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Monday, June 06, 2022

B&D CHILD ABUSE
Legal claims shed light on founder of faith group tied to Amy Coney Barrett

Stephanie Kirchgaessner US Investigations Correspondent
Mon, June 6, 2022

Photograph: Barbara Allison/AP

The founder of the People of Praise, a secretive charismatic Christian group that counts supreme court justice Amy Coney Barrett as a member, was described in a sworn affidavit filed in the 1990s as exerting almost total control over one of the group’s female members, including making all decisions about her finances and dating relationships.

The court documents also described alleged instances of a sexualized atmosphere in the home of the founder, Kevin Ranaghan, and his wife, Dorothy Ranaghan.

The description of the Ranaghans and accusations involving their intimate behavior were contained in a 1993 proceeding in which a woman, Cynthia Carnick, said that she did not want her five minor children to have visitations with their father, John Roger Carnick, who was then a member of the People of Praise, in the Ranaghan household or in their presence, because she believed it was not in her children’s “best interest”. Cynthia Carnick also described inappropriate incidents involving the couple and the Ranaghan children. The matter was eventually settled between the parties.

Barrett, 50, lived with Dorothy and Kevin Ranaghan in their nine-bedroom South Bend, Indiana, home while she attended law school, according to public records. The justice – who was then known as Amy Coney – graduated from Notre Dame Law School in 1997 and two years later married her husband, Jesse Barrett, who also appears to have lived in the Ranaghan household. There is no indication that Amy Coney Barrett lived in the house at the time when the Carnick children were visiting or witnessed any of the alleged behavior described in the court documents.

The examination of the People of Praise’s history and attitude towards women comes as a majority of the supreme court – including Barrett – appear poised to reverse Roe v Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that made abortion legal across the US.


Cynthia Carnick stated in the documents that she had witnessed Dorothy Ranaghan tie the arms and legs of two of the Ranaghans’ daughters – who were three and five at the time the incidents were allegedly witnessed – to their crib with a necktie. She also said that the Ranaghans allegedly practiced “sexual displays” in front of their children and other adults, such as Dorothy Ranaghan lying with her clothes on and “rocking” on top of Kevin Ranaghan in their TV room.

Cynthia Carnick – who no longer uses Carnick as her last name – declined to comment but said that she stood by the statement she made at the time.

In an affidavit that supported Cynthia Carnick’s written statement, a woman named Colette Humphrey said she had lived with Kevin and Dorothy Ranaghan from 1973 to 1978, when she was a member of the People of Praise, and confirmed she had witnessed incidents of inappropriate sexual expression.

Humphrey also wrote in her statement: “When I was part of the People of Praise I was in full life submission to Kevin Ranaghan, under full obedience to him and he exercised this authority over most areas of my life. For example, we were ‘in common’ financially, which meant that I had to hand over my paycheck to Kevin Ranaghan and he would decide on how that paycheck would be used. Kevin Ranaghan controlled my dating relationships, deciding who and when I should date.”

Humphrey – who now uses a different surname – did not respond to a request for comment left at her residence.

A third woman, Susan Reynolds, said in a sworn statement that she lived in the Ranaghan household, and that she had at one point been “shocked” to hear that Kevin Ranaghan sometimes showered with two of his daughters, who were ten or eleven at the time. She said in her statement she was later told by Dorothy Ranaghan that Kevin had “decided to quit showering with them” after Reynolds had questioned Dorothy about the practice.

The Ranaghans did not file any affidavits in connection to the 1993 proceeding, to which they were not a party.

Dorothy Ranaghan declined to comment to the Guardian. Kevin Ranaghan said: “These allegations are nearly three decades old, outlandish, and completely without merit. We have a loving and affectionate marriage of 55 years and have welcomed dozens of people into our home as part of our religious faith and commitment to service to God.”

A spokesperson representing the Ranaghans sent an emailed statement to the Guardian on behalf of the couple’s six adult children. It said they were “insulted by false and misleading statements about our childhood relationships with our parents from decades ago”. “We are part of a loving family and bringing these preposterous claims up now is hurtful and irresponsible.”

People of Praise said in a statement: “Since 1967 Kevin and Dorothy Ranaghan have been known and respected for their tireless work sharing the free gift of the Holy Spirit with hundreds of thousands of people around the world. We are proud that they are members and leaders of the People of Praise.”

The claims about the Ranaghans’ behavior and Kevin Ranaghans’ alleged control over at least one former member of People of Praise is coming to light two years after the Guardian first reported that the group had hired a law firm to conduct an “independent” investigation into decades-old claims of sexual abuse against minors by some members of the Christian faith group.

