Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Trudeau calls out Tory premiers for 'playing games' with national unity over C-69

OTTAWA -- Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says it is "absolutely irresponsible" for conservative premiers to threaten to tear Canada apart if the government doesn't accept all the Senate's amendments to new environmental-assessment legislation.
The Liberals are expected to say as early as Wednesday what they want to do with the 187 amendments made to Bill C-69 in the Senate last week. The bill would revamp the way the federal government evaluates major infrastructure projects, from pipelines to interprovincial highways.
The conservative premiers in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick, and the non-partisan premier of the Northwest Territories, wrote an "urgent" letter to Trudeau Monday telling him that he must accept every last one of the amendments or he will be threatening national unity.
They say Bill C-69 will make it virtually impossible to ever build another major pipeline in Canada and will drive away jobs and investment in the energy sector.
The premiers also want him to scrap Bill C-48, which would put a permanent ban on oil tankers' loading at ports in British Columbia north of Vancouver Island.
Trudeau lashed out at the premiers when the letter was raised by deputy Conservative leader Lisa Raitt during question period.
"Will the prime minister do the right thing, consider the amendments from the Senate and agree to every single one of them?" she asked.
Trudeau said the government is happy to accept amendments that make the bill better and are in the best interests of the country.
"What we will not do is accept the premiers' saying 'There is a threat to national unity if we don't get our way,' " Trudeau said. "That is not the way to hold this country together."
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney was not impressed, saying the premiers signed the letter "in the best tradition of co-operative federalism."
"We only asked to be heard, and this dismissive response from the federal government is the real threat to the national economy and to national unity," he said in a tweet.
Raitt said the premiers were warning about national unity but that they did so as premiers representing a majority of Canadians.
Trudeau said for the first time that at least one of the Senate's amendments, which he says makes Indigenous consultation "optional," is a no-go.
"I don't think Canadians want to go back to Stephen Harper's years of ignoring Indigenous Peoples in how we build resource projects. That's a good way to get nothing done, the way Stephen Harper did over 10 years."
The federal cabinet considered the issue at its weekly meeting Tuesday and a motion listing which amendments the government will accept and which ones it won't could be tabled for debate in the House of Commons as early as Wednesday.
Bill C-69 fulfils a Liberal election promise to redo the way major national projects are assessed; Trudeau has said previous changes made by the Conservative government in 2012 led only to court challenges. Among the new changes are:
-- creating a new Impact Assessment Agency to conduct the reviews,
-- limiting the influence of regulators like the National Energy Board in project approvals, and
-- requiring the reasons for an approval or denial to be made public, including any science used to reach the conclusion.
Trudeau is under intense pressure from environment groups to reject almost all the Senate amendments, which the groups say are directly taken from the demands of the oil and gas sector and cut into the bill's attempts to balance protecting the environment and economic growth.
Environmental Defence, Greenpeace Canada and the West Coast Environmental Law Association say the amendments weaken the requirement to consider a project's impact on climate change, reduce the ability of the public to participate in assessment hearings, and limit the right to ask a court to review a project approval.
That last change is also of concern to law professors, at least 50 of whom penned a letter to Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Tuesday saying it would undermine access to justice, and therefore public trust.
"Canadians must be assured that, when there has been a legal error in the exercise of public duties, they can bring their case to a court without undue expense, impediments and burden," the law professors said.
GOOD NEWS ONE OF MY FAVORITE SHOPPING CENTRES IS GOING SINGLE USE PLASTICS FREE  UPDATEDItalian Centre Shop agrees with move away from plastics 1

TRADITIONAL  BUNKO PSYCHIC SCHEME FOR WITCH THE FRAUDULENT PRACTICE OF WITCHCRAFT ACT IN THE CRIMINAL CODE WAS CREATED FOR AND FOR WITCH WE HAVE MADE SURE IS NO LONGER USED, FRAUD IS FRAUD 
A juvenile spotted salamander is seen inside a pitcher plant in this undated photo (Patrick D. Moldowan)

