November 16, 2013
By Staff
BURLINGTON, ON. This is what you would call a `”coup” The Different Drummer is bringing Margaret Atwood to town. The Drummer along with, Bryan Prince Bookseller and Random House of Canada will have Atwood at Royal Botanical Gardens on Thursday, November 28 7pm
 Margaret Atwood; one of the country’s finest writers.
Ian Elliott, the guy behind the counter at the Drummer is “deeply honoured” to announce what is a rare local appearance by an international, leading literary figure.
Atwood will discuss her work and the issues at the heart of the final volume in her enthralling dystopian trilogy, MaddAddam.
Tickets are $10. Please contact us at (905) 639 0925 or diffdrum@mac.com to reserve.
November 15, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. The Burlington Executive Airpark has decided to appeal the decision that found the city of Burlington site modification bylaw to be valid.
One needs to look at the time line on this decision to appeal. Justice Murray released his decision at just before 5:00 pm on Wednesday the 13th. These things are often sent by fax and would have gone to the offices of the lawyer who argued the case.
That suggests that Vince Rossi and his legal team were up late Wednesday and then spent all of Thursday reviewing the decision and the applicable case law.
They then have to draft their documents and file them at the Court House in Milton and then have the documents served on the city, which they are reported to have done Friday afternoon.
 An early photograph of the Airpark property. There are now two runways and a lot more landfill now than there was when this picture was taken. The lines indicate the extent of the holdings.
The news release announcing the decision to appeal did not come from the lawyers representing the Airpark but instead came from Tim Crawford who has been an advisor to Vince Rossi.
 Vince Rossi at a community meeting held in a barn a couple of hundred yards from the end of one of the airport runways
The grounds for the appeal are twofold: arguing that Justice Murray erred in law and that there is a fundamental constitutional issue to be argued as well. That pulls the Attorney General of Canada and the Attorney General of Ontario into the case. When you involve federal and provincial governments you move into a pace that is best described as glacial. Someone is buying time.
There is a lot of Vince Rossi’s money at risk. He owns the land, has a $4 million mortgage to service and will have to keep his development plans on hold until he has a decision.
Selling gas to small planes isn’t going to pay the bills.
Earlier in the week, on Monday, King Paving removed all their equipment from the site. King was the company that hauled the bulk of the landfill onto the Airpark site.
The relationship between King Paving, Tim Crawford and Vince Rossi is a complex one. Both King Paving and Crawford have offices in the same building in Burlington. Crawford is in the aircraft insurance business and while he claims that he does not have a financial interest in the Airpark and does not earn fees from the company, many believe there is a benefit in there for him somewhere.
When the Airpark issue was heard at the Region, Crawford who expected to do a 10 minute delegation, was kept hopping with some close to hostile questions from the Regional Councillors. They kept him on his feet for close to an hour and gave him quite the grilling
Vince Rossi is a relationship builder. He seeks out people with power and influence and manages to get them to do some of his bidding. When he needed to send a fax to the Minister of Finance the document went from the offices of Hazel McCallion, Mayor of Mississauga. When a fax from the Mayor of Mississauga arrives – attention is paid to it.
 Lisa Raitt, second from the right, Tim Crawford centre behind the flowers and Vince Rossi in the red sweater. The flowers suggest a Christmas event.
Rossi has developed a better than working relationship with Lisa Raitt, the MP for Halton – good business. That relationship is such that Raitt shows up at some of the Airpark social events.
Rossi has done the same thing with Burlington`s Ward 6 Councillor Blair Lancaster. She has held at least two ward corn roasts at the Airpark
Relationships are good to have but they will never beat a positive cash flow which many suspect is something the Burlington Executive Airpark does not have.
The saga continues.
Background:
Rossi meets with residents; his lawyer fails to browbeat city council.
Airpark landfill damage cannot be seen from Appleby Line.
City gets details on landfill damage – not a pretty picture.
City thinks about road access suspensions to airpark property.
It all came to the attention of city council back in may.
November 15, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON It was not their finest hour.
It was the longest Standing Committee meeting this Council has held and it significantly disrupted people who came to city hall because they were told they were going to be heard.
For reasons that are beyond most people, the Clerk’s office decided to hold a public meeting and then put three items that were contentious on the Standing Committee agenda that followed and then they tacked on a Special Meeting of Council. It was to be a disaster from the start.
 We look good but inside we come across as a bit of a hick town.
Councillor Taylor remarked that it was a very bad example of agenda management. Part of the reason for the mess was that Council cut short their Development and Infrastructure schedule on Remembrance Day so the Mayor could spend the evening at the Legion; something that is a Burlington tradition. Time well spent, but that decision backed up things and resulted with the mess Council faced during the five-hour meeting – straight with no breaks – while they listened to ten delegations on the VR-Pro Half Chili marathon that takes over Lakeshore Road one day every year.
Delegations from Diane and Nicholas Leblovic set the theme – they felt there are other places the Marathon, that draws 5,000 people with projections to rise to 6,000, could be held and they had a petition with 150 names on it supporting a move to another location. The Leblovic’s went further and drew out three routes that might be considered. They just want the event off Lakeshore Road so that they don’t have to deal with the inconvenience of not being able to get out of the streets they live on and onto Lakeshore Road.
Before the Leblovic’s got their kick at the cat Colin Cameron, pastor at Holy Cross Evangelical Lutheran Church gave his take on it all which was if you can’t beat them – then join them. Pastor Cameron gave one of the funnier delegations and for a time had them laughing in their seats as he explained how he stands in the middle of Lakeshore Road giving blessings and handing out fresh fruit to runners as they make the return portion of the marathon.
With the Public Meeting at the front of the agenda for the evening, and then the Half Chili Marathon discussions, there wasn’t time for the delegation BurlingtonGreen wanted to make nor was their time for those who wanted to delegate on the Ghent Avenue development that is due to be heard by the Ontario Municipal Board at a hearing November 26th.
Allison Thornton finally got to the podium well past the time that Council normally adjourns and announced that she could not give her delegation because the batteries on her iPad had died. “I have been sitting here for more than three hours waiting to speak”, she said.
As the evening progressed – and progress is loosely used here – tempers began to flare. Council Taylor had a number of concerns that he felt were not being addressed. Taylor, who tends at times to be emotional, doesn’t function all that well at meetings that run late – and this was a meeting that was running very late.
Chaired by Councillor Sharman – it was a meeting that just didn’t work.
 City Clerk Angela Morgan
The running of council meetings is the responsibility of the Clerk’s Office. The General Manger overseeing this meeting was Kim Phillips who earlier in her career was once the City Clerk. The city has staff with the experience to know how to run a meeting – for some reason none of that experience was brought to bear on the Council that met Wednesday the 13th of November.
