies like the United States and around the world who are wondering what the hell is Canada been up to,” Wark said.

The demonstrations in Canada have inspired similar convoys in France, New Zealand and the Netherlands. U.S. authorities have said that truck convoys may be in the works in the United States.

In other developments, Ontario’s premier Doug Ford announced Monday that Canada’s most populous province will lift its COVID-19 proof-of-vaccination requirements in two weeks — not because of the protests that have blocked the border and paralyzed Ottawa, he said, but because “it is safe to do so.”

Ford said that on March 1, the province will drop its requirement that people show proof of vaccination to get into restaurants, restaurants, gyms and sporting events. A surge of cases caused by the omicron variant has crested in Canada.

The province will also remove its 50% capacity limit on restaurants on Thursday, four days earlier than planned. Ford gave no timetable for dropping the requirement that people wear masks in public places.

“Let me very clear: We are moving in this direction because it is safe to do so. Today’s announcement is not because of what’s happening in Ottawa or Windsor but despite it,” Ford said.

Ford said he would support Trudeau’s government if it proposed further measures to quell the protests.

““We need law and order. Our country is at risk now. It’s not just not happening here in Ottawa, but it’s happening in Alberta and British Columbia,” Ford said. “We won’t accept. it”


Police in Windsor, arrested 25 to 30 protesters and towed several vehicles Sunday near the Ambassador Bridge. The span, which carries 25% of all trade between the two countries, reopened to traffic late Sunday night.

After protesters began blocking bridge access Feb. 7, automakers began shutting down or reducing production at a time when the industry is already struggling with pandemic-induced shortages of computer chips and other supply-chain

About 470 miles (750 kilometers) northeast of Windsor, the protest in Ottawa has paralyzed downtown, infuriated residents who are fed up with police inaction and turned up the pressure on Trudeau.

“It’s stressful. I feel angry at what’s happening. This isn’t Canada. This does not represent us,” Colleen Sinclair, a counter-protester who lives in Ottawa.

Sinclair said all demonstrators have had their say and need to move on — with police force, if necessary.

“They’re occupiers,” she said. “This is domestic terrorism and we want you out of our city. Go home.”

While the protesters are decrying vaccine mandates for truckers and other COVID-19 restrictions, many of Canada’s public health measures, such as mask rules and vaccine passports for getting into restaurants and theaters, are already falling away as the omicron surge levels off.

Pandemic restrictions have been far stricter in Canada than in the U.S., but Canadians have largely supported them. The vast majority of Canadians are vaccinated, and the COVID-19 death rate is one-third that of the United States.

_____

Gillies reported from Toronto. Associated Press writers Ted Shaffrey in Ottawa, Ontario, and Gene Johnson in Seattle contributed to this report.





Canada: PM Trudeau invokes emergency powers to deal with protests


After meeting provincial leaders, Justin Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act to deal with protests. For more than two weeks people have been protesting against COVID measures, blocking a vital trade route in the process.





Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced that government will invoke the "Emergencies Act"

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday invoked never before used emergency ordinance in a bid to quash protests that have brought the capital city Ottawa to a near standstill.

For the past two weeks, hundreds and sometimes thousands of protesters in trucks and other vehicles have blocked the streets of Ottawa, as they vented their frustration over vaccine mandates and other virus-related restrictions.

As a result, Trudeau conducted a meeting with the country's provincial leadership and announced the measures in a national address.

"The Federal government has invoked the Emergencies Act to supplement provincial and territorial capacity to address the blockades and occupations... The scope of these measures will be time limited, geographically targeted, as well as reasonable and proportionate to the threats they are meant to address... This is about keeping Canadians safe," Trudeau told a news conference.

"The blockades are harming our economy and endangering public safety," said Trudeau. "We cannot and will not allow illegal and dangerous activities to continue."



What is the Emergencies Act?


The Emergencies Act is an unprecedented measure and grants government greater authority to deal with matters deemed to be a national emergency.

It was passed in 1988 and must only be invoked if the situation exceeds the capabilities of existing measures.

The act grants police greater power and more resources to deal with illegal protests and come into effect immediately.

While the scope of the act covers the entire country, the measures will only apply in areas where they are needed.

When asked whether there would be any military involvement, Trudeau said he would not deal with hypothetical scenarios.

The prime minister did however stress that the move "in no way brings in the military as a solution against Canadians" and that it was about "empowering law enforcement."

