Wednesday, September 01, 2021

Carpets, dust are sources of airborne 'forever chemicals' in schools, offices


A new survey revealed surprisingly high airborne PFAS concentrations in kindergarten classrooms, which researchers link to old carpets and other products with manufacturing processes that include the chemicals. 
File Photo by wavebreakmedia/Shutterstock

Aug. 31 (UPI) -- Harmful forever chemicals called PFAS can become airborne and circulate indoors, according to a new study.

Using a new measurement technique, researchers detected surprisingly high concentrations of PFAS in air sampled from kindergarten classrooms, university offices and laboratories.

In some indoor settings, scientists detected toxin levels as high as those measured at outdoor clothing and carpet stores, where PFAS-treated products are bought and sold.

Researchers shared the results of their survey in a new paper, published Tuesday in the journal Environmental Science & Technology Letters.

RELATED Report: Dangerous levels of 'forever chemicals' found at Great Lakes area military sites

"Food and water are known to be major sources of PFAS exposure. Our study shows that indoor air, including dust, is another source of exposure to potentially harmful forever chemicals," senior study author Rainer Lohmann said in a press release.

"In fact, for children in homes or schools with old PFAS-treated carpets, inhalation may be even more important than dust as an exposure pathway to volatile PFAS that eventually could biotransform to more persistent and harmful PFAS," said Lohmann, a professor at the University of Rhode Island whose research focus is marine and atmospheric chemistry.

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are a class of synthetic compounds used in a variety of industrial processes and found in dozens of household items.

RELATED Study: Many cosmetics contain unlisted, toxic 'forever chemicals'


They have been linked to a variety of health problems, including cancer and high cholesterol, and a report published earlier this year found the toxins are accumulating in municipal drinking water all over the United States.

The health threats posed by PFAS have inspired U.S. lawmakers to take action as the chemicals have been found in drinking and ground water across the country, including after years of use at military bases.

In April, Reps. Debbie Dingell, D-Mich., and Fred Upton, R-Mich., introduced bipartisan legislation on Tuesday to designate PFAS as hazardous substances and set a national drinking standard for the "forever chemicals.

RELATED 'Eco-friendly' foam may pose environmental, human health risks

A separate analysis published Tuesday by the Environmental Working Group spotlighted six U.S. military sites with ground water PFAS levels thousands of times higher than the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and most states permit.

But as the latest findings show, PFAS contamination isn't limited to water.

To measure the concentrations of airborne PFAS in various indoor settings, scientists affixed polyethylene sheets to the ceilings of several kindergarten classrooms, offices and laboratories.

Researchers also placed a sheet in one single family home, an elevator, two Rhode Island carpet stores and the storage room of an outdoor clothing store in California.

Several classrooms and labs at the University of Rhode Island had higher PFAS concentrations than those measured in the storage room in California. The highest PFAS concentrations were measured in the two Rhode Island carpet stores.

"PFAS were formerly used as stain and water repellents in most carpets," said lead author Maya Morales-McDevitt. "Fortunately, major retailers including The Home Depot and Lowe's now only sell PFAS-free carpets. We believe that slowly smaller retailers will do so as well."

Families can reduce PFAS exposure by replacing carpets, but a variety of other products can emit forever chemicals, including clothing, shoes, building products and furniture.

"As long as they continue to be used in products, we'll all be eating, drinking, and breathing PFAS," said co-author Tom Bruton, senior scientist at the Green Science Policy Institute. "We need to turn off the tap and stop all unnecessary uses of PFAS as soon as possible."
Brazilian viper venom may become tool in fight against coronavirus, study shows

By Leonardo Benassatto
© Reuters/CARLA CARNIEL Brazilian study uses snake venom against COVID-19 in Sao Paulo

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazilian researchers have found that a molecule in the venom of a type of snake inhibited coronavirus reproduction in monkey cells, a possible first step toward a drug to combat the virus causing COVID-19.
© Reuters/CARLA CARNIEL Brazilian study uses snake venom against COVID-19

A study published in the scientific journal Molecules this month found that the molecule produced by the jararacussu pit viper inhibited the virus's ability to multiply in monkey cells by 75%.

© Reuters/CARLA CARNIEL Brazilian study uses snake venom against COVID-19

"We were able to show this component of snake venom was able to inhibit a very important protein from the virus," said Rafael Guido, a University of Sao Paulo professor and an author of the study.

The molecule is a peptide, or chain of amino acids, that can connect to an enzyme of the coronavirus called PLPro, which is vital to reproduction of the virus, without hurting other cells.

Already known for its antibacterial qualities, the peptide can be synthesized in the laboratory, Guido said in an interview, making the capture or raising of the snakes unnecessary.

"We're wary about people going out to hunt the jararacussu around Brazil, thinking they're going to save the world ... That's not it!" said Giuseppe Puorto, a herpetologist running the Butantan Institute's biological collection in Sao Paulo. "It's not the venom itself that will cure the coronavirus."

© Reuters/CARLA CARNIEL Brazilian study uses snake venom against COVID-19

Researchers will next evaluate the efficiency of different doses of the molecule and whether it is able to prevent the virus from entering cells in the first place, according to a statement from the State University of Sao Paulo (Unesp), which was also involved in the research.

They hope to test the substance in human cells but gave no timeline.

The jararacussu is one of the largest snakes in Brazil, measuring up to 6 feet (2 meters) long. It lives in the coastal Atlantic Forest and is also found in Bolivia, Paraguay, and Argentina.

© Reuters/CARLA CARNIEL Brazilian study uses snake venom against COVID-19

(Reporting by Leonardo Benassatto; Additional reporting by Pedro Fonseca; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

Brazilian viper venom may become tool in fight against coronavirus, study shows

© Reuters/CARLA CARNIEL loBrazilian study uses snake venom against COVID-19
Black US farmers awaiting billions in promised debt relief


BOYDTON, Va. (AP) — There was a time when Black farms prospered.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

LONG READ

Just two generations out of slavery, by 1910 Black farmers had amassed more than 16 million acres of land and made up about 14 percent of farmers. The fruit of their labors fed much of America.

Now, they have fewer than 4.7 million acres. Black farms in the U.S. plummeted from 925,000 to fewer than 36,000, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's latest farm census. And only about one in 100 farmers is Black.

What happened?


They were able to overcome the broken promise of “40 acres and a mule” to the newly freed slaves — a military order, later rescinded. But over the last century, they faced one obstacle after another because of their race.

Farmers needed loans to expand, to buy seed, to bridge the time between harvests. But lenders — chief among them, the USDA — often refused to give them money, and often rushed to foreclose. Suppliers and customers undercut them. Laws of inheritance led to the breakup of homesteads.

Now the government wants to make amends by providing billions of dollars in debt forgiveness for farmers of color as part of the pandemic relief package. But a judge has put the money on hold in the face of lawsuits filed by white farmers claiming that the program is unfair — reverse discrimination.

Today’s Black farmers and the descendants of Black farmers who struggled and lost their stakes argue that they are the ones who have been the victims of injustice:

The Virginia farmer who barely was able to keep part of his farm when the USDA threatened to sell it at auction. The Kansas man who lost the land his grandparents once homesteaded. The Arkansas farmer who is holding on by a thread, praying the federal aid will come through in time.

It was racism, says farmer John Wesley Boyd Jr. And it still is.

“I think discrimination is still pervasive. I think that it’s done in a much subtler way,” Boyd says. “I don’t think you’re going to see many USDA officials spitting on people now or maybe calling them colored, but they aren’t lending them any money — the way they lend white farmers.”

___

Steering his John Deere tractor with his left hand, the 55-year-old Boyd clutches a rusty, mud-encrusted horseshoe in his right. Discovered in a field by one of his workers, it’s become something of a talisman.

“This horseshoe here probably came off one of the mules,” he says as the squeaky-creaky planter carves rows into the rocky soil. “Because that’s what Blacks were using. They weren’t using no tractors like this, man.”