Carnivorous plant that consumes baby salamanders found in Ontario park


SCIENTISTS NAME IT AFTER DOUG FORD  FORDCONSUMESONTARIONS

Spotted salamander
A juvenile spotted salamander is seen inside a pitcher plant in this undated photo (Patrick D. Moldowan)


Christy Somos, CTVNews.ca Writer@C_Somos



    Published Tuesday, June 11, 2019 6:15PM EDT 
    Last Updated Tuesday, June 11, 2019 7:20PM EDT
    Canadian researchers have discovered that carnivorous pitcher plants in Ontario’s Algonquin Provincial Park are feeding on baby salamanders in addition to their regular diet, believed to be a first in North America.
    Their paper, published in the Ecology journal, details how testing showed that 20 per cent of pitcher plants surveyed in the park contained at least one salamander.
    Carnivorous plants tend to populate nutrient-poor environments, and in southern Ontario that means bogs. The bell-shaped pitcher plant is a common sight in Algonquin, as are the yellow-spotted salamanders.
    What surprised the researchers was how long it took for anyone to discover what was happening.
    “The Wildlife Research Station near the bog has been there for 70 years,” said research paper co-author Alex Smith a biology professor at the University of Guelph, in an email to CTVNews.ca.
    “So the surprise was that we discovered such a new case of plants eating vertebrates involving such a well-known species in such a well-known space.”
    Smith, along with PhD candidate and co-lead author Patrick Moldowan of the University of Toronto, say that their discovery means that “plants eating vertebrates may be more common than [we] once thought.”
    Most carnivorous plants are thought to eat invertebrates and arthropods, such insects and arachnids, although a species of pitcher plant in a remote part of the Philippines was found to catch rodents as large as rats. 
    Smith and Moldowan are testing three hypotheses on how the pitcher plants attract the salamanders: that the juvenile salamanders fall into the bog plant haphazardly, that the salamanders are drawn to the pitcher plants as a place to hide or that the presence of the extra insects (which the plant is feeding on) draws them in.
    Smith and Moldowan are also studying how the salamanders die and break down inside the plants. 
    “The salamanders may simply drown if they cannot climb out of the pitcher, [or] the pitcher itself may contain some digestive enzymes for a high acidity or temperature or some combination of these that kills and then breaks down the… juvenile salamander,” says Smith.
    “There is also a whole community of other organisms living in the pitcher that may break down this larger animal in small chunks that the plant can then begin to absorb.”
    Smith says it “seems to lake less than two weeks” for the salamanders to decay.
    The study “suggests there is still much more for us to learn from…the common things we share the planet with, let alone species we haven’t named yet,” says Smith.

    ANIMAL TALES

    Bobcat

    Calgary dairy producer has licence suspended by Canadian Food Inspection Agency

    The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has suspended the licence of a Calgary milk producer.
    The Safe Food for Canadians licence of Mother Dairy, located on 47th Street N.E., was suspended May 21 for failing to identify hazards, having a lack of appropriate equipment and failing to implement a preventive control plan and document a food complaint process, according to a release.
    There is no food recall associated with the suspension.
    According to its website, some of the products the company produces include paneer (Indian cottage cheese), desi ghee (clarified butter), whipped butter, plain yogurt (Punjabi dahi), and lassi (sweet and salted).
    The suspension can be lifted if CFIA believes corrective measures have been taken. If corrective measures are not taken within 90 days, the licence can be cancelled.
    UCP AND CALGARY OIL COMPANIES GIVE WORKERS DAY OFF TO PROTEST