The decision comes after the so-called "freedom convoy" converged on the capital city in trucks, demonstrating primarily over COVID-19 regulations.

Illegal occupations the catalyst for emergency measures

The Ambassador Bridge which connects Windsor, Ontario with Detroit in the US was shut down for around a week. It was eventually cleared on Sunday when authorities announced the standoff had come to an end.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has called the protesters a "fringe" of Canadian society, had rejected calls to bring in the military. But his office has said authorities would not hesitate to pull out all the stops, if necessary.

kb/jsi (AP, Reuters)

'Caution must be taken against overreach': Premiers react to Trudeau's call for Emergencies Act

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau briefed premiers on a proposal to invoke the Emergencies Act Monday morning, a sweeping piece of legislation that would give the government extraordinary powers to clear protests that have swamped downtown Ottawa and blockaded border crossing in several provinces.



Quebec Premier Francois Legault said he doesn’t support a state of emergency in his province.

Several premiers have already spoken out against the possible move, including Premier Jason Kenney in Alberta and Quebec Premier Francois Legault.

Legault said he doesn’t support a state of emergency in his province.

“I understand there is a particular problem in Ontario and in Ottawa, and we are ready to support what needs to be done by the federal and Ontario government as well as the municipal government in Ottawa, but we do not wish to have Emergency State in Quebec.”

Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson said using the act in her province would be ill-advised.

“The sweeping effects and signals associated with the never-before-used Emergencies Act are not constructive here in Manitoba, where caution must be taken against overreach and unintended negative consequences,” she said, while conceding the situation in Ottawa might be different.

The Emergencies Act is the modern-day replacement to the War Measures Act. It allows the federal government to force companies to provide services, it can require public protests to end, and limit mobility rights by preventing people from moving to designating areas.

The act also allows for the military to be used as police, but several sources said that is not under active consideration.

Several sources provided information to the National Post, all speaking on the condition they not be named.

In the call with the premiers, one provincial source told the National Post it was clear the decision was still under consideration.

The protests around Parliament Hill have been going on for more than two weeks, restricting movement throughout downtown Ottawa.

Trudeau invokes emergency powers to quell Canada protests





Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the military would not be deployed at this stage, but that authorities would be granted more powers to arrest protesters and seize their trucks (AFP/Dave Chan)

Michel COMTE, Genevieve NORMAND in Montreal
Mon, February 14, 2022

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday invoked rarely used emergency powers to bring an end to trucker-led protests against Covid health rules, after police arrested 11 people with a "cache of firearms" blocking a border crossing with the United States.

It marked only the second time in Canadian history such powers have been invoked in peacetime, and came as hundreds of big rigs still clogged the streets of the capital Ottawa, as well as two border crossings.

"The federal government has invoked the Emergencies Act to supplement provincial and territorial capacity to address the blockades and occupations," Trudeau told a news conference.


The prime minister said the military would not be deployed at this stage, but that authorities would be granted more powers to arrest protesters and seize their trucks in order to clear blockades, as well as ban funding of the protests.

"We cannot and will not allow illegal and dangerous activities to continue," Trudeau said.

"This is about keeping Canadians safe, protecting people's jobs and restoring confidence in our institutions," he added, noting that the scope of the measures would be "time-limited" and "geographically targeted," but without providing specifics.

As the threat of violence lingered, federal police said they arrested 11 protesters with rifles, handguns, body armor and ammunition at the border between Coutts, Alberta and Sweet Grass, Montana, just a day after another key US-Canada border crossing was cleared in Ontario.

"The group was said to have a willingness to use force against the police if any attempts were made to disrupt the blockade," the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said in a statement.

The protests by Canadian truckers and their supporters -- opposed to mandatory coronavirus vaccines and pushing a wider anti-establishment agenda -- have triggered copycat movements from France to New Zealand, with US truckers mulling similar rallies.

Under pressure to act, Trudeau on Sunday convened a special federal response group on efforts to end the occupation of Ottawa and the remaining, economically damaging, blockades of border crossings in Alberta and Manitoba.

The Emergencies Act was previously used by Trudeau's father, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, during the October Crisis of 1970.

It saw troops sent to Quebec to restore order after the kidnappings by militant separatists of a British trade attache and a Quebec minister, Pierre Laporte, who was found strangled to death in the trunk of a car.