Since then, at least one alleged victim who cooperated with the investigation has been told that the inquiry into sexual abuse claims by the law firm of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan has been concluded, but that a written report of its findings would not be released to alleged victims or to the public.

When one alleged victim of sexual abuse, who spoke to the Guardian but asked not to be named, asked about the investigation into her own case, lawyer Diane Doolittle of Quinn Emanuel allegedly told her that at least some of the individuals who had been interviewed about the allegations “didn’t recall the details” and that it had been “difficult” to get information.

The South Bend-based group is a covenanted community, which means that members have entered a “covenant commitment” to live together – sometimes families and single members can live in a single household – and are expected to share portions of their income and regularly attend hours-long private prayer meetings, which can include exorcisms and speaking in tongues. The group has about 1,700 members, is mostly Catholic but is open to all Christians, and espouses conservative views on gender. It opposes same-sex marriage and only men can serve on its board of governors or as coordinators, who lead different branches of the community.

The Washington Post reported in 2020 that a People of Praise 2010 directory showed Barrett served as a “handmaid”, a female adviser to other female members. Barrett also served on the Trinity Schools board, whose members must belong to People of Praise, from 2015 to 2017, at a time when the schools effectively barred admission to children of same-sex parents and – according to the AP – “made it plain that openly gay and lesbian teachers weren’t welcome in the classroom”.

Doolittle did not respond to an emailed request for comment. People of Praise said in a statement: “The independent review by Quinn Emmanuel was concluded more than a year ago, and meetings regarding the review have taken place.”

The Guardian sought a comment from Amy Coney Barrett’s chambers through the supreme court press office, but did not receive a response.

In June 2021, four victims of alleged sexual or physical abuse in the People of Praise published an open letter in the South Bend Tribune calling for reforms within the faith group. The suggested reforms included public acknowledgment that there had been a “systemic failure to protect People of Praise children from abuse”, public naming of all individuals who have been “credibly accused of abuse” or “concealing abuse within People of Praise or its schools”, and placing an equal number of women in the highest leadership positions in the group, and giving them an “equal vote in all of the group’s decisions”. The letter noted that the Catholic church has publicly named individuals who have credibly been accused of abuse.

Barrett, who is Catholic, has never publicly been asked about her membership in People of Praise, which first came to light in a New York Times article in 2017, after Barrett, a former law professor at Notre Dame, was nominated by Donald Trump to serve as a judge on the US court of appeal for the seventh circuit. She was confirmed and then later, in 2020, was nominated and confirmed to serve on the supreme court after the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Barrett has said that her religious convictions, including her previously stated views opposing Roe v Wade, had no bearing on her role as a judge and would not affect her impartiality.


The justice’s involvement in People of Praise became known publicly in 2017 only after one former member, Kevin Connolly, said he brought the story to the New York Times. He did so, he told the Guardian, because he believed it was important for the public to be aware of and understand her affiliation with the group. He was also one of the four authors of the open letter sent to the South Bend Tribune.


Connolly, who is the brother of the People of Praise’s chief spokesperson, Sean Connolly, told the Washington Post in 2021 that his father, who was then a member of People of Praise, was violent and once kicked him in the face when he was 10, leaving him with a black eye.

Connolly came forward, he said, after he heard of several other incidents of physical abuse among his friends growing up. Neither Connolly’s father nor his brother responded to the Post’s questions at the time the alleged abuse was reported in the Washington Post.

“Growing up in the People of Praise, I knew that they held beliefs that would be extremists to the vast majority of practicing Catholics, including on gay rights and women’s rights. I looked at the number of people living in those states covered by the seventh circuit court, and then projected those numbers over a lifetime appointment. It was well into the tens of millions. That’s when I brought the story to the New York Times in 2017. As a supreme court justice now, her extreme views may affect upwards of half a billion Americans in her lifetime,” he told the Guardian.




• In the US, call or text the Childhelp abuse hotline on 800-422-4453. In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Association for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In Australia, children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800, or Bravehearts on 1800 272 831, and adult survivors can contact Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. Other sources of help can be found at Child Helplines International

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

'2 to 1': Calgary mayor-elect Gondek will be bolstered by majority-progressive council, say pundits

'I heard a lot of people saying they really wanted change'

Left to right: David Hartwick, Anila Lee Yuen, Shane Keating and Zain Velji. CBC spoke with several community leaders and pundits Monday evening. (CBC)

Calgary city hall  watchers anticipate a more cohesive city council following Monday's vote, with many newly elected councillors sharing priorities with mayor-elect Jyoti Gondek.

One pollster estimates progressive-leaning councillors outnumber conservative-leaning candidates by roughly two to one, and others see an opportunity for Gondek to quickly push forward on key priorities such as COVID-19 response and infrastructure investments.

