Friday, May 27, 2022

Coastal Cities are Sinking as Sea Levels Rise

Rhode Island researchers identify at-risk areas in cities worldwide for subsiding land.

By Gabe Allen
May 27, 2022 

(Credit: MainlanderNZ/Shutterstock)

In a recent study, researchers examined 99 coastal cities and found nearly all of them were rapidly sinking. The study showed development and groundwater depletion has been depressing the surface. In many of these coastal communities, subsiding land may create a compounding risk of flooding, adding to the rising sea levels due to global warming.

“Anywhere you are worried about sea level rise, you should also be worried about subsidence,” says study author Matt Wei, a University of Rhode Island associate professor of oceanography.

Although subsidence, a fancy word for sinking ground, is more prevalent in East Asia, Wei and his colleagues also observed it in the U.S., Africa, Europe and Australia. In short, it is a global phenomenon with global implications. In many places, research like Wei’s could help prevent disastrous consequences during natural disasters.

Accounting for Subsiding Land

U.S. Geological Survey employee Richard Ireland took a photograph in San Joaquin Valley, Cali. in 1977 of a local farmer standing beside a telephone pole. A sign that read, “1925” in bold print was nailed to the pole at two-thirds height. In the 52 years preceding the photograph, the ground below the farmer's feet had sunk nearly 30 feet.

Booming agriculture — grapes, nut and citrus farms — depleted a subterranean aquifer system below the valley floor. As the aquifer collapsed, the ground sank and the underground water-holding capacity of the area was permanently diminished.

In recent decades, the valley has developed systems to closely monitor subsidence. Extensometers and a GPS network watch out for signs of further aquifer compaction. The network might soon prove a useful model far beyond the bucolic Californian farmlands.

“A lot of U.S. and European countries have plans where they look at flood risks for different scenarios of sea level rise,” Wei says. “Rarely do they take into account subsidence in their models.”

Making this shift will require collaboration between municipalities and scientists. Since the phenomenon is rarely uniform, cities can’t use the same subsidence models. Certain areas may sink while others rise within a city, or even a neighborhood.

In an attempt to map out at-risk locations, Wei and his colleagues identified areas that sit below 10 meters above sea level and are experiencing subsidence at an equal or greater rate to sea level rise. In other words, low-lying coastal zones that are sinking faster than the water is rising.

Of 99 cities, all but six contain these danger zones and some have many. Shanghai, China and Hanoi, Vietnam top the list, each with more than 1,000 square kilometers of at-risk real estate. The U.S. cities of Hampton, Va., Tampa, Fla. and Corpus Christie, Texas break the top 10 as well.
Underlying Geology

Similar to the San Joaquin valley, researchers think the leading cause for subsidence worldwide is groundwater depletion. But water alone doesn’t offer a satisfactory explanation. Large construction projects tend to compact the soil beneath them, and also pump out large quantities of water to support their operations. Oil and gas extraction can contribute as well. The process can weaken underground structures and cause the ground to sink rapidly.

Underlying geology drives local variations of subsidence. A neighborhood built on the soft alluvial soils of a former riverbed is more prone to subsidence than one built on solid granitic bedrock. Similarly, areas that sit on top of large aquifers are more prone to subsidence from groundwater depletion.

Wei hopes that his research will motivate municipalities to pay attention to subsidence. Once a city knows where subsidence is happening, they can take inventory of the area, assess the flood risk and take measures to protect it.

“First you have to be aware that it is happening, then you need resources to improve it,” Wei says.

GPS stations are an important tool. While much of Wei’s research relied on satellite images, GPS data is more accurate. But, even in the U.S., cities rarely contain more than a handful of GPS stations. Long-term monitoring of subsidence risks will require governments to invest in on-the-ground technology.

“The expansion of ground geodetic data is very important,” Wei says.

As cities around the world grow and expand, so does our understanding of their unintended consequences. Wei’s research provides insight into how one of these consequences may collide with the global effects of climate change to create a unique problem. But it is also a reminder of something more. That disaster mitigation, on both global and local scales, is done best through careful observation and anticipation.
‘This will emerge again’: Communities organize to tackle far-right rhetoric of ‘freedom convoy’

By Natasha Bulowski | May 26th 2022


Counter-protesters are seen during a rally against the trucker convoy in 
Ottawa on Feb. 5, 2022. 
Photo by Spencer Colby / Canada's National Observer

The streets of downtown Ottawa are no longer blocked with trucks and peppered with hate symbols, but residents are not ready to rest while the extreme rhetoric of the so-called “freedom convoy” permeates Canadian politics and society.

“This will emerge again,” said Andrea Harden, an Ottawa resident who participated in many counter-protests against the month-long occupation. “The question for me is when and where?”

Recent events support Harden’s assertion that similar hateful and divisive actions are inevitable.

Less than one month ago, a convoy of motorcyclists continued the work of the “freedom convoy” by protesting public health measures in Canada’s capital, but unlike the demonstration that inspired the motorcycle convoy, they did not linger.

Earlier this week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau cancelled plans to attend a fundraising dinner after two speakers at the event said protesters hurled racial slurs at the mostly South Asian attendees entering a convention centre in Surrey, B.C.

One protester carried a noose attached to two flat sticks printed with the words "treason" and "Trudeau." Trudeau says the safety of Canadians participating in democracy should never be jeopardized by the kinds of racist insults and threats of violence witnessed at the fundraiser.

Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh faced verbal abuse in Peterborough, Ont., earlier this month when protesters shouted expletives at him and called him a "traitor."

The freedom convoy’s extended stay in the nation's capital and police inaction led many citizens to push back with counter-protests, a class-action lawsuit and mutual aid. When a protest in solidarity with the freedom convoy rolled into Vancouver, it was met by a group of cyclists who blocked the road to try to keep the convoy from disrupting access to hospitals.

