Monday, June 19, 2023

Central Alberta records ‘tremendous’ amounts of rain; flooding a concern
ALBERTA IS THE BIBLE BELT
FIRST FIRE THEN FLOODS
Story by Emily Mertz • Yesterday 


Water accumulates in Edmonton at 34 Street and 69 Avenue on Monday, June 19, 2023, after heavy rain fall Sunday.© Global News

Edmonton saw nearly half of the average amount of rain it usually sees for all of June in just one day.

As of 6 p.m. Sunday, the city had recorded up to 38 millimetres of rainfall. For Edmonton, the June average is 77 mm.

“We’ve seen a tremendous amount of rain so far in the city and over the course of just Sunday," said Global Edmonton weather specialist Phil Darlington.

Darlington pointed out that the University of Alberta weather station has recorded about 129 mm of rainfall so far this June.

Some private rain gauges recorded over 40 mm of rain by Sunday night. Over the course of 24 hours, some parts of Edmonton recorded nearly 80 mm of rain.

Video: Edmonton weather forecast: Monday, June 19, 2023

“We’ve already exceeded our June normal, which is very interesting considering we started the month off well below normal," said Sara Hoffman, a meteorologist for Environment and Climate Change Canada.

She said the first two weeks of June were incredibly dry. Calgary recorded zero precipitation and Edmonton recorded just 0.5 mm.

“So really, over the past six days, we’ve seen a month’s worth of rain -- and more -- fall in the Edmonton region," Hoffman said.

“This amount of rain, at this time, especially for west-central portions of the province, is a little bit unusual and not as common. These rainfall amounts in 24 hours are definitely not the norm.”

Much of central and northern Alberta also saw a lot of rainfall thanks to this significant low-pressure system.

“The most rain fell west of us in Yellowhead County, around Hendrickson Creek and the Edson area," Hoffman added.

Accumulated precipitation amounts (over an approximately 48-hour period) as of noon Monday were:

Hendrickson Creek: 132.8 mm

Carrot Creek: 128 mm

Evansburg: 108 mm

Edson: 107.5 mm

Edmonton area: 52-76 mm

Jasper: 73.5 mm

“The dichotomy of how it started and how it is right now is kind of giving us whiplash," Hoffman said.

"It started off so hot and dry. Now we’re well below normal temperatures, with some portions of the province seeing a crazy amount of precipitation.”

Environment Canada still had rainfall warnings in effect Monday for much of central and western Alberta, including places like Yellowhead County. The weather agency said those regions could see between 40 and 80 mm of rain.

"A long period of heavy rain continues," Environment Canada said. "Widespread rain amounts of 50 to 80 mm have already fallen, with some areas receiving over 100 mm so far.

"Heavy downpours can cause flash floods and water pooling on roads. Localized flooding in low-lying areas is possible."


When considering what they've already seen in the last couple days, that could add up to more than 120 mm total, Darlington said.

The town of Edson, where residents were just allowed to return home after being forced out by wildfire, declared a local state of emergency Monday due to heavy rainfall and flooding.

The town said crews were out with pumps, directing water to avoid flooding issues. Residents experiencing flooding in their homes are being told to call 780-723-6300.

"Crews are extremely busy right now and may not be able to respond right away," town officials said in a post on Facebook.

"Once our main office lines are open again, please contact Infrastructure and Planning to make sure you’re on the tracking list of flooded properties.

"Please stay away from creeks, streams, and other bodies of water right now. We are monitoring Hillendale Pond, Centennial, and other areas and trying to mitigate issues as best we can."

According to Alberta weather station data, the Edmonton Blatchford station accumulated about 52 mm of rain between June 16 and 19. Over the same time period, the Carrot Creek daily station recorded nearly 85 mm.

Bruce Webb, a rancher in Carrot Creek, said the flooding happened really quickly.

"It (Lobstick River) was dry – nothing flowing through it or nothing. Just overnight – like late (Sunday) afternoon around supper it was just a little stream and (Monday) morning it’s all flooded.”

Video: Flooding in western Alberta after heavy rainfall

He said he can see how high the water is from his house.

"Just overnight... It’s flooded a big area of it.

“I haven’t seen what it’s done to my crop fields yet.”

It's as bad as he's ever seen for this time of year.

“Usually in the spring and spring runoff, but not as big as this. This has been quite a few years since we’ve had this much rain," Webb said.

Video: Rare June snowfall warning in the Rocky Mountains, Marmot Basin shares snow photos

There were six 24-hour rainfall records set: Bretton, Camrose, Edmonton, Edson, Elk Island and Grande Prairie.

“For the higher elevations in the Rocky Mountains, this actually fell as snow," Hoffman said. "So we’ve had some accumulating snow especially on Highway 93 and portions of Jasper, Nordegg.

"At this time of year, most people have their summer tires on, so if you’re planning to be in the Rocky Mountains for the next couple of days here, you’ll have to drive to conditions because there’s snow on the roads.”

“Conditions in Jasper are very snowy right now," said Brian Rode, vice-president of Marmont Basin, on Monday at 11:30 a.m.

"It’s been snowing probably for about seven or eight hours now.

"We’ve got a foot on the ground up in Marmont Basin and some trees down in Jasper, so lots of snow but it looks like the weather is going to be sunny here in a few days," Rode said.

High streamflow advisories were also in place for much of central and western Alberta Monday, including for tributaries of the North Saskatchewan River (from Rocky Mountain House to the city of Edmonton, mainstem within the city of Edmonton), the Swan Hills watershed, the Peace River Basin (all streams in the Smoky River Basin) and the Athabasca River Basin (Pembina River Basin).

According to Alberta Rivers, water level rises in the tributaries of over 1.2 metres are possible but no flooding impacts are expected at this time.

Water levels of the North Saskatchewan as it flows through Edmonton are expected to peak late Wednesday into early Thursday, rising 1.5 metres more.

"This may impact boat launches as well as the docks near Dawson Park, Edmonton riverboat."

There was also a flood watch for the Athabasca River Basin (parts of McLeod River near Whitecourt and Paddle River near Barrhead).

Edmonton is no longer under any rainfall alerts, but there's still a risk of rain over the next several days.

Panex Oil and Gas controller Brenda Toews arrived at work on Monday to six inches of water in the Edmonton shop.

The building, located at 37 Street and 69 Avenue in Edmonton, experienced a bit of flooding on Thursday, Toews said, but they were able to sweep it out with brooms.

EPCOR drained it on Friday, she said, but the water returned Monday with a vengeance.

“Now we’ve got five pumps pumping out the water as fast as we can because sweeping it wasn’t working," Toews said.

“It’s really hard to weld when you’re standing in water. So we have no production and I’m paying all my welders to sweep water."

She said it's very frustrating.

"Stressful because we’re going to miss deadlines… and stressful that no one’s being held accountable."

Toews thinks the flooding is connected to a train track and ditch behind the shop.

“I’ve been here 23 years and it’s never happened before. Obviously there’s a big issue. It’s going to continue happening until someone decides what’s wrong.”