"What I think it is for mayor-elect Gondek, is a great starting point," campaign strategist Zain Velji told CBC Calgary's News at 11.

"She's got six to seven solid votes on most things she wants and if she runs her office like a political office she can sway three to five more."

Velji previously worked on Naheed Neshi's campaign.

Looking at those leading or elected, it's clear this council will also have more women and candidates who are BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of colour) than recent councils. It has only three incumbents but the mayor and two new councillors have previous council experience. 

CBC News talked with with several community leaders, strategists and pundits as the final votes were counted. Here's what they had to say.

Former Ward 3 city councillor Jyoti Gondek, shown giving her victory speech Monday night, will be Calgary's next mayor. Gondek, who has a PhD in urban sociology, worked in consulting and led the Westman Centre for Real Estate Studies at the University of Calgary's Haskayne School of Business before entering politics. (Radio-Canada)

A progressive-leaning council

There are no party affiliations in municipal politics. But based on each winner's platforms and endorsements, pollster Janet Brown says she sees a fairly left-leaning council.  

"On balance, I think we've got more progressive councillors than we do conservative councillors, maybe by a two-to-one margin," said Brown. "That will be good very news for Gondek because this will be an easier council for her to wrangle and get on side with her priorities."

Gondek won with more support than any of the polls predicted. She had 45 per cent of the vote with 256 of 259 polls reporting. But that didn't surprise Brown.

"As soon as the results started coming in, I sort of laughed at myself and I thought: 'You know, this happens election after election.' We think it's going to be a close race ... but Calgary doesn't really have a history of electing conservative mayors."

The political action group Lead Calgary endorsed candidates whose platforms prioritized cutting property taxes and restoring fiscal responsibility. That includes winners Dan McLean (Ward 13), Peter Demong (Ward 14), Andre Chabot (Ward 10), Terry Wong (Ward 7) and Sean Chu (Ward 4).

It will be a mixed council that represents the political diversity of Calgary, added Velji, saying the actual vote split will likely shift from issue to issue. But Gondek is also hard to paint as either right or left.

"We really don't know how she lands on certain things."

WATCH | Hear what CBC Calgary's political panel had to say about last night's election.

CBC Calgary's political panel breaks down the vote

13 hours ago
12:27
CBC Calgary's political panel included Maclean's Jason Markusoff, political strategist Zain Velji, and pollster Janet Brown to discuss last night's election. 12:27

Newcomers but with experience  

"I heard a lot of people saying they really wanted change, and I think that's what we're seeing now," said David Hartwick, a longtime volunteer with the Northern Hills Community Association.

In the ward races, voters turfed two incumbents and other races were close. Joe Magliocca and Diane Colley-Urquhart each lost, coming third in their races, while Gian-Carlo Carra squeaked in a win by just 152 votes.

Ward 4 incumbent Sean Chu, who has served as a city councillor since 2013, led his closest rival DJ Kelly by a margin of 706 votes with 28/30 stations reporting as of 5:30 a.m. on Tuesday, according to Elections Calgary.

But Hartwick says those worried about a loss of institutional memory should take heart. Gondek is not a newcomer and two of the newly elected councillors have council experience. Newcomers Andre Chabot and Richard Pootmans have five previous terms on council between them. 

  • WATCH | Calgary mayor-elect Jyoti Gondek delivers her victory speech:

Gondek makes history claiming Calgary's top job

14 hours ago
7:12
Jyoti Gondek stepped onto the podium as Calgary's first woman elected as mayor. 7:12

Out-going councillor Shane Keating was quite worried about the high turnover. But not Monday night.

"I've very excited and extremely happy," he said, looking at the results.

"You know, we've seen four years of this picking and snipping," he said. "I've always said that if you get the right people, it doesn't matter of political affiliations. I think you're going to have a great council coming forward.… We have individuals who have master's degrees. We have individuals who are who are educators, engineers or have another master's degree in administration."

Keating will be replaced in Ward 12 by Evan Spencer, who previously worked in his constituency office.

Making history 

Calgary's new council will have six women compared with three on the previous council.

"That's obviously not parity but it's a whole lot better than we've done in recent past. At present, six of 15 are racialized Calgarians. That's a high water mark for a city that has a pretty big history of electing only white people," Maclean's correspondent Jason Markusoff said on News at 11.

Gondek's parents immigrated from Punjab, India. Edmonton also elected a mayor of south Asian descent in Amarjeet Sohi, who was a former councillor and a former cabinet minister.

Anila Lee Yuen, who grew up in Calgary as a child of south Asian parents, says that's a big deal for young people who need to see themselves in community leaders. 

