Monday, May 08, 2023

Recalling the eruption of Mount Pelée — deadliest volcano in the 20th century


Randi Mann
Sun, May 7, 2023 

Thumbnail: "Evacuees on Rue du Pavé, Fort-de-France after 1902 eruption, photographed by William H. Rau." Courtesy of Wikipedia/William Herman Rau


This Day In Weather History is a daily podcast by Chris Mei from The Weather Network, featuring stories about people, communities and events and how weather impacted them.


On Wednesday, May 7, 1902, Mount Pelée, on the island of Martinique in the Lesser Antilles, started to erupt. Around 29,000 people died, making it the deadliest eruption of the 20th century and one of the most destructive in recorded history.

On April 23, Mount Pelée started eruptive activity. The volcano let out a series of large phreatic explosions that occurred before subsiding until early May.

Pelee 1902 1

1902 eruption. Photograph of Mount Pelee by Angelo Heilprin. Courtesy of Wikipedia

When Pelée started to start up again, the sky filled with dark clouds and lightning. The mountain emitted ash that blacked out the sun.

On May 5, a mudflow came down a side of the mountain and buried around 150 people. The mudflow also triggered three tsunamis that damaged coastal buildings.

Between May 6 and 7, the phreatic explosions turned magmatic.

On May 8, at about 8 a.m., the volcano exploded. Lava and turbulent gases flowed down the mountain at hurricane speeds. The volcanic material reached Saint-Pierre at 8:02 a.m. No one could escape. Most of the city's population died. Only two people in the actual city survived, and a few people from surrounding areas. All survivors experienced severe burns.

Pelee 1902 
Remains of Saint-Pierre. Courtesy of Wikipedia


After the explosion, rescuers headed to the island. On May 20, Mount Pelée exploded again, killing 2,000 of the rescuers and other people who were helping with the aftermath. On Aug. 30, another eruption generated a pyroclastic flow, which killed an additional 800 people.

Mount Pelée continued to erupt until October 1905

AMERIKA
Teacher appreciation? Try better pay, more governors say

Sun, May 7, 2023 



HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — As schools across the country struggle to find teachers to hire, more governors are pushing for pay increases, bonuses and other perks for the beleaguered profession — with some vowing to beat out other states competing for educators.

Already in 2023, governors in Georgia and Arkansas have pushed through teacher pay increases. Ahead of Monday’s start of national Teacher Appreciation Week, others — both Republican and Democratic — have proposed doing the same to attract and retain educators.

More than half of the states’ governors over the past year — 26 so far — have proposed boosting teacher compensation, according to groups that track it. The nonprofit Teacher Salary Project said it is the most it has seen in nearly two decades of tracking.

“Today we have governors left and right from every political party and then some who are addressing this issue because they have to,” said founder and CEO Ninivé Caligari. “We’ve never seen what we are seeing right now. Never.”

In Idaho, Gov. Brad Little is aiming to raise the state’s average starting salary into the nation’s top 10. In Delaware, Gov. John Carney said competition for teachers is more intense than ever and a pay increase is necessary to “win the competition with surrounding states.”

It’s not clear how far pay raises will go toward relieving the shortages, though, and some teachers say it is too little, too late to fix problems that are years in the making.

Blame for teacher shortages has fallen on underfunding after the Great Recession, tight labor markets, lackluster enrollments in colleges and programs that train teachers and teacher burnout inflamed by the travails of the COVID-19 pandemic.

There has been no mass exodus, but data from some states that track teacher turnover has shown rising numbers of teachers leaving the profession over the past couple years.

Shortages are most extreme in certain areas, including the poorest or most rural districts, researchers say. Districts also report particular difficulties in hiring for in-demand subjects like special education, math and science.

Meanwhile, teacher salaries have fallen further and further behind those of their college-educated peers in other fields, as teachers report growing workloads, shrinking autonomy and increasingly hostile school environments.

Magan Daniel, who at 33 just left her central Alabama school district, was not persuaded to stay by pay raises as Alabama’s governor vows to make teacher salaries the highest in the Southeast. It would take big increases to match neighboring Georgia, where the average teacher salary is $62,200, according to the National Education Association.

Fixing teachers’ deteriorating work culture and growing workloads would be a more powerful incentive than a pay raise, she said.

She recalled, for instance, her principal asking her to make copies and lesson plans last fall while she was on unpaid maternity leave. Difficulty getting substitutes puts pressure on teachers who need time off for emergencies, she said, and spending nights and weekends on paperwork siphoned the joy out of teaching.

“I would not go back just for a higher salary,” Daniel said.

In Oklahoma, Joshua Morgan, 46, left his rural district a year ago because after 18 years he was still earning under $47,000. Oklahoma’s governor is talking about awarding performance bonuses, but Morgan said he would only go back to teaching for substantially more money — like $65,000 a year.

The national average public school teacher salary in 2021-22 increased 2% from the previous year to $66,745, according to the NEA, the nation’s largest teachers union. Inflation peaked around 9% at the time.

For new recruits, the math of paying for a college education is grim: The national average beginning teacher salary was $42,845 in 2021-22, according to the NEA. Teachers do often qualify for public service loan forgiveness, which forgives their student debt after they’ve made 10 years of monthly payments.

Besides fewer teachers getting certified, the “teacher pay penalty” — the gap between teacher salaries and their college-educated peers in other professions — is growing.

It reached a record 23.5% in 2021, with teachers earning an average 76.5 cents for every dollar earned by other college-educated professionals, according to the Economic Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank.

It has been widening for decades, researchers say. For men, it is 35% and for women it is 17% — reflecting the gender pay gap seen across the U.S. economy.