    Pro-energy rally in Calgary draws thousands of pipeline supporters


    Published Tuesday, June 11, 2019 6:41AM MDT 
    A pro-pipeline group claims a noon-hour rally on Tuesday in support of the oil and gas industry is one of the largest in Canadian history.
    Canada Action, a non-partisan group, says at least 4,000 people attended the event at the Stampede grounds. 
    (EP NOTE WHENEVER A GROUP CALLS ITSELF NON POLITICAL OR NON PARTISAN THEY ARE RIGHT WING HIDING THEIR AFFILIATION)
    The rally coincided with the 51st annual Global Petroleum Show and was in anticipation of next week’s federal cabinet decision on the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project.
    SO IT WAS A PROMO FOR A TRADE SHOW EP
    “The Trans Mountain expansion, while an incredibly important project in its own right, has become a symbol of the oil and gas industry and the challenges facing energy projects all over the country,” said Canada Action founder, Cody Battershill. 
    “We are going to send a message that we need to support the energy sector because global oil and gas demand continues to grow and Canada needs to grow globally."
    Battershill added Canada lost $40,000 per minute in 2018 due to insufficient pipeline capacity. 
    Tuesday’s rally featured speeches from industry leaders, advocates and politicians, including:
    • Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe
    • Alberta Energy Minister Sonya Savage
    • B.C. MLA Ellis Ross
    • Ontario Minister of Energy, Northern Development and Mines Greg Rickford
    • Fort St. John Mayor Lori Ackerman
    The rally began at noon at the outdoor zone next to the Big Four building and was open to the public. 
    Alberta Premier Jason Kenney also spoke at the Global Petroleum Show at 10 a.m. before travelling to Montreal for bilateral meetings at the International Economic Forum of the Americas.


    Tyson Fedor reports on Jason Kenney’s investment message at the Petroleum Expo and the massive rally of support outside.

    Supporters of the oil and gas industry are protesting outside the Global Petroleum Show in Calgary, Mark Villani reports.

    Calgary Board of Education proceeds with cuts despite provincial funding promise
    School boards cautious despite funding pledge

    The CBE says it will continue with its planned cuts despite the province’s funding commitment. Kevin Green has the latest.

    The Calgary public school board is proceeding with staff reductions despite a promise from the provincial finance minister to fund rising enrolment.
    Speaking in the legislature, finance minister Travis Toews said "I am pleased to announce today that increased enrolment growth will be fully funded for this upcoming year."
    The Calgary Board of Education faces a $40 million budget gap, with $21 million of that driven by increased enrolment.
    The board chair admits to being surprised by the announcement, but Trina Hurdman says the board will take a wait-and-see approach as Toews announcement lacked detail. "Our education funding is a very complex process, there is a lot more than just the basic per student funding," said Hurdman. "We are waiting for further information from the province around what does our overall funding look like."
    The president of the Calgary public teachers' association worries the province is playing a bait-and- switch game by announcing the enrolment funding without saying what other money it will actually cut.
    "They could go and play the shell game and say we are not going to fund this or that," said Bob Cocking, ATA Local 38 president. "They could find a way to make it look like they are funding it but we are being maybe robbed in other areas."
    The school board's chief financial officer says Monday's provincial announcement isn’t enough to stop the staff cuts already underway.
    “We have not received anything concrete from Alberta Ed," said CBE CFO Brad Grundy. "It's basically full steam ahead with the plan we had."
    The province hasn't indicated if it plans any cuts to other areas of education funding, telling CTV more details will be released in interim financing legislation in July.

    Protester dragged off stage before Jason Kenney's speech

    1:40m

    Protester dragged off stage by security


    2:10m

    Premier's speech overshadowed by protester


    1:50m

    Thousands show up for oil and gas rally


    8:04m

    C-69 would end future pipeline projects: Kenney


    1:07m

    Protester interrupts Premier Kenney speech


    India rubbish mountain to rise higher than Taj Mahal
    A noteworthy monument to 20th Century.
    Taking up the area of more than 40 football pitches, Ghazipur rises by nearly 10 metres a year with no end in sight to its foul-smelling growth.
    According to East Delhi's superintendent engineer Arun Kumar, it is already more than 65 metres (213 feet) high.
    At its current rate of growth, it will be taller than the iconic Taj in Agra, some 73 metres high, in 2020.



    PHYS.ORG




    Stop using my grandpa's name, actor Kiefer Sutherland tells Doug Ford | CBC News






































    The Story of Mouseland: As told by Tommy Douglas in 1944

    • 10 years ago
    •  
    • 98,424 views
    It's the story of a place called MouselandMouseland was a place where all the little mice lived and played, were born and died.
    "Sick and dying, they brought themselves down here to speak to no one. Shameful. It's an embarrassment to the country, and it is a stain on this institution," Stewart said to a half-empty congressional committee.


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