"Twelve-year-old me, my eyes would be just bulging out of my head right now because they look like me," said Lee Yuen. "The leaders of our province — our mayors look like me.… They grew up with similar cultural context as I did, and I never thought that that would happen when I was 12. And they've got good policy."

Gondek is also Calgary's first female mayor.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Elise Stolte

Journalist

Elise Stolte has 15 years of experience telling the stories of her community and has been recognized for feature writing, social-impact and community-based journalism. She previously worked for the Edmonton Journal and joined CBC Calgary this summer.


Jasmine Mian, former Olympic wrestler,

 wins vacated Ward 3 seat

Jasmine Mian will be one of several newcomers on city council after successfully winning her bid to fill the seat vacated by Jyoti Gondek


Author of the article: Dylan Short
Publishing date:Oct 19, 2021 •
Jasmine Mian

A political newcomer once known for representing her country will now represent the north Calgary Ward 3 at city hall for the next four years.

Jasmine Mian will be one of several newcomers on city council after successfully winning her bid to fill the seat vacated by Jyoti Gondek who handedly won the mayoral race on Monday, defeating her main competitors Jeremy Farkas and Jeff Davison by a wide margin.

Mian said she had been going door to door to attract voters to her message of navigating the pandemic and continuing to support developing communities in north-central Calgary and that voters gave her a clear response.

“I think that I was given a very clear mandate by the voters of Ward 3 to run a positive campaign to collaborate with the rest of the councillors on some of the big challenges we have,” said Mian.

Mian, who represented Canada as a wrestler at the 2016 Olympics, said representing her constituents will be the honour of a lifetime. She said her first priority, once the new council is sworn in, is to continue to navigate through the COVID-19 pandemic. She noted that the most important ward-specific issues are ensuring services and infrastructure continue to grow.

Mian was among eight candidates vying for the Ward 3 seat.

Coming up just short with the second most votes was Brent Trenholm. Speaking to Postmedia before polls closed, he said he had knocked on over 20,000 doors in the past year and felt he had the support to be successful.

“It’s been a lot of fun,” said Trenholm, as votes were still rolling in. “It’s been a long grind . . . But, I’ll accept what’s there. And wish the next person well.”

Trenholm thanked everyone who voted for him, as well as his campaign team for supporting him. He said Mian will have a tough job over the next four years.

Braid: Gondek rides to stunning win in

 unprecedented reboot of city hall

This is the look of Alberta's great cities today — tolerant, forward-looking and ready to deal realistically with social problems


Author of the article:Don Braid • Calgary Herald
Publishing date:Oct 19, 2021 • 
  Jyoti Gondek at her campaign headquarters after being elected as Calgary Mayor on Monday, October 18, 2021. PHOTO BY AZIN GHAFFARI/POSTMEDIA
Article content

As election results poured in Monday night it was soon clear that Calgary’s new mayor is Jyoti Gondek, who only a couple of months ago stood barely above 10 per cent in polling support.

With Amarjeet Sohi’s victory in Edmonton, the province will once again have two relatively progressive mayors as counterpoints to Premier Jason Kenney’s UCP government.

This time, both mayors are people of colour. They are also Canadians of Punjabi heritage. And Gondek will be Calgary’s first female in the job since we started electing mayors in 1884.

If this doesn’t finally obliterate national stereotypes of Alberta as some kind of racist backwater, perhaps nothing ever will. But this is the look of Alberta’s great cities today — tolerant, forward-looking and ready to deal realistically with social problems.

Gondek says her first job will be to “meet with all the councillors elected tonight and talk about how we can collaborate to move the city forward.

“I also look forward to working with the provincial government. Our future requires us to work together.”

But she also said that when necessary, she’ll speak firmly for Calgary in dealing with a government that has often been bitterly critical of city hall.

Gondek overtook Jeromy Farkas on her way to a thumping victory. And her biggest ally, although he surely didn’t mean to be, may have been Jeff Davison.

Davison was surprisingly strong and likely took considerable support away from Farkas.

Davison also painted himself as a true conservative, but one who can collaborate and build rather than pick fights and say no to almost everything that comes out of city hall.

The result showed exactly what was happening when Farkas sent his open letter last Friday , asking supporters of Davison and Brad Field to support him instead.

Farkas must have known that he was losing votes to these more reasonable choices, and made one last desperate attempt to hold the conservative vote.

In the end, Field also did remarkably well after a long campaign that went largely unnoticed for months, but finally showed him as a caring and able candidate.

Farkas is just the latest in a string of ideological conservatives who have failed to win the mayor’s chair. Ric McIver, now a provincial minister, lost to Naheed Nenshi in 2010. In 2017, Nenshi beat Bill Smith, who proudly offered himself as a conservative.

