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

.
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

.
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

The political consequences of Kenney's 4th-wave vacation

Alberta premier hasn't been seen by the public in weeks, leaving a vacuum filled with critics and concern

Premier Jason Kenney addresses Albertans about COVID-19 on May 5, 2021, not long before his government declared the province 'open for business' for summer. The premier hasn't been seen by the public in weeks as a fourth wave grips the province. (Andrew Peloso/VEK/Alberta Newsroom)

In Alberta, COVID-19 hospitalizations are up, case counts are up, and anxiety, too. Schools are reopening, some workplaces are returning, vaccinations are lagging. "Best Summer Ever" hats, meanwhile, are still for sale on the United Conservative Party website. 

And there sits an empty podium. 

Taking a casual stroll through social media in Alberta these days, it's hard to ignore a common question: Where is Jason Kenney? Why has the premier been silent in public since Aug. 9, as the delta-driven fourth wave of the pandemic surged? 

The absence appears, for all intents and purposes, to be a direct refutation of everything that's known about communications in a crisis: Get out front, be clear, calm people down, empathize, never leave a vacuum. 

But does it matter? 

Without a guiding voice, citizens, businesses and organizations are left to fill a void, with their own policies and procedures, their own personal decisions or their own misinformation. There are many questions that have been left unanswered in the absence, including the rationale for lifting almost all COVID-19 restrictions this summer. 

Critics of the government have also filled the space left by the premier, ministers and the chief medical officer of health and the message has spiralled well out of the government's control. 

So why then has the premier been missing in action?

Where is Kenney?

Kenney's office says he was simply on a well-deserved vacation and that he was in constant contact with officials. On Wednesday, the office said he had returned to work. It's not known where the premier was.

It was a similar argument laid out by Finance Minister Travis Toews on Tuesday as he spoke to reporters after presenting the province's fiscal update. 

Kenney's last public appearance was 23 days ago, on Aug. 9, when he announced an expansion to the Labatt's brewing plant in Edmonton expected to create 25 jobs. (Alberta Newsroom)

"There has been communication, daily communication around the pandemic and I have full confidence in our chief medical officer of health and our health minister to, at the appropriate time, make themselves available for the press," he said.

"Look, we're in the fourth wave at this point in time. The delta variant is very contagious. Cases are going up. That wasn't unexpected at this point in time."

Kenney's office has not yet responded to questions for this article.

It's hard to argue with the need for a vacation. The premier is not known to be lazy and the pace of the pandemic would be gruelling for any leader. Give the guy a break. 

But it's also hard to understand the timing of it all, or why there hasn't been a minister who stepped up to answer questions for the premier. 

In an article on crisis communication and COVID for doctors published last year by the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, the authors argued that emotional responses to pandemic public health measures require a steady communicative hand.

As the public tires of uncertainty tied to a novel virus, that becomes even more important. 

"This uncertainty can again increase anxiety, stress and fear, causing the public to dismiss risk altogether, or become angry about mitigation strategies," they wrote. 

"Communicating actionable steps for the public to take can help to reduce this anxiety and fear by increasing a sense of agency and personal control."

Without a guiding hand, the vacuum gets filled.

Crisis communication and the vacuum

In the absence of briefings or public appearances by either Kenney or the chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, a group called ProtectOurProvince, which includes physicians critical of the government's pandemic response, has sprung up to offer regular updates. 

Hinshaw has not made a public appearance since Aug. 13, when she delayed the province's plans to lift testing, tracing and isolation measures until at least Sept. 27. 

"We really don't have very far to go before the [health-care] system is completely overloaded, not just because of the number of cases but because of burnout," Dr. Ilan Schwartz of ProtectOurProvince said Monday. 

"I've never seen my colleagues in the ICU more despondent in the last week … in part because this wave is entirely preventable."

Dr. Joe Vipond, who has been critical of the Alberta government's COVID-19 plan, gives a speech to supporters gathered in front of the Foothills hospital. He is part of a group of doctors that have started regular COVID briefings. (Rachel Maclean/CBC)

It's not the kind of message a government would usually allow to dominate the headlines without a response. 

It's also just one side of the coin. 

"The thing is, their absence is not just leaving a void with the pro-vaccination people, it is also leaving a void with the anti-vaccination people," said Janet Brown, a Calgary-based pollster who runs Janet Brown Opinion Research.

She points to the City of Edmonton bringing back a mask mandate and the Calgary Flames requiring proof of vaccination for spectators as two examples of changes being implemented without the province. 