On this blistering summer day, Boyd is sowing his cash crop, soybeans, making passes up and down a rolling 1,000-acre tract along the broad Roanoke River in Virginia. It’s one of several parcels he owns, totaling 1,500 acres — some of it land that his ancestors once tilled as slaves.

And now, it’s his. Some days, it’s hard to believe.

“I’m owning land that many of my forefathers worked when it was scotch free. You know -- slave labor, man,” says Boyd, his black cowboy hat casting a shadow over his face. “I’m just trying to make them proud.”

Like the other Black farmers, Boyd has encountered prejudice in many ways. An example: Boyd’s wife, Kara, a member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, recalls the time her husband took a load of soybeans to the grain elevator and got a low price for it. Too much trash or moisture in it, he was told.

When Kara Boyd brought in another load from the same field, she got a better price. But when her stepfather, who is white, took a load out of the same field, she recalled that he was told: “Man, these are the best beans they’d seen and how many more could he bring them?”

But Boyd’s battle with the USDA was epic. It almost wiped him out.

Boyd was just 18 years old when he assumed an existing USDA loan when he bought his first farm in the early 1980s. He says walking into his local USDA office was like a return to the Jim Crow era. Black farmers had supervised accounts and could only get appointments with the local lending officer on a single day of the week, a practice that came to be known as Black Wednesday.

Boyd endured racial slurs. A loan officer once spat tobacco juice on him — he accidentally missed the spit can, the official would claim. Another time, Boyd saw an official tear up his application and throw it in the trash.

In 1996, USDA took just 30 days to foreclose on some of his farmland. Then the department moved to auction off the remaining 110 acres.

Boyd joined other Black farmers at a protest in Washington, tying a mule named 40 Acres to the White House gate. Their demonstration was successful; less than a week later, then-Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman soon declared a farm foreclosure moratorium. Boyd had just enough time to save his farm.

Documents from a USDA internal review that Boyd provided to The Associated Press show investigators found his operating loan requests were not processed for years, despite explicit instructions from the agency’s state director. It also found that his account was improperly referred to a credit bureau as delinquent when it should have been restructured, deepening his financial difficulties.

Boyd recounts how, unlike their white counterparts, Black farmers who fell behind on a payment would see their loans immediately accelerated, no negotiations. They would be given just 30 days to pay the full amount or they were pressured to sign their deed over to USDA under a program which purportedly allowed them to lease and later buy back their land when their financial situation improved.

But that typically didn’t happen because USDA’s local county committees — comprised mostly of white local farmers — would be given first option on such leases. That’s how Boyd says he lost his 46-acre tobacco farm in 1996. It ended up in the hands of a white farmer who was a member of the committee.

These kinds of practices prompted U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman to approve the landmark settlement of the Pigford v. Glickman lawsuit filed by Black farmers in 1999.

The settlement provided about $1 billion to 15,000 farmers who said USDA unfairly turned them down for loans because of their race between 1981 and 1996. A second round of $1.25 billion stemming from that lawsuit was approved by the court in 2011 for people who were denied earlier payments because they missed filing deadlines.

“It is up to the Secretary of Agriculture and other responsible officials at the USDA to fulfill its promises, to ensure that this shameful period is never repeated and to bring the USDA into the twenty-first century,” the judge wrote.

Though USDA paid more than $2.4 billion under the Pigford settlements, state taxes eroded recoveries, debt relief was incomplete and reports before Congress show the settlements did not cure the problems faced by minority farmers.

Government lawyers noted in a court filing that between 2006 and 2016, Black farmers were subject to 13% of USDA foreclosures — despite receiving fewer than 3% of direct loans.

___

Tucked amid the vast plains of Kansas are the remnants of what was once the bustling Black settlement of Nicodemus. It is the most famous of the Midwestern settlements where former slaves known as “exodusters” migrated more than a century ago, hopeful that farming their own land here would help them escape the racism and poverty of the South.

Little remains today of that farming heritage as even the few Black families who were able to hold on to their land now mostly lease their ground out to white farmers. Nicodemus farmers who once tilled hundreds of acres of farmland no longer actively farm, and much of their ground has been lost over the generations.

Just a couple of miles outside the town sit the 200 acres that the grandparents of Theodore Bernard Bates once homesteaded. The Black farmer and his father bought the family homestead in 1970, taking a loan from what was then the Production Credit Association of Stockton, Kansas.

USDA’s farm loan lending agency refused to even give them an application to fill out, said Bates, one of the original named plaintiffs in the Pigford lawsuit. He received, as he puts it, “not a penny” from that settlement.

“I learned later the reason (USDA) didn’t want to give me an application was because they didn’t want it hanging in their office that they discriminated against a Black person,” Bates says. “They’d be in trouble, see, so they didn’t want that in the office. They didn’t want that record.”

The 1980s were especially tough on the Bates farm. They suffered through a drought one year, a late freeze in another and then a hailstorm that wiped out their wheat crop. Their lender foreclosed.

Three years before his death, the former president of the Production Credit Association swore in a 2012 affidavit that there was a plan to get Bates “out of farming.” Elvin D. Keiswetter said in that affidavit that the lender’s board decided it would “rather foreclose, even if they lost money” than take Bates’ money, regardless if it was paid on the notes.

Keiswetter said that shortly after their lawyer filed the foreclosure petition, Bates came to his office with his parents and his children. Bates owed about $180,000; he asked whether, if he paid $100,000, the lender would give him until after harvest, or six months, to pay the balance.

They took his farm machinery first, and then they took the land. Then the sheriff came and cut the lock on his grain storage bins. Bates and his wife watched for hours that night as trucks hauled out thousands of bushels of wheat they had worked hard to harvest.

After they took everything, Bates says the family was forced to go on food stamps to survive. He worked a few odd jobs over the years, including a stint as a corrections officer. Every time they go to Nicodemus now, they drive alongside the edge of their old homestead to look at the land.

“It is just something you can’t explain,” he says. “It hurts so deep.”

Years later, the now 84-year-old Kansas man is still haunted by the memory of Nov. 7, 1986 — the day they went to the federal court hearing in Wichita where the foreclosure was finalized. They got home late that Friday evening and his father, Alvin, asked him, “What you guys get done today?”

“We got foreclosed on,” Bates told him.

His father didn’t say a word, he recalls.

“I guess he just couldn’t stand it to see his family homestead go, you know, and he died that Sunday,” Bates says.

___

The USDA was not responsible for all the misfortunes of Black farmers. Other structural impediments also have taken their toll.

One involves family land that is passed on to several surviving kin without a will, known as “heirs’ property.” USDA studies show the practice is prevalent among Black people in the South, Appalachian white families, Hispanics in southwestern colonia communities and Native American tribes.

The result: a lack of access to money, because lenders are usually reluctant to extend credit without a clear title to the land. Congress authorized in the 2018 farm bill language that would ease loans to those farmers. But it was not until this year that USDA actually funded a $67 million heirs relending program to resolve land ownership and succession issues.

Many Black farms have been lost over the decades in what are called partition sales. In the South, particularly, many Black landowners distrusted the local courts, or were barred from them, and failed to leave wills or even record their deeds. Over several generations, a single tract can end up being held in common by dozens or even hundreds of heirs.

In places like coastal Georgia and South Carolina, popular vacation destinations, speculators would track down distant members of these families and buy their interest in the old family farm, which the heir may never have even seen. That outsider can then petition the court to sell the entire tract and divide the money, leaving the entire tract of land to be sold at auction, often at a fraction of its real value.

Paul Bradshaw signed in 2008 a lease that upon his death gave his son, Rod, a 10-year option to farm and eventually buy the entire 2,950 acres that the Black farmer had accumulated near Jetmore, Kansas — a move meant to keep the family farm intact for the next generation.