To add to the dysfunction of the meeting, everyone had to use a microphone system that no longer works. Many of the speakers could not be heard. The microphone at the podium is not the right size and people who are tall have to lean into the podium and bend down to be heard while those who are short have to stand on their tip toes to get close enough to the microphone.
 Kelly Arnott isn’t the tallest person to begin with. She had to stand on her tip toes throughout her delegation in order to be able to reach the microphone
Kelly Arnott of VR Pro, the people who run the Chili Half Marathon , was on her toes much of her delegation.
It gets worse. When people at the horseshoe want to speak they have to press a button on their microphones. When they do that a red light flicks on. All too often speakers forget to press the button when they have finished speaking which prevents anyone else from opening up their microphone. Committee Clerks have a small sign that they hold up and wave to the person at the horse show who has left their microphone on.
It is both funny and embarrassing. Professional people who attend Burlington Standing Committee meetings to make delegations must leave city hall wondering why we provide facilities that are just so lousy. This is not a new problem; the microphones have never worked properly in the three years I have covered this council.
It is a totally unacceptable situation. The Clerk surely has the budget and the authority to have the right kind of equipment installed.
 Will Council members be issued megaphones until the speaker system in the Council Chamber is fixed.
Or are we going to have a situation where everyone at the horseshoe is given a megaphone and delegations get given one as well so that everyone can hear each other.
In Burlington we sing the O’Canada at the beginning of each Council meeting. A recording is played, everyone stands and the anthem is sung.
Well they try, Few voices are raised, often because the recoding that is used is a rendition people are not comfortable with or the equipment that plays the recording doesn’t work and the sound comes out as wobbly. Hard to describe – but just such poor form. To add insult to injury the Council meetings are broadcast live on Cogeco cable television. We come across looking like such a bunch of hicks.
With the meeting over people headed home. The city planner lives in St. Catharines, the city solicitor lives in Niagara – both had a bit of a drive – and both would be at their desks on time the next day. We human beings do not function at our best with hours like this. Agenda management needs a re-think.
The city is planning on reducing the number of Standing Committees from the current three to two – Budget and Corporate is apparently to be merged with Community Services – which will mean even longer agendas. Does that mean even more dysfunction? Or does the city want to get out of public meetings and shove everything onto the internet?
 Stand By says the city motto – for how long one might ask?
The Clerk needs to read the Municipal Act to assure herself that she has the authority to do something then she has to read the riot act to the people at city hall who have let this situation arise and continue to take place.
Failing that – watch for a tender asking someone to supply the city with a couple of dozen megaphones – something with the corporate crest on it perhaps. The city motto is Stand By.
November 15, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. So – what’s next with the air park? The city won – the airpark people can appeal – they’ve got 30 days plus a couple of jiggle days to decide what they want to do. The final date for an appeal is December 18. The two lawyers representing the Airpark will be going over the decision with a fine tooth comb looking for grounds to appeal – assuming their client can come up with what it is going to cost to file an appeal.
Meanwhile the city will pull together its team – that will include Ian Blue, the lawyer the city hired to argue the case, and the internal staff that have worked this file.
The city bylaw is pretty specific –
An applicant for a Permit must submit a Control Plan as part of its application which must contain, inter alia, a map showing the location of the site, the site boundaries and the number of factors, the current and proposed use of the site, location of lakes, streams, wetlands, channels, ditches and other watercourses and other bodies of water on the site, the location of the predominant soil types, the existing site topography at a contour level not to exceed 0.5 m, the proposed final elevations of the site, the location and dimensions of temporary soil, or silt stockpiles and provisions maintaining site control measures during construction.
And if the decision stands this is what the Air Park is going to have to comply with.
 This Regional government map shows they knew what the plans were – but they didn’t do anything – instead bought the Vince Rossi argument that the airpark was federally regulated.
The challenge is going to be for the city to find a way for the Airpark to comply. City General Manager Scott Stewart explains the Airpark will have to hire a consultant and put forward a proposal on how they think they can comply with the bylaw. Expect to see a lot of back and forth on this one. Vince Rossi has never given an inch in his previous dealings with the city.
The relationship Rossi established with the Ward Councillor Blair Lancaster, which bothered the people whose property was being harmed environmentally and de-valued financially, is not going to get Rossi out of this one. There is one resident who has probably lost 50% of the value of her property now that there are 30 foot hills either side of her lot.
Many felt that Lancaster, was far too close to Vince Rossi. They felt her sitting beside him at a community meeting was a dumb decision and when she was spotted walking out of the court house with Rossi some wondered if any of the confidential information Lancaster is given as a Council member was working its way to Rossi.
 Ward 6 Councillor Blair Lancaster held some of her ward meetings at the Airpark. Area residents didn’t fully appreciate in 2011 and 2012 how tight she was with Vince Rossi.
Lancaster had spent a few minutes with Ian Blue, the city’s lawyer and Scott Stewart, general manager for Development and Infrastructure and the point man on this file, after the Judge completed the hearing. Lancaster then walked from the Court house to her car with Rossi. The political optics were terrible – one would expect the Council member to be mindful of her position.
The north Burlington residents have been meeting with senior city staff at regular Saturday morning get togethers at a coffee shop and have been kept in the loop. One hopes that the city will have at least some of that Saturday morning group at the table as they work out how to get the Air Park to comply with the bylaw.
The city expects Rossi to comply with the bylaw using some of the money he made from landfill dumping fees – problem is much of that money doesn’t show up on the Airpark’s financial statements. So where is that money – and we are not talking chump change here.
During the hearing before Justice Murray, Ian Blue managed to slip in the fact that the $2 million plus per year, earned by the Air Park in 2011 and 2012 and a smaller sum in 2013 did not appear on the company’s financial statements. Many want to know where that money went.
The public does know that there is something in the order of $4 million in mortgages on the Airpark property – hard to understand how that debt is going to be serviced with no more dumping fees coming in. Might the TD Bank end up foreclosing on the property and offering t sell it to the city who might operate the place as a municipal airport?
Stranger things have happened. Jeff Fielding, city manager, has council convinced to let him come up with business cases for what he calls Enterprise Corporations. A municipal; airport could be just another enterprise.
Assuming the court case is not appealed the city has some major thinking to do. First how to fix the damage that was done and then to decide just what it wants to do in terms of how it grows north Burlington. It is a development no go zone, designated as agricultural but doesn’t really support an agricultural industry. There are a number equine operations up there, places where you can pick your own berries and pumpkins and quite a bit of hay and soy bean farming.