"I mean, if I'm an anti-vaxxer, am I happy that Jason Kenney is not responding to that?" she said.

The opening for critics is especially hard to understand in the context of who Kenney is. 

"Everything I know about politics and Jason Kenney is that Jason Kenney loves the battle, right?" said David Taras, professor of communications studies at Calgary's Mount Royal University.  

"He loves this smoke of war, right? He loves to be engaged and he loves the headlines. And not to be there? Not to be on the field of battle? Very strange."

That's not to say there isn't plenty of speculation as to why.

Why?

Sifting through the theories as to why the premier has been so quiet, some percolate to the top. Chief among them is that Kenney is so unpopular and controversial at this time that either he is maintaining, or has been asked to maintain, a low profile during the tight federal election campaign. 

Kenney has held the lowest approval rating of any premier throughout much of the pandemic and the UCP has trailed the NDP of late in both polls and fundraising.

Brown argues the downside of that keep-away strategy for Kenney far outweighs any positive impact it could have.

There has been speculation that Jason Kenney, right, is keeping a low profile to boost the chances of Conservative Party of Canada Leader Erin O'Toole, left, during a tight federal election campaign. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press, Chris Schwarz/Government of Alberta)

Taras says he can't account for what goes on within the federal Conservative Party, but there would likely be people who would want Kenney to stay out of the picture. Or perhaps Kenney is worried about internal ideological battles within his own UCP.

"The only logic that I can think of is that they don't know what to do, that they're paralyzed," said Taras.

"That they've just sort of trapped themselves in a series of decisions. That he can't get out of that. That he's played his cards poorly, that he's lost the public trust and doesn't know how to regain it."

In June, shortly before his government removed most public health restrictions, Kenney said they did not expect to see a scenario where case counts rose dramatically. His government opened quickly, removed restrictions ahead of any other province and pushed hard to turn the page on the pandemic. 

"If we see any unforeseen circumstances, we will respond to those in due course," he said in June. 

The lack of response and the perception his government is paralyzed could have political consequences for the leader and his party.

The consequences

Brown hasn't conducted any recent polls she can point to that might indicate the impact of Kenney's vacation, but she says she conducted focus groups on Monday night and nobody had anything positive to say about the premier. 

"I was hearing really, really harsh language," she said. 

"But what was so surprising was I was hearing harsh language from people who I would have, in another period in time, expected a more sympathetic tone toward the premier and a conservative party."

It's a snapshot that fits into a larger picture of a party and a leader that are struggling to maintain the support that launched them into government in 2019. 

These are the Best Summer Ever Hats being sold on the United Conservative Party's website for a 'limited time only.' (unitedconservative.ca)

Politics is, after all, a profession of self-promotion and image control. When things get tough, the leader appears with sleeves rolled up, ideally with a hint of crust in the eyes to suggest a sleepless night of policy debates.

When critics attack, you refute, you fight, you defend or demur, but you try to control the message. 

In the middle of a pandemic, you speak to the citizens impacted by every uptick in cases.

Without those responses, the message gets away from you and building trust becomes increasingly difficult.  

"For a government to have gone silent for three weeks, in the middle of a health crisis is ... I can't even come up with a parallel that's even close," said Brown. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Drew Anderson is a web journalist at CBC Calgary. Like almost every journalist working today, he's won a few awards. He's also a third-generation Calgarian. You can follow him on Twitter @drewpanderson. Contact him in confidence at drew.anderson@cbc.ca. Signal contact upon request. CBC Secure Drop: www.cbc.ca/securedrop/


Welcome back to your political problems, Jason Kenney

Twenty-three days.

That’s how long Albertans went without seeing their premier, Jason Kenney, in the flesh as a 4th wave of COVID hit Alberta.

Then suddenly, without any advance warning, Kenney appeared live on Facebook Wednesday night where he took selected questions sent in online from the public.

He made no apology for being away so long, saying he had been on vacation recharging his batteries. He scoffed at critics who complained he has been in hiding since August 9 when he made his last public appearance – and mockingly pointed out he was “hiding in plain view” Wednesday by being on Facebook Live.

Mind you, he could pick and choose the questions on Facebook where he didn’t have to deal with irritating journalists who have a habit of asking followup questions.

Kenney said the 4th wave is a “wave of the unvaccinated” and the COVID Delta variant tends to attack the unvaccinated elderly and although some children might be getting sick, none have died.

You have to think his performance isn’t going to placate his critics.

Kenney’s whereabouts have been the topic of rumour and speculation for weeks.