By then, the father and son had already been farming together for decades. Paul Bradshaw, who died two years after signing that lease agreement, had also separately drawn up a will that evenly split the money received for the farm among his eight children, his son says.

Over the years, Rod Bradshaw had made several discrimination complaints against USDA. When his claim seeking debt relief under the Pigford lawsuit was denied, he says he was unable to buy out his sisters’ shares.

A bitter family fight ensued after his father’s death, and a local judge threw out the lease agreement and split the family farm among the son and his seven sisters. Rod Bradshaw says he ended up with about 350 acres of it that he still farms, while his sisters sold or leased their acres to white farmers.

“If Dad knew what happened, he would be livid,” he says.

Bradshaw ended up filing for bankruptcy — something he said he never would have had to do, had it not been for USDA’s refusal to give him debt relief under the Pigford settlement and its confiscation of his farm program payments. He filed a federal discrimination lawsuit against USDA in 2004, leading to a bench trial in 2018. He is still waiting for the judge’s decision.

Bradshaw — who has more than $300,000 in direct USDA loans that would qualify for the debt relief — has been unable to obtain any money through pandemic relief benefits open to all farmers.

“I think I am probably going to suffer some setbacks, but I think I can hang on ... depending on what happens,” Bradshaw says.

___

USDA spokeswoman Kate Waters says the agency is committed to rooting out systemic racism and reducing barriers to accessing services. She says the department plans to launch an Equity Commission later this year to identify problems and fix them.

Congress, meanwhile, approved a $4 billion debt relief program for 16,000 farmers of color in March as part of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 stimulus package.

The funding was intended to remedy past discrimination in USDA loan programs, and to provide $1 billion for outreach and technical assistance for what it calls socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers — a group that includes not only Black farmers, but also Hispanic, Native American and Asian producers.

White farmers have filed lawsuits in Florida, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Texas, Wyoming, Illinois, and Minnesota. In June, U.S. District Judge Marcia Morales Howard issued a nationwide, preliminary injunction halting the program.

The Texas case is led by Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller and brought by America First Legal, a nonprofit started this year by Stephen Miller and other senior members of former President Donald Trump’s administration.

Sid Miller, who is suing in his personal capacity as a farmer and not on behalf of the state, contends the debt relief is unconstitutional because it excludes white farmers based on their race or ethnicity. He argues USDA no longer discriminates against farmers of color and called the loan forgiveness a “backhanded way” of offering reparations.

“It is just flat wrong,” Miller said. “Us Republicans and old white guys, we get accused of being racist all the time, but this is racist by the administration. It couldn’t be a plainer case of racist.”

But it is clear that minority farmers still suffer disproportionately. As of May 31, 11% of white farmers were delinquent on a government farm loan, compared with 37.9% of Black borrowers, 14.6% of Asian borrowers, 17.4% of American Indian borrowers and 68% of Hispanic borrowers, according to court documents.

For Abraham Carpenter, a 59-year-old Black farmer whose family grows fruits and vegetables near Grady, Arkansas, the injunction means he has to wait and hope for help with about $200,000 in loans, even as rain has wiped out hundreds of acres of watermelons, turnips, collards and other crops.

“I’ve seen some really, really tough times, you know, but I’ve always been able to survive because of God’s blessing and his mercy and his grace. And they are still upon us,” Carpenter says. “So I am not going to say I am going to go belly up. I am going to work a little harder and I am going to pray a little harder.”

___

Hegeman reported from Belle Plaine, Kansas.

Roxana Hegeman And Allen G. Breed, The Associated Press
Price tag on the planet? Helping business value nature

From agriculture to housing to transportation, economic growth has historically depended on burning through finite natural resources and rearranging natural landscapes.

© Pedro PARDO Indigenous populations, fishermen and real estate developers all value mangrove forests but have different ideas of what to do with them

AFP 

As the IUCN World Conservation Congress kicks off in France on Friday, an urgent question will be how to reduce the devastation wrought by humanity on the environment.

One idea gaining currency is to assign nature an economic value.

"It's the only way to speak the same language as political decision-makers," Nathalie Girouard, an expert on environmental policy at intergovernmental think tank OECD, told AFP.
© Gal ROMA Highlights of a landmark Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) draft report on the effects of a warming planet on nature.

"We have increased economic growth at the expense of nature."

Chemical-intensive agriculture, over-fishing, pollution and climate change are all pushing ecosystems to the brink of collapse.

For business, putting a monetary value on nature means that damaging resources such as breathable air and drinkable water becomes not just a survival risk, but a financial one.

© Joao LAET Critics of natural capital say legislation and not financial incentive will work best to protect remaining ecosystems

But experts are divided on how to measure "natural capital", and some argue that it should not be done at all.

- Natural capital -

During most of industrialisation, the intrinsic value of nature's bounty -- air, fresh water and oceans, for example -- was not recognised because it cost nothing to consume or pollute.

The concept of natural capital, some conservationists and economists argue, makes it possible to evaluate ecosystems in terms of the "services" they provide -- and the cost of repairing them when damaged.

Mary Ruckelshaus, head of the Natural Capital Project at Stanford University, acknowledges that it is a complex task.

She gives the example of their work in Belize where indigenous populations, fishermen and real estate developers all value mangrove forests, but have very different ideas of what to do with them.

Some will value their capacity to dampen storm surges, while others would prefer to see aquaculture or sandy beaches in their place.

"They help protect coastlines, communities from sea-level rise and hurricanes," she says, adding that such a "service" is worth millions, in some cases billions, of dollars.

"You can monetise that."

But she says such numbers cannot always cover the true cost of harming a resource.

"What's the cultural value of the mangrove forest to an indigenous community who lives in Belize? Priceless," she continues.

Ruckelshaus says the best way to assign value to ecosystems is to get all the interested parties around a table.

"If you articulate and quantify where the most value is for each stakeholder, often you don't have as many trade-offs as you think," she says.

- Regulation still key -

When you scale things up, the numbers are eye-popping.

Some $44 trillion (37 trillion euros) of annual economic value generation -- half of the world's gross domestic product -- is moderately or highly dependent on nature, according to the World Economic Forum.

Using the natural capital as the guiding principle, proponents favour integrating natural resources into the calculation of a country's wealth.

"This is the first step to integrating biodiversity in national strategies and plans and to bring about real change, thanks to clear targets and indicators," said Girouard.

But the concept remains controversial for some.

In 2018 British writer and environmentalist George Monbiot argued against the idea, which he said "reinforces the notion that nature has no value unless you can extract cash from it".

French author, environmentalist and member of the European Parliament Aurore Lalucq agrees.

"We don't need to give a price to bees -- we need to outlaw the pesticides that kill them," she told AFP.

She believes that legislation, not financial incentive, will work best to protect remaining ecosystems.

"We need to regulate, make practices illegal and invest in green infrastructure and biodiversity," she said.

Ruckelshaus acknowledges that the monetary value system has its limitations and that government regulation remains crucial.

"Valuing nature... gives everybody the same information but it doesn't guarantee that everyone will make the decision to protect nature," she said.

laf-nrh/mh/jj/rl
Nothing new about anti-vaccine hysteria


First in a two-part series

In an early episode of the TV doctor drama “House” (2004-2012), the title character, played by Hugh Laurie, is talking to a mother who won’t vaccinate her baby because she believes it’s all a big scam.

Dr. House holds up the baby’s toy frog and offers some observations on the business model of the company that made it.

“You know another really good business?” he says abruptly. “Teeny, tiny baby coffins. You can get them in frog green, fire engine red. Really.”

Of course, House was saying the quiet part out loud for effect. Few non-fictional doctors would be so blunt.

But vaccine skepticism has become a major problem in the modern world — though perhaps not as prominent in Newfoundland and Labrador as it is in some parts of Canada and south of the border.

“Thankfully, in this province, I haven’t run into too much hesitancy over my career, which is different from a lot of my colleagues in the country and in the world,” Dr. Natalie Bridger told The Telegram this week.

