Tuesday, October 11, 2022

AGRIBUSINESS IS ALBERTA'S #1 INDUSTRY

Alberta could be global powerhouse for plant-based foods but more support needed: industry insiders

Phil Heidenreich - Yesterday -Global News

From grocery store aisles to restaurant menus, consumers around the world are being offered more and more plant-based options when it comes to dishes rich in protein. And based on the success of plant-based meat substitutes like those offered by Beyond Meat, whose entry into the stock market three years ago sent investors into a frenzy, the sector is a lucrative one with plenty of room to grow.



With an increasing consumer demand, and possibly need, for plant-based protein, could Alberta become a global leader in supplying it?
© Laura Whelan/Global News


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With an increasing consumer demand, and possibly need, for plant-based protein, could Alberta become a global leader in supplying it? Canada is already the planet's largest producer of dry peas and lentils. At 4.6 million tons in 2017 alone, the country is also a global power in terms of the production and exportation of pulses. In terms of producing the crops needed, Alberta appears ripe to capitalize on the opportunity.

READ MORE: Beyond Meat launching in Canadian stores amid race to build a better veggie burger


"There's been very few trends in the food industry in the last 25 years that have given this level of opportunity," says Bill Greuel, the CEO of Protein Industries Canada (PIC), a not-for-profit organization tasked with propelling Canada's plant protein and plant-based product sector to becoming a major global provider.

"When you think about the stars that are aligning here (consumers seeking healthier food options, diets that have less negative impact on the environment and animals)... growth of the plant-based food sector is real, and it's growing at an unprecedented rate."

The federal government anticipates the sector will deliver $10 billion in GDP impact over 10 years, along with over 4,500 jobs in the same time frame.

While Alberta is not a Canadian leader when it comes to soybean production, it is when it comes to the production of pulses: chickpeas, lentils and perhaps most importantly -- because of their increasing popularity as a plant-based food ingredient -- dry peas.

According to crop production projections released by Agriculture Canada last month, Alberta is expected to make up 41 per cent of dry pea production in the country in 2022-23. Alberta is expected to account for the second-largest share in terms of dry pea, lentil and chickpea production. Production of all three crops is expected to increase significantly in Canada compared to a year earlier.

But when it comes to processing those raw materials to create plant-based food products or the ingredients needed to do so, Alberta has yet to stake its claim as a leader.

Allison Ammeter is a grain farmer who also serves as director of the Alberta Pulse Growers Commission, a non-profit that advocates on behalf of thousands of farmers. She served as chair of the Plant Protein Alliance of Alberta (PPAA) until it ceased operations last year.

She believes Alberta needs to "get into the industry in a big way while there's still room to get in."

"I would say five or even 10 years from now, there will be all the plants built for the current need. Not right now -- we're nowhere near close to that."

"It's this whole ecosystem that we are giving away," says Christine Lewington, the CEO and founder of PIP International, an Alberta-based agri-tech company producing pea protein.

READ MORE: Alberta has highest food insecurity rate among Canadian provinces: report


She adds that with increasing attention being drawn to the issue of food security, the ability to offer plant protein is a selling point.

"We have that in Alberta," Lewington says. "Europe is all over food security.

"We bring in our finished products in Alberta... We don't value-create here."

Ammeter suggests Alberta could be on the cusp of capitalizing on the explosion of demand for the product, drawing an analogy to growth in the province's oil industry in the middle of the 20th century.

"They unlocked the oil industry by bringing in the money," Ammeter says. "We will unlock our industry when we have the investment."

'Let people know what the potential is'

In a bid to boost innovation in the economy, the federal government announced in 2018 it had selected five innovation superclusters, one of which was the protein industry. This led to the creation of PIC.

"There's a lot of upside potential and excitement (in Alberta)," Greuel says. "It's pretty favourable from an operating perspective."

He cites Alberta's low corporate tax rate and availability of land and feedstock as advantages the province has in trying to grow the sector. He also says Alberta has "lots to offer in terms of innovative farmers."

The PPAA used to advocate for the sector and help facilitate its growth in Alberta. It ceased operations after the provincial government announced last year it would not continue to provide it with $250,000 in annual funding, a move Ammeter says "spoke volumes" to a lot of people.

Ammeter believes Alberta's government can play an important role in helping the sector reach its potential.

"I would like to see our government saying, 'We have this incredible natural resource... We are going to do everything we can to promote value-add in Alberta.'"

Video: Plant Protein Alliance of Alberta producers worry funding cut will stall agriculture diversification

'We think the global market for plant-based foods is going to be about $250 billion'

A 2019 analysis conducted by the National Research Council of Canada found that "annual global sales of plant-based meat alternatives have grown on average eight per cent a year since 2010, with projections forecasting that, in 25 years, 20 per cent of meat will consist of plant-based and clean meat."

The NRC forecasted that global revenues when it comes to plant-based dairy substitutes will reach USD$34 billion in 2024 and added the plant-based beverage market also continues to grow significantly.

"In Canada, sales of plant-based protein products rose seven per cent to more than $1.5 billion in the 2016-17 fiscal year," the report reads.

READ MORE: Global plant protein summit lands in Saskatoon

A report for the federal government recently found over 40 per cent of Canadians are "actively trying to incorporate more plant-based foods into their diets."

"If you're looking at grocery stores' sales of plant-based food, that has increased considerably over the last five years," Greuel says.

But some point out the sector's rise has not been immune to peaks and valleys. For example, in a fourth-quarter financial report released early this year, Maple Leaf Foods noted sales from its plant-based division saw a decline of 4.7 per cent in 2021, even though it generated more than $184 million in sales for the year.