His office had announced he was on a two-week-long vacation. Considering that Kenney disappeared August 9 – more than three weeks ago –  it would seem time runs at a different pace for Kenney than for the rest of us.

With apologies to Einstein, call it the Special Theory of Political Relativity, where even reality moves differently.

Kenney seemed to be living in an alternative world where Alberta’s economy opened “for good” on July 1, where Albertans have enjoyed their “best summer ever,” where there is no worrying fourth wave of COVID, and where nobody is wondering where in heck their premier disappeared to.

Either that, or Kenney was so painfully aware that, in his rush to drop restrictions and open the economy two months ago, he managed to launch a fourth wave in Alberta that is, per capita, the worst in the country. In that scenario he was in hiding figuring out how to explain himself to Albertans.

At the same time, he’s become so politically toxic for Conservatives across the country that Erin O’Toole and the Conservative Party of Canada would happily launch the premier into orbit for the duration of the federal election campaign.

A few of Kenney’s cabinet colleagues have made appearances, including Finance Minister Travis Toews who on Tuesday announced government revenues are projected to be up by $11 billion this year – and the deficit is projected to drop by almost $8 billion.

The good news is oil prices are up. The bad news is the Alberta government continues to rely on volatile oil prices to save the day.

Being the only cabinet minister available, Toews couldn’t avoid questions from reporters about why neither Kenney, nor Health Minister Tyler Shandro, nor the province’s medical officer, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, has held a news conference in weeks to explain the government’s COVID plan. In the face of an information vacuum, municipalities and school boards have been forced to come up with their own plans.

The City of Edmonton, for example, is re-invoking a mandatory mask mandate for indoor public spaces on Friday.

“We have not kept anybody in the dark,” said Toews, who pointed out Hinshaw has been issuing regular tweets updating Covid numbers. But Twitter hardly seems like a suitable means of communicating with the public when 1,000 people a day are contracting COVID. More than 400 are in hospital and more than 100 of those are in ICU.

Yes, everyone is entitled to a vacation — including Kenney, Shandro, and Hinshaw, who’ve been front and centre for the past 18 months. But it beggars belief to think they couldn’t have nominated a deputy to hold news conferences to take questions and provide answers.

Kenney’s absence from the federal campaign is no doubt frustrating for him, especially when he loves to bash Liberal leader Justin Trudeau, but it is an understandable tactic when Trudeau is eager to use the unpopular Kenney as a whipping boy and a stand-in for O’Toole.

The good news for the federal Conservatives who, when the campaign began, faced losing four seats in Alberta (two in Edmonton and two in Calgary) to a relatively popular Liberal party. Now, with Trudeau’s prospects faltering nationally and O’Toole’s chances blossoming, Liberals could be completely shut out of Alberta as they were in 2019.

However, Kenney’s lengthy absence during the fourth wave of the pandemic will be more difficult for him to justify, and could further erode the public’s confidence in a premier whose popularity has fallen from a high of 60 per cent in 2019 to about 30 per cent now.

Kenney is back in the office and speaking to the public – but in a carefully crafted appearance online.

He has yet to face the news media who tend to be more difficult to handle than written questions on Facebook.

And he has yet to face the ballooning problems plaguing Alberta as the province is hit yet again by the worst COVID wave in Canada.

CORPORATIONS IN SPACE
Rocket 'terminated' in fiery explosion over Pacific Ocean


VANDENBERG SPACE FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) — A privately designed, unmanned rocket built to carry satellites was destroyed in an explosive fireball after suffering an “anomaly" off the California coast during its first attempt at reaching Earth's orbit.

© Provided by The Canadian Press

Firefly Aerospace's Alpha rocket was “terminated" over the Pacific Ocean shortly after its 6:59 p.m. Thursday liftoff from Vandenberg Space Force Base, according to a base statement. Video from the San Luis Obispo Tribune showed the explosion.

Firefly said an “anomaly” occurred during the first-stage ascent that “resulted in the loss of the vehicle” about two minutes, 30 seconds into the flight. Vandenberg said a team of investigators will try to determine what caused the failure.

The rocket was carrying a payload called DREAM, or the Dedicated Research and Education Accelerator Mission. It consisted of items from schools and other institutions, including small satellites and several demonstration spacecraft.

“While we did not meet all of our mission objectives, we did achieve a number of them: successful first stage ignition, liftoff of the pad, progression to supersonic speed, and we obtained a substantial amount of flight data," Firefly said in a statement. The information will be applied to future missions.