For Rachaele Otto and other Louisiana teachers, the prospect of a $3,000 salary increase proposed by the governor might be appreciated. But at roughly $200 a month after taxes, it’s not enough to keep a teacher who feels burned out or demoralized, Otto said.

“I know there are teachers willing to take pay cuts to leave the profession,” said Otto, 38, a science teacher in a rural Louisiana district. “If you double the salary, maybe that would change their thinking.”

Sylvia Allegretto, a senior economist who studies teacher compensation for the Center for Economic and Policy Research, called salary promises by governors one-time “Band-Aids” that barely keep up with inflation.

“You’re kind of chipping away at the margins,” Allegretto said. “You’re not fixing the problem, generally.”

For governors, raising teacher pay may be good politics, but raising it across the board may have little long-term impact. Getting better data on where the shortages are and then targeting raises — or bigger raises — to those areas will help more, researchers say.

Research shows a pay raise will have at least some effect on retaining teachers, said Ed Fuller, a Penn State associate professor who studies teacher quality and turnover. What is difficult to research, Fuller said, is the effect a raise has on a college student’s decision to enter a teacher preparation program — and take on debt.

Some districts haven’t waited for governors and legislatures to act.

Kentucky’s biggest school district, Jefferson County in Louisville, gave a 4% raise last year and the board approved another raise of 5% to start this coming July. It also started giving an annual $8,000 stipend to teachers who work with higher-need students.

Superintendent Marty Pollio wants the district to be the highest paying in Kentucky, calling the teacher shortage “a real crisis and a growing crisis.”

In Pennsylvania, the William Penn School District is offering signing bonuses for long-term subs and holding its first-ever teachers job fair.

Superintendent Eric Becoats said a teacher told him they can move to neighboring districts and make $10,000 more — something the relatively small and poor district cannot compete with right now.

Some teachers also tell him they will retire or leave the profession if they can.

Morgan said a major change in salary is required to overcome a major change in how teachers now view a profession where they once expected to stay until they retired.

“That’s not how the world works anymore,” Morgan said. “I’m seeing more educators, especially the younger ones, coming in and saying, ‘I’m not willing to put up with this.’”

___

Brooke Schultz, a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative, contributed to this report. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Data reporter Sharon Lurye also contributed from New Orleans.

___

Follow Marc Levy on Twitter: http://twitter.com/timelywriter

Marc Levy, The Associated Press
WHAT RECESSION
Consumers willing to spend at US restaurant chains despite menu price increases



Brooke DiPalma
·Reporter, Booking Producer
Sun, May 7, 2023

In the latest earnings results for fast-food and fast casual restaurants, consumers willing to spend despite higher menu prices, and lower employee turnover helped propel the top players to double-digit same-store growth.

"I think it's a pretty resilient consumer, where you're seeing the price increases being absorbed, and very, very little pushback on that," BTIG managing director Peter Saleh said.

This quarter, U.S. same-store sales got a boost across the board: McDonald's was up 12.6 % year-over-year, Chipotle, rose 10.9%, Wingstop was up 20.1%, YUM! Brands' Taco Bell was up 9%, Starbucks rose 12%, Shake Shack was up 10.3%, and even Subway saw a spike in sales growth as it gears up for a sale, rising 11.7% in North America.
This is welcome news for investors, after all brands across the board increased their menu prices. Chipotle was one the brands to raise them the most, Saleh said in his coverage, yet its same-store sales also saw a boost. CFO Jack Hartung said menu price increases compared to a year ago are in "about a 10% range."

All this seemingly contradicts previous fears that higher prices would deter consumers, Saleh said. "We're just not seeing that right now."

At mega fast food chains, consumers are looking for value, Morningstar Analyst Sean Dunlop said. "We saw some evidence of consumers managing checks, particularly on the lower-income end of the spectrum."

YUM! Brands CEO David Gibbs told Yahoo Finance that the company tends to "flourish" in tough financial times, especially its Taco Bell brand. "People care a little bit more about value than they have over the last few years maybe when they were a little more flush with money in their pocket," Gibbs said.

In a call with investors, Papa John's CEO Rob Lynch said value was driving its customers as well.

"We're definitely entering into a period, if we're not already all the way there...value is going to become more important than it has been over the last 3 years and so it's critical for us to have a compelling and successful value strategy."

Saleh said he wouldn't call it a "a value war environment," however. "We still have all these restaurants [that] are still dealing with commodity inflation to a certain degree."
Menu price increases to moderate this year


Taco Bell drive-thru open for business with lush green plants and clear sky in a residential neighborhood, Walnut Creek, California, March 27, 2023. 
(Photo by Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)

Because of pressures like food input costs, labor costs, and other inflationary pressures, price increases will still happen, but maybe not in as vast of a jump as we saw last year.

"I think it's unlikely we see operators take too many incremental price increases in 2023, particularly as food input costs have moderated," Morningstar's Dunlop said.

Starbucks CFO Rachel Ruggeri told Yahoo Finance said the company would expect changes in price to start to moderate in the back half of the year, "as we get to more historical levels of pricing, which we've shared is typically around 1% to 2%."

The message was similar from YUM! Brands' Gibbs. "I do not anticipate taking as much price in 2023 as we did in 2022," he told Yahoo Finance. That's due to lower key input costs for food and "even the labor market has gotten a lot better."

Chipotle, the chain that took one of the largest price increases, is waiting to see how the year rolls out.

Despite an unpredictable inflation landscape, Chipotle's Hartung said the company doesn't have plans to make any price increases.


Company leaders said the easing of a tight labor market has also helped boost their bottom lines. In a call with investors, Shake Shack CEO Randy Garutti said lower turnover and a lot more people applying for jobs at Shake Shack is driving sales.