Video: What homeowners should watch for when it rains

When the rain started really coming down Sunday, Charity Sagart knew her older home might have some issues.

“Last night, of course, it was flooding outside. The (basement) carpet was saturated with water so I just lifted it up and cut through the drywall and saw a little bit of a crack and followed it up and it’s there."

She found a crack in her foundation so she called to have it assessed and repaired Monday.

“We’re getting over 100 calls a day," said Todd Ivanochko, president of Shield Foundation Repair.

“This is just that time of year. You get a month’s worth of rain in less than three days.”

He said the most common issues are deficiencies in foundation walls, vertical cracks, leaking snap ties (the wires going through the foundation) and honeycombing (when the concrete separates and becomes porous).

“Water can be terrible. It not only wrecks the drywall, it’ll wreck the baseboards, it can wreck your flooring, it can damage any furniture in the area, and if you don’t catch it right way, it can create mould and other issues.”

“I’m in homes that were built in 2023. I’m in homes that were built in 1910. It doesn’t matter.

"We live in an environment that has a very high plastic clays, which means the more moisture you get, the more the ground swells (and) the less moisture you get, the more it shrinks. So the house is always wiggling and moving," Ivanochko said.

He added that if homeowners notice water damage, they should try to contain the water and minimize its impact by rolling up carpet and moving any belongings away.

“People should pay attention to their downspouts and where they’re going, any negative sloping grating towards the house, that’s just encouraging more water to go up against the foundation wall.”

Fire to floods: Edson declares local state of emergency due to massive rainfall

Story by Karen Bartko • Yesterday 

Heavy rainfall caused Bench Creek through Centennial Park to flood and become a lake as the town of Edson dealt with flooding on Monday, June 19, 2023.© Credit: Edson Mayor Kevin Zahara via Twitter

To say it's been a trying few weeks for the people of Edson, Alta., may be an understatement.

After being forced to evacuate twice in the the span of a month due to wildfires fuelled by dry conditions, residents in the town about 180 kilometres west of Edmonton are now dealing with an opposite extreme: too much water.

"We asked for rain and boy, did we get it. Way too much and if it wants to stop now, I'm thinking we would be very happy about that," Edson Mayor Kevin Zahara said Monday afternoon.

"Really shocking. From one extreme to the next."

More than 105 millimetres (mm) of rain has fallen in Edson in the past 48 hours and Zahara said the bulk of it — about 85 mm — came over the course of couple of hours Monday morning.

"Which is the types of rainfall you would see over a period of a month. So our infrastructure — no town infrastructure, city infrastructure — can handle that much water at that amount of time."

Late Monday afternoon, Yellowhead County issued an emergency alert for flash flooding.

"We are experiencing heavy rainfall resulting in overland flooding, snow accumulation, fallen powerlines, and in some areas, power outages," the Alberta Emergency Alert issued at 4:19 p.m. said.

People were advised to avoid driving through flooded areas, stay away from downed power lines and be prepared for outages.

Just before 6 p.m., the county also said part of a hamlet about 60 kilometres south of Edson and Hinton was being told to evacuate.

An evacuation order is being issued for residents in Lower Robb due to heavy rainfall. They were told to head to a reception centre up the road at the Robb Multiplex/Curling Hall.

As of 1 p.m., the town of Edson said 13 properties had reported flooding but the number is expected to change. Zahara said he's never seen this much rain or flooding in the community.

During a update in which a state of local emergency was declared by the town due to heavy rainfall and flooding, Zahara became overwhelmed with emotion.

"Listen, folks. This has been incredibly difficult the last number of weeks..." he said, choking up and having to pause to collect himself.

"Today is hard to watch, to see people struggling with their homes... But I am incredibly proud of our staff here at the Town of Edson and our emergency responders. Thank you," he said through tears.

Zahara said residents are dealing with flooded basements and homes and the flooding is taxing the town's already exhausted resources.

"We know this is a lot to deal with right now."

All available staff in the town have pivoted to deal with the flooding.

"We have every available resource within the Town of Edson deployed right now. Many of them were working during the fires as well. So they are a bit taxed and we are looking at bringing additional resources in," Zahara said.

Phone landlines and internet were also down in the town Monday, which the community noted was an issue with Telus and the telecommunications company was working to fix it.

By declaring the state of local emergency, Zahara said the town will be in contact with the Alberta Emergency Management Agency to get more resources in to help, as well as requesting assistance from surrounding municipalities.

"We're going to be reaching out to our neighbouring municipalities if they can help support us with some crews, to help our teams to be able to divert this water," Town CAO Christine Beveridge said during the update.

Some roads have been closed and pumps have been set up to deal with localized flooding in Edson, she added.

The Edson landfill is also closed until further notice due to deteriorating road conditions and bridge concerns, the town said later in the afternoon.

The town noted the storm surge being experienced Monday is unprecedented, adding the majority of the sewer system was designed back in the 1960s and 1970s and is undersized for today's needs.

"No amount of infrastructure funding and infrastructure upgrades would deal with this kind of rainfall over this short of a period of time," Zahara said.

The town said once the system becomes overwhelmed, roads become the natural path for runoff to any one of the three creeks that flow through Edson.

With the past few days of continual rainfall, the ground has soaked up as much as moisture as it could, and Edson said the waste treatment system is running at capacity.

"We have pumps that are diverting sanitary past the (sewage) treatment plant to holding ponds to relieve the pressure on our system," Beveridge said.

"We've had over 85 millimetres of rain in a very short time and obviously we're trying our best to minimize the damage."

The mayor shared a photo on social media showing Bench Creek through Centennial Park had overflowed its banks and turned into a lake, with water levels reaching a pedestrian bridge that runs through the park in the middle of town.

Beveridge said a "beaver specialist" has been called in to free blockages (presumably caused by beaver dams) downstream on the creek.

An Environment Canada rainfall warning is in effect across much of western Alberta as a long period of heavy rain continues.

Widespread rain amounts of 50 to 80 mm have fallen with some areas receiving over 100 mm so far, the national weather agency said Monday afternoon.


Edmonton itself saw nearly half of the average amount of rain it usually sees for all of June in just one day.


Video: Heavy rain flooding basements in Edmonton: ‘It’s heartbreaking’

A noon update from Environment Canada said Hendrickson Creek near Grande Cache has received 132.8 mm of rain, while Carrot Creek got 128 mm. Edson is located between those two communities.

Additional amounts of 40 to 80 mm are expected before rain tapers off Tuesday night, the government said.


It was just last Thursday the roughly 8,000 residents of the town in Yellowhead County were allowed to return home, six days after being ordered to evacuate.

On June 9, a massive wildfire sped towards the western Alberta town, fuelled by high temperatures and winds.

That evacuation of both the town and much of the county came a month after a nearly identical situation in early May.

Monday's town update was actually supposed to be a wildfire update but that is no longer the main threat to the community.

"At this point in time, we will have a further update later this week as the water is now our issue over fire," Beveridge said, adding 84 mm of rain has fallen at the head of the wildfire as of Monday morning.