- Protests spreading -

Canada's so-called "Freedom Convoy" started with truckers protesting against mandatory vaccines to cross the border with the United States.

But its demands now include an end to all Covid-19 health measures and, for many of the protesters, for the toppling of Trudeau's Liberal government -- only five months after he won re-election.

The truckers have found support among conservatives and vaccine mandate opponents across the globe, even as Covid-19 measures are being rolled back in many places.

In Paris on the weekend, police fired tear gas and issued hundreds of fines in an effort to break up convoys coming from across France.

The Netherlands, Switzerland and Austria have also seen copycat movements, and Belgian authorities said Monday they had intercepted 30 vehicles as police scrambled to stop a convoy of trucks.

- Truckers dig in -


Canadian police over the weekend cleared a blockade on the Ambassador Bridge, which handles an estimated 25 percent of trade with the United States, and had disrupted business in the world's largest economy.

But Monday morning in Ottawa, as a deep freeze rolled in, protesters remained defiant despite threats of jail and fines of up to Can$100,000 (US$80,000).

Leaving "is not in my plans," Phil Rioux, behind the wheel of a large truck, told AFP before Trudeau's announcement.

"It's by maintaining the pressure that we have a better chance of achieving our goal," the 29-year-old explained.

"There are other customs checkpoints that are blocked, more will be blocked elsewhere," he added.

Protest organizer Tamara Lich also told a news conference, "We are not afraid... We will hold the line."

Earlier Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced the lifting of vaccine passport requirements by March 1 in the province -- following in Alberta and Saskatchewan's footsteps.

Ontario, Canada's most populous province, had reimposed at the end of December among the most restrictive health measures in the world.

Residents of the capital, meanwhile, have grown increasingly frustrated, saying the protest has made them prisoners in their own homes.

Most businesses downtown are also closed or have had almost no customers after officials warned residents to stay clear.

"It's a little quieter now, there are less honking but it's annoying... (because) there's no other way to get to work than by walking" past the demonstrations, said Haley, a young woman on her way to work who declined to give her last name.

Like thousands of counter-protesters who blocked more trucks from entering the downtown this weekend, she'd been looking to the prime minister to end the crisis.

bur-amc/caw

Doodle-covered truck becomes symbol of Canada's Covid protests


sProtesters and supporters line up to sign their names and scribble messages of support for protests against Covid-19 health measures on a truck parked outside parliament (AFP/Ed JONES)More

Anne-Sophie THILL
Mon, February 14, 2022,

A white truck parked outside Canada's parliament -- covered in protesters' signatures and scribbled slogans to mark their struggle against Covid restrictions -- has become a must-see for the truckers and supporters hoping their stand goes down in history.

Gaëtan, Derek, Ariana, Marc-André, Jessyca -- hundreds of signatures are scrawled in black marker all over the vehicle.

Alongside the names are messages such as "God bless the trucker," "Thank you cowboy" and "People read about history, you are making it."

Nearby, retired nurse Nancy Lauzon gushes with pride over her compatriots -- who are mostly seen abroad as "so polite" -- raising hell over public health rules they say went too far and are strangling their democratic freedoms.

"I put my name on this truck because I want to be part of history, and this is history in the making," Lauzon, 64, told AFP.

"Hopefully my grandchildren will remember that their nanny tried to fight for freedom," she said, her voice choking up.

At the front of the truck, a little girl in a pink ski jacket and pants, barely taller than the semi's tire, draws a heart under the tender gaze of Cathy Stevens, who is waiting her turn.

The black felt freezes in bone-chilling temperatures, however, leaving people scrambling for another.

For her partner, Gilles Desbiens, the truck covered in doodles symbolizes "a coming together of Canadians showing that they care about the future." It should be kept as a "memorial of the people," he said.

- For posterity -

Sitting behind the wheel of his big rig, Spencer Bautz, sporting a goatee and black cowboy hat, is constantly interrupted by curious demonstrators.

They stop to extend congratulations, compliments and words of encouragement through his open window, as well as offer him cigarettes and letters from supporters. Sometimes they ask to snap a selfie with him.

The 24-year-old trucker is very chatty, happy to regale passers-by with stories of his more than two weeks parked in the Canadian capital to protest vaccine mandates and other pandemic restrictions, and to listen to their own tales.

It will be a "constant reminder" of the importance of the event, he said. "Every time I walk by or look out at it, I'm gonna be reminded of how special this was."

