If you find yourself in a bit of hot water - deflect - change the channel and put out something different.

By Pepper Parr

October 3rd, 2022

BURLINGTON, ON

 

The time line on this story is what makes it interesting.

Media and politicians, especially those running for re-election, are a little like oil and water

On the 27th of September we wrote a story with the headline: Two incumbents have reason to be looking over their shoulders.

The incumbents were Lisa Kearns of ward 2 and Rory Nisan of ward 3.

The two are up against tough contenders; Nisan more so than Kearns.

During the 2018 election Nisan and Kearns donated $1400. to each other’s campaign.  Not on the same day.  Many wondered what was going on.

During that same election Nisan got the lightest slap on the wrist for the way he handled an election fund raising event.

The day after we published the story Kearns sent out a tweet:

On the 28th, Kearns published a tweet that went like:

Her issue was with an article we did on the Truth and Reconciliation Day event that was held last Friday.  The day was a federal government holiday.  Unions that have contracts with the city of Burlington have clauses in their contracts that give them federal holidays.

The city is prepared to spend up to $500,000 to defend its position on the plans to develop the Waterfront Hotel site.

The story we wrote covered the holiday city hall union workers got and  The word “natives” appeared in the story but had no reference to the Indigenous community, unless of course you were looking for something to deflect public interest in the “inadvertent comment made by Kearns at a virtual BDBA meeting at which she let loose lips make mention of the $500,000 the city has budgeted for a defence of the Ontario Land Tribunal matter related to the Waterfront Hotel site re-development.

Kearns knew better.  She only realized she had revealed information that was discussed at a CLOSED meeting of Council when one of the participants at the virtual meeting asked how much of the $500,000 had been spent. At that point she panicked. Ran to the City Manager, talked to the City Solicitor and called the Integrity Commissioner to confess and hope that her penance  was bearable.

Lisa Kearns does have a very good brain, however Common sense is a staple in the world of politics –

Salt with Pepper is the musings, reflections and opinions of the publisher of the Burlington Gazette, an online newspaper that was formed in 2010 and is a member of the National Newsmedia Council.

 

 

 

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The debate is on - Mayor has to juggle her schedule - she has a Council meeting on the same day October 11th 7 PM Port Nelson United Church

By Pepper Parr

October 3rd, 2022

BURLINGTON, ON

 

The best and perhaps only debate we are going to see during this election is to take place at the Port Nelson United Church at 7:00 pm on October 11th – in the Roseland Room.

Making it happen was the product of a number of roll-up-your-sleeves and get-it-done Roseland Community Association members.

One of the event organizers assures the Gazette that it will not be “puff ball” event.

Rick Burgess, once a candidate for Mayor, will Chair the candidate event on October 11th

Rick Burgess will chair the event.

The candidates will have the opportunity to present their policy positions on the key issues which the community has identified, and hopefully, we will gain some impressions regarding their depth and style.

The candidates will receive the questions on the night of the event, and each candidate will be allowed to make introductory and closing statements.

The questions have strong introductions, and will hopefully lead the candidates into stating policy positions on these issues to be addressed during the next term of Council.

This is a neighbourhood undertaking, and the broader City wide issues need to be addressed in other forums. The headings for the questions are:

– Intensification and Established Communities
– Local Roads and Traffic
– Cost of Living and Affordability
– Governance
– Environment and Trees
– Committee of Adjustment

The audience will have copies of the questions being out to the candidates.

The RCO people are hoping that Cogeco will be able to broadcast the event

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Water Festival returned to Kelso for the grade 5 students - it was a virtual event for grades two students.

By Staff

October 3, 2022

BURLINGTON, ON

 

While the new normal has a few iffy spots to it – the closing of two sections of the Joseph Brant Hospital where Covid19 outbreaks were declared – the Region is slowly finding its way to whatever normal is going to be as we head into that time of year where we spend more time indoors.

Conservation Halton decided it was possible for the Halton Children’s Water Festival to return to Kelso Conservation Area and welcome back over 800 students this year for an in-person program focused on protecting water in our community.

This is the fifteenth year for the festival which has educated over 50,000 elementary school students with the support of over 6,000 high school students over the years.

The objective was to step though each of the tires and keep whatever was in the bucket – in the bucket.