A rocket launched by Firefly Aerospace, the latest entrant in the New Space sector, is seen exploding minutes after lifting off from the central California coast on Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021. The Alpha rocket was "terminated" over the Pacific Ocean shortly after its 6:59 p.m. liftoff from Vandenberg Space Force Base, according to a base statement. (Len Wood/For The Santa Maria Times via AP)

Austin, Texas-based Firefly is developing various launch and space vehicles, including a lunar lander. Its Alpha rocket was designed to target the growing market for launching small satellites into Earth orbit.

Standing 95 feet (26 meters) high, the two-stage Alpha is designed to carry up to 2,200 pounds (1,000 kilograms) of payload into low orbit. The company wants to be capable of launching Alphas twice a month. Launches would have a starting price of $15 million, according to Firefly.

Firefly will have to catch up with two Long Beach, California-based companies that are ahead in the small satellite launch sector.

Rocket Lab has put 105 satellites into orbit with multiple launches from a site in New Zealand and is developing another launch complex in the U.S.

Virgin Orbit has put 17 satellites into space with two successful flights of its air-launched LauncherOne rocket, which is released from beneath the wing of a modified Boeing 747.

The Associated Press

Firefly Aerospace rocket explodes minutes after first launch


Firefly Aerospace's Alpha rocket completes a test firing in Cedar Park, Texas, in October. Photo courtesy of Firefly Aerospace

Sept. 3 (UPI) -- Texas-based Firefly Aerospace's first rocket launch attempt ended in an explosion minutes after liftoff from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Thursday night.

Videos and photos posted online showed an orange fireball about two minutes after liftoff of the Firefly Alpha rocket at 9:59 p.m. EDT. White smoke trailed as a piece of debris as it fell into the Pacific Ocean.


A Firefly Alpha rocket, built by Texas-based Firefly Aerospace, lifts off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Thursday night. Photo courtesy of Firefly Aerospace

The U.S. Space Force terminated the flight after a problem that wasn't immediately known or disclosed, according to a Space Force news release. Such flight terminations are done to prevent rockets from flying outside the designated launch path.

The announcement also said debris could be floating in the ocean and may wash ashore.

"A team of investigators has determined that any debris from the rocket should be considered unsafe," according to the release.

The company acknowledged the incident, which it called an anomaly, quickly on Twitter, and posted a statement.

"While it's too early to draw conclusions as to the root cause, we will be diligent in our investigation," Firefly Aerospace said.

The rocket had been carrying experiments for Firefly and for several universities.

Despite losing the rocket, the company said it gained data about the rocket as it reached supersonic speed. Alpha, at 95 feet tall, is designed to place payloads into orbit.


Firefly, founded in 2014, is led by CEO Tom Markusic, a rocket propulsion scientist who worked for NASA, Elon Musk's SpaceXJeff BezosBlue Origin and Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic.
World's largest carbon capture plant will soon operate in Iceland

Climeworks, a company that owns 14 direct air capture facilities across the globe, is set to launch its largest plant to date on September 8th.


Isabella O'Malley 9 hrs ago

"This will be the largest direct air capture and storage plant on Earth"

The plant, named Orca, is being built in Hellisheidi, Iceland and the company says that it will be the largest direct air capture and storage plant in existence.

Orca is estimated to capture 4,000 tons of carbon dioxide each year and the company says it will be the world’s biggest climate-positive facility. Carbfix, an Icelandic company that converts carbon dioxide into stone underground, will permanently store the captured carbon in the ground.

© Provided by The Weather NetworkClimeworks says that Orca will become the world's biggest climate-positive facility to date. (Climeworks)

Orca’s eight collector containers are sustainably powered by the geothermal Hellisheidi Power Station and use a two-step process to remove carbon from the atmosphere.

A fan draws air into the collector and then a highly selective filter material captures carbon dioxide until it is full. The collector is then closed and its contents are heated to a temperature between 80–100°C, which concentrates and purifies the carbon dioxide before it is permanently stored.

Carbfix mixes this concentrated carbon dioxide with hot water and then pumps it deep below the Earth’s surface where it reacts with basalt rock and slowly turns into stone over a period of several years.

© Provided by The Weather NetworkCarbon dioxide is turned into stone that will be stored permanently underground. (Carbfix)

“Orca demonstrates that Climeworks is able to scale carbon dioxide removal capacity by a factor of around 80 in 3–4 years. These developments will lead to several million tons of direct air capture and storage capacity by the end of this decade,” the company states on their website.

A report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says that carbon capture technology will be needed to mitigate severe impacts from climate change. The IPCC says removing carbon from the atmosphere through technology can reduce global warming, reverse surface-level ocean acidification, and influence water availability and quantity, food production, and biodiversity levels.