Counter-protesters, right, argue with protesters from Canada First, an organization designated by the Canadian Anti-Hate Network as “young white supremacists.” 
Photo by Spencer Colby / Canada's National Observer

Harden believes that if armed with the right tools, communities can come together to challenge the rise of the far-right exemplified by the freedom convoy. She recounts a successful counter-protest in Ottawa — dubbed the “Battle of Billings Bridge” — where a few dozen neighbours decided to block an intersection to prevent more trucks from joining the convoy. Over the course of the day, a small but determined group of 30 grew into a community-wide resistance of over 1,000 frustrated people saying “enough is enough,” Harden said. Throughout the roughly 10-hour event, counter-protesters managed to turn trucks away and got protesters to give up their flags, jerry cans and other “various paraphernalia.”

A national movement was birthed out of citizen resistance to the Ottawa freedom convoy and now the Community Solidarity Project wants to arm communities with the resources to challenge far-right rhetoric and push for systemic change.

 #FreedomConvoy

A trucker convoy protestor holds up a jerry can with the words 'Filled with Love' during the eleventh day of protest on Monday, Feb. 7, 2022 in Ottawa, Ont.
 Photo by Spencer Colby / Canada's National Observer

The community’s spontaneous resistance to the convoy inspired a national project seeking to arm communities with tools to challenge individualistic far-right rhetoric and long-standing systemic issues. In Ottawa, organizers were teaching people how to conduct themselves peacefully and how to be legal observers during rallies to make sure folks are protected, said Diwa Marcelino, national organizing lead of the Community Solidarity Project and member of the Council of Canadians board of directors.

“Looking at the experiences of folks in Ottawa, Toronto (and) Winnipeg, we have found ways that we can peacefully talk to folks … across the divides,” said Marcelino. “We have more in common with the people protesting on the other side of the street than folks like Elon Musk, who is promoting the convoy.”

At the Battle of Billings Bridge, Harden and community members were able to engage with members of the convoy and discovered many were apparently shocked at the frosty reception. Many expected to be welcomed with open arms, which lends insight into the social media echo chambers where the convoy was organized, said Harden.

The national project will seek to provide communities with resources to directly respond to events and address underlying systemic issues that contribute to the rise of the far-right. The Council of Canadians is supporting grassroots organizing in communities by sharing contacts and offering webinars and other forms of political education. There are also ready-made templates for posters to be used at rallies so grassroots groups can tailor the message to the event. Ottawa organizers put these posters around the city in anticipation of the “Rolling Thunder” motorcycle convoy.

To speak across the divide and penetrate those echo chambers, people need an alternative message to rally around, said Harden, who got involved with the Community Solidarity Project as a senior strategist with Emdash, a progressive strategic communications firm.

The slogan “together we can” cuts to the root causes of why people are struggling and acknowledges that while there are problems in our society, the answer isn't hate or putting folks in a position where the vulnerable are sacrificed to the COVID-19 pandemic, she said.

By coming together to demand economic justice, climate justice, health care for all, affordable education or reconciliation, communities can challenge the individualistic narrative of movements like the freedom convoy, said Marcelino.

“There's been years of underfunding of our social safety net that's left millions of Canadians feeling unheard, unsupported and forgotten,” said Marcelino.

A goal of the national project is to make sure people aren't left in the far-right echo chambers, said John Cartwright, chair of the Council of Canadians. Giving people who are frustrated about the pandemic, cost of living or other issues a space to put their energy into hopeful and inclusive work instead is key, he said.

Cartwright says the current situation is “a huge battle of ideas” and that the coming years will be a time of “deep uncertainty” in Canada.

Creating spaces where people can voice their unhappiness and work toward real solutions without dividing and scapegoating is paramount, he said. The Community Solidarity Project lays the groundwork to pursue systemic solutions.

The national project is uniting countless social justice groups, from health-care coalitions to student groups to unions. “It's very inspiring to see all these groups coming together of all faith backgrounds, of all demographics, to work together towards this,” Marcelino said.

.
On May 16, students rallied in front of the Manitoba legislature to raise awareness that international students don't have equitable access to health care.
 Photo by Elizabeth Shearer / Canadian Federation of Students Manitoba

Ariel Troster is an Ottawa resident who took part in the Battle of Billings Bridge and other local events.

“It felt incredibly empowering to hold those trucks back from entering our downtown neighbourhoods for a day,” said Troster, who intends to run for Somerset Ward city councillor. After three weeks of complete police inaction, this spontaneous citizen movement stepped up when the city, police and all levels of government failed to, she said.

At the Battle of Billings Bridge, Troster felt “very worried” because there were “violent and criminal elements associated with the convoy” and “a lot of white supremacist extremism.”

As a queer Jewish woman, Troster was deeply uncomfortable seeing swastikas and Confederate flags on display in the city.

“We know that racism is very much alive and well in Canada, but this is just this extreme explosion,” she said.


MUST BE FROM ALBERTA 
On Jan. 28, a truck brandishing a Confederate flag was photographed on Elgin Street near Parliament Hill in downtown Ottawa. Photo from Ariel Troster via Twitter

Though the convoy is long departed, communities are dealing with residual trauma, said Troster.

“My daughter's school was right in the middle of where the convoy was gathering. There were people parking trucks and carrying jerry cans of fuel right behind her school. There were people yelling at kids in the schoolyard, and it was terrifying for her,” said Troster. She added that schoolchildren in the area — many of whom are immigrants, refugees or have disabilities — were terrified by protesters hurling hateful slurs at them on their way to school.

Her nine-year-old daughter, Daphne, had a “really significant” panic attack after hearing the convoy was going to target schools, said Troster.

It was “incredibly upsetting” to see her daughter’s mental health deteriorate so profoundly, and Troster had to pull her from school for a few days.

It took weeks for Daphne to feel safe walking down the street again.

Ariel Troster, an Ottawa resident involved in freedom convoy counter-protests, stands at the intersection of Kent Street and Somerset Street on May 25, 2022. Back in February, this street was lined with vehicles protesting public health mandates as part of the "freedom convoy." Troster said community members conducted safe walks to escort frightened or vulnerable residents through the area. 
Photo by Natasha Bulowski / Canada's National Observer

“I hope that this is a lesson for other communities to stand up to and stop white supremacy when you see it, to not welcome it into your communities, to not allow it to fester and take up residence,” said Troster. Citizens took care of each other, both on the front lines at counter-protests and behind the scenes. “There was a lot of queer and trans people and disabled people and people of colour who were taking care of each other, delivering meals, checking in, doing safe walks,” she said.