“Today, I’ve learned about water and the correct bins the garbage goes in,” said James, a Grade 5 student from St. Anne Elementary School, Burlington. “Right now, we’re playing a game and it’s really fun!”

The festival offered the Grade 5 students curriculum-linked environmental education programming, over three days, that gave students the opportunity to learn about water and society, water conservation and protection, water health and safety and water science and technology. Fun, themed learning activity centres such as Waterfront Quest, Garbage Juice, What’s That?, the Great pH Challenge and Beneficial Bugs allowed for hands-on learning outdoors where students could enjoy the views of Kelso Reservoir on one side and the Niagara Escarpment on the other.

“The water festival gives our students the opportunity to be stewards of the earth by investigating and participating in real-life, hands-on activities that are designed and lead with the Ontario Science and Technology expectations,” said Clare Slaven, Grade 5 teacher, St. Timothy’s Catholic Elementary School, Burlington. “It is a wonderful fun-filled day where we can  show what we value and celebrate in Halton and the environment.”

The grade 5 students were kept busy – learning how their environment works and the role water plays in everything they do.

A virtual Water Festival Program will continue again this year. Since launching in April 2022  more than 1,600 students have participated in the online field trips.

The Halton Children’s Water Festival is presented by Conservation Halton and Halton Region in partnership with Halton District School Board, Halton Catholic District School Board and Conservation Halton Foundation, with the support of the Town of Oakville, Geo Morphix, City of Burlington and the Town of Halton Hills.

Conservation Halton is the community based environmental agency that protects, restores, and manages the natural resources in its watershed. The organization has staff that includes ecologists, land use planners, engineers, foresters and educators, along with a network of volunteers, who are guided by a Board of Directors comprised of municipally elected and appointed citizens. Conservation Halton is recognized for its stewardship of creeks, forests and Niagara Escarpment lands through science-based programs and services. Learn more at conservationhalton.ca.

 

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Will the truth lead to real reconciliation - might within the Indigenous community - not going to happen at Council

Pepper Parr

 October 3rd, 2022

BURLINGTON, ON

OPINION

We live in a time where offence is easily taken.  We live in a time that has information coming at us relentlessly and we often fail to read what is said carefully.  Late in September I wrote a piece that used the word “natives” when referring to staff at city hall.  Some took the use of the word “natives” as a reference to the Indigenous people who are rightly called member of the First Nations.

If we have offended anyone we apologize, and, for those who were offended, we do apologize – not for what we wrote but for not writing as clearly as should have.  The Gazette has been an advocate for the Indigenous community long before it became popular.

 

Perhaps it is my jaundiced eye.

Let’s see if you see it the way I saw it when the two events came together for me.

The Day for National Truth and Reconciliation is to be celebrated on September 30th; which is a paid holiday declared by the federal government.

Burlington decided they would give the holiday to employees as well; a clause in a union contract required the city to give the union members the holiday and the big poohbahs at city hall decided they could keep the natives from getting too restless by giving everyone the holiday.

The usual grumbling from tax payers who are neither members of the unions at city hall nor federal government employees was heard.

The 30th happens to be the day the people involved with the purchase of the Bateman High School property are said to be signing the deal.

The public has been clamouring to know just how many dollars are going to move from one side of the bargaining table to the other, but were told on numerous occasions, that there is no deal until the sale closes – which was supposed to be the 30th.

Would that make some kind of a truth and a bit of a reconciliation – truth being the public learning what the idea of turning a decommissioned high school into a community centre is going to cost? The reconciliation will come when the public realizes that there is not yet a complete plan for the site which is very big and there might be a significant asbestos removal bill to contend with.

The Mayors loves the idea of turning the school into a community centre; has been a champion of the idea before the decision to close the school was final.

Back when the Halton District School Board was working with the communities to decide which of the seven high schools would be closed – Marianne Meed Ward, at the time a mere city councillor, was very active in ensuring that Central High School was not closed. The way to keep Central open was to ensure Bateman was closed.

The matter of how much information the public was going to have resulted in a city Councillor beinmg sanctioned by the Integrity Commissioner for uttering a figure that was an approximation of what it was all going to cost.

That was enough for two Councillors to file complaints with the Integrity Commissioner that resulted in the Councillor being docked five days pay.

That Integrity Commissioner said after he had rendered his decision that had he known that the Councillor he had sanction was not truly remorseful he would have taken away 30 days pay.