"That's just a huge win in every way," he said. "Turnover is expensive. It is hard to train people and mostly because you're just not up to the reps. You're just not up to speed and throughput. That's where the most gains are going to come from."



Brooke DiPalma is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter at @BrookeDiPalma or email her at bdipalma@yahoofinance.com.
Canada's electronic waste more than tripled in 20 years, study indicates

The Canadian Press
Mon, May 8, 2023 



Canada's electronic waste more than tripled in the last two decades and is expected to keep increasing, a new study indicates, with researchers urging better e-waste management to reduce environmental harm and bring economic rewards.

Researchers from the University of Waterloo conducted what they called a comprehensive estimate of e-waste in Canada to better understand the lifecycle of electronic items from point of sale to disposal.

The study, published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials, looked at e-waste data going as far back as 1971.

E-waste consists of discarded electronic products including computers, televisions, cell phones, consumer goods like electronic toys and household lighting, and large household appliances such as refrigerators or washing machines.

The research indicates e-waste generation per personincreased from 8.3 kilograms in 2000 to 25.3 kilograms in 2020.

Canadians produced nearly one million tonnes of e-waste in 2020, and that's expected to reach 1.2 million tonnes annually by 2030, the study suggests.

Lead researcher Komal Habib, a professor at the University of Waterloo's School of Environment, Enterprise and Development, said the rising rate of electronic consumption can be attributed to the increased pace of technological developments since the turn of the millennium, shorter device lifespan and consumer habits.

"From a consumer perspective, we tend to upgrade our technological setup to the latest available technology," said Habib in an interview.

"The phone I'm holding right now ... is five years old, but not many Canadians are like me, right? They tend to upgrade their device every year."

The study also found the estimated growth of e-waste reflects Canada's growing population.

Within all of that electric junk is "an urban mine of precious minerals and many other types of resources," which, according to Habib, could help create a secondary supply chain of critical minerals and reduce potential supply disruptions if managed properly.

Meanwhile, inefficient handling of e-waste can lead to toxic materials being released into the environment, causing environmental and human health problems, the study said.

Canada's e-waste recycling infrastructure has not developed at a pace in line with electronics development, said Habib.

Governments can address rising e-waste by providing more incentives for recyclers to keep up with the waste, Habib said. Product designers should also give more consideration to how metals and minerals can be more easily recovered from devices in a financially viable way, she said.

"That is something which is lacking: a bridge between these two sectors at both ends of a product, at the designer and manufacturer level, as well as the end-of-life level," she said.

But managing e-waste is a shared responsibility, she said, and consumers play a role as well.

"It's our responsibility to be mindful of our consumption patterns," said Habib. "We really don't need to upgrade our product every year or every two years if it's fully functional and providing the service we bought it for."

Her research calls for more attention to be given to improving repair, refurbishment and product life extension opportunities rather than focusing solely on recycling and material recovery.

"Repair is something which we have forgotten in high-income societies," she said. "But we should really focus and promote where it is possible to repair a product before discarding it."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 8, 2023.

Tyler Griffin, The Canadian Press
More than 11.5 million tree seedlings destined for Quebec forests were destroyed last year

CBC
Sun, May 7, 2023 

This pile of small trees rejected by the government in 2022 is part of the 11.5 million plants that will be turned into compost. (Priscilla Plamondon Lalancette/Radio-Canada - image credit)

While reforestation efforts are at the heart of the fight against climate change around the world, more than 11.5 million tree seedlings destined for Quebec forests were destroyed last year.

Ironically, it was extreme weather conditions that forced plant nurseries to discard those that did not meet the government's criteria.

The significant losses, valued at $3.6 million, represent almost nine per cent of the trees that were poised to be planted in the province.

"Because the plants are produced outdoors, they are subject to increasingly frequent weather hazards in a context of climate change," the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry said in an email.

"Early frosts in the fall, a lack of snow, a mild spell during the winter or late frosts in the spring can cause significant damage to the plants."


Priscilla Plamondon Lalancette/Radio-Canada

The ministry says 83 per cent of the trees destroyed in 2022 were related to extreme weather events.

Stéphane Boucher, president of Quebec's forest plant producers, says that over the past 10 years, the weather has been the source of headaches for nurseries and silviculture companies.

"There are people who replant trees that did not get their plants. There are sites that have not been reforested," he said.

His nursery in Saint-Ambroise, in the province's Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region, was one of the two most affected by losses in Quebec, with two million plants destroyed.


Priscilla Plamondon Lalancette/Radio-Canada

The most significant damage occurred in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region, where the Serres coopératives de Guyenne, a greenhouse, had to dispose of eight million trees.

In total, 14 times more plants were destroyed in the province than in 2021.

"It's still quite spectacular, the increase we see in the loss of forest plants produced by our nurseries," said Jean-François Boucher, a professor in eco-advising at the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi.

He studies the roles that reforestation and afforestation — the process of creating forests that haven't existed before — have in the fight against global warming.

"[These losses] challenge us in relation to the adaptation to climate change that must be done," he said.
Most trees were viable, says nursery owner

According to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, "when the seedlings are no longer of sufficient quality to ensure their survival and recovery on the planting site, they cannot be used."

However, growers feel that a fair number of trees that were tossed out last year were, in fact, viable. "The department only picks up the plants that have no defects," said Stéphane Boucher, with Quebec's forest plant producers.

He said most of the two million tree seedlings in his nursery that he was forced to throw away in 2022 were viable.

"It sure breaks my heart," he said.


Priscilla Plamondon Lalancette/Radio-Canada

Healthy trees end up in these piles of plant waste because they are deemed too small, Boucher says. The same goes for plants that have developed two heads following a frost or those whose roots are not sufficiently compact.