The mess the city got itself in with the Airpark development was because there was no one paying any attention. The residents were telling anyone who would listen that there was a massive landfill operation going on up there and when people at the Region, city hall and the Conservation Authority made telephone calls they were told that the Airpark came under federal jurisdiction and for a time everyone let it go at that.
 Will this mountain of landfill ever get taken out?
It wasn’t until Vanessa Warren formed an organization and went public at both the Regional and city levels that we saw some action on the part of the city. They sent people up and took a look around; the Mayor visited several of the properties and left stunned by what he saw and is reported to have been on the phone to the city manager as he drove out of one property saying he was appalled at what was being done.
The city, to its credit, grabbed this one by the horns and moved quickly and with more certainty and confidence than was ever seen under the term of the previous city manager. When Glenn Grenier, a lawyer representing the Air Park, delegated to city council the city manager advised the Mayor on three occasions during the meeting to send the man packing. Fielding, who is a man you do not want to cross, exchanged words with Grenier in the Council Chamber foyer later. That should have been signal enough for the thickest of mindsets to figure out they had a fight on their hands. But Vince Rossi has never indicated that he took listening very seriously.
Right now he is reading and re-reading Justice Murray’s decision and telling his lawyers to find a hole in the document; give him something to crawl through.
November 14, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. We now have more detail on the decision Justice Murray handed down this morning on the dispute between the city and the Burlington Executive Airpark.
The Airpark had taken the position they were a federally regulation operation and did not have to comply with local bylaws and regulations. They argued that the federal government was who they had to listen to.
 Vince Rossi, president of the Airpark had great plans. He was going to turn a sleepy little rural airport with a grass runway into a thriving regional airport. To do that he needed to dump tonnes of landfill on the property. An outline of the Airpark is shown above.
The city argued that they didn’t want to intrude on the running of an airport but they did believe they had the right and more importantly the responsibility to ensure that property was protected.
In his conclusion Justice Murray ruled that the “application of the City of Burlington is allowed” which means Burlington is entitled to a declaration that Burlington’s by-law 6-2003 is valid and binding upon Burlington Airpark Inc. in respect to its landfill activities at the airpark.
The City, wrote Justice Murray “has requested an order requiring the respondent to comply with the by-law forthwith. This court has determined that the by-law is valid and binding on Burlington Airpark Inc. The issue of enforcement is properly left to the municipal authorities.
Justice Murray said the City of Burlington by-law was designed to regulate the use of landfill for the protection of the environment and for the safety, health and welfare of municipal residents. It was not enacted for the purpose of regulating federal undertakings and therefore the Burlington by law does not impair the core of the federal power.
 This Appleby Line resident wonders if the Court decision will mean this pile of earth will be hauled away. Or does the decision mean she has a claim against someone for the damage done to the value of her property/
The Judge’s decision set out the questions brought to him. He said: “There has been an ongoing dispute between the owners of Airpark and Burlington with respect to on-going fill operations maintained by Airpark. The owners of Airpark have consistently taken the position that its fill operation was not subject to review or regulation by Burlington because the airport is subject only to federal jurisdiction and regulation. Much debate has taken place since 2008 and has related to, inter alia whether the fill being used by the airport is clean. Although Airpark has made efforts to persuade Burlington that fill it is using on its premises is clean and presents no risk to neighbouring properties, the owners of Airpark have taken the position that as a matter of law, Burlington has no jurisdiction to regulate its fill operations.
“The issue came to a head in the spring of 2013 when Burlington started to receive significant complaints about the continuing fill operation at the aerodrome including complaints related to grading, drainage, noise, dust, traffic safety and possible effects of the fill on groundwater relied upon by neighbouring residents for drinking water.
“Burlington had a number of concerns including: the amount of fill deposited on the airport premises, whether the airport property is being used for a commercial landfill business unrelated to the airport, and the adverse drainage effects from the imposition of significant gradient and slope changes on the airport property that have been created by the deposit of fill. Fill samples provided by Airpark to Burlington have reinforced concerns that fill being dumped on the premises may result in contamination by pollutants of area groundwater.
“On May 3, 2013, Burlington issued an order to Airpark to comply with the by-law by obtaining a permit for the ongoing fill operation at the airport. Violation notices were subsequently issued notifying that Airpark was in breach of the order to comply and in violation of the by-law. Owners of the airport refused to cease accepting fill on its premises and commenced its own application to prohibit the city from enforcing its by-laws against it. In sum, Burlington indicated its intention to enforce its by-law and Airpark indicated that it will not comply. The result of this stand-off is the two applications before the court.
An application by Burlington for an injunction to restrain the delivery of fill to the airport lands was settled by Airpark agreeing to suspend all fill deliveries pending the outcome of these applications.
 The fence at the edge of this property can be seen at the bottom of the picture – there is 32 feet of earth that got put there without permission from the city. What happens to that earth now?
The Burlington bylaw was pretty clear: An applicant for a Permit must submit a Control Plan as part of its application which must contain, inter alia, a map showing the location of the site, the site boundaries and the number of factors, the current and proposed use of the site, location of lakes, streams, wetlands, channels, ditches and other watercourses and other bodies of water on the site, the location of the predominant soil types, the existing site topography at a contour level not to exceed 0.5 m, the proposed final elevations of the site, the location and dimensions of temporary soil, or silt stockpiles and provisions maintaining site control measures during construction.
 Vince Rossi at a meeting with north Burlington residents. He took everything the resident had to say under advisement. Justice John Murray told Rossi that he had to apply with the city’s bylaw. Now what?
With the Judge’s decision in hand, Burlington can now take steps to bring the site into compliance with the bylaw – and that is going to be a huge stretch. Some of the residents will want those 30 foot plus high hills of landfill taken down. Who will pay for that? Does the Airpark have the money to do that work?
The decision is a positive one for the city – now what they do with that decision and how they bring the Airpark property into compliance with the bylaw will be interesting to watch.
Scott Stewart, the city General Manager handling this file said: “Staff will be meeting with our legal counsel to determine our next steps, including how this decision might be used in respect of the city’s other regulatory powers, to deal with the situation at the Airpark”.
November 14, 2013
By Staff
BURLINGTON, ON. The city was right. Justice John Murray thought about it and wrote a decision that ruled city’s site alteration bylaw applies which means the Burlington Executive Airpark has to follow the rules like everyone else.
Earlier this week King Paving removed the equipment it had on the Burlington Executive Airpark site and said they were not going to be doing any more work for the airpark people. King Paving was the company that trucked in the tonnes of fill that resulted in massive changes to the geography of the airpark.