Bridger, Eastern Health’s clinical chief of infection prevention and control, said she finds the sea of misinformation spread on Facebook and other social media sites “soul-crushing.”

“Vaccines are probably one of the main reasons why life expectancy has gone up and infant mortality has gone down,” she said. “There have been many other discoveries in the medical world over the past 100 or so years, but I would say vaccines are up there as probably No. 1.”

As it turns out, misinformation about vaccines has a surprisingly long history.


Take the case of Dr. Alexander Ross.

Ross was a member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba in 1885 when he circulated a pamphlet lashing out at a small pox vaccination campaign underway in Montreal.


“His pamphlet serves as a prime illustration of the strategies used by anti-vaccinationists — both then and now,” Paula Larsson, a doctoral student in the history of medicine at Oxford, wrote for theconservation.com last year. “These arguments are not new and have changed little over time. Learning to recognize their repackaging in modern form can help with effectively combating their power.”

What are those strategies?


First, downplay the seriousness of the disease.

“Despite mortality rates between 30 and 40 per cent, and the extreme contagiousness of the disease, it was common for anti-vaccinationists to claim that smallpox was only a minor threat to a population,” wrote Larsson.

Ross insisted authorities were panicking over a minor outbreak, and that the disease wasn’t serious. In fact, more than 3,000 people — two per cent of Montreal’s population — died in the epidemic despite best efforts to combat it.

Another tactic parallel to today’s “anti-vaxx” propaganda was to trot out a litany of things the vaccine may cause. In recent times, we had the autism scare of 1998, which has since been soundly debunked (more on that in Part 2), but the alarmism was no different 100 years earlier.

“The anti-vaccinationists of the past claimed that vaccination caused a full spectrum of diseases, from smallpox itself to syphilis, typhoid, tuberculosis, cholera and ‘blood-poisoning,’” wrote Larsson.

The difference in the 19th century is that unsterile practices did occasionally cause secondary transmission of infections, something unlikely to occur today.

Larsson also highlights the tendency — then as now — to see media, experts and drug makers as part of a giant, money-making cabal, colluding to pull the wool over people’s eyes in order to capitalize on public fear.

And perhaps most surprisingly, the notion of personal freedom was as prominent a cudgel against vaccines in 1885 as it is in 2021.

“Tyranny detestable in any shape, but in none so formidable as when it is assumed and exercised by a number of petty tyrants,” Ross wrote in his pamphlet. “It is in vain for working men and women to plead that they do not believe in the efficacy of vaccination. They are told that they may believe what they like, but that vaccinated THEY MUST BE, or leave their employment, which to many of them means STARVATION!!”

Today’s social media warriors have nothing on the hyperbole of 1885.

“There have always been individuals who capitalize on medical crises to push their own agenda, and in the modern age of digital media, strategies of misinformation have evolved and expanded,” Larsson concludes. “Much like Ross, the leaders of these movements gain social power by painting themselves as lone crusaders.”

Peter Jackson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Telegram
How secret Canadian money helped forge modern China

Special to National Post 

LONG READ

© Provided by National Post A 1910 photo of Sun Yat-sen taken by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. Soon after this photo was taken, Sun would embark on a secret fundraising trip through the Chinatowns of Western Canada.

While you were busy memorizing interminable details about Responsible Government or Laura Secord, you missed out on some of the best parts of our national story. Hopefully we can rectify things somewhat in our occasional series, The Secret History of Canada, documenting the little-known (and often R-rated) parts you missed. Today, the time an influential Chinese revolutionary travelled in secret through Canada’s early 20th Century Chinatowns.

To the non-Chinese British Columbians who spotted him in their midst, he would have seemed like just another Chinese person; no different than the millions of others the federal government of the era was actively trying to keep out.

He dressed well, spoke English perfectly and — particularly rare for a Chinese national of the era — was a Christian. He was also a wanted man who faced immediate arrest and deportation if any official ever figured out that he wasn’t the Japanese or American he claimed to be.

But the non-Chinese coal miners and fishermen of early 20th Century Canada never did place the mysterious figure, and would never know they had rubbed elbows with a revolutionary who would shape the course of future events like few others.

Sun Yat-sen in 1924, just before his death.

Sun Yat-sen took a weak, divided and economically stagnated China and set it on the course to becoming the economic juggernaut it is today. And he did it in part with clandestine Canadian support.

Born in 1866 to a poor rural family in Guangdong province, Sun was educated by British missionaries in Hawaii, which was then an independent kingdom. Upon his return to China, Sun initially set out to train as a physician, but soon came to believe that his semi-colonized homeland needed to embrace Western thought and technology to end decades of military and economic defeats.

China at the time was ruled by the Qing Dynasty, which had been in power since the 17th Century. While the rest of the world was feverishly building railroads, China under the Qing saw them as an encumbrance that would harm agriculture and obstruct feng shui. Government corruption was rampant, and Qing bureaucracy never accounted for China’s growing population. Overwhelmed officials completely failed to respond to an 1876 famine that killed at least nine million people.

Part of the ruined Old Summer Palace in Beijing, China, circa 1860. The Palace, formerly the residence of emperors of the Qing Dynasty, was destroyed by British and French forces during the Second Opium War in 1860. The conflict was one of several that became emblematic of the weakness of China’s Qing rulers.

In 1894, Sun wrote a lengthy letter to his provincial governor suggesting ways China could modernize. When it was callously dismissed, Sun returned to Hawaii and founded the Revive China Society, an underground revolutionary society that drew from the disaffected lower class.

In 1895, China was decisively defeated by Japan in the first Sino-Japanese War. After inflicting Chinese casualties that were up to 30 times higher than their own, Japan won control of Taiwan, the Korean peninsula and parts of eastern China — all of which it would control until the end of the Second World War.

The humiliation convinced Sun that reform of the existing dynasty was impossible. With the help of revolutionary contacts in Hong Kong, Sun launched an uprising in Guangzhou, just up the Pearl River Delta from Hong Kong.

His plan to seize the city was leaked, leading to the arrest of dozens of Society members and the execution of Lu Haodong, best known as the designer of the blue sky and white sun emblem which still adorns the Taiwan flag. The uprising was a spectacular failure that forced Sun into exile, pursued by the vengeful agents of the Qing Empress.

S
Sun Yat-sen, centre, with members of the Tong Meng Hui Nationalist Movement in Vancouver, February, 1911.

An 1896 stop in London saw Sun detained by Qing secret service , where deportation and execution seemed certain until a British media campaign and friends in the U.K. government stepped in. The Foreign Office successfully pressured the Qing embassy to release Sun, and the incident left him a sudden celebrity.



Sun’s first trip to Canada , in 1897, was a layover between Europe and Japan. Trailed by Qing agents from Montreal to Vancouver, Nanaimo, and Victoria, he could do little more than take in the sights. But when he returned in 1911, he would be in the Chinatowns of the West Coast preaching revolution.

The 1899 Boxer Rebellion saw disaffected Chinese peasants push the Qing into a failed attempt to oust Western influence and missionaries. Its failure at the hands of a multi-nation alliance had further destabilized China.

In the meantime, Sun had orchestrated multiple uprisings, including an attempt to seize a military fort on the Vietnam border and a rebellion in the city of Huizhou, where the revolutionaries defeated the Qing in several skirmishes before being put down.

An Edmonton militia of Sun supporters. It was founded in 1915, and more than 500 people applied for membership. Edmontonians Ma Ziang and Huang Huilong, who would later travel to China to serve as Sun’s bodyguards, were members.

His world travels had made him an experienced speaker and fundraiser with legions of fans and powerful enemies. He’d also become wanted by the same country that saved him from the chopping block in 1896.

Sun’s rabble-rousing was clashing with Britain’s business interests in China, and the U.K. now warmed to the idea of deporting him to the Qing. If Canadian authorities identified him, he would be arrested on the spot and deported to meet his likely demise.