"We still can't let our guard down as as when conditions dry, we'll start to see more risk again. But at this moment in time, it's really about the water."

The flooding comes as the town is still working to get back to normal after the wildfire evacuations.

Beveridge praised the patience of residents and the efforts of workers to re-open stores and restore services and utilities.

She said ATCO Gas has gotten 3,400 homes back online since last week. She thanked all the help provided by other municipalities in recent weeks, including the City of Edmonton which opened a reception centre.

"It's second-to-none when it comes to how our residents were treated. It's just been ... amazing."

The wildfire danger is low in the Edson area now and while the fire burning near town is still classified as out of control, Alberta Wildfire said little fire spread is forecasted due to the mild weather.

"I wish we would have had some of this rain a few weeks ago," Zahara said.

"Obviously, this is going to help our wildfire situation, but has brought a whole bunch of new problems to our community."

Zahara said administration would have a further update on Tuesday.




FIRE AND FLOODS HAVE PLAGUED ALBERTA SINCE THE RALPH KLEIN DAYS

Ralph Klein attended the 1995 Bilderberg meeting while floods ravished the south of the province and forest fires decimated the North. It was a good time for a trip abroad. He was invited by long standing Bilderberg Steering Committee member and international corporate criminal; Conrad Black.



EPA sued over reapproval of toxic herbicides using Agent Orange chemical

Story by Tom Perkins •  The Guardian

Photograph: Maika Elan/AP© Provided by The Guardian

Public health groups are suing the US Environmental Protection Agency over the reapproval of two toxic herbicides made with an active ingredient in Agent Orange, a chemical weapon deployed by the US to destroy vegetation in the Vietnam war, and which caused huge health problems among soldiers and Vietnamese residents.

The federal suit alleges the EPA’s science shows the human health risks and harm to endangered species associated with widely spreading the chemical on US cropland, but the agency failed to properly calculate those risks during the reapproval process. The herbicide is also prone to damaging non-GMO crops or vegetation on neighboring fields.

Related: EPA accused of failing to regulate use of toxic herbicides despite court order

The suit asks a federal judge to order the agency to rescind its approval and recalculate the environmental and health risks using proper methodology.

“[The herbicides] are highly toxic and have devastating impacts on wildlife and rural communities that live near sprayed fields,” said Kristina Sinclair, an attorney with the Center for Food Safety. The non-profit brought the suit with Pesticide Action Network North America, and Alianza Nacional de Campesinas.

It comes after a federal court invalidated the herbicides’ previous approval in late 2020, but the EPA still “rushed” to reapprove the herbicides, the complaint alleges.

The chemical 2,4-D, is used in Enlist One and Enlist Duo, which are applied to fields with corn, soybeans and cotton genetically engineered to resist the herbicides. It is considered a likely carcinogen by the World Health Organization, and, among other human health effects, is linked to non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, birth defects and respiratory problems.

The chemical is also thought to harm hundreds of endangered species including butterflies, birds, fish, deer, panthers and bats. It works by attacking the roots and leaves of weeds and causing them to produce unwanted cells, not unlike inducing cancer to kill or hobble it.

The suit also alleges the products’ approval threatens to increase the spread of new herbicide-resistant weeds because the EPA failed to properly mitigate risks, which will make it harder for farmers to manage troublesome weeds.

One of the Enlist products also uses glyphosate, a controversial and highly toxic ingredient linked to cancer and subject to another lawsuit over EPA approval.

The EPA first approved Enlist One and Duo for use in several states in 2014, and since then has approved its application across much of the US. The products are now widely used, but were up for a registration renewal in 2021 that triggered a health review. The EPA based its health and environmental impact assessments on earlier usage levels, which the environmental groups say dramatically underestimate the threat.

The products were spread on about 1.5m acres of cropland in 2018, and the weed killer’s manufacturer, Corteva, reported that use has since tripled, the complaint states.

Enlist is sometimes applied to the ground near the base of a plant and also sprayed over the top of farmland. While both methods cause harm because the chemicals accumulate in the environment and run off into waterways, spraying the herbicide makes it more prone to drifting into neighboring fields.

The groups also allege that EPA violated the Endangered Species Act because the products threaten endangered species in rural areas across the US, but the agency did not properly consult with expert wildlife agencies.

Sinclair characterized the move as an attempt to “skirt” the law, and said it was unclear why the EPA seems so determined to allow the use of the active ingredient for Agent Orange on cropland.

“I do not know and I wish I could tell you, but that’s why we are challenging it,” she added.











































https://files.libcom.org/files/Bookchin%20M.%20Our%20Synthetic%20Environment.pdf

Our Synthetic Environment. Murray Bookchin. 1962. Table of contents. Chapter 1: THE PROBLEM. Chapter 2: AGRICULTURE AND HEALTH.


What if things could turn out differently? How the multiverse got into our heads and didn't let go

IT'S  NOT META (R)(C)(TM) 
IT'S THE QUANTUM UNIVERSE


What if things could turn out differently? How the multiverse got into our heads and didn't let go© Provided by The Canadian Press

“Let’s do things differently this time.”

Those are the first words you hear in this month’s “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” an otherworldly meditation on multiple realities. The message is clear from the get-go: We have choices. You are you, sure. But wait — you might also be you and you and you.

The world is a stressful, sometimes lonely place. But what if things could turn out another way? What if, somewhere, they had? Enter the realm of the multiverse and alternate realities, one of the most glorified pop culture canvases — and a repository for the ache and longing of living in an era of uncertainty.

“The cultural assumption used to be that the world we live in is the way it is, and that’s the only way it could be,” says Douglas Wolk, who read 27,000 Marvel comics for his book, “All of the Marvels.”

“What has happened in culture,” Wolk says, “is that people are saying, ‘Well, no. This consensus reality is not how things have to be.’”

The notion of exploring life’s twists and turns through alternate timelines has been around for a while, albeit in varying guises.

“It’s a Wonderful Life” sent George Bailey tumbling into a timeline where he’d never been born to reveal his true impact. In the decades since, that notion has accelerated — a rise in stories that consider events both fictional and real, extrapolating different choices.

What if the South had won the Civil War (“CSA: The Confederate States of America”)? What if Germany and Japan had won World War II (“The Man in the High Castle”)? What if John F. Kennedy hadn’t been assassinated (“11/22/63”)?

Fictional worlds are more malleable. Imaginary characters — particularly beloved ones with established stories — are toyed with in books, TV shows and movies that airlift them out of one life and into another. It's a canvas that cuts across genres, from rom-com (1998’s “Sliding Doors”) to near-musical (2019’s Beatles jukebox “Yesterday”).

You have the reality where Spider-Man never married M.J. (Marvel Comics’ “Brand New Day”); the universe where a Ben Affleck Batman never existed but the Michael Keaton Batman stuck around and got old (“The Flash”); and the “mirror universe” of “Star Trek” that reveals the baser instincts of beloved characters.

“It’s a way to explore a problem that’s never actually happened in the main story,” sums up Nic Lemire, a California teenager who co-hosts the occasional “Marvel Mondays” podcast with his mother (a former Associated Press film critic).