Bautz added: "I've never been so hopeful and proud to be a Canadian."

Explaining his motivations for protesting, he said: "Watching people who had their careers taken away or seeing kids having to wear masks, and just seeing people treated so unfairly... it just really, really bothered me."

Bautz drove almost 3,000 kilometers (1,800 miles) from Humboldt, Saskatchewan to Ottawa three weeks ago for the protest.

He said he will add his signature on the truck if there's any space left at the end of the demonstrations -- which, with Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoking emergency powers Monday to quell the protests, could come sooner than many demonstrators had hoped.

Eventually, Bautz said, he will return to driving his rig daily. But before that he intends to add a clear coat of paint or varnish, to preserve the signatures and comments for posterity.

ast/tib/amc/mlm
Israelis mount their own COVID 'Freedom Convoy'



Israeli "Freedom Convoy" protesters demonstrate in Jerusalem

Mon, February 14, 2022,

JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Hundreds of vehicles drove along the main highway from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem on Monday and converged on parliament to protest against COVID-19 curbs in a convoy inspired by demonstrations in Canada.

Other protesters stood on overpasses and at junctions as the so-called "Freedom Convoy" passed by, with banners and Israeli and Canadian flags flying from the vehicles.

"Freedom doesn't look like this," read one sign, showing a picture of a girl in a mask.

Outside parliament, protesters sounded horns and beat drums, and called for pandemic restrictions to be lifted.

"We are all gathered here for freedom. Because for two years already, all this world is going mad because of all the mandates and all the things that don't let us live as free as we are born," Jonathan Deporto, 39, said.

In recent weeks, Israel has rolled back requirements to show proof of vaccination at restaurants, cinemas, gyms and hotels to coincide with a slowdown in daily infections from the highly contagious Omicron variant of COVID-19.

But masks are still mandatory in public indoor spaces, including schools, shops and medical institutions.

In Canada, the "Freedom Convoy" https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/canada-protesters-police-deadlocked-tensions-simmer-blocked-border-bridge-2022-02-13 protests started in the capital Ottawa last month led by truckers opposing a vaccinate-or-quarantine mandate for cross-border drivers. Similar protests took place in France over the weekend.

(Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Andrew Heavens)



Freedom convoy: Israelis protest Covid rules in Canada-style convoy
AFP
February 14, 2022 
Source: Flickr

Thousands of Israelis streamed into Jerusalem from across the country Monday in a “freedom convoy” against coronavirus restrictions that mirrored similar traffic-blocking protests in Canada and around the world.

The demonstrators blared their car horns and waved Canadian and Israeli flags as they made their way towards the seat of Israel’s government. Protesters held signs against wearing masks and other coronavirus restrictions. Other activists stopped traffic at junctions and bridges nationwide.

The Jerusalem convoy snarled traffic in a demonstration similar to a massive show of protest in Canada that caused a major US-Canada crossing to be shut for days.

Similar movements have sprung up in France, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Australia and New Zealand.

Shany Shlomo, 51, an administrator, said she attended the protest in Jerusalem to speak up against coronavirus vaccines.

“Nobody can tell us what to put into our body,” she said.

Israel was one of the first nations to roll out a national vaccine campaign, with third and fourth booster shots available to offset the vaccine’s gradual decline in efficacy.

Authorities in Israel have loosened restrictions in recent weeks, shortening the list of places where a vaccine pass is required. This comes as runaway infections fuelled by the highly transmissible Omicron strain seem to be slowing down.

Last month, some days saw more than 80,000 new Covid cases. Since then, the infection rate has declined, with about 30,000 new cases registered Monday.

Tzvi Shori, 30, a business and law student, said he wanted “to fight for my rights” amid coronavirus restrictions.

“You’re taking and controling and holding us by a very short leash and basically saying ‘no’, now you do what we say,” he said.
Video by:Luke SHRAGO

 

Belgium: 'Freedom Convoy' protest reaches Brussels

Hundreds of protesters in cars, vans and trucks have headed to the Belgian capital to demand an end to COVID-19 restrictions, despite a ban preventing them from entering the city.



Protesters in a so-called "freedom convoy" have managed to make their way into Brussels on foot after police stopped vehicles from entering the city


A group of "freedom convoy" protesters reached Brussels Monday, with police in the Belgian capital partially blocking the main access routes into the city and redirecting vehicles to a car park on the outskirts.