"While work is continuing, analysis to date demonstrates a clear slowdown in projected growth rate for the overall category compared to very high growth rates predicted in 2019," the Maple Leaf report reads.

Greuel acknowledges that since the COVID-19 pandemic hit, growth figures may have "softened to some degree" but adds the sector is "still seeing year-over-year growth."

"When you think about that, we're going to need startup companies (and) ingredient-manufacturing companies setting up shop," he says. "We think the global market for plant-based foods is going to be about $250 billion... Our goal is that Canada owns 10 per cent of that global market.

"You could say that's an aspirational goal."

Lewington believes the plant-based food market's growth could be at risk of temporarily stalling because "there's no availability to increase and grow the market" as a result of insufficient capacity to process the protein needed for plant-based food products.

READ MORE: Edmonton's Nabati Foods hoping to bring its vegan 'Eggz' to stores around the world


"Manufacturers are being rationed," she says. "When you can't grow, consumers pull back.

"Before demand, you need to create a need. To create a need, you need to create capacity."

Lewington says one of the keys to successfully growing the plant-protein processing sector in Alberta will be for producers to be able to assure companies they can keep up with supply needs as demand for those companies' products grows.

'We truly have a great new product'

Plans for two major plant-protein processing facilities in Alberta were announced in May: Phyto Organix Foods Inc. revealed plans for a $225-million wet fractionation plant in the Strathmore area while PIP International offered details on plans for a $20-million pea-processing pilot facility in Lethbridge.

"This is Alberta pea country," Chris Theal, Phyto Organix's founder and president, told Global News at the time, noting the plant's location offers an opportunity to see output grow over time. "We've got roughly five times our capacity within 75 kilometres of the facility. We range out to 150 kilometres (and) we've got 10 times our capacity."

Plant fractionation facilities use a process that separates grains or pulses into fibre, starch and protein, the latter of which can be used as an ingredient in plant-based foods and beverages.

"Getting projects like ours up and running successfully shows others it can be done," Theal says. "The resource is there -- it's getting the right people and capital in place, including government grants and loans."

Lewington's excitement is evident when she speaks about her company's facility.

"We truly have a great new product," she explains. "Clean tasting, premium protein that they (plant-based food companies) can actually functionalize."

READ MORE: Arrival of vegan chains signals changing appetites in Alberta's capital


Lewington says to attract the necessary investment to grow, her facility is opening in phases.

Phase 1 is a pilot facility that will still deliver tons of product before scaling up for Phase 2, a $150-million yellow pea protein facility she says will be able to create 100 new jobs, process about 126,000 tons of yellow peas each year and support over $75 million in annual pea contracts for regional growers.

"We're demonstrating that we can do what we say we do," Lewington says of Phase 1, which began producing product this fall. She says Phase 2 is headed to detailed engineering by the end of the year and construction is anticipated to begin in the spring of 2023.

"We are raising money. I am open to finding the right partner," she says, adding she believes the province could do more to help industry players achieve their goals.

She acknowledges Phase 1 of her project received $1 million in funding from the province, something she is grateful for, but notes the cost of getting Phase 1 off the ground is $25 million.

'Getting the capital lined up is certainly a challenge'

Access to capital is seen as a major challenge when it comes to trying to get plant-protein processing facilities up and running.

"(It is) far and away the No.1 issue," Greuel says. "Processing facilities for protein extraction are very capital intensive."

He notes most plant-protein facilities cost between $200 million and $600 million to build.

"It's a real struggle," Ammeter says of accessing capital. "The money is all around... (we just need) to let people know what the potential is."

She would like to see the province backstop loans for proposed plants so they are better able to secure funding from institutions like Farm Credit Canada (FCC) or the Agriculture Financial Services Corp. (AFSC)

"I'm not asking for handouts," she says. "Do what they're already doing in a number of other industries."

READ MORE: Edmonton's vegan restaurant scene continues to grow


Ammeter says she believes Saskatchewan and Manitoba are doing more to make "value-add a priority" when it comes to leveraging their ability to produce pulses to try and help fractionation plants get off the ground. She says when governments do more to help the sector, investors take notice.

Ammeter calls it a missed opportunity that so much raw product from Prairie growers is being sold overseas.

"It's not good for Canada's GDP," she says, adding she believes an investment tax credit geared towards the sector would help.

"The plant-protein space in Alberta is going to suffer because it does not get the support it does in other provinces," Lewington says. "Saskatchewan and Manitoba are very aggressive."

READ MORE: Massive new Manitoba facility to feed demand for pea protein

Video: Massive new Manitoba facility to feed demand for pea protein

Like Ammeter, she would also like to see the province backstop loans.

"(It would allow entities like FCC and AFSC to) provide loans where we don't have to provide personal guarantees -- because they scare off investors," she says. "The more creative you get, the more risk equity investors see.

"If I could take a loan guarantee with a syndicate and show investors there is no personal guarantee, they're in all day long.

Ammeter believes there is another challenge when it comes to securing financing. She says banks "are not nearly as quick or capable of evaluating" proposed projects as they are with proposals in other sectors.

Greuel says PIC is working to educate investors about the sector in an effort to loosen more capital.

"Canada is a natural place for investment for ingredient manufacturing," he says. "Universities have taken notice of this (sector and are)... looking at training to create this talent."

Lewington also notes the need for more skilled labour for the province's plant-protein sector to truly take off. She says she is glad to see Alberta taking steps to make it easier to bring in foreign skilled workers in areas where there is a shortage of them.