One crowning example of multiverse success: The Oscar-sweeping “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” which showed all the different lives Michelle Yeoh’s main character might have lived — with the point being that across the multiverse, her family remains a family.

These works are united by one theme: There are always possibilities, for better and for worse, and exploring them is entertaining, enlightening and escapist. That’s no small thing in a post-COVID world where convulsive change can seem the only constant.

“We’re bombarded with things that seem arbitrary, random,” says Hannah Kim, an assistant professor of philosophy at Macalester College. “The number of difficult developments the past few years — the pandemic, political upheaval, effects of climate change, etc. — leave the anxiety-riddled person with the nagging feeling that this all could have been otherwise.”

Exploring the question of “what if” continues to be lucrative — there's even an entire Marvel show called “What If...?” While multiple universes may start to feel spread thin as a plot device, the trope isn't going away.

After all, if you can remix popular characters while retaining the potential for a reset in a “prime universe,” what is there to lose? Well, there's this: If everything is reversible, how high can the stakes really be?

“It narratively lets you have your cake and eat it too — you can kill off the character, have an emotional death scene and then bring the character back from another universe,” says Matt Ruff, whose 9/11 novel, “The Mirage,” posits an alternate universe that flips aggressors, victims and prejudices.

“If everything’s possible, the choices are less interesting. The consequences don’t matter all that much,” Ruff says. “Part of engaging in the real world is engaging with the fact that there’s no magical solution.”

That, though, may be precisely why the notion resonates. Humans have always wanted to try on other outfits, other outcomes, other lives. Technology has enabled people to obtain most anything from the world’s bounty within 48 hours. So why not thousands of stories with thousands of possible endings? What does that do to our relationship with our stories?

“You are looking at a piece of a bigger cultural picture that provides a constant barrage of cultural images that reinforce this idea that we can be better versions of ourselves,” says Colgate University sociologist David Newman, who has written a book on second chances. “People want to believe that when we have a problem, the problem is fixable.”

There’s one Marvel Comics offshoot, “Marvel 1602,” in which Earth’s mightiest superheroes exist at the beginning of the 17th century.

“I posit we are in a universe which favors stories,” Fantastic Four leader Reed Richards says. “A universe in which no story can ever truly end; in which there can only be continuances.”

However it might play out, that’s a universe full of possibilities. And judging from the past two decades, it’s good business as well to keep on asking: What if?

___

Ted Anthony, director of new storytelling and newsroom innovation for The Associated Press, has been writing about American culture since 1990. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/anthonyted

Ted Anthony, The Associated Press
UK
Tory Michael Gove to ban councils from boycotting Israeli goods

Edward Malnick
Sat, June 17, 2023

Michael Gove

Michael Gove has warned that boycotts of Israeli goods lead to “appalling anti-Semitic rhetoric and abuse”, as he prepared to unveil legislation preventing councils from conducting their own “foreign policy”.

On Monday, the Communities Secretary will introduce a Bill banning all public bodies from imposing their own boycott or divestment campaigns on foreign countries and territories.

The legislation was promised in the Conservatives’ 2019 manifesto following a series of local council motions backing the BDS (boycott, divestment and sanction) movement in public procurement contracts or pension schemes.

The BDS movement calls for public and private sector bodies to take action against Israel in support of Palestine and has led to many boycotts of Israeli companies around the world.
‘Simply wrong’

Mr Gove, the Cabinet minister responsible for local government, told The Telegraph: “It is simply wrong that public bodies have been wasting taxpayers’ time and money pursuing their own foreign policy agenda.

“The UK must have a consistent approach to foreign policy, set by UK Government.

“These campaigns not only undermine the UK’s foreign policy but lead to appalling anti-Semitic rhetoric and abuse. That is why we have taken this decisive action to stop these disruptive policies once and for all.

“My message to these organisations is to get on with your job and focus on delivering for the public.”

Under the legislation, ministers will be able to conduct investigations into suspected breaches of the ban.

Public bodies that break the new rules will face “significant” fines, said Mr Gove’s department.

Before 2019, Leicester City Council, Swansea City Council and Gwynedd Council all passed motions to boycott produce from “illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank, until such time as Israel complies with international law and withdraws from Palestinian-occupied territories”.

Split with Labour

Tory sources believe the legislation – the Economic Activity of Public Bodies Bill – may open up a split with Labour over the issue of councils being free to impose such boycotts.


In an interim report published by Labour’s National Policy Forum in 2020, with a foreword by Sir Keir Starmer, the party’s shadow Foreign Office team “publicly stated that annexation is profoundly wrong ... and called for a ban [on] goods from the illegal settlements in the West Bank”.


Jeremy Corbyn, Sir Keir’s predecessor as Labour leader, publicly supported targeted action against settlements in the West Bank and has described banning BDS by councils as an “attack on local democracy”.

A government source said: “Will Labour vote to end the politics of division and back our new laws? Or is Starmer too weak to take on the hard Left of his party?”

The Levelling Up and Communities Department said that the legislation would stop Israeli businesses being targeted by public sector boycotts that risk “community tensions and a rise in anti-Semitism”.

The legislation will not affect sanctions imposed by the UK Government, such as those on Russia and Belarus, said officials.
UK
Social housing activist compelled to decline MBE as crisis ‘should not exist’

Hannah Cottrell, PA
Sat, June 17, 2023 



An activist who highlights the health and safety of tenants living in social housing across the UK said he has been “compelled” to decline an offer to become an MBE.

Kwajo Tweneboa, 24, took to social media to say he was offered an MBE last month, but made the decision to decline it – saying he could not receive the title off the back of an issue which “should never have existed”.

Mr Tweneboa, from Mitcham, uses his online platform to highlight the issues of tenants living in social housing across the country, but he has also raised problems for those living in private and temporary accommodations.

Mr Tweneboa speaks out for tenants who feel their living conditions are unsafe, which can pertain to black mould, leaks, flooding, asbestos, pests and rodents, or other circumstances where they feel their rights are being challenged.

In a statement posted to Twitter, Mr Tweneboa said he felt “compelled” to turn down the offer, adding that some people across the UK are living in what he said could only be described as “slum conditions”.



Mr Tweneboa’s statement reads: “I want to start by thanking whoever chose to nominate me, as I have no doubt it came from a good place.

“So much grief and suffering has happened as a result of the poor state of Housing in the UK, with the vulnerable and poorest most ignored.

“Some living in, what can only be described as: slum conditions.

“On the 14th of June 2017, 72 innocent men, women and children, tragically – and prematurely – lost their lives in Grenfell Tower, through no fault of their own.

“A disaster that never should have happened.

“Since then, campaign groups like Grenfell United, Shelter and many others have stood side by side demanding systemic change.

“While brave tenants have shared their own experiences, in order to highlight the sheer lack of progress and accountability since Grenfell, many continue to suffer…

“Therefore, I cannot accept being honoured or receiving a title off the back of an issue, which realistically, should never have existed, and in saying that, I felt compelled to turn it down.”