Faced with the climate emergency, producers and experts believe that many wasted trees could have been planted in forests to sequester carbon, especially since reforestation targets are still far from being met.

Professor Jean-François Boucher Boucher is calling on Quebec to rectify the situation, considering that many of the quality criteria for seedlings are not supported by science, he says.

"They must be of such and such a height, such and such a diameter, such and such a root mass and the roots must have such and such a shape," he said.

"There are a lot of criteria that are imposed on nurseries, and in the idea of being agile with respect to climate change, I think we will have to be more flexible."

Adapting to climate change

For three generations, Stéphane Boucher's nursery has been producing seedlings for reforestation programs in Quebec's Saguenay forests.

Technologies have evolved considerably since 1985. The germination of multi-cell seedlings is now done in a greenhouse to better control the conditions necessary for tree growth.

Plants sown indoors alternate between greenhouses and the outdoors to gain strength. To limit the risk of losses due to winter conditions and the lack of snow cover that previously protected the plants, the nursery became the first in Quebec to make the gradual shift to freezing the seedlings three years ago.


Priscilla Plamondon-Lalancette/Radio-Canada

Currently, 400,000 small conifers are dormant in a cold storage facility, protected from the elements. Last fall, they were wrapped in a plastic bag to preserve their moisture, then placed in a cardboard box before being frozen. All that remains is to ship them to the field where they will be planted.

This technique is used in Sweden, Norway and British Columbia.
Part of this centuries-old Quebec farm has been swallowed, maybe permanently, by the river


CBC
Sun, May 7, 2023 

Flood waters inundated Claude Méthot's property on Monday, covering his fields with sand and clay. (Submitted by Claude Méthot - image credit)

It took Claude Méthot a couple of days to fully comprehend the extent of the damage to his farm in Baie-Saint-Paul, Que.

He says the land that he bought three years ago has been cultivated for hundreds of years.

The fields that had been ready for another season of wheat, corn or oats are now covered with sand and clay.

"We will not be able to farm this field anymore," said Méthot. He figures he's lost about 10 per cent of his land.

"It's a primal, visceral fear and shock just to see where there was this gorgeous wheat field last year. Now it's a river."

Unsure if he can recoup his losses, Méthot is one of the farmers in the region left reeling from the flooding and heavy rainwaters that hit the region on Monday.

Not only will this hurt his bottom line, but Méthot says the weather event could threaten Charlevoix's agricultural scene — a part of the region's heritage.


Submitted by Claude Méthot

'The field is going to be invaded again'


When the water levels rose on Monday, Méthot says the current swallowed up the riverbank that separated his fields from the water — essentially washing away two to three metres of land. Méthot says he's worried about the future of his property.

"The field is going to be invaded again by the flood because there's no more wall or nothing to prevent [even] a mild rise in the river from overtaking the terrain … It's just a field, but I still feel that," said Méthot.

He says considerable work goes into making his fields productive. He had removed rocks and cleared the surface. The result was a bumper crop of oats last year. Méthot says even if he has lost only 10 per cent of his land, it will hurt him financially.

"I have taken that revenue away from my financial outlook," said Méthot. "I'm not counting on it because it's quite unclear if I'm going to be able to recoup any of that."

Pride in local production


Submitted by Claude Méthot

Méthot was drawn to to the Charlevoix region by its agricultural history and its renowned cheese, meat and milk products. He says now, that has "eroded away."

"Agriculture is important in itself but that's bigger than just agriculture. It's part of the heritage of Charlevoix. It represents what Quebec is, in the hearts and minds of a lot of people. When you drive around, when you look around, when you taste [products]," said Méthot.

He says there is a sense of pride in producing locally and contributing to the region's output.

"Talk to all the farmers around here," said Méthot. "Everybody is going to express that. They work 18 hours a day. And they're proud of that contribution, they're proud of what they're doing and it's all that [work] that's being nibbled at [by the flooding]."

A third of seedlings lost

Nicol Simard, a farmer, dairy producer and president of the Charlevoix branch of the agricultural producers' union, has also suffered damage, losing about 12 hectares of arable land.

"I just lost the feed for at least 25 animals," said Simard.

"Land in Charlevoix is quite rare. The lowlands bordered by the Rivière du Gouffre are the warmest places in the region because of a microclimate. They are practically all gone with Monday's flood."

He says he hopes there will be support for farmers in the region and prevention measures for future floods — such as building retaining walls.

Colin Côté-Paulette/Radio-Canada

Elsa Girard, the co-owner of a family business that grows grain and raises organic poultry, says the river has claimed part of the fields, ruining part of the crop.

"Usually we buy about $100,000 to $120,000 worth of seedlings. I would say to you that perhaps a third of what was planted will not see the light of day," said Girard.

"With all the rocks, all the mud on the fields right now, I don't think that it will be recoverable."

'In Charlevoix, people are resilient'

Girard says they were fortunate their animals were not injured in the flooding and their employees are okay.

"For sure there are losses, but it's nothing compared to loss of life," said Girard referring to the two firefighters who died after being swept up in the river. Girard noted that the body of one of the firefighters was found close to her property by the water.

"In Charlevoix, people are resilient. I think that's what defines us ... This is not our first storm."

Rachel Watts/CBC

Yves Laurencelle, president of the Quebec City and North Shore branch of the agricultural union, says the mud will prevent crops from growing and will have to be removed in the next few weeks.

"Six farmers have called us to talk about land loss. We know that there will be total crop losses for certain crops," said Laurencelle.

In an emailed statement, Quebec Agriculture Minister André Lamontagne called the situation in Baie-Saint-Paul "difficult," and said he has been in communication with the agricultural union since the start of the flooding.