Despite the challenges, Greuel says he believes there is recognition among all governments about the importance of Canada taking "ownership of this space."

READ MORE: Beyond Meat partners with Portage la Prairie bound pea-processing plant

Lewington believes growing the industry in Alberta is a time-sensitive endeavour.

"When you play with time, anything can happen," she says, adding the industry will benefit growers and all Albertans through jobs and tax revenue. "From the heydays of Beyond Meat coming to market... Those days aren't the same anymore."

"There is a real sense of urgency for Canada here," Greuel says of Canada's plant-protein aspirations.

Lewington says she worries that if Alberta does not more aggressively pursue growth in the industry, larger producers will simply begin expanding existing facilities elsewhere in the country.

READ MORE: Pea protein company puts down roots with new Lethbridge facility


Global News made multiple requests for an interview with Agriculture, Forestry and Rural Economic Development Minister Nate Horner about the state of the industry in Alberta but he was not made available.

Horner attended Phyto Organix's media event to announce its Strathmore plant in May. At the time, he said "this is something we really want to double down on."

"I know as a farmer, before I got involved in politics, I wanted to see this," he said. "I wanted to see more of what we're seeing in Saskatchewan and other jurisdictions. Let's value add here close to home -- and with all the issues with supply chains and resiliency, it really brings that even more to the forefront.

"We're trying to work as Team Alberta to land these investments... if it's ag-related and it's value-added, we're trying to land it."

Horner suggested he believes the challenge when it comes to securing funding for such projects relates to the state of the global economy.

"The world is so crazy right now," he said. "You've seen commodity prices spike and stay at those elevated levels -- fuel... the inflation costs on the actual construction -- so it has delayed some of these announcements.

"But the upside is still there."
WORKERS CAPITAL
Canada's pension system holds steady in global ranking as retirement risks rise

Barbara Shecter -  Financial Post

Canada’s pension system received an improved score in a global annual ranking by Mercer and the CFA Institute, but slipped a notch to 13th spot.


Canada maintained its B-level rating in the 2022 Mercer CFA Institute Global Pension Index.

The list, released Tuesday, was topped by Iceland, which had an overall index value 84.7, closely followed by the Netherlands at 84.6 and Denmark at 82.

Canada maintained its B-level rating in the 2022 Mercer CFA Institute Global Pension Index with an overall score of 70.6, up from 69.8 in 2021.

Thailand had the lowest index value in the 2022 ranking, at 41.7.

The latest report warned that inflation and rising interest rates are challenging retirees, particularly as employers continue to shift from offering defined-benefit (DB) pension plans to defined-contribution (DC) pension plans. DB plans come with guaranteed payouts, sometimes indexed to keep up with inflation, while payouts on DC plans are based on market performance.

“As DC pension plans continue to make up a greater part of Canadians’ retirement, turbulent markets, soaring inflation and a higher cost of living are all impacting older workers that are transitioning to full or part-time retirement,” said F. Hubert Tremblay, principal and senior wealth adviser with Mercer Canada.


“While Canada’s retirement system continues to rank well globally, there are risks that employers and employees need to manage in the current environment.”

The Mercer-CFA index is derived from a comprehensive study of 44 global pension systems and covers 65 per cent of the world’s population.

It benchmarks retirement income systems around the world, highlighting some shortcomings in each system, and suggests possible areas of reform that would help provide more adequate and sustainable retirement benefits.




IMF says storm clouds have descended on the global economy

Things will only get worse, the IMF said after issuing a gloomy economic report.

By Daniel J. Graeber


Director of the Monetary and Capital Markets Department at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Tobias Adrian said there are dark storm clouds lingering over the global economy. 
Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo

Oct. 11 (UPI) -- The International Monetary Fund reported the weakest global economic growth profile in more than 20 years Tuesday and said the worst is yet to come.

The IMF expects the global economy to grow by 2.7% in 2023. That's 0.2% lower than the IMF predicted in July and it comes amid expectations that the economies of China, the European Union and the United States -- three of the world's largest -- will continue to falter

"The worst is yet to come, and for many people 2023 will feel like a recession," the IMF's report read.

The report comes on the heels of the troubling outlook from IMF Director Kristalina Georgieva, who said last week that "shock after shock after shock" -- a reference to climate disasters, the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine -- means the global economy could be facing a loss of $4 trillion over the next four years.


"Their combined impact is driving a global surge in prices, especially on food and energy, causing a cost-of-living crisis," she said.

Pent-up demand during the post-vaccination stage of the pandemic overwhelmed supply chains and led to an increase in the cost of most consumer goods toward the end of 2021. Energy and geopolitics collided in February when resource-rich Russia invaded Ukraine, adding a substantial risk premium to the price of everything from grains to crude oil.

The global economy expanded by 6% last year. If IMF forecasts are accurate, growth next year will be the slowest since 2001 -- save for the deep scars during the worst of the pandemic.

Inflation, meanwhile, is expected to peak this year, but it's been a staggering rise. Global inflation was 4.7% in 2021, but it's expected to level out at 8.8% this year and "remain elevated for longer than previously expected," the IMF said.

While the strains are most apparent in major economies such as the European Union and the United States, it's the emerging and developing markets that could bear the brunt of the downturn.

Axel Van Trotsenburg, the managing director of operations at the World Bank, told CNBC about half of the global population is already forced to survive on less than $10 a day.


"We see extreme poverty again increasing," he said.

The war in Ukraine and the lingering impacts of the pandemic combine to pose challenges to economic policymakers working to keep their economies from tumbling into recession. Higher lending rates should curb demand enough to dampen inflation, but the seemingly simultaneous way in which policymakers are acting suggests a global recession may be unavoidabl

All told, Tobias Adrian, a financial counselor for the IMF, said the global economic situation is dire.