The Councillor stood her ground and said if it took five days pay to get the issue of just how much information the public was going to be given when Council came out of CLOSED meetings then she saw it as money well spent or words to that effect.

A while later the city brought in legal counsel that specializes in CLOSED door council meetings and what the public should be told when the CLOSED meeting ends. They, in the most possible polite terms told the city that their practices needed improvement.

Reconciliation indeed.

Our Mayor wasn’t finished with the Councillor Sometime later she used her power to re-order a Council meeting agenda and did her best to force the Council member to publicly read an apology the Councillor had said she was prepared to give a member of city Staff at the end of the Council meeting.

The Mayor wanted the apology done during the council meeting where it could be debated – thus giving the two councillors who filed the complaint with the Integrity another opportunity to pile on.

This is the kind of stuff you see on television.  Did we make it up.  CLICK to listen to what Mayor Meed Ward chose to do

Salt with Pepper is the musings, reflections and opinions of the publisher of the Burlington Gazette, an online newspaper that was formed in 2010 and is a member of the National Newsmedia Council.

 

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Burlingtonians celebrate the first National Day of Truth and Reconciliation at Spencer Smith Park

By Katelyn Goodwin

October 1st, 2022

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Burlington residents both Indigenous and non-Indigenous gathered in Spencer Smith Park Friday evening to mark National Day of Truth and Reconciliation also known as Orange Shirt Day, a day in which we honour survivors of residential schools and the children who never returned home from them, as well as their families and communities. The event contained information booths, public displays, speeches from Indigenous speakers affected by intergenerational trauma caused by the residential school system, and a reflective walk.

The walk that celebrated the first National Day of Truth and Reconciliation day in Burlington began at the Pier.

There were very close to a hundred if not a few more residents participating in these events-especially the reflective walk and ceremony at Lift Bridge lighthouse following it. Those events were where most attendees were taking the chance to listen, learn, and talk amongst each other. While observing and taking part in the walk and ceremony, I caught some of the words spoken between people. Most were talking about the impacts of residential schools and the trauma left behind by them still affecting Indigenous people and communities, as well as the stories told to us from children/grandchildren of residential school survivors and non-survivors in their speeches. I think the amount of people talking about the painful but true history of these schools and those affected by them at once says a lot about the impact of this event.

People gathered in small groups to talk about different residential. school experiences.

I talked to several members from the Indigenous community; with parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, aunts  and  uncles,  who had been taken away from their families and put into a  residential schools. While telling their almost all of them got teary-eyed and were able to share the stories in great detail.

Speaker and family member of residential school survivors Laura Suthers said that though Truth and Reconciliation Day is a day of healing that helps create awareness of the tragedies that occurred in the schools, it is also one that can bring back trauma for survivors and their families, acknowledging that my question as to what the day meant to her was quite loaded and hard to answer at first. She noted how important it is for non-indigenous people to honour residential school survivors and children who never made it home not just September 30th, but every day of the year. “While the truth can hurt” she said – “it needs to be said.’

White Eagle, the daughter of a residential school survivor addressed the audience telling them how important it is that we not forget what was done to the Canadian Indigenous community.

Event leader, speaker, and an Indigenous person affected by the intergenerational trauma of residential schools White Eagle talked who about how vital is to remember survivors of residential schools and those who didn’t return home.  Honour those affected by the horrors of and do not hold back any information when talking about what went on in residential schools.

Something she told me that should be considered is that while the Truth and Reconciliation Day is meant to be one for Indigenous people and their healing journeys, they also use it to educate non-Indigenous people about residential schools while being reminded of their trauma. This is something she describes as a ‘double-edged sword.’

The participants at the National Day of Truth and Reconciliation gathered on the Beach.

Steven Paquette, an elder who works with the Halton District School Board,  said the day is important for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous as it is important in relation to Canadian history and builds allyship and spreads awareness in non-Indigenous communities while acknowledging strength and prosperity in Indigenous people.

Walking along what used to be a rail bed for trains that took produce to markets around the world those participated in xxx

I left the events at Spencer Smith Park on National Day of Truth and Reconciliation realizing that through talking to people who have personal stories to tell about this tragic part of Canadian history is that both this day and events related to it are needed to both honour the voices of residential school survivors living and deceased and remind us to stand with members of the Indigenous community and listen to their experiences not just for one day, but every day.

 

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