"The primary objective is to ensure the safety of people and animals. We have yet to assess the overall impact on agricultural businesses. Various insurance programs exist to mitigate this type of event," read the statement.
So many people have dumped their pet turtles that it's threatening B.C. species, says biologist

"It's hard to be a turtle."

CBC
Sun, May 7, 2023 

Invasive red-eared slider turtles are proliferating in Canadian ponds. The turtles were commonly sold as pets and start about the size of a toonie, but grow to the size of a dinner plate and live up to 50 years in captivity. (James Harding - image credit)

When biologist Aimee Mitchell began her tally of endangered coastal western painted turtles 15 years ago, she says it was impossible to ignore the number of discarded pet turtles thriving in the wild.

The invasive red-eared sliders, which grow larger than the coastal western painted turtles — B.C.'s only native turtle — were crowding sunbathing spots.

Her team's most recent study was the first to confirm that the freed red-eared sliders are successfully reproducing in the same territory as the West Coast population of western painted turtles.

This population of turtles — that spans south along the Sunshine Coast, Gulf Islands and Vancouver Island — hit a low of about 3,000 before hatchlings were released over the past few years, Mitchell says.

Mitchell and her colleagues tallied turtles at 19 spots, confirming the invasive turtles were overtaking endangered western painted turtles — which were outnumbered 2.5 to one.

"It is surprising," said Mitchell, the program manager for the Coastal Painted Turtle Project.

Before the work her team did, it was believed that red-eared slider turtles could survive in the wild, but would fail to successfully reproduce given the shorter egg incubation period in Canada.

"It surprised the province as well," said Mitchell, who has focused on species at risk throughout her career.

"Until we proved that they were fully successfully hatching, the province didn't consider them invasive."

Corey Bullock/CBC News

Native turtles in steep decline


By 2016, B.C. ruled red-eared sliders are an invasive species.

The proliferation began when these turtles were sold as pets. People took home a coin-sized paddler, and it grew to the side of a dinner plate. A captive turtle can also live to 50 years old. Many owners released them into the wild.

Mitchell says she would like to see efforts to remove and cull invasive turtles on a large scale, to save the threatened native species. So she's doing further study, urging people to report sightings of turtles so they can map their evolving territory, and says she hopes more work is done to study the effects of the invader on precarious populations like the coastal population of painted turtles.

Painted turtles are found in Southern Canada from B.C. to Nova Scotia. They live in shallow, slow-moving water. They like mud.

Of the three main populations of turtles — western, eastern and midland — the largest are the western painted turtles, which can grow up to 25 centimetres in length. All are noted for the bright markings on the edge of the shell, yellow stripes down their head or neck and a bright abstract pattern on their lower shell that can range from yellow to orange, according to the Nature Conservancy of Canada.

Environment and Climate Change Canada says there are no exact populations counts, but estimates there are about 3,000 or fewer adults on the Pacific Coast and up to 20,000 inland, from the Rockies to the Canadian Shield.

Painted turtle populations have faced a steep decline in southwestern B.C. and the lower Fraser Valley, blamed on everything from traffic to wetland loss and invasive species, like bullfrogs and other turtles, according to the ECCC.

Turtle invaders stress native species

Mitchell blames red-eared sliders. She says they hog the sunniest logs and push the smaller turtles into riskier habitat, such as near fishing spots where they risk getting close to humans, dogs and fish hooks.

"[Sliders] will ultimately exclude western painted turtles from basking. And there's so many of them. I've seen them sink the logs," said Mitchell.

"The the rule with basking is, the biggest turtle wins, and sliders are bigger. They grow faster."


Kyle Robertson Thomson

Discarded pet turtles can also spread parasites, respiratory and other illnesses, she explained. And the impacts are even harsher when there's only one native turtle, as is the case in B.C.

"In the east there are seven or eight other turtle species so they're at least a little more adapted to competition," she said.

Red-eared sliders are considered one of the most invasive species, as they were the most common turtle sold as pets.

That's a concern given the fact that all eight of Canada's native freshwater turtle species are at risk, making them "the most endangered group of wildlife in Canada," according to David Seburn, a freshwater turtle specialist with the Canadian Wildlife Federation.

"Turtles are the underdog," said Seburn. "T-Rex vanished, but the turtle survived, which says something about their ability to endure."

Sliders now survive in many urban ponds, especially in B.C. and southern Ontario.


Toronto Region Conservation Authority

To survive, turtles need to bask in the sun.

"Basking isn't just a trivial thing; it's how the turtles maintain their body temperature. It's how the females develop their eggs. So basking is critical to the lifestyle of turtles," Seburn explained.


He fears released pets will spread diseases and threaten wild populations.

"An infected turtle released into a wetland ... that's a big wildcard."

Some say the slider is 'vilified'

Fifteen years ago, Marc Ouellette started a reptile rescue called Little RES Q to take in discarded turtles.

He explains that turtles need about 10 gallons of water "per each inch of shell," so a foot-long or 30 centimetre slider needs a 120-gallon tank. If the tank is too small, it must be cleaned daily and he says some turtle owners get overwhelmed.

"People just kind of get bored of it," said Ouellette, of Pefferlaw, Ont.

What started as a few aquariums in his apartment has turned into a 1,200-square-foot space with 800-gallon stock tanks. Ouellette now cares for 300 reptiles. There are 120 turtles on his wait list.


Marc Ouellette/LIttle RES Q

Some researchers say red-eared sliders are vilified. Biologist Scott Gillingwater first reported that sliders were reproducing near London, Ont., in 2013.

After 15 years of studying sliders, Gillingwater does not advocate releasing pets, but says he has no fear the species will "overtake our wetlands" despite how many end up dumped in urban ponds.

"The slider is often vilified, but it is people that are the problem," he wrote to CBC News.