"The global environment is fragile with storm clouds on the horizon," he said.
Michael Moore Suggests Media May Be ‘Too White or Too Male’ to See Dem ‘Tsunami’ Coming in Midterms
MEDIATE
Oct 11th, 2022, 


Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

Michael Moore may have predicted a Donald Trump victory leading up to the 2016 presidential election, but the filmmaker is claiming now that he sees a Democrat “tsunami” coming in the midterms, one the media may be “too White or too male” to notice.

“Four weeks from TODAY, MAGA is about to get the whoopin’ of their lives,” Moore wrote on his website on Tuesday, sharing coverage from Salon on his “Midterm Tsunami of Truth.”

The “narrative” that the “party in power always loses the midterms” will soon be “put out to pasture in OK Boomerville,” Moore added.

Salon’s Sophia A. McClennnen highlighted some of Moore’s predictions in the Salon report, including that an “unprecedented tsunami of voters” will take to the polls during in the upcoming midterms and “nonviolently, legally, and without mercy remove every last stinking traitor to our Democracy.” Moore has been posting daily snack size arguments to back up his “tsunami” claim.

Moore is also not satisfied with the media where rigorous debates continue to occur about the prospects of both major political parties in multiple tight races in the midterms, one that could shift the balance of power in Congress to Republicans or more in the favor of Democrats.

The media, the Canadian Bacon and Bowling for Columbine director theorized, is too “overworked” or perhaps “too White” or “too male” to see what he sees coming.

“Much of what many in the media are telling you is patently false and just plain wrong,” Moore wrote. “They are simply regurgitating old narratives and stale scripts. They are either too overworked or too lazy or too white and too male to open their eyes and see the liberal/ left/progressive/working class and female uprising that is right now underway.”

Moore echoed his prediction of a Democratic Party “landslide” during a recent appearance on HBO’s Real Time, where host Bill Maher balked at the prediction, eventually telling him to “shut the fuck up” as Moore droned on and on about Democrats taking out the “traitors.”
WH Downplays Reported ‘Trepidation’ Over Biden’s Upcoming 80th Birthday Making Him First Octogenarian In Office

By Zachary LeemanOct 11th, 2022, 


Alex Wong/Getty Images

There is “trepidation” in the White House about President Joe Biden’s upcoming 80th birthday celebration, Politico reported Tuesday. Biden will become the first person to turn 80 while president on November 20.

Politico reported that those inside the White House are not “keen on having a blow-out celebration” amid criticism and concerns regarding Biden’s advanced age. Accusations that the president may be too old to be Commander in Chief were renewed recently when he appeared to publicly search for the recently-deceased congresswoman Jackie Walorski at an event.

From Politico:
White House aides are keenly aware of the storylines surrounding his age and are bracing for the inevitable news cycle. The topic has been met with some trepidation in the West Wing and senior aides have called around to Biden world allies to seek advice on how to best handle the date that will surely draw significant attention from reporters and Republicans alike.

White House spokesperson Andrew Bates touted Biden’s successes while in office in a statement to Politico about the reported “trepidation.”

“Like President Biden has said, anyone with questions about his age should just watch him: he has delivered record job creation, made NATO the strongest it has ever been, and amassed the most significant legislative record since [Lyndon B. Johnson] in less than half of one term,” he said. “I don’t have a comment about whether POLITICO is invited to his birthday.”

Citing sources close to the president, Politico reported Biden will likely not be having a massive celebration highlighting him turning 80. No plans are concrete yet ahead of the November date though, which will come only weeks after the midterm elections.

Concerns about Biden’s age mainly relate to whether he will run for reelection in 2024. If he does, he would not be leaving office until he’s 86. The president will reportedly have discussions about 2024 over the holiday season and make a final decision sometime early next year.
#KASHMIR IS #INDIA'S #GAZA
India’s prime minister says he has «solved» the «problem» in Kashmir


Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has claimed to have "solved" the "problem" in the disputed Kashmir region with Pakistan, sparking criticism from Islamabad, which said it was a "false and misleading" claim.


Archive - India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi - 
Michael Kappeler/dpa

Modi has given a speech in which he has veiled criticism of Jawaharlal Nehru -- who became the first person to hold the post of prime minister after independence in 1947 -- by claiming that the situation in Kashmir was managed "by a single person", causing the problem to fester.

Thus, the prime minister extolled the figure of Sardar Patel, India's deputy prime minister during part of Nehru's term, and has assured that he is "following in his footsteps." "Sardar persuaded the states to join India, but someone else managed the Kashmir issue," he stressed.

"I am following in the footsteps of Sardar, I have the values of Sardar's land and that is the reason I have solved the Kashmir issue. Therefore, I pay tribute to Sardar Patel," he said, as reported by Indian state news agency PTI.

In response, the Pakistani Foreign Ministry has "categorically" rejected Modi's remarks and said that these statements "reflect how far removed the Indian leadership is from the ground realities in occupied Kashmir".

Thus, he stressed in a statement published on its website that the situation in the region "is an internationally recognized dispute" and added that "the solution to it has been on the agenda of the United Nations since 1948".

"Despite clear UN resolutions on a free and impartial plebiscite for the final settlement of the dispute, India has not only illegally occupied the territory, but is guilty of gross violations of human rights and employs more than 900,000 troops of its brutal occupying force," he denounced.