The question now is – will the Airpark appeal? Will the private aircraft pilots who were funding a large part of the court case continue to put up the money?
And, more importantly what will happen to the development of the Airpark. Those who have land abutting the airpark are experiencing significant flooding. Suing Vince Rossi, president of the Airpark would be worse than throwing the money down a well.
The task now is – how does the city go about forcing the Airpark to comply.
It was a court case the city, and the Region, even though they didn’t put up a dime to help out with the costs, had to win if they were to have any hope of running their city.
November 3, 2013
By Ray Rivers
BURLINGTON, ON. At the end of WWII Canada had the third largest navy in the world, the fourth largest air force and the largest volunteer army ever fielded. Since that time we have participated in over 200 international military operations though, with the exception of Korea and Afghanistan, these were largely peacekeeping or international policing exercises.
The only nation which has ever invaded Canada was the USA and they are unlikely to ever do that again since we beat them in 1814. Besides, if they did invade what would we do? Even during the 50‘s cold war Canada was never threatened, except perhaps in our minds.
 National War Memorial – Ottawa
So in the late sixties, the Canadian government swallowed a reality pill and changed the role of our military from fighting to peacekeeping. We downsized our war machine, unified the three branches of the armed services and focused on what was most important – finding the path to peace. Hey, and even with a smaller and presumably less effective fighting machine nobody invaded us.
However our current PM is a big promoter of the military, in fact, the biggest we’ve had since the second world war. He has plowed a tonne of money into military hardware such that Canada is now the 13th or 14th biggest arms spender in the world and the 6th among NATO members. Our military budget rose 42% over the ten years ending 2008, he’s changed the names of the air and naval forces as if to restore the good old glory days, and he has his eye on some fancy fighter jets and other toys.
This past week we celebrated Remembrance Day. Always a solemn day, this year our veterans had another reason to be sad. You see the Conservatives introduced the Veterans Charter in 2006, under which a lump sum cash payment has replaced life-long after-service care for disabled vets. It may have sounded like a good idea at the time but the reality has bitten hard. Since the Charter was enacted our vets have been increasingly concerned that the lump sum will be inadequate to cover all the costs relating to their conditions as they age. This is especially true for the younger returned soldiers.
Nobody makes a greater sacrifice for the nation than our men and women who put their lives in harm’s way for us – principally our soldiers, police and firefighters. When they are injured in the line of duty we owe them. It is something to dedicate a day of remembrance with music, wreaths and parades. But it is something else to do the right thing by these heroes and make sure we have got their backs covered, now when they need us most. Canada has been spending a lot of money on military hardware lately, let us not forget our obligations to those who have put their lives ahead of ours.
Ray Rivers writes weekly on both federal and provincial politics, applying his more than 25 years as a federal bureaucrat to his thinking. Rivers was a candidate for provincial office in Burlington where he ran against Cam Jackson in 1995, the year Mike Harris and the Common Sense Revolution swept the province. He developed the current policy process for the Ontario Liberal Party.
Background:
Canada’s armed forces
13th biggest military spender
Veteran’s Charter Does the Veteran’s charter need a change?
November 13, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. We got asked to leave – again. Council, meeting as a Standing Committee, was going to take a break for a fast lunch and then re-convene to hear what city solicitor Nancy Shea Nicol had to tell them about the latest in the Brant Street Pier saga.
 Happy campers? Part of the legal team representing the city in their battle with Harm Schilthuis and Sons Ltd., and AECOM
The lawyers who do the heavy lifting for the city were waiting patiently in the Council foyer to update Council on how things were going. The lawyers are still in the Discovery process where we understand that the information being “discovered” is not all that good for the city’s case against Harm Schilthuis and Sons Ltd. (HSS), the contractor that decided to give up on the job when he believed the plans he was given would not work and AECOM, the company that was managing the project for the city.
The company that did the design of the pier Totten Sims Hubicki (TSH), was a private entity when they got the job to do the design work but they were bought out by AECOM during the construction of the pier. That purchase apparently didn’t raise eyebrows at the time.
This court case has been going on since March of 2011 and the city is believed to have spent a significant amount of money going after the people they feel damaged the city.
The pier design that seems to be the cause of most of the problems, was approved in 2003, after several changes. The city then selected Harm Schilthuis and Sons Ltd. as the General Contractor ion August of 2006.
 The pier opened to great fanfare – oddly many of the political types who got the idea off the ground didn’t attend. Most had good reasons.
It opened to much fanfare in June of this year.
While the lawyers were in court doing battle the city re-tendered the project and brought in a firm that was strong in western Canada to complete the job. The pier opened successfully in June and has proven to be a very popular place. The people paying for the pier would like to have gotten better value and the original contractor who is being sued by the city and also counter suing the city would like to get paid for the work he has done. There is a couple of million dollars in invoices that have yet to be paid.
The legal costs mount and the Mayor has promised to tell all – once the court case has been settled. Council has gone into closed session three times in the last 60 days which suggests something is going on and it may not be going the way the city had thought when they originally decided to take legal action.
There is much more to this story. The suffering tax payers in this province might find themselves facing a provincial election in the spring and a municipal election in the fall with all the details of a significant law suit snuck in between those two events.
The pier was an issue in the 2010 election and might be an even bigger issue in the 2014 election.
Background:
They promised to tell you everything – even hired spin doctors.
November 13, 2013
By Staff
BURLINGTON, ON. Regional police are continuing their investigation of what they are calling an attempted murder at an apartment building in the east end of the city at 5220 Lakeshore Road.
A 9-1-1 call came in from a young girl at 8:35 pm Tuesday.
 Police have charged a resident of this apartment complex with attempted murder; weapon is believed to have been a knife.
Halton Police attended an apartment at 5220 Lakeshore Road, Burlington in response to a 9-1-1 call from a young girl. When police arrived they located the caller in a common hallway and found a teenaged girl suffering from stab wounds in a nearby apartment. She was transported to an area hospital for medical intervention and remains under observation.
A 32-year-old woman, who is known to the victim, was taken into custody at the scene and will be charged with Attempted Murder.
A police presence at the scene will be maintained throughout the day as detectives continue their investigation into this incident.
Anyone with information that would assist in this investigation is asked to contact the Burlington Criminal Investigations Bureau at 905 825-4747 x2315, Crime Stoppers at 1 800 222-TIPS(8477), through the web at www.haltoncrimestoppers.com or by texting ‘Tip201’ with your message to 274637(crimes).
November 12, 2013.