Now, Farkas goes down despite ardent support from UCP types and Calgary’s old conservative guard. It shows that many Calgarians want their city government to be independent of the province, and focus mainly on urban issues rather than partisan agendas.


Jeromy Farkas talks on the phone minutes after giving a concession speech at Heritage Park Calgary on Monday, October 18, 2021. Jim Wells/Postmedia

But there was one big win for Kenney — the referendum calling for removal of equalization from the Constitution carried with a 58 per cent majority in Calgary.

All other municipalities have yet to be tallied and the final result will be announced by Elections Alberta on Oct. 26 .

But even with Edmonton expected to oppose the move, Calgary’s 58 per cent, along with expected majorities in rural Alberta, should carry the question for Kenney.


Otherwise, the voters’ choices failed to move council in a conservative direction. Several progressive councillors were elected, along with comeback kids Richard Pootmans and Andre Chabot .

Scandal-ridden Joe Magliocca got clobbered in Ward 2 by Jennifer Wyness . Veteran Diane Colley-Urquhart lost decisively in Ward 13 to Dan McLean .

In an election where 10 seats were empty, even incumbents lost despite being almost invulnerable in previous elections.

The voters clearly wanted to clean house. What they came up with, according to Stephen Carter, Gondek’s campaign manager, is a “pragmatic group” that will be able to work together.

Carter is a comeback story of his own. He played a role in Nenshi’s first victory in 2010 and was behind Alison Redford’s drive to be Alberta’s first female premier, serving as her chief of staff for a time before she was forced to resign.

Now he’s back in the game and could well play a senior role in Jyoti Gondek’s city hall.

It will be much different from Naheed Nenshi’s last council, but hopefully infused with new energy and a wish for genuine collaboration in the city’s interests.

Don Braid’s column appears regularly in the Herald

Friday, September 03, 2021

NO MEDIA WELCOME: JASON KENNEY REAPPEARS, VIRTUALLY, ANSWERING CURATED QUESTIONS VIA FACEBOOK LIVE

ALBERTA PREMIER JASON KENNEY DURING HIS RE-EMERGENCE ON FACEBOOK YESTERDAY (PHOTO: SCREENSHOT OF FACEBOOK VIDEO).

Alberta Politics


DAVID CLIMENHAGA
POSTED ON SEPTEMBER 02, 2021, 1:49 AM

Having been spotted out for shawarma in Calgary Tuesday night, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney cautiously emerged back into the artificial light of political life yesterday.

Rather than making an actual public appearance and risking having to answer rude questions by the province’s media, uncharacteristically uncooperative after Mr. Kenney’s two-week vacation ran to 23 days during which the province drifted leaderless through the fourth wave of the pandemic, Mr. Kenney settled for an hourlong Facebook Live audience with Alberta’s digitized commoners.


Please stand by, the premier of Alberta will be with you in a moment (Photo: Jason Kenney/Facebook).

Beamed from his Calgary office, the premier shrugged, grimaced and gesticulated, offering rambling, often uninformative and occasionally incoherent responses to questions typed into their devices by supposedly random Albertans.

Clearly this is a man in love with the sound of his own voice, and untroubled by the lack of anyone else’s.

The effect of the premier’s surreality TV production was mildly disconcerting and sometimes comedic in a Monty Pythonesque manner, as when he favourably compared how his United Conservative Party Government has handled the COVID-19 pandemic to the way the Alberta NDP didn’t deal with it when it wasn’t in power.

But if it had been, Mr. Kenney explained earnestly, it would have been “just massively devastating. … Misery, and depression, mental-health crisis, addictions crisis, bankruptcies, financial collapse, would be incalculable.” Plus obesity, childhood obesity, he added moments later.

Well, nothing like that happened on his watch, did it?

Having dispensed with what the NDP didn’t do, Mr. Kenney moved along to a variety of other topics, imparting little news.



Alberta UCP 'evasive', faking public accessibility with premier's Facebook Live: expert


BY NEWS STAFF
Posted Sep 3, 2021

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney poses for a photo as he hosts the Premier's annual Stampede breakfast in Calgary, Alta., Monday, July 12, 2021.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

CALGARY – Premier Jason Kenney’s approach to addressing the public through Facebook Live after weeks of silence may not have been the best way to address the COVID-19 situation, according to one expert.

The premier said during his live event on Wednesday that his decision to go on vacation was made in part because August is usually a quieter time for politics.

READ MORE: Premier Kenney breaks silence, answers questions on Facebook Live

But that’s not the most concerning part, says Associate Professor of Policy Studies at Mount Royal University Lori Williams.

She says it’s worrisome that other officials were not around to address the public health crisis unfolding in the province during Kenney’s absence.