In this regard, he stressed that "the fact remains that the people in occupied Kashmir continue to face the condemnable Indian occupation, which it seeks to perpetuate through malicious demographic shifts and heavy-handed tactics", before branding the "prepared visits" of Indian leaders and "so-called development projects" as a "façade of normalcy".

The Pakistani Foreign Ministry stressed that these actions "will not affect the spirit of Kashmiris fighting for freedom from the illegal Indian occupation and will not mislead the world", before calling on New Delhi to "fulfill its commitments to Kashmiris and the world and ensure that the Kashmiri people enjoy their inalienable right to self-determination".

"Pakistan has consistently asked the international community to assume its role and responsibility over occupied Kashmir and Indian atrocities in the occupied territory," he recalled, before calling on human rights organizations to "condemn India's state terrorism" in the region.

"The only solution to the Kashmir dispute is to ensure that Kashmiris can exercise their right to self-determination through the democratic method of holding a free and fair plebiscite, mediated by the UN, as provided for in the relevant UN Security Council resolutions and in line with the wishes of the Kashmiri people," he concluded.

Pakistan and India have clashed over it in two of the three wars they have fought since independence from the UK. In 1999 there was a brief but intense military confrontation between the two nuclear powers and since 2003 there has been a fragile truce.
GANG RAPE COVER UP
CEO Scott Smith leaves Hockey Canada, entire board steps down, called a ‘great step’ by MP

Sportsnet Staff - 

CEO Scott Smith, who came under fire for how Hockey Canada has handled allegations of sexual assaults by two Canadian world junior teams, has left the organization, it was announced Tuesday. All Hockey Canada board members have also agreed to step down “to make room for a new slate of directors.”

The announcement comes three days after interim Hockey Canada chair of the board Andrea Skinner tendered her resignation.

“I think this is an excellent indication that Hockey Canada is better understanding that change is required and the only question would be who is on the interim management committee and what new board will be elected,” Liberal MP and Heritage committee member Anthony Housefather wrote in an email to Sportsnet. “But this seems to be a great step.”

With the CEO and board members now departed, day-to-day operations will be handled by an interim management committee, although who was on that committee was uncertain. Hockey Canada said in a release it will have new board members elected “no later than the forthcoming virtual election scheduled for December 17, 2022. The Board will not seek re-election and will fulfil its fiduciary duties until such time as a new Board is elected.” This new board will be responsible for choosing a new CEO.

Two names mentioned by a source familiar with the operation of Hockey Canada as potential CEO replacements were former Team Canada members Danièle Sauvageau and Thérèse Brisson, both of whom have been mentioned in the past as good candidates to be the first female GM in the NHL. Sauvageau, 60, a long-time coach, was a member of the RCMP and the Montréal police force for 33 years. Brisson, 56, a former national team player who won six world championships and one Olympic gold medal, and is now the president and CEO of Alpine Canada.

While appearing at two Parliamentary hearings called to investigate Hockey Canada’s response to allegations of group sexual assaults by the 2003 and 2018 teams, Smith resisted calls by MPs from all four parties for his resignation.


Related video: Trudeau, sport minister call for Hockey Canada leadership change
Duration 8:50  View on Watch

“I’m prepared to take on this responsibility for change within our game,” Smith said during hearings in Ottawa on July 27, responding to a call to resign by committee member and Conservative MP John Nater. “I believe I’ve got the experience to do it.”

However, after a third hearing in Ottawa became contentious between Skinner and members of Parliament on the Heritage committee responsible for a portion of the organization’s funding, the calls for wholesale change grew louder.

Since last week’s hearing, almost all sponsors have permanently suspended further support of Hockey Canada, and eight provincial associations have suspended fee transfers and/or called for wholesale changes to the organization.

Smith, 55, had been with Hockey Canada since 1995, serving as vice president and chief operating officer. He took over on July 1 as president and CEO from Tom Renney, who left the organization in a previously decided retirement.

Previously, Smith, a native of Bathurst, N.B., served from 1991-95 as the executive director of the New Brunswick Amateur Hockey Association. He has a degree in education from the University of New Brunswick.

1 WOMAN 7 MEN

Stepping down as board members: Terry Engen of Eckville, Alta.; Kirk Lamb of Calgary; John Neville of Markham, Ont.; Barry Reynard of Kenora, Ont.; Bobby Sahni of Toronto; Mary Anne Veroba of Lampman, Sask.; and Goops Wooldridge of Milton Station, P.E.I. Previous board chair Michael Brind’Amour of Montreal stepped down in August.

–with files from Sportsnet’s Paul D. Grant

What to know ahead of this week’s Hockey Canada hearings© Provided by Sportsnet
Bauer pauses role as official equipment provider to Hockey Canada’s men’s teams


Sport minister says Hockey Canada leadership still must change after chair resigns
Second world war ‘Ghost Boat’ emerges in California lake, puzzling officials

Gabrielle Canon - Yesterday 


Waning water levels across the west – symptoms of the region’s record drought – have revealed yet another artifact.

Related: LA restricts water flow to wasteful celebrity mansions: ‘No matter how rich, we’ll treat you the same’

Dubbed the “Ghost Boat” by officials, the rusted carcass of a second world war Higgins boat, used to transport troops into battle and on to beaches overseas, began to emerge from the shallows in Lake Shasta last fall. Levels have sunk low enough this year to excavate the craft fully.

But how it ended up in California’s largest reservoir, buried in the depths for decades, is uncertain.

“The circumstance of its sinking remains a mystery,” US Forest Service officials with Shasta-Trinity national forest wrote in a Sunday morning Facebook post, including photos of the historic find perched atop dried cracked earth of the desiccated lakebed. Numbers painted along the boat’s ramp show that it was once assigned to the Attack Transport USS Monrovia, used as General George Patton’s headquarters in the Sicilian occupation in 1943.