In 1911, Sun entered Vancouver with false papers, and he sometimes pretended he was Japanese. But the Chinese-Canadians he spoke to knew exactly who he was.

In Victoria alone Sun raised $12,000 dollars for the revolution, which is about $289,000 today. Sun didn’t just promise to oust the Qing and establish a republic in China; he told eager crowds of more than 1,000 people that, when he was in charge, China would negotiate better treatment for Canada’s Chinese population.

© Cumberland Museum and Archives A 1910 photo of the massive, self-contained Chinatown in the Vancouver Island mining town of Cumberland. Sun Yat-sen secretly spoke here during his 1911 tour.

At the time, Chinese and Japanese immigrants to Canada had to pay a punitive $500 head tax . They also couldn’t vote, and had been declared “obnoxious to a free community and dangerous to the state” by a 1902 government commission .

Begrudgingly tolerated only as a source of cheap labour, laws banned Asians from many professions, and land covenants barred them from living in most neighbourhoods. Just a few years prior to Sun’s arrival, two days of spontaneous anti-Asian rioting in Vancouver had seen Japanese and Chinese neighbourhoods terrorized by rampaging white mobs.

© Library and Archives Canada Damage to an Asian-owned store in the aftermath of a 1907 riot in Vancouver orchestrated by the Asiatic Exclusion League.

Sun’s journey was a strict secret, and no mainstream press accounts from the time noted his tour through Canada. But everywhere Sun went, the Chinese-Canadian community flocked to him. Edmontonians travelled to Calgary, Lethbridge, and Winnipeg just to hear him talk, while businesses and community groups mortgaged their property for the cause .

Sun’s passionate speeches won over everyone from socialists to Ming Dynasty revivalists, and word spread to cities Sun couldn’t reach. Some Chinese invested in bonds that Sun promised his future republic would repay, while Qing representatives on their own barnstorming tours tried to undercut Sun’s message by selling investments and official titles.

His swing through the prairies in February 1911 rustled up another $35,000 (about $845,000 today). Considering that he was a wanted criminal pulling his support from a largely impoverished underclass, Sun was collecting truly incredible sums.

© B.C. Archives Part of the ruined Old Summer Palace in Beijing, China, circa 1860. The Palace, formerly the residence of emperors of the Qing Dynasty, was destroyed by British and French forces during the Second Opium War in 1860. The conflict was one of several that became emblematic of the weakness of China’s Qing rulers.

Sun was away from China when he learned about the Wuchang Uprising. Disgruntled soldiers influenced by Sun’s work were upset at a Qing plan to hand Chinese railroads over to foreign banks. They rebelled, and soon controlled all of Wuchang, which is today part of Wuhan. Inspi
red by their success, uprisings began breaking out across the country.



Flush with Canadian cash, Sun rushed home with dreams of creating a democratic republic from the chaos. After the military forced the resignation of the last Qing Emperor, Sun was briefly named provisional president of a government in Nanking, but was ousted by the powerful authoritarian Yuan Shikai in March 1912.

Sun was sent into exile once again as Canada and other Western governments recognized Yuan as the leader of the new Republic of China.

Sun returned to China in 1917 and attempted to halt its slide into fractured fiefdoms as former Qing generals transformed themselves into warlords. His humble Revive China Society had evolved into the powerful Kuomintang party, but Sun concluded that only a complete military conquest could allow a unified China to begin transitioning towards democracy. To that end, in the last months of his life Sun was extending an olive branch to the nascent Communist Party of China.

In 1925, Sun died of gallbladder cancer at just 58, creating a power vacuum in the Kuomintang that was eventually filled by Chiang Kai-shek. Chiang’s relationship with the Communist Party would soon fracture, throwing the country into a civil war that would not resolve until 1949 — and would simmer even through the long years of Japanese occupation during the Second World War.
© MIKE CLARKE/AFP/Getty Images Photos of Sun Yat-sen seen during a 2004 pro-democracy rally in Hong Kong.

In the West, Sun is an obscure figure overshadowed by Chiang and Mao Zedong. But in China he remains revered. Better remembered for his tenacity than his philosophy, his relentless fundraising and ability to keep the revolutionary flames stoked saw him dubbed the Father of China in both Taiwan and the People’s Republic.

The Kuomintang is still a powerhouse in Taiwanese politics, while Beijing is known to downplay Sun’s anti-imperialism, Christianity, and democratic vision in order to emphasize his role as a proto-socialist revolutionary with an eye towards rapid modernization.

© AFP PHOTO/Sam YEH In this 2005 image, Taiwan opposition leader Lien Chan leads a Kuomintang delegation in a bow to a statue of Sun Yat-sen at Sun’s mausoleum outside Nanjing in the People’s Republic of China.

Signs of Sun’s legacy can be seen throughout Canada. Toronto features two statues of him , visitors to Montreal can check out Sun Yat-sen Place, and if you’re driving in Markham, Ont., you might find yourself on Sun Yat-Sen Avenue. If you’re out west, there’s another statue in Victoria , and Vancouver’s impressive Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden.

Sun’s work strengthened ties between Chinese-Canadians and their homeland, and left the Canadian diaspora with a stronger sense of identity . Many followed his lead in cutting off their queues — distinctive long braids that were a sign of Qing subservience — which helped them better integrate into Canadian society. Hundreds of Chinese Canadians formed a militia that would travel to China to aid Sun and offer their services in the First World War.

But China’s revolutionary upheaval came to Canada, too. In 1916, Victoria’s Chinatown saw violent conflict between supporters of different would-be governments. Rival Chinatown newspapers competed to spread their version of rapidly changing events. And in 1918, a Kuomintang supporter in Victoria assassinated a visiting politician from Yuan Shikai’s government, briefly rendering association with the Kuomintang illegal in Canada.

© Ryan Sharpe/Wikimedia Commons A statue of Sun Yat-sen erected just outside Victoria, B.C.’s historic Chinatown.

In 1923, just two years before Sun’s death, Canada’s head tax would be replaced with a total ban on Chinese immigration, the Chinese Exclusion Act. This act lasted until 1947, when Chinese-Canadians were finally given full citizenship, beginning the slow improvement of conditions that Sun had promised.

Contemporary China’s glass skyscrapers and high-speed rail lines could be seen as a manifestation of the modernized future Sun had hoped for his homeland, but they came without the democratic freedoms the revolutionary had so fervently championed in Canadian Chinatowns.

During a 2016 visit to Vancouver, Sun’s great-grandson suggested that his ancestor would be “quite disappointed” with modern China’s human rights record.
We found tax records showing 'Hillbilly Elegy' author JD Vance's anti-opioid nonprofit faltered

awren@insider.com (Adam Wren,Meghan Morris) 
Two figures loom large over J.D. Vance's political future: tech titan Peter Thiel (left), who donated $10 million to Vance's Senate campaign, and former President Donald Trump, who has yet to endorse a Republican in the crowded Ohio primary. 
John Lamparski/Getty Images; Astrid Riecken For The Washington Post via Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Samantha Lee/Insider 

JD Vance is running for Senate in Ohio as a savior of the Midwest.

A nonprofit he started to fight the opioid epidemic seems to have faltered.

Vance's track record is the subject of an Insider deep-dive.

On the heels of "Hillbilly Elegy's" best-selling success in 2016, author JD Vance wrote a New York Times op-ed announcing that he was moving back to his native Ohio. The reason: a nonprofit aimed at combating the state's opioid epidemic.

"I've talked about these problems and I came to the conclusion that maybe I should be doing something to solve them," Vance told The Columbus Dispatch at the time.

Five years later, the much-ballyhooed nonprofit Our Ohio Renewal seems to have faltered before it ever got off the ground. Its status is now raising questions about the credentials of Vance, who has entered a crowded Republican primary to replace retiring GOP Sen. Rob Portman in 2022.