This “hate-filled, conspiracy-filled movement” is deeply concerning, Troster said, pointing to the federal Conservative leadership campaign as an example of “racist dog whistles being adopted by mainstream politics.”

The recent verbal attacks on NDP Leader Singh are just one example of the temperature heating up, but we can cool things down by fighting for better social safety nets so people are supported and less likely to be driven to extremes, she said.

Part of this is fighting the simplistic Conservative messaging that promises freedom for all and one-off rebates to put a few hundred dollars in our pockets, said Troster. She said a few bucks here or there means nothing compared to an actual pharmacare program, dental care program, paid sick days and investment in other social supports for people.

Although the convoy was a “horrible experience,” Troster said gathering at counter-rallies and solidarity picnics was “really comforting because it was nice to be together in the community again, and in a community that was opposed to this kind of extremism.”

— With files from The Canadian Press

Natasha Bulowski / Local Journalism Initiative / Canada’s National Observer
ONTARIO

'Like a war zone:' Tornado shown touching down in Uxbridge in new video footage

Video captures tornado touching down in Uxbridge


New video shows the moment a tornado touched down in Uxbridge over the weekend, ripping the roof off a local brewery.

Chris Fox, CP24.com Managing Digital Producer
Published Friday, May 27, 2022

New video has emerged showing the moment a tornado touched down in Uxbridge over the weekend, ripping the roof off a local brewery in the process.

The footage was captured by several cameras attached to a Tesla that was parked outside the Second Wedge Brewery on Victoria Street.

It shows the sky quickly darkening as the EF2 tornado first touched down in the area on Saturday afternoon.

PHOTOS

Debris is shown hitting a vehicle in Uxbridge as a EF2 tornado touched down over the weekend.
(CanuckChris/YouTube)

A camera positioned at the rear of the vehicle initially shows heavy winds pummeling a tent that had been set up outside the brewery, tearing up the canopy and bending the metal frame.

Then within seconds a stream of debris, including what appears to be lumber and insulation from the brewery’s roof, starts to fly through a shot captured by a front facing camera.

The whole thing unfolds over about two minutes of footage and by the time it is done you can see another parked vehicle with at least two broken windows and a mound of debris in the foreground.

The Toronto resident, whose vehicle captured the footage, told CP24.com that he had just arrived at the brewery with his wife and seven-month-old son when the rain started falling.

He said that he did get the emergency alert warning of approaching thunderstorms on his phone but was seated inside and wasn’t particularly concerned at first.

The situation, however, quickly changed.

“The rain started to pick up quite heavily and as the staff was closing the bay doors at the front of the building I looked over at my wife and said ‘Wow, it is coming down really heavy.’ A second or two later it had picked up to the point that it wasn’t a ‘oh wow’, it was an ‘oh no.,’” Chris Kreasul said. “We were going to relocate to the back off the bar. We got two steps away from the table we were sitting at and then there was a really loud cracking sound. My wife turned around to protect our seven-month old son from the glass shattering from the windows and I bear hugged them, covered them up and covered my head. I just waited it out as all the debris from the roof fell on top of me.”

Saturday’s storm caused widespread damage throughout Uxbridge, prompting the town to declare a state of emergency.

Environment Canada has previously said that the tornado was embedded within the leading edge of a derecho, which is a widespread and long-lived windstorm associated with a line of thunderstorms.

At one point a maximum wind speed of 195 kilometres per hour was recorded.

“It was like a war zone,” Kreasul said of the scene outside the brewery after the storm passed. “There was downed tress everywhere, debris of all kinds all over the place, the roof from the brewery was missing and across the parking lot on top of two vehicles. It just didn’t look like the same place as it was when we got there.”

Kreasul said that he didn’t actually think to check the video footage from his Tesla until a few days after the tornado, as he was pretty shaken up by what transpired.

He said that while his car was “beaten up” with a cracked windshield and a damage roof, he was able to drive his family home to Toronto following the storm.

More importantly, he said that nobody was injured.

“It is a miracle we got away as well as we did. Looking at the video I can’t believe nobody was seriously hurt,” he said.

The co-founder of the brewery told CTV News Toronto earlier this week that the business could be closed for upwards of a year due to the damage

The brewery is one of at least 35 properties in Uxbridge that was heavily damaged as a result of the storm.


MORE REACTIONARY CENSORSHIP
Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None has been banned by the Upper Canada District School Board.

Kevin Connor - Toronto Sun




Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None has been banned by the Upper Canada District School Board.

“As noted, the text includes anti-Semitic references,” the board wrote in a letter to schools on May 19.

“This moment provides a strong reminder of the importance of reflecting on and acting on the harm that texts can perpetrate on students — texts that in another time might have appeared innocuous or contextually appropriate.”

The letter goes on to say as the Ontario College of Teachers professional advisory on Anti-Black Racism reminded all educators, “a recent amendment to the Ontario College of Teachers Act, 1996, … now stipulates that making remarks or engaging in behaviours that expose any person or class of person to hatred on the basis of a prohibited ground of discrimination under Part 1 of the Human Rights Code’ is an act of professional misconduct.”

The board said this is one proactive step it can take that we can take in to ensure that the texts we assign our students meet the threshold of our duty to protect students from discrimination.

Cara Zwibel, with the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, say she is not in favour of banning books.

“They can make the decision what is appropriate for different ages. A better approach would be to use this as an opportunity to discuss the issues,” Zwibel said.

“Not having access to a book concerns me. Lets talk about it.”

Marvin Rotrand, National Director of B’nai Brith Canada’s League for Human Rights, says he can find no convincing proof of overt anti-Semitism in this book, but adds some of the descriptions of the characters reflect the attitudes of the time.

“I’ve seen some critics write that they wish a few lines weren’t in the book, but all seem to agree that it would be better to teach the book and provide historical perspective for the readers than to ban it,” Rotrand said.


“I am not calling for others to emulate the example of the Upper Canada District School Board. Teachers should provide the historical perspective needed, as they do in teaching Shakespeare, so that the high school reader can recognize the books literary merit and comprehend how Christie’s writing reflected the attitudes of her time.”