“Eisenhower also was on this ship at that time, and it went on to a further six D-Day invasions in the Pacific,” officials said in the post, noting that it was reportedly used in the invasion of Tarawa and that it “sank in shallow water during that invasion”, but was later salvaged. Classified as an attack transport in 1943, the ship earned seven battle stars during the war, according to NavSource, a volunteer-run history site, but was sold for scrap in 1969.

Still, the fate of the USS Monrovia and its illustrious history does little to shed light on how the little Higgins boat went from the battles of Europe to the bottom of Lake Shasta. For now, it is on its way to a museum in Nebraska where experts will work to preserve it and restore a “weathered ‘combat fatigue look” before it is put on display.

The boat is just the latest in a series of peculiar finds pulled from the muck in receding waterways across the west. Another boat linked to the second world war was discovered in Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the US, along with three sets of human remains that may be linked to mob murders.

Meanwhile, the drought is expected to worsen in the coming years, spurred by the climate crisis, that has put more pressure on declining water resources. Roughly half of the American west is categorized as in severe drought by the US Drought Monitor and researchers are concerned that there is little chance for a rainy season strong enough to offset the long periods of dryness.

There may be more mysteries that will emerge from the mud. For now, officials are trying to piece together the story of the Lake Shasta Ghost Boat.

“There is more to discover of its history and obviously its time on Shasta Lake,” they said. “It really is quite remarkable how it emerged from the lake with so many stories to tell.”
Sask. city councillor implicated in physical, emotional abuse allegations at private Christian school, church

Jason Warick - CBC-SASKATOON

LONG READ

The growing list of officials accused of physically and emotionally abusing children at a private Christian school and church in Saskatoon now includes a sitting city councillor.

The lawyer representing former Christian Centre Academy students says allegations against longtime councillor Randy Donauer are being added to the dozens of criminal assault complaints made to Saskatoon police.

"We're pushing forward on it," Saskatoon lawyer Grant Scharfstein said.

"If in fact he's done what [the students] are alleging, and I have no reason to disbelieve it, then yes, I think he has to be treated like everybody else."

Former student and church member Coy Nolin made a statement to police regarding Donauer and has shared it with CBC News. Nolin described an alleged "paddling" incident by Donauer at a church camp, as well as Donauer's actions afterward.

"I cried. [Donauer] waited till I stopped, then hugged me and we prayed," reads the statement.

Donauer declined interview requests, but emailed a statement to CBC News.

"My understanding is that a representative of the school will be making statements at some point about the school's current and previous practices, once the Statement of Claim has been received and reviewed with legal counsel," Donauer wrote, referencing the $25-million lawsuit recently filed by students against other officials.

"Personally, I do not expect to have any role in the court process given my conduct and I see no value in providing any further comments."

When CBC News received further details from students and shared them with Donauer, he again replied briefly by email.

"If there are rumours being shared about me, I vehemently deny any wrongdoing. If any legal claims involving me are made I will vigorously defend [against] them," Donauer wrote.



Two former students of the Christian Centre Academy, now called Legacy Christian Academy, say current Saskatoon city councillor Randy Donauer was one of roughly two dozen officials who emotionally and physically abused them. A lawsuit has been filed, and police are investigating criminal complaints from more than 40 students against various officials.
© Jason Warick/CBC

Earlier in the summer, Donauer admitted in an email to CBC News that Christian Centre Academy students were recruited during class time to campaign for the school's preferred political candidates. He admitted he received inappropriate endorsements during church services at the adjacent Saskatoon Christian Centre before his first election victory in 2010. Donauer also organized distribution of campaign materials for other politicians during church services.

But now students interviewed by CBC News say Donauer was also involved in the physical violence, and the culture of fear and intimidation. Two of them say Donauer was one of the officials who beat them with large wooden instruments, a practice known as "paddling." Other students told stories of a normally mild-mannered Donauer suddenly becoming enraged and threatening children during Sunday school or other events.

The school and church, still operating out of a building in Saskatoon's Lawson Heights neighbourhood, are now known as Legacy Christian Academy and Mile Two Church.

Donauer was not a teacher, but served various roles within the adjacent church. The students said that for many years, Donauer was the "enforcer" for former pastor Keith Johnson. Johnson wrote the child discipline manuals used by the school and church. Students and a staff member say Johnson demanded unquestioning obedience.

"Randy was in Keith's inner circle, his right hand," former student Christina Hutchinson said.

Donauer would "be all calm, but then just change. He could be so cruel," her sister, Stefanie Hutchinson, said.

Each summer, Christian Centre officials rented Living Waters Bible Camp, 100 kilometres north of Saskatoon, said former students Coy Nolin and Caitlin Erickson. In 2003, when they turned 14 years old, Nolin, Erickson and others were "volun-told" by church officials that they'd be working as camp counsellors, Erickson and Nolin said.

Donauer was one of the main officials overseeing the camp, Erickson said. She said that, like the other youth counsellors, she was not paid, even though she was a certified lifeguard and gave private swim lessons in addition to her counsellor duties.

In an interview, Nolin said he was accused one day of spreading a rumour about some of the campers. He said Donauer took him to the adult cabin and berated him.

"Then he made me bend over a chair," Nolin said.

Nolin said he knew what was coming next. He realized he was about to be hit with a large wooden paddle, just as he and other students say they had been paddled by other officials many times at school.