Sharing the log

York University field biologist Marc Dupuis-Desormeaux says different turtle species often bask together in peace.

"We have ample evidence of red-eared sliders with painted turtles on top of them all on the same log," said Dupuis-Desormeaux, who has studied turtle demographics in urban areas.

He urges people not to release pets, but says the sliders that have now populated urban ponds that are already full of invasive species, eat up dead matter and do the job of missing native turtles.

Dupuis-Desormeaux says that while native species are the ideal, too many have been wiped out by cars, attacked by dogs or fallen victim to egg-plundering raccoons or disappearing wetlands.


And he says Canada's cold winters and short summers stop the unchecked spread of invasive turtles.

"It's hard to be a turtle."


Aimee Mitchell
Behind the blue wall: The toxic culture that left a Vancouver police officer dead

Jason Walker, Associate Professor, 
Graduate Studies, Leadership and People Management, University Canada West
THE CONVERSATION
Sun, May 7, 2023 

A Vancouver police cruiser is seen on city streets. The Vancouver Police Department is under fire for the suicide of a police officer and other alleged misconduct that highlight the dangers of the 'blue wall of silence.' 

In January 2019, Const. Nicole Chan — a 30-year-old, nine-year member of the Vancouver Police Department — took her own life hours after being discharged from Vancouver General Hospital amid a mental health crisis.

Chan said she had been subjected to a pattern of abuse by senior members of the Vancouver police force starting when she was being recruited to the department. Her story exposes how cop culture and the impenetrable “blue wall” turned their back on her during her time of need.

Chan’s history of mental health issues, a direct result of her treatment by the Vancouver Police Department, made her particularly vulnerable to the predatory behaviour of those in positions of power.

As is often the case, the perpetrators were the very people responsible for keeping all members of the public safe.

The dark side of cop culture

Chan’s story hasn’t gone unnoticed yet it’s sadly not new. Law enforcement agencies across Canada have been plagued with allegations of bullying, harassing and sexually abusing their own members.

In January 2023 — four years after Chan’s suicide — a coroner’s inquest into her death delivered 12 recommendations highlighting severe systemic issues within the Vancouver Police Department.

The five-person jury noted that department leadership, human resources and the police board have failed to address the culture of bullying and harassment within the force, and recommended support systems to help members struggling with their mental health.


Jennifer Chan, left, the sister of late Vancouver Police Const. Nicole Chan, who died by suicide in 2019, leaves a coroner’s inquest, in Burnaby, B.C., in January 2023. 

One recommendation called for “mandatory, rigorous, in-person and respectful” workplace training on a regular basis for officers of all ranks in the department. That’s already mandated by WorkSafe BC law and policy, although the legislation does not speak to the quality nor duration of training.

The jury also noted that members of the Vancouver Police Department’s human resources department weren’t qualified for their positions, and lacked training, certification and proper oversight.

Other recommendations included creating a protocol that would require admitting physicians to consult with friends, family, first responders and other professionals to assess suicide risk properly — something that should have already been happening since it’s a best practice standard.

The inquest jury performed well after hearing heart-wrenching testimony. Their recommendations reflect common sense, which is often sorely lacking not just at the Vancouver Police Department, but at other organizations.

The truth about cop culture


Loyalty and solidarity can be positive qualities — until they aren’t.

Cop culture is a phenomenon that encompasses the shared values, practices and beliefs held by members of law enforcement.

It can foster support among officers and camaraderie, but it also contributes to the unwritten live-or-die mentality of the “blue wall of silence” that results in cops protecting cops when misconduct occurs.

Respecting that blue wall can include subverting the law, turning a blind eye to major misconduct and ignoring blue-on-blue crime. It means the police have lost the ability to police themselves.

Read more: Alleged political interference in the N.S. mass shootings means the RCMP must be restructured

The blue wall of silence is a serious issue for police forces around the world. Officers tend to protect one another by failing to report misconduct, which perpetrates a lack of accountability, creating a toxic work environment and eroding public trust.

Take the recent inquest into the death of Myles Gray after he sustained a severe beating by the Vancouver Police Department in 2015. The inquest jurors deemed his death a homicide and six police officers were charged under the Police Act for failing to take notes of the incident.


Protesters hold banners with a photograph of Myles Gray, who died following a confrontation with several police officers in 2015, before the start of a coroner’s inquest into his death in Burnaby, B.C. on April 17, 2023. 


In fact, even as the inquest into Chan’s death was proceeding, it was revealed that new allegations of misconduct by members of the Vancouver Police Department are being investigated by the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner.

It’s alleged that as many as a dozen officers, including Supt. Tanya Whysker and Insp. Kelly Risebrough, obstructed the RCMP following a traffic incident involving a Vancouver Police Department member.

There’s now an ongoing criminal investigation into obstruction of justice — further underscoring that the department considers some of its members above the law.

Vancouver police chief Adam Palmer has responded to the allegations by saying: “We have to get the facts and find out what happened. Based on what I’ve heard, (I’m) not that concerned.”

In fact, Whysker has since been promoted to lead the department’s 2026 FIFA World Cup preparation, and Risebrough is representing the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police on a publicly funded trip to South Africa, Botswana and Turkey to look at how to build police trust with youth.

Failure of leadership


Chan’s ordeal was not an unknown secret in the Vancouver Police Department. Her colleagues, senior constables, sergeants, human resources staff and an inspector knew what was happening.

Not one of them did what was right. They did what was easy, which was to bend to cop culture, turn a blind eye and cover things up.

Read more: The 'blue wall' of silence allows bullying, sexual abuse and violence to infect police forces

Three months after the release of the coroner’s inquest recommendations, Palmer released a statement sending heartfelt condolences to Chan’s family and accepting the recommendations. He made no mention of holding his force accountable for events that contributed to her death.