A review by Insider of the nonprofit's tax filings showed that in its first year, Our Ohio Renewal spent more on "management services" provided by its executive director Jai Chabria - who also serves as Vance's top political advisor - than it did on programs to fight opioid abuse.

Read more: 'Hillbilly Elegy' author JD Vance is running for Senate as a savior of the Rust Belt. Insiders and experts say that reputation is unearned.

The group, which has shut down its website and abandoned its Twitter account after publishing only two tweets, says it commissioned a survey to gauge the needs and welfare of Ohioans.

Vance's campaign declined to provide any documentation of the project when Insider asked about it. His campaign also declined to comment on the record about Our Ohio Renewal's work. As Insider prepared to publish its story, Vance attended a "Rally 4 Recovery" event in Dayton for families who have suffered from addiction.

A spokeswoman for the Ohio Opioid Education Alliance, the state's largest anti-opioid coalition, said in an interview she hadn't heard of Vance's organization.

The nonprofit raised so little in each of the last three years - less than $50,000 a year - that it wasn't even required by the IRS to disclose its activities and finances.

"It's a superficial way for him to say he's helping Ohio," says Doug White, a philanthropy adviser and former director of Columbia University's master of science in fundraising management.

Back in 2017, Vance tapped his best friend from Yale University law school, Jamil Jivani, to help run the operation, advising him on law and policy. Soon after Jivani decamped from Toronto to Columbus to help launch Our Ohio Renewal, he fell ill with stage four non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and left Ohio in 2018.


"It looks different now, with him being a Senate candidate," Jivani told Insider in an exclusive interview.

To read the whole Insider deep dive into Vance's nonprofit and his tech investing history, click here.
AMERICAN JUNKIES
Study: Some seniors at increased risk for opioid misuse after hip surgery

By Alan Mozes, HealthDay News

Many seniors who undergo surgery after breaking a hip continue to take opioids long after being released from the hospital, new research indicates.

After tracking nearly 30,000 U.S. older patients, investigators found that nearly 17% were still taking opioids as much as half a year after hip surgery.

At three months after surgery, that figure was nearly 70%, while almost 84% of the patients were on opioids during the first month following surgery.

The study team said the numbers suggest that older patients struggling with acute pain are not immune to the risk for becoming dependent on an extremely addictive drug.

RELATED Study: Laws that limit opioid prescription duration help cut length of use

"While the risk of long-term opioid dependence following musculoskeletal injury and surgery has been established in younger patient populations, our study found that this risk was present in elderly patients following hip fracture surgery as well," said study lead author Dr. Kanu Okike, an orthopedic surgeon with Hawaii Permanente Medical Group in Honolulu.

Okike and his colleagues focused on hip surgery patients aged 60 and up, with an average age of 82.

All the patients were surgically treated between 2009 and 2018 at one of 35 hospitals across the United States; roughly 7 in 10 were women.

RELATED Doctors prescribing more muscle relaxants for back pain


"Opioid pain medications are powerful agents which can alleviate the pain that many patients experience after hip fracture surgery," Okike acknowledged.

In that light, "it is certainly reasonable for patients to take opioid pain medications for the first few days or weeks following hip fracture surgery," he added.

"However, opioid pain medications are also associated with a number of serious side effects," Okike noted.

RELATED 1 in 10 seniors, 6 percent of adults use opioid painkillers in U.S.


With prolonged use, that can mean nausea, vomiting, sedation, constipation and breathing problems, alongside the risk for developing long-term dependence.

The risk for prolonged opioid use was found to be highest among the youngest patients, women, those who had a history of smoking or substance abuse, and those with a higher body mass index, which is a measure of excess weight.

The researchers will present their findings this week at a meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, in San Diego. Such research is considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Two experts not involved with the study stressed how chronic dependence is potentially a big problem among older pain patients.

"Opioids carry a high risk of addiction," said Linda Richter, vice president of prevention research and analysis with the Partnership to End Addiction.

"And when used for a longer period of time the risk of physical dependence on opioids increases, especially for patients with a history of substance misuse or substance use disorder, as this study found," Richter said.

In addition, Richter stressed that "older patients may be more vulnerable to the adverse effects of opioids, including the risk of addiction, since they typically metabolize drugs more slowly than younger people, and are more sensitive to the effects of drugs like opioids."

Adding to the problem, she noted, is the fact that "health care providers may be less likely to consider or identify a substance use problem in an elderly patient than in a younger patient, potentially mischaracterizing the symptoms of drug misuse as depression or anxiety."

And that, Richter said, could lead to "missing opportunities to help taper patients off addictive medications, provide alternatives, or refer those in need to treatment. The fact that such a high percentage of older patients in this study were prescribed opioids up to six months post-surgery is very concerning."

Such concerns were echoed by Dr. Yili Huang, director of the pain management center at Northwell Health's Phelps Hospital in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y.

"None of these findings are surprising, and just reinforce our current evidence that we should approach opioid use carefully," he said.

Given that "as many as 12% of patients started on opioids for any reason may develop opioid use disorder," Huang said it's important that postsurgical opioid prescriptions be carefully individualized for the type of surgery at hand and tailored for each patient's particular needs.

"The best course of action would be to provide a short course of opioids -- 7-14 days -- and reevaluate pain needs with a follow-up appointment," Huang said.

Meanwhile, Okike stressed there are other effective pain-control options that can be considered, "which can relieve pain without such severe side effects." He pointed to non-opioid painkillers -- such as acetaminophen, commonly known as Tylenol, or anti-inflammatories such as ibuprofen; nerve-blocking drugs; ice, and routine body repositioning.More information

There's more on opioid use concerns among the elderly at the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Copyright © 2021 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
NOT CHINA, NOT MEXICO
Fentanyl ‘superlab’ dismantled in rural Alberta
Caley Ramsay
© File / The Canadian Press File: Fentanyl pills are shown in an undated police handout photo.

The Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team says hundreds of millions of fentanyl doses have been kept off the streets after a "superlab" was dismantled in rural Alberta.

In a news release Tuesday, ALERT said 13 search warrants were executed on July 7 as part of Project Essence.

Homes and businesses in the Edmonton and Calgary areas were searched as part of the investigation. A "fentanyl superlab" was also located and searched near Aldersyde, Alta., which is located just southeast of Okotoks, Alta.

Read more: Over $2M in drugs, cash seized after drug ‘pipeline’ disrupted: ALERT

ALERT said more than 31 kilograms of fentanyl and precursors were seized, along with 7,600 kilograms of chemicals used in fentanyl production.

ALERT said the investigation covered all aspects of fentanyl production, "from importation to accumulation and stockpiling of equipment and raw chemicals, to production and eventual distribution."

Read more: Investigation into Alberta-B.C. drug trafficking network ends in $1M bust, 6 arrests : ALERT

It's not yet known if any arrests were made or how many suspects may be involved.

ALERT said more details would be released at a media availability at 11 a.m. Wednesday, where Justice Minister and Solicitor General Kaycee Madu, Minister for Mental Health and Addiction Mike Ellis, ALERT CEO Supt. Dwayne Lakusta and ALERT Edmonton Insp. Kevin Berge are all expected to speak.

Video: Edmonton’s Downtown Business Association takes action against opioid crisis


Canada’s drug policy — not drugs — is killing people at record numbers, advocates say


​It’s mind-boggling communities across Canada must still organize for an annual awareness day to draw public and policymakers’ attention to poisoned street drugs and an ongoing health crisis that has killed more than 21,000 people in just five years, advocates say.

Events for International Overdose Awareness Day are taking place across Canada on Tuesday to commemorate people killed by toxic street drugs, recognize the grief of family and friends, and advocate for change.

Yet as people gather to mourn across the globe, and despite public recognition of the public health crisis, the death toll across Canada from toxic street drugs is the highest it has ever been — and is spiking, said Karen Ward, a drug policy consultant for the City of Vancouver.

“It’s outrageous and so upsetting that we even have to have awareness when what we need right now is outrage and immediate and obvious action to change drug policy,” said Ward.