SEE 

ENOUGH WITH CLOSED RALLIES IN PUBLIC SPACES
Toronto lawyer says she's 'shaken up' after arrest outside Doug Ford rally near Hamilton airport

Bobby Hristova - 

Hamilton police arrested and ticketed a Toronto-based lawyer for trespassing near a Progressive Conservative campaign stop on Thursday evening, but Caryma Sa'd says she was targeted for criticizing party leader Doug Ford.

Police say Ford was at the John C. Munro Hamilton International Airport for a campaign stop at about 5:30 p.m. when protesters showed up.

Sa'd said she has been asked to leave Ford events in the past and this time RSVP'd to attend the event. She's known for creating cartoons and videos that criticize politicians and people protesting public health measures.

Sa'd said she wasn't there as a protester but as a political commentator. She said someone from Ford's team asked her to leave and called the police when she refused.

A video posted on Twitter by Sa'd appears to show the conversation in front of the Cargojet facility before her arrest.

"It's pretty obvious what your intentions are coming here, it's all over Twitter.... You're not invited to this event, you're not welcome ... we know you're not here for the right intentions," said a person speaking to Sa'd in the video. The person appears to be wearing an in-ear headset, but their affiliation is unclear.

"I'll wait for the police," Sa'd said in the video.

The Progressive Conservative Party didn't answer questions from CBC Hamilton about the incident, deferring to police.

Police say protesters were on private property and that officers asked them to move when they blocked off the road to the Cargojet facility.
Woman given multiple warnings before arrest: police

Another video posted by Sa'd on Instagram appears to show the moments immediately before her arrest. Hamilton police spokesperson Jackie Penman said the arrest took place at about 6:30 p.m.

"So it's your choice," a Hamilton police officer says in the video.

"No one has articulated why ... I'm not allowed into this event, I have an RSVP," Sa'd says while someone tells her she's trespassing.

"OK, you're under arrest," the officer says before the video shows him approaching her.

Penman told CBC Hamilton that officers asked the 33-year-old woman to move "several times and instructed that if she did not comply, she would be arrested for trespassing — fail to leave premise when directed."

Another video posed by Sa'd seems to show her being handcuffed.

"Can she leave?" someone says behind the camera.

"No, she had her opportunity," the police officer says.

Sa'd was taken off the property before being released and given a $65 ticket. Penman said the woman was taken to Airport Road before others joined her there and demonstrated peacefully.

"As far as I am aware, there have been no other arrests at campaign stops this year," Penman said.
'This should never happen in a free society': Del Duca

Sa'd said she wasn't part of a protest but was there to document the event.

Hamilton 350, an environmental group organizing a protest outside the event, posted on Twitter that its members were also there. None of its members were arrested and it felt that Sa'd was singled out.

Don Mclean, a member of the group, said he watched the arrest and corroborated Sa'd's account. "We didn't even have signs at that point," he said.

Mclean said she was not part of the protest and was arrested well before any protesters were standing on roads. He added that his group of protesters were asked to move even when they were on public property outside the facility.

Penman didn't clarify questions about the wording of the press release, which says the person arrested was part of the group blocking roads.


© Taylor Simmons/CBC
Caryma Sa'd, a Toronto lawyer, says she shouldn't have been refused entry into Ford's rally in Hamilton because of her opinions.

Sa'd acknowledged that while the facility is private property, the rally was a public event. Given that she properly signed up for the event, she said she should have been given a fulsome explanation for why she couldn't attend.

Sa'd said she attended events for Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca this week and had no issues, despite criticizing him.

Del Duca criticized Ford on Twitter for the incident.

"First Doug Ford hides from the media, now his staff have them arrested. This should never happen in a free society," he wrote Thursday evening.

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner also commented on the incident during a campaign stop in Hamilton on Friday.

"It is wrong and inappropriate to arrest a journalist, even though they may be citizen journalists, at a political event," he said. "We live in a province, in a country where one, people should be able to express themselves without fear of arrest, and two, people who are engaging in journalistic activities should not be arrested for showing up at a political event."

Sa'd said she's a bit "shaken up" by the event and isn't sure if she'll attend others in the future.

"I do political commentary, so to be blocked because of disagreement with my views that are not violent or objectionable ... I think that is the bigger concern and it reeks of authoritarianism," she said.


UCP AUSTERITY PUNISHES PUBLIC SCHOOLS FUNDS PRIVATE SCHOOLS

Edmonton Public Schools approves budget that will see staffing cuts amid growing enrolment

Edmonton Public school division has approved a budget that will see staffing cuts amid growing enrolment in the coming school year.


© Provided by Edmonton Journal
Edmonton Public Schools board chairwoman Trisha Estabrooks and Edmonton Public Schools’ superintendent Darrel Robertson at a news conference in Edmonton on. Aug. 16, 2021.

Lisa Johnson - 4h ago

The division, which saw an operating budget increase from the province of $10.8 million, estimates it will still have a funding shortfall for nearly 1,700 students.

In a sometimes emotional meeting Friday, Ward C trustee Marcia Hole became tearful weighing in on the budget, lamenting the potential impact on public education.

“The value of public education is that we accept every student, and the most heartbreaking thing about this budget is that we don’t have enough — we don’t have enough to really be able to offer the funds to the kids that they deserve,” said Hole.

Even though enrolment in the city’s public schools is projected to increase by 2.7 per cent, with the addition of slightly more than 2,800 new students compared to September 2021, the budget predicts full-time teaching positions will be cut by 218, or 3.9 per cent, while 138 full-time equivalent educational assistants are slated to be lost, amounting to an 8.8 per cent cut.


The budget document notes that many of the cuts are due to temporary staff, hired in the fall to help with online learning during COVID-19, no longer being needed.


Ward G Trustee Saadiq Sumar said the division is careful with spending, but there aren’t enough dollars to support students’ needs coming out of the pandemic.

“We trimmed the fat a long time ago, and now we’re cutting into muscle, we’re cutting into bone here.”

The Alberta government’s 2022-23 budget increased K-12 education funding across the province by $700 million over the next three years.