Mr Tweneboa’s statement added that he has written to the Prince and Princess of Wales to inform them of his decision and to express his interest in working with them to raise awareness surrounding the social issues which he said cause “needless suffering to minority groups across the UK”.

He continued, saying he wished to acknowledge the Prince of Wales’ recent work surrounding homelessness.

“It can only be positive to see meaningful change across lots of other important Social issues, whilst giving a platform, an ear, and a hand to help those most ignored and neglected,” he wrote.

“Thanks to all who continue to support.”

In 2021, Mr Tweneboa was living in a council house in Mitcham with his two siblings.

At the time, he described the conditions to the PA news agency as being “unlivable” and “not even fit for animals”.

He said he was driven to share pictures on social media of his dilapidated housing out of sheer desperation, images which depicted his rotten kitchen, mouldy wallpaper and waterlogged cabinets.

The housing association responsible took action and as a result, the flat was repaired.

Since then, Mr Tweneboa has become a champion for those living in similar conditions up and down the country, prompting landlords and housing associations to take urgent action and make repairs.
Britt Ekland says Bond girls have better time on set following #MeToo movement


Ellie Iorizzo, PA Senior Entertainment Reporter
Sun, June 18, 2023

James Bond star Britt Ekland said it was “tough” working in the film industry as a woman in the early ’70s before intimacy coaches were introduced on set and the #MeToo movement.

But the 80-year-old actress, who starred as Mary Goodnight opposite Sir Roger Moore in 1974’s The Man With The Golden Gun, said today’s Bond girls do not have as much fun in a world of political correctness.

She told the PA news agency: “There are no more Bond girls, they are Bond women today. They have it with the political correctness and the #MeToo, they have a much better time than we had.

“But I don’t think that the end product is as fun as ours were, because we were pretty and we had good bodies and we didn’t try to look sexy, we just were.

Actress Britt Ekland starred alongside Sir Roger Moore in The Man With The Golden Gun (PA)

“Today, everything is so, ‘Don’t do that because that will upset that side’. We didn’t have any of that.

“We just went out there, we were always in a bikini and all these people are fully dressed, very typical, but it was a job and we did it.

“So I think today the Bond women have it – from a political correctness point of view – in a much better position. But I think we had more fun.”

Ekland, who was speaking around the 50th anniversary of her and the late Christopher Lee’s film The Wicker Man, recalled filming scenes for the horror in Scotland – where she discovered she was pregnant with her second child.

She said: “It was very tough. This was the early ’70s and we didn’t have the kind of facilities that we have today, catering and people taking care of you.

“We certainly didn’t have what they have today, at least in America, an intimacy coach, and that is someone who I think is in the room when you do scenes of a sexual nature.


Ekland with Christopher Lee (PA)

“We had nothing, we just had to make do and it was not filmed in a studio, it was filmed in actual rooms and buildings. There were no regulations in those days.

“That’s why the #MeToo movement took everyone by such a surprise… this has been going on since a long time.

“Maybe today it’s over regulated, I don’t know because I haven’t done a movie for a long time. But it was tough.”

When asked about the changes in Hollywood following the #MeToo movement, Ekland clarified: “Put it this way, it has changed a little bit but not that much.”

Ekland reminisced about filming The Man With The Golden Gun, becoming “great friends” with Maud Adams, who played Andrea Anders, Bond filmmaker Albert “Cubby” Broccoli, as well as Bond himself, Sir Roger.

“He was a fabulous person. He was a real people person and I’m a people person,” she said.


Ekland on the bonnet of an original Aston Martin DB5, an iconic Bond car (PA)

“All of us got along really well. Cubby Broccoli was very friendly and funny and insisted that we all had to have a meal together – spaghetti, Italian meal every weekend.

“He invited the cast and the crew and he wanted me to eat a lot because he felt that I was a little bit too thin. Of course he had seen The Wicker Man and he’d say, ‘Oh, nice boobies, we’ll take her’, and then I arrive on set with the baby and no boobies so he said, ‘You’ve got to eat more’.

“I’m trying to not eat because I had to be in a bikini all the time so we were two forces.”

Ekland – who also appeared in British films Get Carter alongside Sir Michael Caine in 1971 and Scandal with Sir John Hurt in 1989 – admitted she has avoided watching her own films.

“I never really saw my films. I was too shy. I thought it was too scary,” she said.


Ekland attending the 50th anniversary celebration for The Wicker Man at the Picturehouse Central Cinema in London (PA)


“Even today I don’t think I would want to watch my movies. It’s just the way I am. Anyone that has to look at themselves larger than my normal self on a big screen like that, it’s very terrifying, kind of emotionally I don’t want to see that and you feel embarrassed.

“I’m a perfectionist. I could just pick myself apart so that’s why I don’t.”

The Wicker Man 50th Anniversary restoration will be in cinemas on June 21.

"I MAY BE A HEATHEN BUT NOT AN UNENLIGHTED ONE " 
CHRISTOPHER LEE

THE WICKERMAN IS ONE OF MY FAVORITE FILMS

Here's what observers are watching for in Monday's four federal byelections

The Canadian Press
Mon, June 19, 2023 



OTTAWA — Four new MPs are set to be elected to the House of Commons Monday in a handful of byelections that political watchers say could expose rifts within the Conservative party and bring a new Liberal cabinet hopeful into the fold.

The Liberals are expected to hold onto seats in Winnipeg and Montreal, said Philippe J. Fournier, the polling analyst behind the 338Canada polling aggregator website.

The Tories, meanwhile, are poised to hang on in rural Ontario and Manitoba seats, he said — but their margins of victory in both ridings could be insightful for those looking to read the political tea leaves.

The closest thing to a nail-biter will likely occur in Oxford, a mostly rural riding in southern Ontario that has been a Conservative stronghold for nearly 20 years.

Party infighting has led to "the nastiest campaign that we've ever seen in our riding," said Dave MacKenzie, who announced he was stepping down from the seat in December.

"It's divided our party and our community," he said in an interview.

MacKenzie won in the 2021 federal election with nearly 47 per cent of the vote, a 27-point margin over the Liberal candidate.

But his surprise endorsement of this contest's Liberal candidate, whom he calls "an honest guy," has turned heads — and Fournier said it could eat into the Conservatives' support.

"It's probably going to be Conservative win, but the fact that it's close (in polls) has to scare some Conservatives," he said.

"They cannot start losing Ontario seats if they want to win the next general election."

MacKenzie said he believes the Conservative party parachuted its candidate Arpan Khanna into the riding without due process.

He alleged that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and House Leader Andrew Scheer meddled in their local association by influencing the nomination process and taking away grassroots power.

Khanna helped Poilievre's campaign in Ontario during the leadership campaign and ran as a candidate for Scheer in a Brampton riding in 2019.

MacKenzie said Khanna's nomination has led to people cancelling their Conservative memberships and clawing back donations.

He said this should be a wake-up call for Poilievre.

"He's not a bad guy, but he's got some cancer around him and he should shake that stuff out," MacKenzie said.

The party did not respond to a request for comment.