Time and time again, law enforcement leadership has failed to address the systemic and profoundly ingrained culture of bullying and harassment within its ranks.

Studies show that 75 per cent of workers have reported being impacted by workplace violence in the form of bullying and harassment. In addition, approximately 80 per cent of women and 30 per cent of men have faced sexual harassment and abuse at work — and 72 per cent of the time, the perpetrator was someone in a position of authority.

Read more: Workplace bullying should be treated as a public health issue

The consequences of workplace bullying and harassment are profound. They can include anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and suicide among employees.

This is an urgent public health issue that requires actual intervention by lawmakers. Maybe Chan’s death — perhaps a “Nicole’s Law” — could help reshape the legal system’s response to preventable violence at work.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. The Conversation is trustworthy news from experts, from an independent nonprofit. 

It was written by: Jason Walker, University Canada West.


Read more

The law often shields police officers from accountability – and reinforces policing that harms Black people, homeless people and the mentally ill


Brenda Lucki’s retirement will not fix the RCMP’s structural problems

PHOTOS THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

How does putting King Charles on Canadian money make people feel? It's a coin toss

CBC
Sat, May 6, 2023 

A staff member with the U.K.'s Royal Mint holds up a commemorative five-pound coin bearing the official coinage portrait of King Charles III. Canada will soon follow suit, producing new coins and banknotes bearing an original image of the new monarch. (Alastair Grant/The Associated Press - image credit)

Canadian currency is getting a facelift — literally.

To mark the coronation of King Charles III, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed on Saturday that Canadian coins and the $20 banknote will be updated with the new monarch's image, replacing that of his late mother, Queen Elizabeth.

Trudeau said he has asked the Royal Canadian Mint to create an effigy of His Majesty to appear on the obverse, or "heads," side of Canadian coins in circulation. He also confirmed he has requested that the Royal Canadian Mint update the $20 bill — the only Canadian banknote left bearing a royal's face — during its next design process.

Canada is not obligated to put the monarch on its money, but it is tradition. While the new look may be an exciting switch for people who are fond of the monarchy, history buffs or collectors of currency, many Canadians are not thrilled that King Charles is the country's head of state and may not care to see his face in their wallets.

An Angus Reid Institute poll conducted ahead of the coronation indicated that an average of just 38 per cent of respondents want to see the new sovereign on their coins and bills. Support was highest in Ontario and the Prairie provinces, and lowest in 
Quebec.

Sixty per cent of respondents opposed even recognizing Charles as King, according to the same poll. Only 28 per cent say they have a favourable view of Charles, while nearly half (48 per cent) did not.

A time for change


Canada has been printing and minting money bearing the likeness of its sovereign since 1908, when the Royal Canadian Mint began producing coins. The Bank of Canada only began issuing banknotes in 1935.

Alex Reeves, a spokesperson for the Royal Canadian Mint, said this will be the first time any Canadian who is 65 or younger will have seen such a significant change to its change.

It's also an important moment for those working on the update. "You can't help but feel like a witness to history," he told CBC News.

"To be able to be part of that transformation of our currency — and to create a design that's going to be beautifully executed and will grace Canadian coins for for years to come — is a really special moment."

Reeves said there will be other differences that Canadians should look out for. First, King Charles will face left on the new coins, once minted, while his mother's image was looking to the right.

The change of direction is a tradition that dates back centuries in British royal history, to differentiate one monarch's reign to the next.


Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press

There will also be a new inscription surrounding the king's effigy: It will change from "D.G. Regina (Dei Gratia Regina)," meaning "By the Grace of God, Queen" in Latin, to "Rex," meaning "King."

Reeves couldn't offer a timeline as to when new coins would be minted, but he said the Mint would like to get them into circulation as soon as possible.

The Crown corporation, he said, has had "a team in place and a process mapped out" in anticipation of this moment.

The Mint will select an original portrait created by one of an "inclusive field" of artists the institution works with, he said, and, once approved by the Canadian government and Buckingham Palace, the dyes will be produced to strike the King's image on coins of each denomination, and production can begin.

Although a new minting will see hundreds of millions of coins across all denominations being produced, there will be no need to remove coins with Queen Elizabeth's effigy, as they will remain legal tender.

In fact, the mint wants to get as much use out of the coins already in circulation because producing new coins comes at a cost and with a carbon footprint, Reeves said, noting that the lifecycle of a coin is about 20 years.

A notable moment

Stephen Woodland, president of the Royal Canadian Numismatic Association, an organization for coin collectors, is waiting to hear more about what the Mint has in store for the coins. But when it comes to the new $20 bills, he said there will be a lot of excitement about the redesign.

"Banknote collectors eagerly await this 'noteworthy' event and will certainly actively pursue gathering notes for their collections," Woodland said in an email.

But not just any regular green polymer note that comes out of an ATM.

Collectors will be on the lookout for "notes with different serial prefixes, specialty serial numbers, various plate numbers and, of course, any errors that escape into circulation," he said.

Bank of England

But they'll likely have to wait a while yet. The Bank of Canada is still in the redesign process for a new $5 note, one that began in 2020. Like the recently redesigned $10 banknote, the $5 bill will feature a prominent Canadian instead of a monarch or past political leader.

The Bank of Canada has a short list of eight "bankNOTE-able Canadians" who are contenders to be the new face of the blue bill, narrowed down from a field of more than 600 qualified people nominated by members of the public.

But deciding to retain a British royal on at least one banknote keeps with the tradition that began when the central bank first issued banknotes nearly 90 years ago.