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. It was a report requesting approval to explore new service delivery models and if it gets the approval the city manager is asking for – it will change drastically the way the city is run.
If we don’t change the way we run the city – what we have today is just not sustainable.
 City manager Jeff Fielding: About to put his stamp on the way the city has to be run.
The report comes directly from city manager Jeff Fielding’s desk and is the first look we get of his longer term thinking. It is a strong report, it takes the city in a direction it has not been before.
Now Fielding has to debate his ideas with a Council that has never seen anything like this before and there are several members who will have difficulty grasping what Fielding wants to do.
His mission is to identify and report back on opportunities that will support the sustainability and quality of directly delivered services.
Fielding believes he can get this done in a month. He already knows what he wants to do and has the team that will get it done during the next two years already lined up.
City Council has not seen what Fielding is putting before them. The first step of the long term plan took place All Hallows Eve when the Executive Director of the Economic Development Corporation was given his walking papers.
The Economic Development Corporation will hold its AGM in April – expect it to dissolved and become a city department.
Look for the creation of what Fielding calls Enterprise Corporations – free standing organizations that will probably not report to any of the Standing Committees.
 Developers have done a great job with condo creation along the Lakeshore Road. The city has not managed to find a way to get the developers to put some of the economic lands into production.
There are five of the things on the “thinking board”.
Economic Development Corporation: This corporation would oversee strategic investment and to potentially hold strategic land assets.BEDC is currently in the process of developing this concept.
Real Estate Asset Management Corporation: This corporation would control civic facility assets to increase asset value and
potentially create a revenue stream (dividend) from increased asset value.The City’s Real Estate Office and Corporate Strategic Initiatives have taken the lead in developing this concept.
Service Based Corporation: This corporation, in partnership with Burlington Electric Services Inc. (BESI) (which is managed under the Burlington Hydro Board), would serve as an in sourced business to operate a select group of services currently managed in-house by each of the parties.
The initial services considered (storm water management, street lighting, tree trimming, right of way access, etc.) and would involve minimal risk to the taxpayers while representing an opportunity to establish and/or enhance existing common or shared services. What this translates into is: should street lighting be a tax supported service? Could the city and hydro create an organization that handles all tree trimming. These are significant changes.
Cultural Enterprises Corporation will not be advanced at this point but you can see where the city is going. This corporation would manage culturally – focused revenue generating businesses.This concept aligns with the theme of the Cultural Master Plan.
The final Enterprise Corporation would focus on energy and would establish and manage the City’s revenue generating energy service delivery model.
For each concept, a comprehensive business case , inclusive of a legal and decision-making framework , will be developed in order to-identify and assess the benefits, costs and risks as well as determine the recommended course of action. Each concept will have a revenue generation and/or cost saving focus, and will only engage in more traditional municipal service functions when it is deemed to be advantageous by Council.
Enterprise Corporations, like other operating models, have inherent advantages and disadvantages. For example, an arm’s-length organization has the ability to act quickly and adjust to market pressures, but on its own, may not be as sensitive to social and/or political issues. Conversely, the City’s current model, inclusive of public engagement, has been successful in addressing wider community issues, but can result in slower decision making.
 The lesson learned on the building of the pier was the need for a tight working relationship between the builder, the project manager and city hall. If the public ever gets to see just how terrible the relationship was with the project managers they will demand better staffing in the Engineering department. When a second contractor was given the job the city had some top notch people doing their jobs.
There is no perfect service delivery mechanism, so it is important to investigate these concepts in order to identify the operating model that offers the “best fit”. What will be vital, when public spending is limited, is a clear understanding of the City’s objectives within a wider social-economic context.
“The evaluation of which service delivery vehicle might best achieve the City’s identified objectives will include an analysis of whether the service is best delivered in-house only, by a combination of in-house resources and a special purpose vehicle (ex. municipal service board) or by an independent development corporation.”
This is heady stuff. What doesn’t appear evident is this: Where is the public input in all this? And why, politically, are ideas like this coming forward when we are less than a year out from a municipal election?
Where is the concept of Community Engagement in all this. We do have an engagement Charter – it’s on a shelf somewhere in city hall.
 Burlingtonians will show up for public meetings and take an active part in any discussion – but they have to be given background briefings and decent opportunity to study and prepare.
Fielding doesn’t talk much about public involvement – but he does explain how he will marshal the staff he has and assign them to this task.
Each concept will be investigated in accordance with the following principles:
1.Alignment with the City’s strategic plan and objectives.
2. Preservation of services that are core to the municipality and its citizens.
3. Transparency with respect to the approach, assumptions and risk considerations.
4. Accountability to Council, citizens and identified interested parties.
5. Positive social or environmental impact, or at minimum, socially or Environmentally neutral.
6. Return on investment will be measured by several metrics, with a primary focus on enhanced service delivery and long-term sustainability.
7. Adaptable and flexible to expeditiously take advantage of emergent opportunities.
8. Risk tolerance will be viewed in the context of its position as a subsidiary of the municipality.
9. Legal authority and framework for establishing the service delivery vehicle and its relationship with the municipal council.
10. Conflict of interest considerations.
In order to provide consistency with decision-making and support,a staff resource will be reassigned. This reassignment will be
managed by utilizing a vacant FTE.
To provide context, many private sector organizations have small strategic staff groups that focus on identifying and fostering Innovative growth opportunities; some are referred to as mergers and acquisitions while others may go under the banner of sustainable development. Patterning a small (temporary staff) group on this model would allow the City to coordinate service delivery and corporate services in a new and innovative way.
Given the depth and breadth of the analysis required, the investigation stage is estimated to take between 18-24 months; depending on staff availability and resourcing.
All this is going to cost money – however this time Fielding does not have to go to council members with hat in hand. Burlington Hydro is a wholly owned subsidiary of the city and each year it takes its surplus – call them profits – and pays the city a dividend which gets tucked into one of the reserve accounts and used to lower the tax rate. Last year the dividend was $750,000 but it didn’t get put into a fund that would reduce taxes – it was set aside as a sort of piggy bank for the project Fielding is taking to Council on Tuesday.
There is more to this than just some fiddling with the way services are delivered. City hall staff are currently working through a list they call the portfolio – what does the city do for the taxpayers?
 Staff and Council members went through six days of Strategic Plan development in 2011. None of the issues set out in Fielding s report came up in the Strat Plan discussions. does the city have the bench strength it needs on both Council and the staff side to pull off what Fielding says we have to do>
It is a bold, new approach to civic administration. Fielding isn’t taking the city through this exercise because he thinks it’s a nice idea. He has come to the conclusion that we must look at the cost of what we deliver and find less expensive ways to do what we do.