“It looks evasive. It looks like they don’t want to answer questions because they don’t have the answers to provide it,” Williams said.

“It doesn’t look like the government knows how it wants to respond to this fourth wave, this crisis that Alberta faces in a worse way than any other province.”

Wiliams adds the fact that Kenney’s first public address was during a Facebook Live event–and not one where people could truly ask questions–adds to the evasive look.

“Those who watched, saw the premier choose which questions he wants to answer. He also read the question, so you heard the question as read by the premier. There were no follow-up questions,” she explained.

“That isn’t full public accessibility.”

She says this is an example of the UCP once again breaking public trust, which will create an uphill battle for the party to regain confidence.

Bell: UCP COVID hide-and-seek … and then Kenney appears

Author of the article:  Rick Bell
Publishing date:Sep 02, 2021 • 
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney speaks at the annual Premier's Stampede Breakfast in downtown Calgary on Monday, July 12, 2021. Gavin Young/Postmedia

Alberta’s Best Summer Ever is over.

Boy, is it over.

Bet nobody in the government of Premier Jason Kenney looked into their crystal ball and saw the current nastiness with a virus not behaving according to plan.

Still, you’d have to think somebody in the Kenney government surely had something significant to say about the fact the happy news, the clear sailing storyline of a couple of months ago is not turning out the way it was sold.

Somehow we would see some direction on where the Kenney government is now going.

But what do we get as the clock ticks.

Crickets.

And crickets are seen by some as cowardice, by others as confusion. By still others, the word ostrich comes to mind.

Are the Kenney people figuring, hoping, praying, crossing their fingers COVID riding the wave would turn around on its own in short order?

People talked about this state of affairs happening during summer holiday time. Hold your horses. You’ll get your answers.

Yes, politicians deserve holidays, but is no one around to mind the store especially when Albertans want some idea of what the authorities have in mind, if anything?

The numbers in hospital go up, worse than ever expected by the Kenney government experts.

The story quickly descends into farce.

Newshounds ask questions.

Where is Kenney? Where is Health Minister Tyler Shandro?

Where is Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s top public health doc?

We get reports, alleged sightings of the premier. Hide and seek.

Who is he, Jason Bourne or Jason Kenney?

As Aristotle, one of the premier’s favourite philosophers, said: Nature abhors a vacuum.

While the cat’s away others begin filling in the blanks, doing their own thing.

Edmonton city council brings back masks indoors.

On Friday, Calgary city council will start a chinwag on their next move against COVID and politicians of all political stripes take aim at the premier and his people.

When Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi and Coun. Gian-Carlo Carra are schooling the premier, you know it’s trouble.

NDP Leader Rachel Notley is said to be preparing to weigh in on the situation Thursday

The official opposition has been having a field day on this one. It’s like watching a soccer game where one team is behind because of own goals, scoring on themselves.

The rumour mill churns.

Talk of Shandro appearing Thursday. Ditto for Hinshaw. Long overdue. No notification at press time.

Minister of Health Tyler Shandro and Alberta’s chief medical officer of health Dr. Deena Hinshaw provided, from Edmonton on March 22, 2021, an update on COVID-19. PHOTO BY CHRIS SCHWARZ/GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA

There was noise about Hinshaw heading for the exit and this is said to be not true. But what pops into my inbox at 8:05 p.m. Wednesday? The rumour again.

There is talk of a big gabfest of the Kenney government’s COVID inner circle Wednesday. This much is coming from many sources but it’s not coming from any official on the premier’s team.

A provincial wear-your-mask law is reported to be on the agenda.

So are restrictions around gatherings.

It sounds like the smart money believes those trial balloons won’t fly, at least not yet.

The status quo is the odds-on bet at the $2 window. For now.

Will the Kenney crowd pass the buck and let the cities do the heavy lifting on the mask issue, maintaining their politics pure?

Is their modelling, their government projections of where COVID could go, ready to be released?

Again there is unofficial chatter.

Could the projections show the likely scenario is somewhere between where we are now and where we were last Christmas?

Could the worst-case scenario show it could be as bad as last Christmas, the season of the lockdown?

A lockdown would finish off the Kenney government. They know that and they say they aren’t going there.

They’ve also say no to a provincial government vaccine passport, where the fully vaccinated would be allowed in places where those not fully vaccinated would not be allowed.

But who knows?

We’re only the people.

Jeromy Farkas is a Calgary councillor running for mayor who backed Kenney’s Open For Summer plan because it was supported by Hinshaw.

Here’s what he says Wednesday on the hide and seek game.

“It’s impossible to say listen to the doctor’s advice if her lips are sealed. If the good doctor is quiet, people will look to others.