But it's clear that the Conservatives would rather the country focus on Portage-Lisgar, where they are looking to stamp out People's Party of Canada Leader Maxime Bernier's bid to rejoin the House of Commons.

Bernier has said he wants to give his party a more prominent voice and prove that Conservatives are not strong enough on "cultural battles" that supporters care about. He has campaigned against transgender-inclusive policies and vowed to reopen the abortion debate.

In the last federal election, Bernier's candidate got nearly 22 per cent of the vote in Portage-Lisgar. Prominent Conservative Candice Bergen still won with more than half the vote. She announced last fall she was stepping down.

While it's unlikely that Bernier will be elected, Fournier said, the Conservatives will be eying whether or not his party can grow that margin.

Fournier said the Tories' recent promises to "never go" to the World Economic Forum — an international organization that has become a the source of rampant conspiracy theories online — show they are trying to woo back voters who chose the People's Party of Canada last time.

Poilievre himself held a rally in Winkler several weeks ago and revived anti-World Economic Forum slogans, taking aim at Bernier's participation in that event when he was foreign affairs minister under Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper.

Lori Turnbull, an associate professor of political science at Dalhousie University, said she sees this as a key opportunity for Poilievre to show he can rally support from the party's right-most wing.

"That's going to energize people in the Conservative party who are afraid that they are losing votes on the right," she said.

That fear is what led to the ouster of previous leader Erin O'Toole after the last federal election, Turnbull argued.

"It wasn't just because he lost the election. It was because there was the sense that he wasn't doing anything to address the possible bleeding on the right side, and that wasn't gonna be reversed."

Winnipeg South Centre is widely expected to remain a Liberal seat after the death of longtime MP Jim Carr last December.

His son Ben Carr is likely to take his father's seat, Fournier said.

And a prominent Liberal insider, Anna Gainey, is expected to keep Notre-Dame-de-GrĂ¢ce-Westmount red after the retirement of former cabinet minister Marc Garneau.

Gainey is a former party president and served as the policy adviser to two national defence and veterans' affairs ministers.

That experience could put her in a prominent position, suggested Turnbull.

"She's had such a high profile in the party, has been party president and is a good friend of the Trudeaus. Will there be a cabinet position for her?" she said.

"I'd be surprised if she wasn't given a leadership role."

Polls in all four ridings are expected to close at 9:30 p.m. EDT.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 19, 2023.

Mickey Djuric, The Canadian Press
In Labrador, those caring for a town's homeless population face backlash, criticism
REVANCHIST REACTIONARIES CALL IT ENABLING

The Canadian Press
Sun, June 18, 2023 



HAPPY VALLEY-GOOSE BAY, N.L. — On a recent spring day in a sandy church parking lot in Labrador, Vanessa Hamel stopped mid-sentence to lean out of a food truck window and wave to an approaching group of people.

“Whaddaya doin’?” she sang out to them, laughing. They waved and laughed back.

She pulled her head back into the truck -- the local Salvation Army’s Emergency Disaster Relief Vehicle -- and began gathering up bags of ham sandwiches, juices and snacks to hand out to them. They’re homeless and they sometimes get extra, said Hamel, who is a community outreach worker with the church.

A church offering food to those who can't afford it is generally unremarkable. But in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, N.L., it's become controversial. Among Hamel's familiar clients are homeless and transient people who live along the wooded trails that snake through the town. Their numbers have spiked from a few dozen to more than 80 in recent years. As governments and organizations race to find a way to house and care for them, the community has become divided over what will work, and whether help should be offered at all.

"We've been accused of enabling them," Byron Kean, the church's corps officer, said in an interview. He said some people yell at them as they're handing out meals. "There are individuals that will flip us the bird," he said. "But if people need a meal, we're going to provide a meal."

Happy Valley-Goose Bay spreads out from the bank of the Churchill River, a wide expanse of churning water that cuts through central Labrador. The town is home to about 8,000 people. On a recent spring Saturday, there were joggers, cyclists and people riding ATVs on the community's vast trail network.

There is evidence of people living in the woods along the trails in some areas: rumpled tarps, empty food and beer boxes and snuffed-out fire pits. There are more and more young men living among them, and they're more aggressive, Kean said. They steal from local stores, they run into the roads and they break into people's houses, he said.

Families have woken up to find strangers in their homes and garages "coming at (them)," Kean said. "And that's scary."

Beginning in 2021, the provincial government assembled response teams made up of representatives from the town, the RCMP and the region's three Indigenous groups. In March, the province set aside $30 million for a new 30-room emergency shelter with 20 transitional housing bedrooms and 20 affordable supportive housing units. It would also provide addiction and mental health supports, as well as cultural programming -- many of the town's homeless people are from Indigenous communities along Labrador's north coast.

But even that plan has become divisive. Happy Valley Goose Bay Mayor George Andrews said in a recent interview that he and other residents worry the facility will just attract more people to live in the trails.

"A majority of who and what we see causing a concern for us from a public safety perspective are not homeless," he said. "They are folks that have come into our community for a brief period, to come to a hospital appointment, whatever, and they've decided to stay."

Officials with the province's housing corporation said Saturday that work on the housing facility was ongoing.

Andrews said the town's concern is public safety. To that end, the town council asked for more policing and removed public benches along the bike trails because people were gathering around them. The RCMP added more patrols and the province allocated nearly $500,000 for the town to hire private security services. The security guards will be deployed in part near a local school, where the mayor said people on the trails have exposed themselves to children.

Jeff Matthews is frustrated by the objections to the new housing facility and by what he says is a lack of empathy and understanding.

Matthews is the coordinator at the town's Housing Hub, a low-barrier shelter managed by the Nunatsiavut government, which is the Inuit government in northern Labrador. The Hub can accommodate around 10 people, Matthews said. If there are more, the Newfoundland and Labrador Housing Corporation will put them up at the nearby Labrador Inn.

"If you look at the fundamentals of human development, what we need first and foremost is housing. Housing, food, love," he said in a recent interview. "There's a lot of broken pieces here. And I think the public really needs to see the importance of educating themselves on what addiction is, and what trauma is."

Matthews and Bill Dormody, who runs the Labrador Inn, said people accuse the inn staff of "enabling" the transient population. Dormody said, on the contrary, he and his staff are housing and looking after people with complex mental health and addiction issues. They regularly intervene in suicide attempts, some of which still haunt them, Dormody said in an interview.

Two winters ago, two people died outside in the cold -- a man outside the Hub and a woman outside the inn.

Matthews said many of the people living at the Hub, the inn or in the trails descend from survivors of the province's residential schools, the last of which didn't close until 1980. Matthews is Inuk, and his grandparents on his mother's side are residential school survivors, he said.

Inuit communities along Labrador's north coast -- and across Canada -- are plagued by housing shortages and overcrowding. Some of Happy Valley-Goose Bay's transient and homeless people have left unsafe or nonexistent housing in those communities, he said.

And there are few services in northern Labrador. "We've got some clients who are suffering some mental health issues," Matthews said. "It's more safe for them to be in Goose Bay in a homeless setting than to be in their home community with a house and without the mental health supports."