© Provided by The Weather NetworkThe geothermal Hellisheidi Power Station in Iceland. (ON Power)

Even if all greenhouse gas emissions ceased today, atmospheric temperatures will still continue to rise because the emissions that have already been released will linger for hundreds of years. This is why experts say that carbon capture technology will be essential for removing historic emissions.

While the world waits in anticipation for further development and deployment of carbon capture technology, scientists say that expanding natural carbon sinks, such as forests, are essential for protecting the environment and the planet’s ability to manage greenhouse gases.

Thumbnail credit: Climeworks
'Surreal': Armed Taliban watch over Afghan news host as he delivers live broadcast
Devika Desai 
© Provided by National Post 
The video shows two armed militants standing behind the host as he delivers his on-air broadcast.

Armed Taliban militants stormed an Afghan television news station and watched over the host during an on-air broadcast.

A video, shared by BBC host Yalda Hakim on Twitter Aug. 29, shows two armed militants standing behind the host as he reads the news and conducts a debate during his programme ‘Pardaz’ on Peace Studio, an Afghan TV network.


“This is what a political debate now looks like on Afghan TV, Taliban foot soldiers watching over the host,” Hakim explained in her caption. “The presenter talks about the collapse of the Ghani govt & says the Islamic Emirate says the Afghan people should not to be afraid.”

“Surreal,” she wrote.

A separate photo posted by Zaki Daryabi, the editor-in-chief of Etilaatroz, an Afghan investigative newspaper, shows the host sitting next to a group of armed Taliban militants, apparently engaging them in conversation on-air.




“This is what @Etilaatroz can’t accept. If so, we will stop our work,” tweeted Daryabi, who last year won Transparency International’s Anti-Corruption 2020 Award.

Hakim’s video has since gone viral on Twitter, with more than 800,000 views since being posted and over 3,000 retweets.

Despite the Taliban’s assurances of a moderate rule that ensures freedom for its women and journalists, more accounts of their brutality and control on the ground have emerged everyday.

The video follows after Afghan female journalist Beheshta Arghand said she fled the country with her family, after being the first female journalist to interview the Taliban on live television.

She told Reuters that two days after Kabul had fallen into the control of the Taliban, militants had showed up at her television studio, unannounced, asking to be interviewed.

“I was shocked, I lost my control … I said to myself that maybe they came to ask why did I come to the studio,” she said.

Days after the interview, she found out that the Taliban had told local media to stop talking about their takeover and their rule. They ordered her employer to enforce the use of a hijab — a scarf closely covering women’s heads while leaving their face uncovered — and banned female anchor at television stations.

With the help of her activist contact, Malala Yousafzai, she fled the country with her family to Qatar.
Engine No. 1 takes climate fight to other big oil companies after underdog win at Exxon
Hannah Miao 8 hrs ago


Activist firm Engine No. 1 after winning three board seats at Exxon is meeting with other oil companies in its climate change fight, a source familiar told CNBC's David Faber.

The hedge fund ha
s spoken with executives of several different oil corporations including Chevron, the source familiar told CNBC.

Engine No. 1 may not necessarily target Chevron in its next challenge, or target any company at all, according to the source.

© Provided by CNBC A view of the ExxonMobil Baton Rouge Refinery in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, May 15, 2021.

Activist firm Engine No. 1 after winning three board seats at Exxon is meeting with other oil companies in its climate change fight, a source familiar told CNBC's David Faber.

The hedge fund has spoken with executives at several oil and gas corporations including Chevron, the source familiar told CNBC.

Engine No. 1 may not necessarily target Chevron in its next challenge, or any company at all, according to the source.

Chevron confirmed the meeting with Engine No. 1 to CNBC.

"We have contingency plans to respond to many different types of events, including an activist investor," Chevron said in a statement to CNBC's Leslie Picker. "We engage regularly with shareholders in constructive two-way dialogue and look forward to discussing the next chapter of our lower carbon story with them later this month."

The Wall Street Journal first reported the activist firm's meeting with Chevron.

Engine No. 1 gained two board seats at Exxon's annual shareholder meeting in May, and a third seat in June.

The upstart activist firm has been targeting Exxon since December 2020, pushing the company to reduce carbon emissions in the face of a changing climate.

Engine No. 1 also launched an exchange-traded fund in June to further its shareholder activism focused on environmental, social and governance issues.

— CNBC's David Faber, Leslie Picker and Pippa Stevens contributed reporting.

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