Thus those Enterprise Corporations.
One of the ongoing problems Burlington has had is the quality of its relationships with other levels of government and agencies. Fielding maintains Burlington’s approach to service delivery and economic growth will require support from various governmental agencies and officials and local businesses. A dedicated resource in this area has the potential to drive Burlington’s priorities forward by leveraging the relationships with several levels of government and local business. The role of an Inter-Governmental Affairs Officer has the potential to secure support, thereby establishing our platform for growth, and is recommended for consideration. Many thought the Economic Development Executive Director would be doing this job. That didn’t happen.
Staff is in the early stages of investigating opportunities through the potential formation of a targeted enterprise corporation. The intended purpose of the corporation(s) would be to undertake business opportunities that will generate new sustainable revenues and/or cost savings for the City in order to offset the municipal tax levy.
Notice the consistent use of the words “new sustainable revenues” and “cost savings”? Fielding realizes that the tax base we have isn’t going to cover the costs. He will do what he can to cut costs but Fielding doesn’t look like a budget slasher. Council probably wouldn’t let him cut all that deeply anyway – they do need to get re-elected.
He has already explained to Council that the Industrial Commercial sector is not bringing in what it should be bringing in, in terms of tax revenue. Part of the reason for that is the terrible performance of the economic Development Corporation. Burlington has some serious catching up to do – and we are competing with every other municipality out there for those companies that set up shop and create jobs.
Add to that the difficulty the city has had with several of the developers with very large lands holdings that are zoned “economic” The property owners would much rather put housing on that land. They’ve not been able to convince the city to let them do that – so they do nothing. And that is a big “ouch” for all of us.
Buried in all this is a very significant change in customer service. You saw it mentioned in the remuneration report on Council member salaries. There is the suggestion that Council members might not really need the six admin assistants that are in place now – the thinking is that better, more focused customer service at the counters and bigger use of the internet and creating a totally different delivery of information with the e-Gov stuff the city is working on will solve all the problems.
That is pie in the sky bureaucratic thinking. Keeping people who are in touch with constituents and their problems at the right hand of every Council member is much better public service. Watch for the battle that takes place on this one.
Fielding has produced a fine piece of work. Council now has to debate the merits and then it has to bring the public onside. Nothing will happen before the end of the year and come 2014 members of Council move into election mode.
With the decisions the city manager wants Council to make and the direction he feels the city has to go and all the changes that will entail – there is a need for strong public debate.
November 11, 2013
By Staff
BURLINGTON, ON. MP Mike Wallace will be hosting a seminar for young adults aged 18-30 on Thursday, Nov. 14 from 7-9 p.m. at the Burlington Central Library, 2331 New St.
Employment Options for Young Adults will feature four guest panelists representing the financial, health care, manufacturing and food sectors will talk about accessing the job market in specific industries and learn about current hiring trends and what they can do to get the competitive edge and stand out from other applicants.
 Burlington MP Mike Wallace – flipping burgers at a Chamber of Commerce event.
The Region recently held a Job Fair that attracted 800 skilled and motivated job seekers who met with 43 employers from across Halton. Halton Region’s Economic Development Strategy has been successful in attracting new business to Halton but those companies don’t seem to be choosing Burlington as their home base.
The unemployment rate for the Region in the second quarter of 2013 remained historically low at 4 per cent, markedly lower that the region’s five year average unemployment rate of 5.6 per cent and significantly lower than the provincial rate of 7.5 per cent.
There seems to be a data gap in there somewhere – unemployment at 4% with 800 people showing up at a job fair?
 Several of the courses given at the Centre for Skills Development & Training are fully booked months in advance – the students usually know where they are going to be working before they graduate.
Wallace get is right when he says: “Employment is integral to a healthy economy.” While job creation has traditionally been seen as a local and provincial responsibility the federal government has come up with a plan that would cost share the training of new people in new jobs. The provinces are suggesting the federal government turn those funds over to the provinces and let them design programs that meet the specific needs of each province.
At least they are talking about training people. With technology surrounding everything we do – and that technology changes almost every 90 days – keeping people fully trained and productive as opposed to just employed is a prime concern.
Co-host for the seminar is the Centre for Skills Development & Training.
For information or to register, call 905-639-5757 or email mike.wallace.c1@parl.gc.ca.
Background:
Training classes:
November 11, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. Early in 2012 city council decided they could no longer make fools of themselves when it came to accepting pay raises that had already been voted upon. After deferring the actual accepting of pay raises more than once and then bickering over whether or not they should pay for the parking spots they get right outside city hall they threw the problem over to a Committee that would come back with a set of recommendations. And by, did this committee ever come back with a solid set of recommendations. A couple of the people on that committee might serve the city rather well were they to become council members.
The Committee made up of Fay Booker (Chair), Robert Bisson, David Tait, David Gore, Sheila White a representative from the city’s bankers and Diana Tuszynski who also sits on the Theatre Burlington Board.
Collectively they did a fine job. They met six times during the five months they took to prepare their report and went beyond just setting the compensation for members of Council. They suggest that the city Customer Service Team to develop a plan to educate the public on how best to deal with the City to resolve issues through the appropriate staff prior to contacting the office of the Mayor and Council. Many tax payers will be surprised to learn that there even is a Customer Service Team.
 We now know what a Committee of respected citizens think these people should be paid next year. How many of them will be around to collect those pay cheques?
The Committee wants to maintain the compensation for Councillors at $53,095 per year and the Mayor at $121,676 per year and adjust annually on April 1 by a percentage equal to the average annual change in the all Ontario consumer price index (CPI) for the twelve month period October to September with the provision that the increase is to have the following banding:
 Mayor Goldring: Is there an event he won’t attend? He doesn’t have to get out to everything – but he usually does.
Any increase cannot be greater than the increase determined for budget purposes for non-union staff compensation;
No increase can be granted in the event the Ontario CPI amount is less than 1%;
Any increase cannot exceed 65% of the calculated Ontario CPI percentage;
When no increase is taken in a year, the amount cannot be carried over and aggregated in future years, that is, no carry-over of forfeited increases from any year to another.
 Rick Craven: Best committee chair the city has; not big on the warm fuzzy stuff through. Needs a hug badly.
This is a well thought out approach to paying the people who make the decisions. It is fair, should the CPI rise significantly in any one year the would not see their pay rise at the same rate – they would be limited to just 65% of that increase.
Burlington Council members are also members of the Halton Regional Council. They are paid a salary as Regional Council members that was $45,827. and an expense allowance of $5,130 per term.