Back at the Salvation Army, Kean said the new housing facility would be a "right step" to address short-term needs and part of what's required to find long-term solutions.

"But we have to somehow speed up the process a little bit to make sure that no more lives are lost in Happy Valley-Goose Bay," he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 18, 2023.

Sarah Smellie, The Canadian Press
Heightened need for clean energy prompts BC Hydro to put call out for new sources


Local Journalism Initiative
Sun, June 18, 2023 

BC Hydro will be issuing a call for new sources of renewable, emission-free electricity, with applications to open in the spring of next year.

The call out, the first to come from BC Hydro in 15 years, has been prompted by an accelerated need for clean energy, said Premier David Eby on Thursday, at a media event at the Tsleil-Waututh Nation administration building in North Vancouver.

Eby said an additional 3,000 gigawatt hours per year of renewable energy, enough electricity to power 270,000 homes in B.C, is needed by 2028 – three years earlier than previously estimated.

“We need to act now to meet this growing demand and to ensure we stay on track with our climate goals,” he said.

In addition, it was announced the province will be providing $140 million to the B.C Indigenous Clean Energy Initiative (BCICEI), a clean-energy funding partnership between the Province of British Columbia, the Government of Canada, and the New Relationship Trust, to support Indigenous-led power projects.

Energy and Mines Minister Josie Osborne said the funding will open up new opportunities for First Nations communities to contribute the renewable electricity needed to power B.C.’s growing economy, and meet the province’s climate targets while keeping rates affordable.

“These projects will generate jobs and economic opportunities that support Indigenous self-determination and advance reconciliation,” she said.

“All over British Columbia there are visionary people who are taking up the electrification challenge with new ideas, innovation and investment. We’re acting today in partnership with First Nations so that we’re prepared to fully seize our advantage and power a clean, prosperous low carbon future for all.”

Eby said it was important to recognize the “incredible potential” of Indigenous-led clean energy projects, noting what had already been accomplished at the Tsleil-Waututh Nation in regards to its solar power system, a project that had been put in place to produce enough power to cover the needs of the local childcare centre, but had grown to become the largest solar power project in Metro Vancouver.

Chief Jen Thomas said the Tsleil-Waututh Nation is committed to reducing its carbon footprint and to addressing climate change issues.

She touched on the solar power system, adding how its 338 panels provide 80 per cent of the energy needed to run the Nation’s administration building, and she noted the energy efficient housing policies the Nation has in place.

“It will take all of us working together to build a more sustainable economy as we broaden our clean and renewable sources of energy through this call for power,” said Chris O’Riley, president and CEO of BC Hydro.

“BC Hydro is committed to meeting the growing and changing needs of our customers and will be working with all levels of government, Indigenous communities, stakeholders and the private sector to make this happen.”

Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.

MKerrLazenby@nsnews.comtwitter.com/MinaKerrLazenby
Mina Kerr-Lazenby, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, North Shore News
Rallying With Union Members, Biden Calls Himself 'Most Pro-Union President' In History

Daniel Marans
Sat, June 17, 2023 

President Joe Biden speaks during a political rally in Philadelphia on Saturday, June 17.

PHILADELPHIA — Speaking on Saturday to more than a thousand union members in his first campaign rally of the 2024 election cycle, President Joe Biden celebrated the work that he’s done to create union jobs and warned union members about the dangers of him not winning a second term.

After walking onstage to Whitney Houston’s rendition of “Higher Love,” Biden waxed lyrical about his kinship with labor unions, noting that wife Jill Biden, a teacher, is a member of the National Education Association and grew up in the Philadelphia area.

“It feels good to be home,” he said.

“A lot of politicians in this country can’t say the word ‘union.’ I’m not one of them. I’m proud to say the word. I’m proud to be the most pro-union president in American history,” Biden said, prompting chants of “four more years.”

Biden went on to enumerate the many policy wins that he has helped deliver for organized labor, including infrastructure legislation, a relief bill that helped fund public sector jobs, a climate bill that is spurring domestic clean energy manufacturing, and his support for organizing rights. Under Biden, the National Labor Relations Board has been especially active in adjudicating fights for union recognition and punishing violations of labor law by employers.

Biden also touted his success defending Social Security and Medicare from cuts during the recent debt ceiling negotiations in Washington. If given a second term, Biden promised to push forward with what he called “Bidenomics” — a progressive alternative to trickle-down economics that focuses on promoting domestic manufacturing and correcting inequities in the tax code, such as the carried-interest loophole that enables super-rich finance executives to pay a 20% tax rate.

“It’s about time the super-wealthy started paying their fair share,” he said.

Former President Donald Trump and others from the growing field of Republican hopefuls vying to take on Biden were notably absent from the speech. Biden did not even hint at any specific candidates.

He instead treated the Republican effort to unseat him as a monolithic threat to working people’s interests. He warned the boisterous group of assembled union members — clad in Biden 2024 T-shirts in the colors of their individual unions — that Republicans could undo his renewable energy investments and other initiatives that are supporting union jobs.

“They’re coming for your jobs,” he said toward the end of his remarks. “They’re coming for your future. They’re coming for the future ability of your kids and grandkids,” he added.

“We’ve got a fight on our hands,” Biden said. “And my question to you is simple: Are you with me in this fight?”

The audience cheered in affirmation.

Indeed, the self-selecting crowd of politically active union members from across Pennsylvania didn’t need much selling on Biden’s presidency.

Bliss Allen, a Lansdowne resident who is participating in the Laborers’ International Union of North America pre-apprenticeship program for young people from marginalized communities, said he was impressed with the infrastructure bill.

“To see him, in this presidency, spend the money dedicated to actually getting our infrastructure — it’s not something that right now he’s going to be recognized for, but it’s something that America is making,” Allen said. “To see now, ‘OK, cool — I’m actually a part of this now.’”

Kevin Niewinski, a member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers from South Philadelphia, told HuffPost after the rally that he appreciated Biden’s call to make wealthier people “pay their fair share.”

“I feel like the working man’s got a shot now, a fair shake,” Niewinski said.

Prior to the rally, Biden was briefed by Pennsylvania Democratic officials on the collapse of part of Interstate 95 in northeastern Philadelphia and took an aerial tour of the damage. In his speech to union members, Biden promised that the federal government would provide all the resources necessary for a speedy rebuilding of the critical transportation artery.

Saturday’s rally was part of a show of force from the Biden campaign and key Democratic interest groups.

The AFL-CIO, the 12.5 million-member federation of labor unions that organized the rally, endorsed Biden on Friday, which it said is the earliest that the federation has ever endorsed a presidential candidate and is nearly a year earlier than when it endorsed Biden in the 2020 election cycle. A number of individual unions also announced their endorsements that day. And earlier this week, an array of environmental groups announced their support for Biden’s reelection bid.

“With labor unions, it brings people together across party lines, and so we can be in an issues-based frame out there at the community level, and really getting people on board,” AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler told a group of reporters after the rally.

In 2016, Trump won a larger-than-normal share of union members, leading Democratic-aligned unions to redouble their efforts to reach out to members about the stakes of having a Democrat in the White House. Memories of that race are still fresh in the minds of union leaders.