“Especially when we know what the problem is, and we know what to do.”

Deaths from poisoned street drugs continue to soar, and are anticipated to get worse, Ward said, noting recent federal modelling suggests that if the status quo continues, more than 1,800 people in Canada will die every three months in 2021 from the illicit toxic drug supply.

And should fentanyl poisoning worsen, that number may well peak at almost 2,400 fatalities over a three-month period.

British Columbia, the province hardest hit by the overdose crisis, is on track to experience its worst year on record since declaring a public health emergency in 2016, according to the BC Coroners Service report released Tuesday.


A total of 1,011 people died from poisoned street drugs in the first six months of 2021 alone — a 34 per cent increase over the previous high of 757 deaths during the same time frame last year as isolation and an increasingly toxic street supply was aggravated by the pandemic.

But 5.3 people continue to die daily from toxic illicit drugs in B.C., which has tallied 7,000 fatalities in the half-decade since declaring the issue a health crisis.

The toll is inexcusable given the deaths are preventable, Ward said, adding government drug policy is killing people rather than the drugs themselves.

“These deaths are the consequence of prohibition, which is the foundation of Canada's drug policy,” Ward said.

“People are buying ... unknown substances and don’t know what they're putting in their bodies.”

Drug users, advocates, grieving families, and substance use researchers have long called for provincial and federal governments to end prohibition, create a comprehensive regulated safe supply of drugs, and decriminalize the possession of illicit drugs.

An international awareness day is important so people suffering the loss of loved ones can grieve together, particularly after being isolated during the pandemic last year, Ward said.

But it’s not enough to just remember the dead, she stressed.

“We must mourn our dead collectively, but we also need to fight for our living, and our lives, because it’s only going to get worse if we don’t.”

Leslie McBain, co-founder of Moms Stop The Harm (MSTH), a national advocacy group made up of families who have lost loved ones to toxic street drugs, sat next to B.C.’s chief coroner Lisa Lapointe during the press conference for the latest death toll — and not for the first time.

McBain questioned why a socially conscious province and country would allow such a dismal and tragic situation to continue.

“Addiction is the only health issue wherein we shuffle people off to black-market produced products,” she said.

“These substances are produced without a nod to safety, science, or consistency.

“People who are addicted or have substance use disorder cannot access the drugs they need in any other way.”

McBain urged every member of the public to push all levels of government to demand drug policy change and implement a widespread regulated system of safe drug supply akin to those in place for other drugs, such as alcohol, tobacco and cannabis.

It’s hard to stay motivated and continue to push for a more compassionate drug policy, said McBain, who lost her only child, Jordan Miller, to a drug overdose in 2014.

“Here we have the worst year so far in the province for drug harms and drug deaths, so I feel a little demoralized,” McBain told Canada’s National Observer.

“Yet in other ways, I’m inspired to become more of an activist, and maybe more radical in our approach to demanding change from the government.”

The need for an overdose awareness day is driven by the stigma around drug use, but senior levels of government compound the shame and pain associated with it through inaction and incremental responses inadequate to the scale of the crisis, said McBain.

“Both levels of government don’t have the courage to widely implement a safe regulated supply of drugs for people who need them,” she said.

“If they did, those people who are addicted, or have substance use disorders, would not be dying.”

To effect such a systemic change to public health would be complicated, she conceded, but not impossible.

“I want people to understand that this is a solvable problem,” said McBain

“Yet meanwhile, people are dying, about 16 or 17 a day, across the country from toxic drugs.”

In addition to an online candlelight vigil for overdose awareness Tuesday evening, relatives are drawing purple chalk outlines of bodies with details about their loved ones outside politicians’ offices, including that of B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix, to draw attention to the losses suffered and to advocate for action, noted McBain.

“It’s to signify that people — our people, our kids, our loved ones — are dying,” she said.

“It’s about remembering those losses, and it’s a day of using every platform possible to talk about the solutions to the problem.”

In Campbell River, the city’s community action team (CAT) and community partners are hosting a memorial and public education event that will also provide free naloxone training, so people can save the life of someone overdosing on toxic drugs, said CAT co-ordinator Gwen Donaldson.

The CAT's goal in the small Vancouver Island city is to develop and support local solutions to the overdose crisis, reduce stigma, and make people aware of what resources are available to reduce the number of deaths from the poisoned drug supply, Donaldson said.

Seven people have died in the Campbell River area so far this year, according to the coroner’s report.

No community is exempt from the perils of the poisoned drug supply, Lapointe stressed.

“This public health emergency is just as real in small towns and communities as in any urban centres,” she said, noting that a fatal overdose from illicit toxic drugs is now the leading cause of death in B.C. for people aged 19 to 39.

Island Health Authority has the third-highest number of fatal overdoses so far this year — 162, behind Vancouver Coastal and Fraser Health with 283 and 342 deaths, respectively.

The cities with the highest number of deaths in the province are Vancouver, Surrey, and Victoria.

And of the total deaths in Island Health, 79 people have died in the south Vancouver Island health service area, 51 in central Vancouver Island, and 32 in the north region.

The number of deaths in the island’s north region at the six-month mark has already matched last year’s total deaths — previously the worst on record.

Dr. Erika Kellerhals, who practices addiction medicine in the North Island region, said there are fewer resources and specialists to deal with the toxic drug crisis in rural areas and small towns.

Few primary care providers have the expertise or feel comfortable prescribing what safe drug alternatives already exist to substance users, and given the lack of doctors in small communities, most already carry heavy caseloads and can’t provide the wrap-around services necessary to meet drug users needs, she said.

“People are just maxed out and must be the Jack or Jill for everything,” Kellerhals said, agreeing a regulated safe supply system that takes the issue out of the hands of individual doctors is needed.

In addition, the implementation of new harm reduction initiatives (such as injectable opiates or fentanyl patches) happens much later than in urban areas, and access to readily accessible detox and treatment is worse.

“When a person says, ‘I am capable of making a change today,’ and I as a doctor have to tell them there’s a 90-day waiting list, you can imagine how discouraging that is for everyone involved.”

And many people using drugs, whether recreationally or due to a substance use disorder, are hesitant to access any existing services because of the stigma and lack of anonymity in small towns.

The decriminalization of drug use, more compassion from individuals and communities, and normalizing substance use disorders as a health issue would help stem the shame, isolation, and disconnection people feel, she said.

“People should be able to say, ‘I’ve got depression, I've got a broken leg, I’ve got a stimulant use disorder,’” Kellerhals said. “They should all kind of be the same thing.”

Kellerhals hoped that awareness events, such as the one in Campbell River, would encourage people to be kinder and stop turning their backs on people using drugs since they come from every walk of life.

“If people walked away with their hearts filled with more compassion and less judgment for folks struggling with substance use, that would be huge.”

Rochelle Baker/Local Journalism Initiative/Canada's National Observer



Rochelle Baker, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Canada's National Observer
STILL GOING TO IMPOSE  AUSTERITY ON PUBLIC SECTOR WORKERS

Alberta halves projected budget deficit to $7.8B; credits global boost in oil demand


EDMONTON — New numbers show Alberta's bottom line is on track to look better this fiscal year, but the province remains mired in a deep ditch of red ink as it battles a resurgence of COVID-19.

© Provided by The Canadian Press

Finance Minister Travis Toews said Tuesday that this year's deficit is projected to be $7.8 billion, less than half of the $18.2 billion projected in the 2021-22 budget in February.

He said benchmarks such as GDP projections, consumer spending, exports and housing starts are all far above projections made six months ago.

"Economic growth is exceeding our expectations," Toews told reporters.

The government credits the turnaround to an ongoing economic recovery from COVID-19, along with a rebound in the energy sector and price restraint by the oil cartel OPEC.

"Global demand for oil has outstripped supply, meaning oil prices are stronger than expected," said Toews.