But Nolin said this incident with Donauer was particularly memorable because paddlings at school were done over a desk, a hard chair or the lap of a witness. This was a "cushy chair" that left him awaiting the punishment "at a weird angle."

Nolin said Donauer struck him hard three times with the hand-made implement similar to a cricket bat.

"Then we prayed after that. It's like it's out of love, but it's weird and creepy," Nolin said.

"It was even more awkward, too, because I was a teenager when that happened and because I was a counsellor, no one was involved or called until afterwards."

Nolin was not allowed to talk to Erickson for the remainder of the camp, but she said Nolin confided in her after returning to Saskatoon.

Nolin said this paddling, like those he received from other officials at school, left him crying, limping and sore.

He said it's not the worst violence he faced — that was the exorcism and paddling he said he endured as a 15-year-old at the hands of four other church and school officials trying to rid him of his "gay demon." But Nolin said it's important to hold everyone to account, especially those still in positions of power.

"I'm disgusted that [Donauer] has gotten to the point where they are political-wise," Nolin said. "It makes me sick, knowing what he's done."

Nolin's brother, Cody, wasn't paddled by Donauer, but said he and Coy would often talk about the paddlings and "brainwashing" they suffered from other officials before their family left the school following the exorcism in 2004. Like other students, it took them years to open up publicly.



Coy Nolin and another former Christian Centre Academy student say current Saskatoon city councillor Randy Donauer physically and emotionally abused them. Dozens of students have come forward with allegations against more than 20 other officials following a CBC News investigation.© Travis Reddaway/CBC

Cody said that when Coy's story was featured in the first CBC News story on the school earlier this month, it gave Cody and others the courage to do the same.

"I'm so proud of him," Cody said.

Another former student told CBC News that Donauer also paddled them.

The student spoke on condition their name would not be used. They said they fear damaging their relationship with close relatives who are still Mile Two Church members. They also said the relatives would face repercussions from the church.

The student said Donauer paddled them nearly a dozen times.

"I just happened to be what they considered a disobedient child and got in trouble a lot. Randy Donauer was almost always involved in the disciplining," they said. "He alone was responsible for the majority of the abuse I received."

Donauer and another woman would take the child into a basement room during Sunday school or other events, the person said.

The female official would pray in unintelligible sounds known as "speaking in tongues" and hold them down while Donauer administered the paddling, the former student said.

"I remember it clearly. Sometimes they would take my pants…off in order to make the discipline even more painful," they said.

Other students say they weren't hit by Donauer but were afraid of him, in part because he was willing to do anything for Pastor Keith Johnson.

"If Keith was angry, so was Randy. If Keith wanted someone kicked out, Randy would do it. If Keith said the building was too cold, Randy would find someone to turn up the heat. If Keith didn't like what someone was saying, Randy would go tell them to be quiet," Stefanie Hutchinson said.

Hutchinson and Cody Nolin both said they clearly remember one particular Sunday school service overseen by Donauer and others. Halfway through one song, Donauer stopped the children, they said. Hutchinson said Donauer became "all red-faced" and started yelling at them to sing louder. They said Donauer told them they weren't putting their hearts into it.

"He became unhinged. He was screaming at us. It was terrifying," Nolin said.

He said Donauer ended his rant by threatening, "If you don't do it, I will paddle every one of you."

They said no one doubted Donauer's sincerity. The children sang as loudly as they could and no punishment was administered.

When a CBC News investigation first published multiple allegations of child physical and emotional abuse, solitary confinement and exorcisms at the school and church earlier this month, Donauer posted a response on Twitter.

"I denounce abuse of any kind and encourage anyone who has been abused to contact the police immediately," Donauer tweeted on Aug. 2.

Since then, the number of students filing criminal complaints against various officials has more than doubled, to 40, according to the Saskatoon Police Service email this week.

The students' lawyer, Grant Scharfstein, said 50 students have signed on to the proposed $25-million class action lawsuit. Donauer was not initially named as one of the nearly two dozen civil defendants, but court documents state the list is not exhaustive and that more names could be added as more students tell their stories.

Scharfstein said they intend to add Donauer as a defendant in the coming weeks. Scharfstein said other officials are being implicated as more students come forward. When all new information has been compiled, they plan to add these new names to the lawsuit through a single amendment, he said.

Students interviewed say it has been incredibly stressful to speak publicly about the abuse they suffered, but it's even harder to name Donauer and others still in positions of power.

"Going against Randy has somehow been even more difficult," Coy Nolin said.

In the emailed interview request sent earlier this month, CBC News asked Donauer, "Have you ever paddled a child connected to your roles (in the church or school)? If so, please provide dates and all details. If not, were you aware that this practice continued to occur there after the January 2004 Supreme Court ruling (banning all corporal punishment by officials), according to multiple students and the former youth pastor?"

Donauer declined to respond directly, instead saying, "I do not expect to have any role in the court process given my conduct."

Erickson, the Hutchinsons and other students describe bringing home waivers for their parents to sign that would allow school officials to continue paddling them after it was outlawed by the Supreme Court. They also say they were told to call paddlings "time outs" if any police or outsiders asked about them after January 2004.

None of the allegations against officials have been tested in criminal or civil court. But the church's former youth pastor, Garrett Davis, told CBC News last month he witnessed many traumatic incidents, and the "cult-like" environment described by students is "100 per cent true."

In Donauer's earlier emailed response, where he admitted to inappropriate political activity, Donauer distanced himself from former pastor Keith Johnson.

"I have NO relationship with Keith Johnson," Donauer said in an email. "We are estranged and have been for many years. Our relationship was toxic for several years prior to his departure because my views are in direct opposition to his on many things."