 Meed Ward: She drives them all bananas and talks too much but she asks the questions and genuinely wants to see things changed. Not a member of the old boys club.
Each Council member has an administrative assistant, which the committee says should continue until at least 2017, when perhaps the new customer service process might lessen the need for those assistants. Don’t expect that recommendation to go very far. We have a couple of council members who couldn’t do their jobs without their assistants.
There is a need for one additional staff member to serve the Council members and that is a qualified research person. The administrative assistants are clerical in nature. Most of them do exceptionally good work but they are not trained researchers. Municipal government is now very complex and the public cannot expect the people they elect to office to know everything. Add a researcher to the staff compliment.
 John Taylor; Dean of this city Council. Has announced his intention to run – why so early? Does he want to scare off any competition? Real competition might be good for him.
The parking perk stays as does the expense allowance of $32,000 for the Mayor and $9000 for each council member. They cannot carry this allowance forward from year to year and they are being asked to show what they spent those expense dollars on. No mention of miscellaneous being an unacceptable category.
The committee wants the current level of pension and benefits for Mayor and Council maintained and disclosed and described on the City’s website.
 Dennison, on the left, explaining the budget to a resident. will Dennison be back at council next term? Not if the people in Roseland decide who is going to represent Ward 4 next term.
The Committee wants the Burlington Hydro Board to change the appointment of the Mayor to the Hydro Board and have that appointment rotated each term; and ask Hydro to provide no compensation to members of Council appointed and make a similar request to any other board that provides compensation to Council members appointed by Burlington City Council.
The Mayor was getting a fee for every board meeting he attended as well as a fee for committees he attended; double dipping at its worst and something the Mayor should have been ashamed of – the least he could have done was to give the money to some charity if he had to take a fee or just not cash the cheque.
 Councillors Sharman and Lancaster – both first term members. Will they both be returned?
If compensation must be made then the payment should be made to the City of Burlington and added to the general revenues.
The City Clerk is asked to draft a Code of Conduct for members of Council which addresses, donations, fundraising, sponsorship, entertainment and the acceptance of gifts by members of Council as well a s other standards clauses included in Codes across the Province. The Code of Conduct for members of Council should not be less stringent than the Code of Conduct established for City of Burlington staff.
The Committee suggested that Council may, if it wished, adjust the calculated increase within the banding to a lesser amount than that determined while meeting the other provisions.
They should pull that one. Given the rather foolish behavior on the part of this Council when they last talked about what they are to be paid – it is a mistake to let them have any say.
A committee of respected citizens have come in with a fine report. Adopt it as it is and add the final recommendation: that the Executive Director of Human Resources presents information on the compensation.
There is another re[port that this Committee might be asked to provide and that is a review of the size of the current city Council and a restructuring of the existing Standing Committee structure and a through review of the procedural bylaw that sets out how meetings are to be conducted.
This Council is too small and every Council member does not have to sit at the Region. Burlington has seven seats on the Regional Council, which has a total of 21 members. Burlington could increase the size of its Council to 10 and have the Mayor and six of the most senior Council members also serve at the Region.
We had three new Council members elected in 2010 and all had to get through a very steep learning curve as Council members. To add a Regional role on top of that for an inexperienced Council member is pushing it.
Finally, get ready for the chorus of people who will stand up on their hind legs and howl at how much we pay these people for what should really be a part-time job. It is a full-time job, these men and woman work hard. Yes there are a couple who have other business interests; specifically Jack Dennison and Blair Lancaster. Dennison feels he can run a major sports/health club operation and still serve his constituents as a council member. Well, if you live in Ward 4 and want to see your Council member be prepared to see him at his Cedar Springs office – which is not professional.
When I want to see my Council member I want to see him at city hall.
It might be interesting to have each member of Council be available for evening meetings for people who have to work during the day.
UPDATE TO ORIGINAL STORY.
November 10th, 2013
By Staff
BURLINGTON, ON. The Regional police are still looking for the “victim” of what they say was Aggravated Assault, Forcible Confinement, Forcible Entry that is reported to have taken place at the Motel 6 on the North Service Road in Burlington.
The victim, who police have not identified, but is said to go by the “handle” was, according to police stabbed in an incident that took place November 9th 2013 at approximately 11:20am.
Nothing has been found and area hospitals have been canvassed.
A young black male, believed to have been stabbed in the torso, fled the Motel 6 on the North Service Road, a little before noon on Saturday. Believed to be bleeding and wearing a white T-shirt, dark pants, black shoes with white soles and a dark red sports style jacket.
Mid 20’s, skinny build, 160 lbs., short black hair in an Afro style the victim was last seen on foot. Police do not know if the male victim got into a vehicle.
Thought to be using the “handle” Jay or Jay Love
Three adult males, between the ages of 20 to 31 years have arrested and subsequently charged with the following offences: Aggravated Assault, Forcible Confinement, Forcible Entry, Weapons Dangerous, Robbery and Possession of Property Obtained by Crime.
Going to be tough to make most of those charges stick if there isn’t a victim and whoever was stabbed in the torso clearly doesn’t want to be found
Anyone with information is requested to contact Halton Regional Police – 30 Division – and to speak to the on duty Staff Sergeant at 905-878-5511 ext. 2310, or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477,) www.haltoncrimestoppers.com, or text “Tip201” with your message to 274637 (crimes.)
November 10, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. Hayden High was opened to media for a tour – what a collection of facilities: a library, a high school and a recreation centre all set on 15 acres of land.
The partners in this venture will hold an open house Saturday November 23rd. The city runs the Recreation Centre, the library is operated as part of the Public Library system and the school is run by the Halton Board of Education.
 It’s not the kind of high school you were used to – There is a fully equipped kitchen which students learn the fundamentals of food, nutrition and preparation. It wasn’t clear who did up the pots and pans when the class was over.
Burlington managed to bring in a cool $1.3 million spread out over 20 years from Haber and Associates – which is not exactly chump change, for the right to put their name on the building. It may prove to be the bargain of the decade for the Haber family.
 Maureen Berry, CAO of the Burlington Library system talks with Andrew Haber who turns out to be a relative. Berry didn’t ask if he had a library card.
The library is there for both the public and the high school students at Hayden High where grades nine and ten are now conducted. Grade 11 will follow in 2014 and grade 1`2 the year after that.
Rather than list all the features one might ask – what don’t they have. The place is filled with light and uses 20 different types of glass in various colours.
There is a kitchen – that is miles from the home economics classes some of us used. There is a cosmetics room, a garage that had two cars inside and half a dozen engines for students to work on.
There is a fully equipped wood working shop with more drills on the walls than you see in an average Home Depot.