Brussels mayor Philippe Close told local RTBF radio that a total of 400-500 cars and vans had been spotted en route to Brussels. Most of the vehicles came from France, where a similar protest took place over the weekend.

"It is a matter of not allowing the Belgian capital to be taken hostage," Close said.

He said protesters might be allowed to enter Brussels on foot, although authorities have banned vehicles in the Canada-style protest convoy from entering the city.


Some of the protesters have traveled from France following weekend protests in Paris
Protesters make it into Brussels despite counter measures

Reuters news agency reported seeing around 150 to 200 protesters in the city center.

A French protester called Philippe, who traveled from the weekend's protest in Paris, told members of the media that he was protesting for his children.

"I came particularly for our children's future. I don't see how my children can live in the world as it is now. Freedom is swept aside, there's more and more poverty. Even when you work,when the 15th of the month comes round, you haven't got enough to live on," Philippe said.

A similar ban did not prevent protesters from converging on Paris in neighboring France over the weekend.

They blocked roads and caused traffic jams around the Arc de Triomphe in the city's center.

The "Freedom Convoy" protests began in Canada, with Canadian truckers opposing a vaccine mandate for cross-border transport. However, the movement has sparked similar protests in Europe.

lo/wmr (AFP, Reuters)

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Erin Jackson wins gold in 500-meter speedskating; U.S. first in 28 years

She also was the first Black woman to win a gold medal in speedskating for the U.S.

By Adam Schrader


Erin Jackson of the USA takes a victory lap with her national flag after winning the gold medal in the women's 500-meter speedskating final at the Beijing Winter Olympics on February 13, 2022. Photo by Paul Hanna/UPI | License Photo

Feb. 13 (UPI) -- Erin Jackson of Team USA won a gold medal Sunday for her first-place finish in the women's 500-meter long-track speedskating event at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

It was the first time the United States has won the event since 1994 when Bonnie Blair won her third gold medal for the event at the Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway. 

She also was the first Black woman to win a gold medal in speedskating for the U.S.

"I wish I could describe how I feel. It is amazing. This medal means so much," Jackson told CNN after the race. "It has been a tough couple of years and a tough beginning for this year. For this to come around like this, I am so happy."

Jackson, 29, is from Ocala, Fla., where is doesn't snow, and she didn't start skating until five years ago.

Jackson finished the race with a time of 37.04 seconds while Miho Takagi of Japan took the silver medal with a time of 37.12 seconds and Angelina Golikova of the Russian Olympic Committee took the bronze with a time of 37.21 seconds.

"Speedy looking extra speedy," Team USA tweeted after her race, in reference to the athlete's nickname.

Jackson, who finished the event in 24th place during the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchange, South Korea, threw her arms in air and wore a look of surprised victory after realizing she had won the race.

"ERIN JACKSON IS OLYMPIC CHAMPION‼️‼️ REPEAT: ERIN JACKSON IS OLYMPIC CHAMPION," the Twitter account for the U.S. speedskating team posted.

Jackson recounted to CNN how her teammate Brittany Bowe had offered her spot on Team USA after Jackson had slipped during qualifying trials and was almost unable to compete. The U.S. later received a third spot,w hich allowed Bowe back into the competition.

"It was just amazing having her out there on the ice. We could just be happy together after the race. She hugged me, said she is really proud of me, and I just said a lot of thank yous," Jackson said.

"At the time when she gave up her spot, she didn't know we were getting a third one, so she made a really big sacrifice for me, and I will be grateful to her forever."

Jackson's win came after the U.S. men's team placed second during the team pursuit speedskating event quarterfinals, progressing to the semifinals.

Ethan Cepuran, Casey Dawson and Emery Lehman of Team USA finished the long-track race just 0.04 seconds behind Norway.

The Russian Olympic Committee finished the course in third place with a time of 3:38.67 while the Netherlands finished the course in fourth place with a time of 3:38.90. Both teams will also move on to the semi-finals and finals on Tuesday.

Eight teams competed for the chance to advance during the quarterfinals Sunday, with only the top four teams progressing to the semi-finals for a chance at a medal.

The semifinals will feature the U.S. facing off against the ROC while the Netherlands will race against Norway for a chance to advance to the finals.

The U.S. currently holds the world record of 3:34.47 in the men's team pursuit event for a race in Salt Lake City in December. Norway holds the Olympic Record for its gold medal finish in the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang in 2018.