“There’s some support among our membership for Donald Trump. I think it’s waned over time,” Shuler said, before making an apparent reference to recent criminal charges facing Trump. “As these legal troubles continue to surface, I think people are asking themselves, ‘Who do we want out there fighting for us?’”

Biden’s recent legislative wins and Democrats’ strong performance in last year’s midterm elections succeeded in quieting doubts about how Biden’s age might affect the 80-year-old’s performance in the general election.

But polling still shows that many Democratic voters do not want him to run again. And the anti-establishment campaign of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has attracted double-digit support in some early primary polls.

A White House official present at Saturday’s rally declined to comment on Kennedy’s bid.

Asked whether the coordinated show of support from labor and other liberal groups was designed to shore up Biden’s weakness with the Democratic base, Shuler insisted that it was solely due to his status as a uniquely dedicated champion for organized labor.

“What’s there to talk about when you have the most pro-union president, who’s standing up, fighting for us?” she asked.

“The policies reflect it, his Cabinet reflects it, his regulatory approach reflects it.”

So, how is Biden more pro-labor than former President Barack Obama?

“There’s some subtlety because he is from the top sending the message to every aspect of the administration … that unions and building from the middle out and the bottom up is the priority,” Shuler said, noting that organized labor now has an official representative in the Department of Commerce, historically a hub for business interests.

“And so it has actually taken hold in every aspect of the administration in a way that’s deeper than ever before.”

In Philly, union members say they don't care about Biden's age: 'I never heard someone who is Catholic say the pope is too old'


Charles R. Davis
Sat, June 17, 2023 

President Joe Biden speaks at a political rally at the Philadelphia Convention Center in Philadelphia, Saturday, June 17, 2023.
AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

President Joe Biden addressed union supporters in Philadelphia on Saturday.


Union members told Insider they are not too concerned about Biden's age or electability.


"I never heard someone who is Catholic say the pope is too old," one union member said.

PHILADELPHIA — Under another president, Jaysin Saxton might not have a job.

A shift supervisor at Starbucks, the 32-year-old was fired last year after speaking out about the effort to unionize his workplace. He was reinstated months later following a complaint filed by the National Labor Relations Board — stacked with new, pro-union appointees since 2021 — with a federal judge ruling that his employer had illegally retaliated against him.

President Joe Biden and his administration have been allies and have given Starbucks workers "a platform, quite frankly," Saxton, who is from Augusta, Georgia, said in an interview, noting that organizers have been invited to the White House. "And because of that, we've been able to mobilize and fight for proposals that could greatly improve our lives."

Biden has largely governed as a friend of labor — its best friend in the years, if not ever, in the eyes of some union supporters. His appointments to the NLRB, which adjudicates disputes between companies and workers, have shifted power to workers. The board has sided not just with Starbucks organizers but has also recently declared that both non-disparagement and non-compete clauses are generally illegal.

Biden's path to reelection depends in part on touting those achievements and turning out union members in November 2024. It also runs through Pennsylvania, where the president spoke Saturday at a rally sponsored by the AFL-CIO, the country's largest union federation, which endorsed his reelection bid this week. Hundred of union members from across the country attended the rally.

"There are a lot of politicians in this country who can't say the word 'union,'" Biden said Saturday afternoon, supporters in colorful union merchandise cheering behind him. "You know I'm not one of them. I'm proud to say the word. I'm proud to be the most pro-union president in American history. I promised you I would be."
Biden needs unions — and Pennsylvania

This native son of Pennsylvania, born in Scranton 80 years ago, has now made no fewer than 10 official stops in the commonwealth since becoming president, and even more informal visits, including a jaunt this past April to the University of Pennsylvania, where his granddaughter, a student, put on an art show.

Biden's latest trip was all about politics and his own political future, which could well be decided by his state of birth. Pennsylvania, with 19 electoral votes up for grabs next year, is not just a bellwether but possibly the key to the White House. In 2016, former President Donald Trump won this swing state by about 48,000 votes; in 2020, the incumbent lost by more than 80,000.

But while Pennsylvania's Democratic Party has performed well in recent years, including the recent midterm elections, which are generally seen as a referendum on the incumbent president — winning the governor's office, sending John Fetterman to the US Senate, and taking over the state house for the first time in a decade — there are concerns among rank-and-file Democrats over whether Biden can repeat his 2020 performance.

Several union members who spoke to Insider tried to address concerns over Biden's age and dismal polling by speaking about the coalition that would propel him to a second term and what that coalition could achieve, emphasizing policy more than the man himself — and contrasting it with the cult of personality formed around some of his rivals.

A nurse from Queens, Mary Samaroo, pointed to the president's executive order, issued in April, that instructs the Department of Health and Human Services to consider minimum staffing requirements for medical facilities such as nursing homes. That would provide welcome relief, Samaroo, a member of the Service Employees International Union, or SEIU, told Insider, describing a status quo where nurses are overworked and patients are denied adequate care.

"Pushing for this safe staffing will give us the ability to ensure that each patient gets the care that they need," Samaroo said. "If we all mobilize around him, he will be able to do what has to be done."

Although Biden can point to some major legislative victories already, including an infrastructure bill that will invest hundreds of millions of dollars in the state, he himself remains stubbornly unpopular, in Pennsylvania and elsewhere: He last enjoyed a favorable approval rating in August 2021, the month that US troops withdrew from Afghanistan.

A recent fall on stage has also served as a reminder of the president's advanced age. Trump, his chief Republican rival, is just three years younger and facing multiple felony charges after trying and failing to overturn his 2020 election loss. But, just over 500 days from the election, Trump is in a statistical dead heat to return to the White House.
The age question

Nora Dumenigo, an immigrant from Cuba who works as a cleaner at Miami International Airport, is supporting Biden "because he has helped us a lot in difficult moments," she said in Spanish, pointing to efforts earlier in his presidency to address the pandemic.

A member of the SEIU, she thinks he offers the best chance to improve pay and health care for laborers like her. Those supporting Trump or other Republican candidates, she argued, have lost touch with workers.

"They are people who are comfortable and who simply think about what benefits them, but do not think about what harms everyone else," Dumenigo said.

But what about his age? Biden would be 82 at the start of a second term, and his periodic trips and gaffes have been fodder for right-wing critics. At Saturday's rally, however, union members insisted it is not a concern — and that the discourse around it is an indictment of the times.

"I think, unfortunately, we live in a culture where we don't honor folks with more experience," Renee Dozier, an electrician from Boston and member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, or IBEW, said in an interview. "He is older, yes, but he has that experience, and he has the wisdom, and he has the discernment. And we need to honor that and use it while we have it."

Mike Brown, a security officer at a local community college and an SEIU member, said his vote was indeed based on the incumbent's long track record in public office. "I'm supporting Joe Biden because he's an advocate for the unions, and he fought for them even before he became president," he said. His age, he suggested, is an asset — and the discussions around it a distraction.

"I never heard someone who is Catholic say the pope is too old," Brown said.