However, in 2020, the UCP government rolled out a weighted moving average funding formula, which counts student enrolment over three years rather than allocating a specific amount of money per student each year. The government has said it’s meant to provide more funding predictability, but Edmonton Public has warned it will hurt quickly growing school divisions.

Board chairwoman Trisha Estabrooks told reporters following the meeting it was emotional for trustees to see the impact of the provincial funding formula trickle down.

Related video: No School Resource Officers at Edmonton public schools this year (Global News)

No School Resource Officers at Edmonton public schools this year


“Ultimately, that affects kids, that affects teachers, that affects educational assistants in our classrooms,” said Estabrooks, noting the division is predicting it will result in larger class sizes.

“How can it not?”

Superintendent Darrel Robertson said at the meeting the number of educational assistant positions lost will fluctuate as principals get a better idea of how many are required in the fall.

Still, he said the current funding model is not sustainable, and the budget increase falls well short of the roughly $10,000 per student public schools need.


“If we keep a frozen education budget … into future years, it will become an impossibility for us to operate and to care for the needs of our kids,” said Robertson.

“Eventually, something’s got to change,” he said, adding school principals are being forced to make tough choices.

“Things like extra (staff) for interventions for kids in literacy and numeracy are having to be removed, as an example, because they simply cannot afford them,” said Robertson.

Katherine Stavropoulos, press secretary to Education Minister Adriana LaGrange, said in a statement the budget increase recognizes enrolment growth, and offers enough to support teachers and to address cost pressures.

“We expect all boards to make the educational experience of students a priority, and to minimize impacts on front-line staff and teachers. Locally-elected trustees will continue to be accountable to parents for their decisions. We also expect school boards to continue to find efficiencies and eliminate unnecessary spending. Money should be spent in the classroom,” she wrote, noting the growing surplus reserves of boards across the province sit at more than $700 million.

Edmonton Public, which is being forced to divert more cash from classrooms to pay for rising utility and insurance costs, plans to pull $10.1 million from its operating reserves.

NDP Opposition education critic Sarah Hoffman said in a release Friday’s budget shows the UCP has failed to provide schools with necessary supports, and the loss of educational assistants will be devastating news for disabled students and their families.

“ I know many parents are feeling a lot of anxiety, even despair, right now,” she said.

Five per cent, or $57.4 million, of Edmonton Public’s $1.2-billion budget is temporary bridge funding, but the province has not said when exactly that funding will end, nor has it detailed the well-being supports for students promised in February’s budget.


Stavropoulos said EPSB will get at least $2.5 million for resources to support the new curriculum.

lijohnson@postmedia.com
twitter.com/reportrix


Edmonton Public Schools eliminating 250 jobs as per-student funding drops

Janet French - CBC

There will be about 250 fewer staff in Edmonton Public Schools next year as the school division prepares to welcome more than 2,800 new students.



© Manuel Carrillos/CBC
Edmonton Public School Board superintendent Darryl Robertson says the division is planning to bring back fewer staff next year due to budget constraints, and class sizes will go up.

Public school board trustees approved a $1.2-billion budget Friday they say will lead to larger class sizes and fewer supports for students with disabilities and additional needs.

Board chair Trisha Estabrooks said it was frustrating to see funding fail to keep pace with growth and expenses at a time when oil revenues are flowing into provincial coffers.

"This provincial government is balancing the budget on the backs of kids in this province at a time we need investment in future generations. And that's what makes it tough," Estabrooks said.

Limited provincial funding and the rising costs of utilities and transportation are driving more money out of classrooms, superintendent Darrel Robertson said.

The division has planned for 138 fewer educational assistants to return to classrooms next year to help students with disabilities.

More than 200 teaching positions will also be eliminated as the school division stops offering parallel online classes during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Robertson said during previous years, the division had more wiggle room to hire some of those employees back in the fall once they saw which kids turned up, and where. He said much of that wiggle room is gone now.

Estabrooks said the cash crunch is the result of three years of a new provincial funding formula that punishes growing urban school divisions. Even with $57 million extra "bridge" funding to help narrow the gap, the division calculates there are more than 1,600 full-time students that are unfunded in Edmonton public, which is the province's second-largest school division.

Funding is not keeping up with the growth in enrolment, Robertson said. Students will get the help they need, but staff will be spread thinner, he said, and the trend is not sustainable.

"It will become an impossibility to operate and to care for the needs of the kids," he said.

Trustees were despondent about the state of funding. Trustee Marcia Hole's voice broke as she described how "heartbreaking" it is that constrained spending especially affects children with mental health challenges and disabilities.

Although the provincial government has promised $110 million for mental health and additional help to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, Robertson said Edmonton public's portion will come nowhere close to meeting students' needs.

News of the planned cuts to staffing is frustrating to Keltie Marshall, co-founder of the group Hold My Hand Alberta, which advocates for children with disabilities. Five of her nine children need extra help in school.

A growing number of students competing for a limited number of education assistants, speech language pathologists, occupational therapists and other school-based professionals is making classrooms increasingly unsafe for some kids, she said.

Now that the provincial government is offering homeschooling families access to some professionals, it's encouraging more parents to pull their disabled children from classrooms — and that's not right, Marshall said.

The proposed cuts are "defeating" and will lead to a stressful summer for some parents left wondering if their kids will have the help and supervision they need next fall, she said.

"One less EA is too many," Marshall said. "We're already at situation critical. We cannot lose one more support for our children."


In an email, Katherine Stavropoulos, press secretary to Education Minister Adriana LaGrange, said the division is "extremely well funded." She said the division received more funding than the formula had allowed for during the past two years, and has some cash in reserves.

The school division is planning to use $10 million of its savings next year, leaving about $15 million in reserves.


The budget does not account for provincially pledged money for implementing a new curriculum and buying resources, new mental health money, or the potential cost of new contracts for teachers and other staff.

Earlier this week, the Edmonton Catholic school board also approved a $528-million budget that will add 10 new teaching positions. Officials said they received flat funding and are expecting enrolment growth of less than one per cent. That board is drawing nearly $6 million from reserves to cover increasing staffing costs.