West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark price for oil, was expected to fetch US$46 a barrel in the budget, but has been rising sharply and is expected to average more than US$65 a barrel this year.

Alberta's non-renewable resource revenue is now forecast at almost $10 billion, which is $7 billion more than first projected in February.

The overall revenue forecast is $55 billion, about $11 billion more than expected.

Total expense is now pegged at $62.7 billion. That's almost $1 billion more than planned, due mainly to anticipated crop insurance payouts caused by extreme drought this summer.

Toews reiterated there would be a plan to balance the books after COVID, but in the meantime, taxpayer-supported debt is projected to reach nearly $106 billion by next March, with debt interest payments pegged at $2.6 billion.

Toews said the government will keep trying to find savings — including a proposal to cut wages for nurses now bargaining for a new collective agreement.
THEY ARE CONTRACTING OUT HOSPITAL SUPPORT STAFF, HOUSE KEEPING, FOOD SERVICES AND LAUNDRY, THEY ARE CUTTING WAGES FOR REMAINING SUPPORT STAFF BY 4%, THEY ARE ALSO CALLING FOR CUTS TO WAGES FOR AUPE GENERAL SERVICES MEMBERS THIS IS KLEIN AGENDA FROM THE BAD OLD NINETIES



The economic improvement comes as Alberta battles a steep rise in COVID-19 cases linked to the more contagious Delta variant.

There were a thousand new cases a day reported last week, but that number dropped slightly on the weekend and was at 920 on Tuesday. There were 431 people in hospital with COVID, 106 of whom were in intensive care.

Premier Jason Kenney’s government lifted almost all health restrictions two months ago and Kenney, chief medical officer Dr. Deena Hinshaw and Health Minister Tyler Shandro have not spoken to reporters for weeks to address whether anything would be done on the rising case rates.


In their absence, municipal, business and education leaders have moved on their own, implementing a patchwork quilt of masking, testing and vaccination rules.

Toews challenged reporters who suggested the province is failing to lead through the pandemic, noting officials have issued statements and social media updates as required.

"We have not kept anybody in the dark," he said.

As for the economy, he said: "We've factored in the issue of the pandemic.

"It's been expected that the fourth wave is going to be a bit bumpy."

The Opposition NDP said Toews can't take credit for an economic rebound based on the ups and downs of global oil prices, and said that any continued economic recovery depends on a robust, responsible strategy to deal with the COVID surge.

"The government has flatly abandoned Albertans at a time when the fourth wave of COVID-19 is larger than they ever warned it would be," said NDP jobs critic Deron Bilous.

"They've abandoned us as uptake of life-saving vaccines has levelled off and Alberta is amongst the worst in the country in this regard.

"If the finance minister can't level with Albertans about his government's horrendous mishandling of this pandemic, we can't take him at his word about this government's so-called economic plan, either."


This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 31, 2021.

Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press
AFN Alberta Chief slams UCP government


(ANNews) – Assembly of First Nations Alberta Regional Chief Marlene Poitras has issued a statement in response to the Alberta government’s refusal to observe Sept. 30 as the National Day of Reconciliation, tying it into their recent decision not to set up voting booths on reserve for October’s referenda and senate elections as examples of an anti-Indigenous bent in the United Conservative Party.

“There have been too many stories in recent days of this provincial government ignoring First Nations peoples and communities in the province as of late, enough is enough,” wrote Poitras.

“Why won’t the government step up and acknowledge this day, which directly responds to the TRC calls to action to bring more awareness to the struggles Canada’s First Peoples have gone through in dealing with colonization?”

While $10 million is being offered to municipalities to support voting in plebiscites and the senate elections on Oct. 18, no support is being offered to reserves to make it easier for First Nation members to vote, she added.

“Instead, we are told ‘drive to the nearest community’. For some nations in Alberta this is an over 100km trek in one direction, for others, they are fly in communities and are left without any options to participate in the democratic process,” says Poitras.

“This government’s actions are showing that First Nations aren’t just an afterthought, they are outright unimportant.”

As of writing there are two referenda occurring on municipal election day — one on whether the province should oppose the federal equalization program that transfers a portion of federal income taxes to lower-income provinces, which Premier Jason Kenney says is unfair to Alberta, and another on adopting Daylight Savings Time year-round.

Since reserves are technically not municipalities, their elections occur on different timelines and thus are not included in October’s civic election.

However, as Piikani Nation member Adam North Peigan previously told Alberta Native News, the provincial government is in effect disenfranchising First Nations by making it more difficult for them to vote than people in municipalities.

“These issues should have input from all Albertans, whether you’re pink, blue or black,” Peigan said.

Jeremy Appel, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Alberta Native News
ALL CAPITALI$M IS STATE CAPITALI$M
Oil producers hope next Canadian government can fund ambitious carbon capture program
Heather Yourex-West 


Since last summer, up to 70 per cent of the carbon dioxide produced at the NWR Sturgeon Refinery northeast of Edmonton has been pumped into the ground.

CNRL (Canadian Natural Resources Limited) Horizon oil sands upgrader near Fort McMurray, Alberta. 
The Canadian Press Images/Larry MacDougal

It's carried to a storage facility via the Alberta trunk line, a pipeline that took more than a decade and hundreds of millions of provincial and federal government dollars to build.

In the first year, more than a million tonnes of carbon dioxide has been stored underground. It's an example of how the oil and gas sector can decarbonize, and Canada's five largest oil producers believe it can be done across the entire oilsands within the next three decades.

"If Canada doesn’t find a way to decarbonize its oil and gas sector, there just simply won’t be a market for the product," said Chris Severson-Baker, Alberta regional director for the Pembina Institute.

"If we want to stay in the business of providing oil and gas to a market that is declining but also demanding a better product from a carbon perspective, then we’re going to have to do a number of these things."

READ MORE: Several Canadian oilsands operators commit to become net zero emitters by 2050

It's why oilsands giants Suncor, Cenovus Energy, Canadian Natural, MEG Energy and Imperial launched the Oilsands Pathways to Net Zero initiative earlier this year.

The plan, which aims to get the industry to net-zero by 2050, is anchored by a multi-billion dollar carbon capture and storage plan that would see a trunk line built between oilsands facilities in northern Alberta to an underground storage hub near Cold Lake.

"There's nobody better to do this than the oil and gas companies, but it's going to take some time in order to put this together," said Mike Monea, President of Monea CCS Services, a leading expert on carbon and capture and storage technology.

"Without carbon capture and storage, we will never be able to meet our (emission reduction) commitments."


The Oilsands Pathways to Net Zero proposal would reduce emissions by 68 megatonnes by 2050, which represents about a nine per cent reduction of Canada's total greenhouse gas emissions (when compared to 2019 levels), but the plan comes with a hefty price tag as well.

It would cost $75 billion, and the industry says it's not prepared to foot the bill alone.


READ MORE: O'Toole supports reviving Northern Gateway pipeline in appeal to indigenous communities

The companies involved with the Pathways Initiative declined a request for an interview, but in an e-mailed statement to Global News, a spokesperson pointed to similar investments made by governments in the U.K. and Norway.

"Following the election, we look forward to working with the federal government to develop an achievable plan to net-zero that will kick start the development of clean technologies across Canada and make Canada a global leader in the next generation of energy production," the coalition of companies said.

But Pembina Institute's Severson-Baker believes the tens of billions of potential government dollars could be better spent someplace else.

"It would make sense to take that additional public funding and put it towards industries that are going to be part of the economy in a carbon-constrained future for years to come rather than putting it towards something where the world is actively trying to get away from using that commodity."

THE REALITY IS THAT CCS IS NOT GREEN NOR CLEAN IT IS GOING TO BE USED TO FRACK OLD DRY WELLS SUCH AS IN THE BAKAN SHIELD IN SASKATCHEWAN
https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2014/10/the-myth-of-carbon-capture-and-storage.html

ALSO SEE https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=CCS