“People are scared. The province dropped the ball and others are picking up that ball and running with it.”

Stop … hold the presses.

With little fanfare, Kenney appears live on his Facebook page taking select questions confirming he talked to Hinshaw Wednesday. He is reportedly vague. He thinks he is being accountable.

One thing is certain. Once again he is not leading the parade but following it.



Nenshi says he's 'lost any faith' in province's COVID action as council prepares to talk pandemic

'I hate that the city has to step in in areas of provincial jurisdiction, but if we have to keep people safe, we'll figure out how'

Author of the article: Madeline Smith
Publishing date:Sep 02, 2021 • 

Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi was photographed outside council chambers during a break in debate on when to lift mandatory masking bylaws on Monday, June 21, 2021. PHOTO BY GAVIN YOUNG/POSTMEDIA

The province announced Thursday that 70 per cent of Albertans are now fully vaccinated, as Calgary city officials got ready to debate whether or not additional municipal measures need to be implemented to combat COVID-19.

Restoring Calgary’s mask bylaw and mandating proof of vaccination in city-owned facilities are among the issues that will be on the table at city hall when council’s emergency management committee meets Friday afternoon.

Mayor Naheed Nenshi said he’s “lost any faith in the ability of the province to do anything” about the rising fourth wave of COVID, as city council is set to weigh whether to take steps themselves.

If there’s a push for the city to take action to address the pandemic, a special meeting could quickly be called to get the measures in place.

Nenshi blasted the UCP government’s lack of action Thursday, as active COVID cases increased to nearly 13,000 province-wide, with 487 people in hospital — more than double the number of hospitalizations in Alberta less than two weeks ago.

“People are getting sick and dying, and this is not time for amateur hour. Ultimately, I hate that the city has to step in in areas of provincial jurisdiction, but if we have to keep people safe, we’ll figure out how,” he said. “I still remain hopeful that the province will step up to the plate and actually do its job.”

The province, meanwhile, issued a news release Thursday encouraging Albertans to get vaccinated with two shots.

“Vaccines take significant pressure off of our health system by reducing the severity of symptoms for the vast majority of people who are fully immunized,” Minister of Health Tyler Shandro said in the news release.

Earlier this summer on July 5, council quashed the bylaw requiring face coverings across Calgary’s public indoor spaces at a time when fewer than 1,000 active COVID cases existed across Alberta and daily case counts numbered dozens, not hundreds.

Nenshi said there has been more appetite among council members lately to restore the mandate, especially if the province doesn’t reinstitute mask rules.

Coun. Diane Colley-Urquhart wrote on Twitter this week that “hundreds and hundreds” of Calgarians have emailed her asking for the mask bylaw to return. And at least one other councillor who voted in favour of lifting the mandate two months ago signalled support for its return.

Coun. Jeff Davison said he’s been hearing “panic” from the public around COVID-19, and it’s time for council to discuss how to protect Calgarians, including potentially following Edmonton’s lead and restoring a mask bylaw.

Coun. George Chahal was among the four councillors who voted against lifting mask rules in July. At the time, he said he wanted to ensure Calgarians who were still waiting had a chance to get their first and second doses of a COVID vaccine.

“I’m hoping that we’ll have a conversation (Friday) and bring back the bylaw to ensure the health and safety of all Calgarians,” he said Thursday.

Face coverings are still currently required in any city-operated facilities, including recreation centres.

Provincial rules require masks on public transit, in taxicabs and in ride-hailing vehicles.
Vaccinations

Some, including mayoral candidate Jan Damery, have been calling for the city to impose its own city-wide proof of vaccination policy in the absence of a provincial “vaccine passport” system like ones that have been rolled out in Manitoba, Ontario, B.C and Quebec.

But Nenshi said while council has the authority to require Calgarians be immunized against COVID to access city facilities, broadening that mandate to private businesses is trickier territory. Plus, the city would have to purchase an app or create its own system for verifying vaccination status.

Another topic the committee will tackle Friday is requiring vaccination for city employees.

Officials are currently working on a system for regular, mandatory rapid tests for unvaccinated employees. But the City of Calgary hasn’t gone as far as some municipalities like Toronto, which now requires employees to be fully vaccinated or face discipline, including dismissal.

Calgary also has the option of returning to a state of local emergency. The city ended the previous state of emergency in mid-June after more than six months — by far the longest in Calgary’s history.

Nenshi said the enhanced co-ordination provided by a state of local emergency is essentially already happening, after 19 months of coping with the pandemic. Still, it’s a lever the city could choose to pull.

For now, he said regardless of any possible council decisions, he encourages Calgarians to wear masks in public spaces to help stem the spread of COVID-19.