The risky business of chicken and pig farms in Canada

By Jan Hajek | Opinion | May 27th 2022

Chicken farms with tens of thousands of birds crowded together play key roles in amplifying influenza viruses. Photo by shutterstock

Avian influenza, carried by migrating wild birds, has swept across Canada. The outbreak has been especially concerning to owners and operators of large chicken farms.

Ask an expert what level of risk this avian flu outbreak poses for human health and they will likely say the risk is low.

Ask that same expert what the chances are for another influenza pandemic in the next few years and they will likely say the risk is high. A common statement is that the question of another influenza pandemic is a matter of “when, not if.” And although there is a degree of unpredictability, it is of critical concern that our next pandemic is being hastened by our use of animals susceptible to influenza, especially chickens and pigs.

Chicken farms with tens of thousands of birds crowded together play key roles in amplifying influenza viruses. The regular contact with humans adds the additional element of spillovers and transmission of these viruses between humans and chickens.

As a global community, we are now raising and slaughtering over 70 billion chickens per year. The numbers are staggering and are continuing to increase as farms are getting bigger and more concentrated. Over the last 10 years, the number of chickens raised on commercial farms for food in Canada has increased by 30 per cent.

The animal agriculture industry, and government officials in positions dedicated to the support of the industry, may naturally seek to distance themselves from the pandemic risks. During the H1N1 pandemic in 2009, testing for influenza on pig farms actually went down. Sensationalizing and fearmongering are not appropriate, but even those dead set on continuing to increase the scale of chicken farming need to reckon with the pandemic risks.

In expecting and preparing for the next pandemic, institutions are putting resources into the development of vaccines and antivirals. There are also calls for more surveillance on chicken farms — of the animals and the workers. These are important initiatives. However, there is disproportionately little support for the development of alternatives and scaling back the staggering and increasing number of animals confined on farms and used for food or fur.

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Choosing to buy chicken meat at a store or restaurant is safe and low risk in terms of getting influenza from the animal’s flesh. But, insofar as it contributes to the support and further growth of this industry, it does increase our risks for the next influenza pandemic.

Consider climate change, greenhouse gas emissions and global warming — one person driving their car to the store, or one small coal plant, is a low risk and could be characterized as almost negligible. But put them all together and we have an impending disaster. There may be more unpredictability when it comes to infectious diseases, but the pandemic risks related to our current uses of animals are similar — something that unchecked will not end well for us.

Despite cultural and economic benefits for many individuals in China, there has been broad support to curb the wildlife trade and live animal markets based on the health risks they pose. The risks related to chicken and pig farms in Canada are quantitatively different, but they do carry serious public health risks.

Opinion: There may be more unpredictability when it comes to infectious diseases, but the pandemic risks related to our current uses of animals may not end well for us, writes Jan Hajek @ahoysvet. #influenza #pandemic #coronaviruses #factoryfarming

There are no risk-free situations in terms of infectious diseases and our food supply. However, the production of some foods clearly poses higher risks than others. There is a lot of processing and many hazards involved in raising animals like chickens and pigs for food on a massive scale. Alternatives do exist, including plant-based foods and lab-grown and cultured meats. We need to include a reduction in chicken consumption and genuine support for safer alternatives in our influenza pandemic prevention plans.

Jan Hajek is an infectious diseases specialist at the Vancouver General Hospital and a clinical assistant professor at the University of British Columbia. He worked in Toronto during SARS, in Newfoundland during the H1N1 "swine flu" pandemic, in West Africa during the 2014 Ebola outbreak, and this past year has worked on the COVID ward at Vancouver General Hospital.


May 27th 2022

Jan Hajek
@ahoysvet
UK

Crowd gathers outside Downing Street to protest treatment of cleaners during Partygate


United Voices of the World (UVW) organised the demonstration outside Downing Street in light of Sue Gray's Partygate report which revealed the "unacceptable" treatment of government cleaners and security staff


Cleaners staged a protest outside Downing Street on Friday 
(Image: PA)

By Ryan Merrifield
News Reporter
mirror.co.uk
 27 May 2022

Demonstrators have gathered outside Downing Street to protest against the "outrageous" treatment of government cleaners and security during Partygate.

Whitehall enforcer Sue Gray has lifted the lid on the behaviour of Boris Johnson and his staff behind-closed-doors during the Covid pandemic.

And that includes the lockdown-busting gatherings, as well as the "acceptable" treatment of the cleaners and custodians who uncovered law-breaking parties.

She said they were left feeling "unable to raise properly" their concerns.

United Voices of the World (UVW), a union which represents cleaners and security guards in Government buildings arranged Friday's demonstration, which started at 5.30pm.

The union wants to raise awareness of the culture of disrespect towards low-paid workers, such as cleaners and security guards, in Government buildings and offices across London.

A protestor holds up a sign encouraging drivers to beep their horns (Image: REUTERS)

The group has also worked to highlight the death of Emanuel Gomes, a father who was an outsourced cleaner in the Ministry of Justice and died in April 2020 after working for five days with suspected Covid symptoms.

He believed he could not afford to lose income.

It comes after the Prime Minister apologised to security and cleaning staff for their appalling treatment at events he insisted he had “no knowledge” of, saying he was “surprised and disappointed” to hear about them.

Owen Jones speaking during the demonstration (Image: PA)

This included the infamous Christmas party on December 18, 2020 where dozens gathered for a raucous knees-up in No10 resulting in cleaners finding evidence of heavy drinking, as well as wine splattered up the wall, according to Ms Gray's report.

Petros Elia, UVW general secretary, said: “We’re not in the least bit surprised by the revelations in the Sue Gray report.

"We have thousands of members who work as cleaners and security guards and these workers face disrespect and discrimination on a daily basis in offices and government buildings across London, not just in Downing Street.

Images of Emanuel Gomes were also used in the protest (Image: PA)

“It is outrageous to have rowdy and illegal parties during the pandemic but to then expect cleaners to mop up after you and to pay them, as well as porters and security guards, poverty wages and deny them full sick pay is abhorrent.

“Most of the cleaners and security guards out there are ethnic minority workers, Black, brown and migrant people, who are disproportionately impacted by poor working conditions and racialised inequalities.