Canada was actually the first country to feature the effigy of Queen Elizabeth II on its currency, the 1935 $20 note, when she was an eight-year-old princess. She became a fixture on all Canadian coins beginning in 1953, the year of her coronation, and on banknotes in 1954.

A face of symbolism


The decision to include the portrait of King Charles on banknotes and coins is largely symbolic. But even symbolic details can reflect the relationship between a country and the monarchy, as well as the level of public support for the institution.

"Different countries are going to approach it differently, depending on the level of attachment to the monarchy and the strength of the republican movement in each country," Jonathan Malloy, a political science professor at Carleton University in Ottawa, told The Canadian Press, referring to campaigns that seek to separate countries from their relationships with the Crown.

In the Caribbean, many countries have been contending with conversations on what role the monarchy should play. Barbados, for example, cut ties with the British monarch as its head of state in 2021. Other Caribbean nations that still belong to the Commonwealth have said little about whether King Charles will be depicted on their bills and coins.

However, the Antigua Observer reported earlier this year that Timothy N.J. Antoine, governor of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, which is the the monetary authority for a group of eight island economies, said there may be "no appetite" for a royal makeover of their money.

But Canada may also be an outlier among Commonwealth nations with closer ties to the monarchy, namely Australia and New Zealand.

Australia is going to revamp its coins, but it has decided not to replace Queen Elizabeth with her son when it updates its $5 notes. Instead, the Reserve Bank of Australia intends to honour Indigenous culture and history in its design. New Zealand may bide its time. The country said it will be a number of years before it needs to update its coins and possibly longer for banknotes.

Recent polling in New Zealand found that 44 per cent of respondents would support remaining a constitutional monarchy if a referendum were held, while a similar number believed the monarchy is "part of a colonial past that has no place in the country."

The United Kingdom, of course, is already in the process of changing its currency. The banknotes aren't expected to go into circulation until mid-2024, according to the Bank of England. The Royal Mint began producing and circulating coins with the effigy of King Charles last year.
Liberals reject balanced budget and mandatory voting as official policy

The Canadian Press
Sat, May 6, 2023 



OTTAWA — The federal Liberal party embraced an expansion of affordable housing, building high-speed rail between Ontario and Quebec, and a basic guaranteed income as their three-day policy convention wrapped up in Ottawa Saturday.

But they rejected the ideas of campaigning on a promise to balance the budget or making voting mandatory.

The event was the first in-person convention for the party since 2018 and is likely the last before the next election. While that campaign doesn't have to happen until the fall of 2025, it's a minority Parliament and an election could come earlier if the NDP-Liberal supply and confidence agreement ever fails.

Many Liberals saw the convention as their chance to re-energize as they move into pre-campaign mode.

"This is where it starts," said Sachit Mehra, who defeated Mira Ahmad to become the Liberal's new national party president after voting ended Saturday.

"In order to send more Liberal MPs here (to Ottawa), we've got to go back into communities and begin working now."

He noted there are five byelections coming up soon, only two of them seats won by Liberals in 2021.

There are 24 new policies to guide the party ahead of the next campaign, though none of them are binding on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

He missed half of the convention attending the coronation of King Charles in London, but reiterated in his keynote address Thursday that he has every intention to lead the Liberals into the next campaign.

In addition to affordable housing and a basic livable income, Liberals also re-embraced the idea of overhauling the electoral system itself. Trudeau promised to do so in 2015, but broke that promise when he said the political parties could not find a consensus on which system to use.

There is, however, no pressure from the grassroots for Trudeau to campaign on balancing the budget.

Liberals from Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault's Montreal riding were behind a resolution calling for the party to develop a clear, costed proposal for a return to balanced budgets, and that it be part of their next election platform.

It pointed to the rising debt levels in Canada in recent years — levels driven up much quicker due to pandemic spending so the economy survived COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 and 2021 — as well as the fact a balanced budget will be something the Conservatives campaign on in the next election.

It failed by a vote of 96 against to 76 in favour early Saturday morning, and not even Guilbeault threw his weight behind it.

He said he backs the recent budget of Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, which shows deficits in each of the next five years. Guilbeault said that budget heavily invests in clean technology to keep Canada in the race during the clean tech industrial revolution underway.

"What I'm saying is that of course we want to to balance the budget and it's important, but we also have other important things we need to do," he said.

He said rejecting the motion does not mean the Liberals won't be able to show a path to balance by the time the next campaign nears.

"I think we have we have a couple of budgets before the next election, so we'll have all the opportunity to discuss this particular issue and obviously especially leading to the election," he said.

Many Liberals felt the convention succeeded in its goal to regroup and recharge after a difficult few years, and they also left with no doubt Trudeau is the centre of this party.

But there were also signs that the list of Liberals who will one day vie to replace him is getting more clear.

On Friday night, two ministers who have been seen as possible front runners shared the stage with two keynote speakers.

Minister François-Philippe Champagne did a brief question-and-answer session with former prime minister Jean Chrétien. Both are from Shawinigan, Que.

Champagne's designs on the leadership were fodder for a joked from Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay who introduced them to the stage.

"Between Mr. Chretien and François-Philippe Champagne, that part of the country has produced two of the best prime min-, politicians that I've ever met," said MacAulay, to laughter and applause.

Madimba Tshibuabua, who attended the convention, said he was impressed with Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly's appearance at the convention. He said he viewed her as someone who could lead the nation one day.

"I followed Mélanie Joly closely, and I think what she said was so amazing. She just showed me how involved she is in every single international initiative," Tshibuabua said Saturday.

Defence Minister Anita Anand also delivered an energetic speech Saturday afternoon that some saw as her throwing her marker into the eventual leadership campaign.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 6, 2023.

Mia Rabson and Mickey Djuric, The Canadian Press