“Whether or not there is a law, do the right thing for your own safety and the safety of those around you and wear a mask.”

Bell: Kenney's UCP, the COVID tire fire and a decision on masks

Author of the article:Rick Bell
Publishing date:Sep 03, 2021 • 
Premier Jason Kenney and Health Minister Tyler Shandro reveal the Open for Summer Plan as Alberta crosses the 70 percent first dose COVID-19 vaccine uptake on June 18, 2021. PHOTO BY SHAUGHN BUTTS /Postmedia

Get out those masks. Wash them good. Best be prepared.

Now nothing is certain with the government of Premier Jason Kenney until top public health doc Deena Hinshaw and/or Health Minister Tyler Shandro and/or the big man himself gives the official pronouncement from on high.

But it is said bringing back the provincial must-wear-a-mask-indoors law made the final cut, a.k.a. the shortlist of options for Kenney and his crew of COVID-19 decision-makers to chew over.

We will see where it lands when the dust settles.

You see, there was a long and drawn-out gabfest of United Conservative members of the legislature Thursday.

I know. I sat outside Calgary’s MacDougall Centre, the government’s southern Alberta HQ, the better part of Thursday afternoon hoping someone would come out and say something.

I went back to the keyboard empty-handed.

In person and by computer, the UCP politicians wrangled over what to do about COVID.

They jawed over it. They pushed and pulled and wrestled not only with the virus but with the politics of the situation.

We are a little more than a couple months and a universe away from Kenney’s proclamation of Best Summer Ever, when almost all restrictions were sent packing, the worst was thought to be over, far better times were ahead and the Best Autumn Ever and the Best Winter Ever would follow.

All that was missing was the Mission Accomplished sign.

For some in the Kenney ranks, sad, shocked, disheartened, gut-punched, it now feels closer to Mission Impossible.

Overall, Alberta’s COVID numbers are the worst in the country. The number of people in hospital with COVID is going up, along with the number of people in intensive care.

It is also known Alberta Health Services has told the Kenney government the capacity for hospitals to handle another wave of COVID is considerably less than we were told in the past.

It has shrunk

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Dr. Heather Patterson was photographed outside the Foothills Hospital ER where she works on March 15, 2021. Gavin Young/Postmedia

The Red Zone, where the doo-doo hits the fan and it’s crunch time in the hospitals, is closer than previously thought.

Maybe the white flag would have to be raised over Kenney’s best-laid plans. If not a surrender, there would need to be a retreat.

It would be a bitter pill to swallow.

One wag painted Thursday’s UCP political huddle as a real tire fire, plenty of heat generated. Tire fires are hard to control, tough to extinguish and toxic.

Some people will be real steamed if we go back to masks, including individuals among the seven out of 10 eligible Albertans fully vaccinated who have done what they were told and hoped for better.

Others will speak of freedom.

No one is expecting Kenney’s government to roll out a vaccine passport as the other big provinces have done, where only the fully vaccinated can go to bars, restaurants, concerts and the like.

The fully vaccinated will wear masks like everyone else, if that’s how the ball bounces.

The final choices are reported to have got the once-over by Kenney and his crew of COVID decision-makers Thursday. But more discussion with his inner circle is expected Friday morning.

We await the final verdict on what is known as Take Out The Trash Day, the time to deliver bad news when fewer souls are paying attention, the Friday before a long weekend.

Among other things getting a serious look apparently include asking the unvaccinated to limit their socializing.

Also, putting in an earlier last call on booze service in bars and restaurants.

Those look like they’re getting a green light. But again, no confirmation from those who wield the thumbs up or down.

One trial balloon is thought to have been shot down: Paying people to get the jab.

Was $50 the amount of the payout? Was $100 considered?

Anyway, that brainwave bit the dust as of press time.

On Friday, we may also see what’s in the crystal ball for where COVID-19 could be headed in this province

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NDP leader Rachel Notley shows off her plan for a vaccine passport at a press conference in Calgary, Alberta. PHOTO BY DAVE DEGAGNE & BRAD GIBBONS /jpg

Meanwhile at Calgary’s McMahon Stadium, where you’ll need to be fully vaccinated to see the Stamps through this football season, NDP Leader Rachel Notley backs a vaccine passport.

Notley says it is almost beyond the ability of words to describe how the Kenney government went missing as COVID ramped up.

She says Kenney is perfectly entitled to take time off but somebody should have been in charge.

The NDP leader fails to mention with this government, Kenney is the all-knowing ventriloquist.

And, as you know, when the ventriloquist is away, no dummy can speak.

rbell@postmedia.com

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

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

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

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


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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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



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

Foothills County opposition

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

masmith@postmedia.com

Twitter: @meksmith