Keith Johnson, who left Saskatoon a decade ago and is believed to now be preaching in the southern U.S., could not be reached for comment.

Keith Johnson's son, Brien, is now the head pastor at Mile Two Church.

"I have a healthy relationship with Brien," Donauer wrote. "He is my Pastor and a friend. He has worked hard to take the church in a drastically different direction than Keith, and to create a healthy environment and to welcome reconciliation with those that Keith hurt, both inside and outside the congregation. He has been a catalyst for change."

Brien Johnson and other current church and leaders have promised at various points to do interviews with CBC News, but then declined. In emails, they said they will comply fully with any investigation and encouraged anyone who "feels" they were abused to contact police.

They also made three central points: that no paddling has occurred there in more than two decades, that exorcisms have never been performed at the school and that they have apologized multiple times to victims.

More than a dozen students interviewed said that based on their experiences, all three of those claims are false. They said no one has apologized to them, that paddling was common practice well after the 2004 Supreme Court of Canada ban on corporal punishment by any officials, and that exorcisms did happen at school and elsewhere.

They also pointed to a recent sermon by Brien Johnson, posted on the church's own social media, in which Johnson says some of the abuse allegations are "exaggerated."

The former students say this all shows the continuing efforts to "gaslight" traumatized students and deny responsibility.

Former students, provincial Opposition NDP Leader Carla Beck and others are calling on the Saskatchewan Party provincial government to shut down the school or at least suspend its $700,000 in annual public funding. Instead, Education Minister Dustin Duncan appointed administrators to oversee Legacy and two other private Christian schools where people named in the students' lawsuits were now working.

Saskatoon police are encouraging any other students who believe they were abused to contact them. Some of the files have already been investigated and passed to Crown prosecutors to decide if charges are warranted. Students are still eligible to sign on to the lawsuit, and there's no time limit on filing criminal complaints for assaults on children.

Scharfstein said Donauer and those in positions of power should be treated no differently than any other citizens.

"I mean, all sorts of people involved in this have gone on to other careers," Scharfstein said. "But if they did what's being alleged that they did, they'll have to deal with the justice system."




BRAUN: Humans to blame for this summer's spate of coyote attacks

Liz Braun - Yesterday - Toronto Sun


Unfortunately, people continue to feed animals, sometimes without even knowing it — by not securing their food garbage, for example.


There are coyotes hanging out in several Mississauga school yards.

There have been a half-dozen coyote attacks in Burlington this year, and police are warning Scarborough residents about a pair of potentially aggressive coyotes.

How did we get here?

And how do we get back to coexisting peacefully with these wild animals?

The first part is easy: humans feeding wildlife is how we got here.

Unfortunately, people continue to feed animals, sometimes without even knowing it — by not securing their food garbage, for example.

Human feeding is the source of almost every unpleasant interaction between humans and coyotes.

According to wildlife organization Coyote Watch Canada , situations like the coyote attacks in Burlington are entirely preventable.

Coyote Watch Canada was not the only animal advocacy group urging that city to take action over wildlife feeding in its parks and green spaces.

But the feeding continued. Now Burlington has shot and killed four coyotes.

And killing those animals does absolutely no good unless the feeding of wildlife stops.

Anyone who has trained a dog with treats knows how food rewards can alter animal behaviour. As Coyote Watch Canada states:

“The chronic feeding of wildlife, and particularly coyotes, has taught wildlife to approach people with an expectation of a food reward.”

Lesley Sampson, executive founding director of Coyote Watch Canada, has delivered the message about not feeding wildlife for many years.

Sampson is known for her educational sessions on coyotes and for her investigations, when municipalities with coyote issues call on her.

In a recent interview, Sampson said the situation with coyotes is straightforward.

“ It’s the feeding of wildlife. The heart of the matter is what we do as humans. People must understand how their behaviour manipulates wildlife,” said Sampson.

Feeding squirrels in the park, keeping a bird feeder in your yard — these seemingly innocuous gestures are all part of the problem.

Bunnies and squirrels (and rats) come to your garden to eat the seed that falls to the ground from a bird feeder.

Those little mammals attract larger predators, like foxes and coyotes. The bird feeder also attracts the notice of larger birds of prey.

“Nobody should have a bird feeder right now. There’s a serious issue with HPAI — Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza — and the federal government has said they don’t want congregations of birds,” insisted Sampson.

There are other food sources. Homeless people living rough in urban ravines and parks bring human food into the animals’ habitat.

“How do we return to reverence and respect for wild life? There’s been an uptick in complaints about foxes, too,” said Sampson. “People want them killed as well.”

Coexisting with coyotes and other wild animals is entirely possible, she added.

“We’re working toward creating informed citizens and enforcing the bylaws that are in place for a reason. There’s a fine for people feeding animals.

“What’s involved is common sense, and for the coyote, aversion conditioning — a way of shaping their behaviour and presenting opportunities for them to learn that there are boundaries.”

And it works.

“I’ve never met a coyote who did not respond,” said Sampson.

Even in a case last year with coyotes in a Scarborough cemetery — chronic feeding was the culprit — it worked.

“Animal services was involved and everyone came together and worked collaboratively to restore calm to the landscape.”

People who feed wild animals should not be surprised when the animal shows demand behaviour — a bite or similar action. Then all hell breaks loose, thanks to what Sampson calls a cruel “environment of betrayal” for the animal.

“Coyotes are excellent hunters and foragers. They don’t need our help. They live in the wild. They are their own nation and culture.

“They don’t need the confusing message of people feeding them.”