Cleaners to stage protest outside Downing Street over partygate treatment

1 hr ago
By Carlo Simone
SEO Journalis


The revelations in Sue Gray's report about how cleaning staff were treated has set this protest in motion (PA)

A protest is to be held outside Downing Street today (Friday, May 27) amid growing anger over revelations in the ‘partygate’ report over the way cleaners and security staff were treated.

Sue Gray said in her report that she learned of multiple examples of “unacceptable” treatment of security and cleaning staff during her investigation.

She wrote: “I found that some staff had witnessed or been subjected to behaviours at work which they had felt concerned about but at times felt unable to raise properly.

“I was made aware of multiple examples of a lack of respect and poor treatment of security and cleaning staff. This was unacceptable.”

Staff members “drank excessively” at the Downing Street Christmas party on December 18 2020, and a cleaner found red wine was spilled on one wall the next morning, the report said.

Sue Gray's report revealed that cleaning staff had been treated badly (PA)

United Voices of the World (UVW), a union that represents cleaners and security guards in government buildings, has called the protest outside Downing Street.

The union said it was protesting against the culture of disrespect towards low-paid workers, such as cleaners and security guards, in government buildings and offices across London.

Petros Elia, UVW general secretary, said: “We’re not in the least bit surprised by the revelations in the Sue Gray report. We have thousands of members who work as cleaners and security guards and these workers face disrespect and discrimination on a daily basis in offices and government buildings across London, not just in Downing Street.

“It is outrageous to have rowdy and illegal parties during the pandemic but to then expect cleaners to mop up after you and to pay them, as well as porters and security guards, poverty wages and deny them full sick pay is abhorrent.

“Most of the cleaners and security guards out there are ethnic minority workers, Black, brown and migrant people, who are disproportionately impacted by poor working conditions and racialised inequalities.

“We represent cleaners at the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) who had to walk off the job during the pandemic because they were not given adequate PPE and were denied full sick pay, which they eventually won for Covid-19 absences."

A leading official of the cleaning industry is calling for a meeting with the Cabinet Secretary over the way cleaning staff were treated at 10 Downing Street.

Jim Melvin, chairman of the British Cleaning Council, said he was “appalled and upset” at revelations in Sue Gray’s partygate report.

Cleaners and security staff to protest against ‘culture of disrespect’ at Downing Street


Harrison Jones
METRO UK
Thursday 26 May 2022 
Cleaners cleared up vomit and red wine after parties in Number 10, Sue Gray’s report found 
(Picture: Reuters/ITV)

Cleaners and security staff are set to protest outside Downing Street tomorrow in disgust at their colleagues’ treatment by those at the top of Government.

A union which represents those workers in government buildings, United Voices of the World (UVW), has called the demonstration against what it calls a culture of disrespect to low-paid workers.

It comes amid growing anger at revelations in Sue Gray’s partygate report, which uncovered repeated examples of ‘unacceptable treatment’ of cleaning and security workers during her investigation into lockdown-breaching parties.

She wrote: ‘I found that some staff had witnessed or been subjected to behaviours at work which they had felt concerned about but at times felt unable to raise properly.


‘I was made aware of multiple examples of a lack of respect and poor treatment of security and cleaning staff. This was unacceptable.’


The report, which has led to four Conservative MPs calling on Boris Johnson to resign today, spelt out in grim detail the scale of rule breaking inside Number 10 during the Covid crisis.

Staff members ‘drank excessively’ at the Downing Street Christmas party on December 18 2020, and a cleaner found red wine was spilled on one wall the next morning, the report said.

The Sue Gray report has led to further calls for Prime Minister Boris Johnson to resign (Picture: Reuters)

The UVW said it was protesting against the culture of disrespect towards low-paid workers, such as cleaners and security guards, in government buildings and offices across London.

General secretary Petros Elia explained: ‘We’re not in the least bit surprised by the revelations in the Sue Gray report. We have thousands of members who work as cleaners and security guards and these workers face disrespect and discrimination on a daily basis in offices and government buildings across London, not just in Downing Street.

‘It is outrageous to have rowdy and illegal parties during the pandemic but to then expect cleaners to mop up after you and to pay them, as well as porters and security guards, poverty wages and deny them full sick pay is abhorrent.

‘Most of the cleaners and security guards out there are ethnic minority workers, Black, brown and migrant people, who are disproportionately impacted by poor working conditions and racialised inequalities.’

He continued: ‘We represent cleaners at the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) who had to walk off the job during the pandemic because they were not given adequate PPE and were denied full sick pay, which they eventually won for Covid-19 absences.


‘One of our members who worked as a cleaner at the MoJ tragically died an untimely and avoidable death. That’s how far the levels of disrespect and mistreatment went and goes towards low paid workers.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is said to have personally apologised to Number 10 cleaning staff following the report.

But a leading official from the cleaning industry is now also calling for a meeting with the Cabinet Secretary about the issue.

Jim Melvin, chairman of the British Cleaning Council, said he was ‘appalled and upset’ at the revelations.



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Now he has written to Cabinet Secretary Simon Case, saying: ‘At a time when many cleaning and hygiene operational staff, arguably as frontline workers, were putting themselves directly at risk to maintain high standards of hygiene and ensure that key workers and the public were kept as safe as possible during the pandemic, it is absolutely appalling and upsetting to hear that they were being treated with such contempt by people who may sit within Government or the Civil Service and who frankly should know better.


‘It is our position that cleaning and hygiene operatives are hardworking, professional and deserve to be respected in their vital work, just like anyone one else and certainly how the people concerned would expect to be treated.’

He continued: ‘For further clarification and information, in some parts of the cleaning industry, the demand for increased standards of hygiene during the pandemic has combined with severe staff shortages to drive many colleagues close to breaking point.


‘What cleaning staff need is support and recognition from the Government and Civil Service, not to be treated with any level of disrespect.’
FTSE rises despite weight of windfall tax on oil companies

PA CITY STAFF
27 May 2022,



Markets ended the week on another high as strong showings for many of London’s financial stocks offset a drop sparked by the new windfall tax.

By the end of the day the index had gained 0.3%, a rise of 20.54 points to 7,585.46.

It is its highest point since the early days of the month, and the index has now gained more than 400 points since its low point on May 12.

“It’s been a decent week of gains for markets in Europe, with the FTSE 100 enjoying a particularly strong performance, on course for its best week in over two months,” said CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson.

He said shares in some of the country’s biggest retailers had been helped by Thursday’s package of support that will put hundreds of extra pounds in the pockets of households across the country.

“Having had a bit more time to dissect yesterday’s windfall tax announcement from the UK Government, we’ve seen further weakness in the UK oil and gas sector.

“While BP and Shell shares have held up quite well, they are still down today, after BP said it would review all of its investment in the UK and North Sea, which could well lead Shell to do the same thing.”

But it was worse for Harbour Energy, a major producer of oil from the North Sea which only operates in the UK.

Its shares ended at the bottom of the FTSE, down more than 10%. EnQuest and Seriva Energy also slid on the news of the extra 25% tax hit they will be facing.

“We’re also seeing weakness in the UK grid and power suppliers over concerns they could be next in line for some form of levy, with SSE, Centrica and National Grid all falling back for the second day in a row, and down on the week,” Mr Hewson said.

In Europe the Dax index rose 1.6% while the Cac 40 was up 1.7%. On Wall Street the S&P 500 had gained 1.8% and the Dow Jones was up 1.1% shortly after European markets had closed.

The pound was down 0.03% against two major rivals and could buy 1.2611 dollars or 1.1773 euros at the end of the day.

In company news Stagecoach will buy the east London bus business of Kelsian Group for £20 million.

The business said that the deal includes a depot at the Lea Interchange. It will pay £10 million up front and then £1 million per year for a decade after that.

It will mean Stagecoach taking over 11 contracts with Transport for London and the 150 buses it uses. Turnover for the business is around £38 million per year.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust, up 49p to 794.8p, Ocado, up 43p to 901.4p, Experian, up 87p to 2,695p, Ashtead, up 104p to 4,120p, and Halma, up 54p to 336.6p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Harbour Energy, down 46.1p to 382.1p, ITV, down 2.8p to 70.64p, Pearson, down 14.8p to 742.8p, Royal Mail, down 6.3p to 321p, and National Grid, down 22.5p to 1,164p.

US must lead on decarbonizing international financing for development projects

BY REP. JARED HUFFMAN (D-CALIF.), OPINION CONTRIBUTOR - 05/27/22

CONGRESS BLOG

The recent 2022 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report offered a dire warning from the world’s top scientists about the consequences of climate inaction: Climate change is killing the planet and we are not prepared. And the truth is, we are running out of time to curb the destructive effects already seen in our communities at home and around the globe, let alone avoid the catastrophic events on the horizon.

One of the most troubling sectors where the funding for climate-destroying fossil fuels continues unchecked is international fossil fuel financing for development projects, particularly in the transportation sector. As the World Bank and International Monetary Fund leaders gathered for the Spring Meetings, clean energy advocates urged them to end their investments in transportation projects that fund internal combustion engines that burn fossil fuels.

The numbers speak for themselves: of the World Bank’s 216 public sector transportation projects approved from 2017 through 2021, $77 billion was for projects supporting internal combustion engine vehicles and infrastructure that make the climate crisis worse. Less than $1 billion was approved for zero-emissions vehicles.

While the transportation sector is just one sizable piece of a larger ecosystem dependent on fossil fuels — international financial institutions (IFIs) play a significant role in fueling the problem. As one of the largest shareholders at the IFIs, the U.S. has significant influence to push the institutions to end their support for fossil fuel investments, which would have a worthwhile impact on total greenhouse gas emissions.

These uneven investments can’t continue to be the norm for the World Bank and other major financial institutions; we must pursue bold steps, both at home and through our investments abroad, to avoid the most disastrous impacts of the climate crisis. That means that our financial institutions must stop investing in the destruction of our Earth, end financing for fossil fuels, and instead invest in clean, secure, sustainable alternatives.

And it’s more than just our environment that’s at stake. Global security depends on clean, reliable energy. We can never be energy independent if we depend on fossil fuels that tie us to a boom and bust cycle dictated by the global market, OPEC, and fossil fuel-funded autocrats like Vladimir Putin. We must not lock future generations around the world into more reliance on these dangerous fuels, and the best way to ensure that is to launch a Marshall Plan for clean energy and end the world’s planet-killing addiction to fossil fuels.

That’s why my bill with Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), the Sustainable International Financial Institutions Act (SIFI Act) is vital for solving our energy crisis. This legislation would advance the shift to a clean energy economy by aligning the United States’ role in the IFIs to end support of new fossil fuel activity.

President Joe Biden’s Executive Order on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad took the bold step of requiring the U.S. Treasury Department to develop a strategy for how the voice and vote of the United States can be used in the IFIs, like the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which led to the U.S. Treasury Department’s updated energy financing guidance released last summer.

These are welcome first steps, but we need to go well beyond them if we’re going to have a chance at making meaningful progress. The U.S. is a key — if not the key — partner in these banks. Our influence can determine the direction of their investments for years to come.

The SIFI Act builds upon current U.S. policy and the updated Treasury guidance. It would require U.S. representatives at the IFIs, like the World Bank, to champion clean energy and climate change mitigation and oppose any financial or technical assistance to any country or entity to create new capacity for fossil fuel activity. It would also restrict United States’ foreign assistance to support fossil fuel activity through entities such as the Export-Import Bank and the Development Finance Corporation.EPA must provide certainty for low-carbon fuels In 2023 and beyondBiden’s debt forgiveness misses targets

These are necessary actions to ensure that our development finance institutions end support of new fossil fuel activity and instead invest in green alternatives. We cannot afford to only invest pennies in clean options while taxpayer dollars continue to disproportionately support fossil fuels.

We must heed the warnings of scientists worldwide and call on leaders to start working now to make drastic cuts in greenhouse gas emissions before it’s too late for our climate and our planet. I urge my colleagues to work with me to pass the Sustainable International Financial Institutions Act and continue to use our power as a leader to call on the IFIs to end financing for fossil fuels, and instead invest in clean, secure, sustainable alternatives.

Jared Huffman is the U.S. representative from California’s 2nd District.