Hallways are wide with students plopped down on the flow working over their laptops. The building has WiFi throughout and all kinds of nooks and crannies where students can talk, work on their laptops or read a text-book.
Thirty six washrooms with 90 toilet stalls – so that problem is well taken care of. The media tour took place on a Friday which we assume is a “casual dress” day for the school. Principal Jacqueline Newton wore flame red jeans and had a habit of high fiving a number of her students as she passed them in the some of the widest hallways I’ve seen in a school.
 Part of the massive gym set up in the Haber Recreation Centre
The gymnasiums are set up in both the high school and the Recreation Centre with a combined 34,000 sqft of sprung maple gym floors. The recreation facilities were designed to handle provincial competitions with 38 to 40 foot ceilings and loads of natural light.
Each of the 208 rooms in the building has names, not numbers. In the high school the names were chosen by the students that opened the place.
 The students decided to call it The Forum – it could have been called The Roost – a place where anyone can gather and just sit and watch or talk and kid around. Someone in the media tour suggested it looked like one big detention room.
There is a section set up in one of the hallways – sort of like bleachers at a ball park, where students can just roost like birds. A lot of use is made of concrete and wood and yet the place doesn’t feel cold or bleak.
The desks in the classrooms are not what most of us are used to. They are designed to give the word “collaboration” real meaning. Modular in design they can be grouped as two- three – as many as eight in a configuration that lets students work side by side.
 No more desks set out in neat rows. The classroom furniture is now such that students can sit by themselves or in groups of two or three – up to eight. The objective was to create situations where the students learn to work as groups and to collaborate on a problem – question or assignment.
Blackboards went the way of separate entrances for boys and girls. The rooms now have white boards and make extensive use of visual projections. The media spent a few minutes in an art history class where students were looking at the works of Salvador Dali, Picasso and MC Esher and learning about the surrealist movement.
 The instructor in this class didn’t seem to have a problem with a student using her cell phone during the class. The place is fully wired.
Embedded in the hallway floors are different types of tile and markings that tell a student they are at a decision point and have to decide which way they are going to go. There is 200,000 square feet of space in the place.
There is parking for just over 400 vehicles, racks for 130 bikes on the property with room for another 100 across the street at Norton Park.
Does the place work as a building? A little too early to tell but it has all the makings of a different approach to high school that suggest it should work very well. The building is not yet fully used – there are two more grades to be added – so there is space for different community groups. The Regional Police have some space, the Regional government has space and a driving school has some space.
 The 200 seat theatre is part of the high school with walls that are built to control sound. The place has everything any parent could ever want in a place for their children to get the education they are going to need.
There are two rooms for community groups; a 200 seat theatre, cafeteria and a server operated by a company owned by the school board. That should cut down on the quality of the food complaints. Add to the food operation is a collection of vendor machines which Principal Jacqueline Norton said she would certainly like a cut of that revenue.
 The library has some of the books on the shelves -but just a portion of what will eventually be available. Maureen Berry CAO for the Burlington Public Library system explains that furniture is still arriving but that the community has taken to the library very well.
Great sports facilities, a library led by one of the better librarians in the province who, during the tour learned that she is related to the Haber family which bought the naming rights to the recreational centre. Maureen Beet and the Haber’s are first cousins twice removed or something like that. For a while it felt like old home week down on the farm.
 Jennifer Johnson, city project manager on the site, admits to shooting some hoops in the gymnasium when no one was round.
Guiding the tour was the city’s project manager Jennifer Johnson, who kept trying to hurry people along – there, was just so much to see. The Board of Education was the lead on this project with each partner having their own hands on person. Jennifer Johnson was the lead for the city and admits to shooting a couple of hoops in the gym while the place was under construction.
Open House November 23rd – the place will be packed. Expect to see students from the other high schools prowling the halls of Hayden High drooling with envy.
November 9, 2013
By Staff
BURLINGTON, ON. The police have suspects – they just don’t have a victim.
A young black male, believed to have been stabbed in the torso, fled the Motel 6 ON THE North Service Road, a little before noon today. Believed to be bleeding and wearing a white T-shirt, dark pants, black shoes with white soles and a dark red sports style jacket.
Mid 20’s, skinny build, 160 lbs, short black hair in an Afro style the victim was last seen on foot. Police do not know if the male victim got into a vehicle.
Thought to be using the “handle” Jay or Jay Love
Whatever the differences between the victim and those apprehended – they aren’t going to settle it with the police in the room.
ANYONE WITH INFORMATION IS REQUESTED TO CONTACT HALTON REGIONAL POLICE 30 DIVISION S/SGT AT 905-878-5511 EXT 2310 OR Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS(8477), www.haltoncrimestoppers.com, or text “Tip201” with your message to 274637 (crimes).
In Flanders Fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

November 8, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. It was chump change as far as the drug business goes. Just another link in the drug trade food chain. The Halton Regional Police, Burlington-3 District Strategic Support Team, executed a Controlled Drugs and Substances Act search warrant at a residence on Prospect Street.
These search warrants are obtained from a Justice of the Peace who reads an affidavit the police have prepared explaining why they believe they should be given the right to enter an property and search for whatever they have convinced the Justice of the Peace is there.
Every police force has a couple of JP’s (Justices of the Peace) they can always call upon to get the warrant they need. This particular warrant was the result of a short drug investigation and the arrest of persons that had purchased drugs from the accused. The police arrested someone in possession of drugs, squeezed him (or her) a bi and got the name of the dealer. A bit of observation and bingo – there is enough evidence to swear that affidavit which the JP buys into and the warrant is issued and the search takes place
All this happened on November 7, 2013. Seized as a result of the warrant and subsequent arrests was;
798 grams of marihuana (approximately 28.5 ounces or 1.78 pounds )
7 grams of Psilocybin (approx 1/4 Ounce),
67 grams (over a 2 ounces) of Cocaine,
128 grams of Cannabis resin (commonly known as hash oil),
$1325.00 in cash.
 Tools of the trade: scale to measure out the purchase and cell phones to keep in touch with the client list.
A digital scale, a couple of cellular phones (customer list on at least one of those – will that list lead to additional arrests?) and packaging material. They make it sound as if this guy gift wrapped what he was selling. This was almost a small drug pharmacy for those whose needs could be met in the middle of the night.
The accused, Ryan HORECHKA-23 years of Burlington, was located inside the premise and was subsequently arrested.
HORECHKA was charged with Trafficking a Controlled Substance and four counts of Possession for the Purpose of Trafficking and released on a Promise to Appear with certain drug conditions. He is to appear in Milton Court on December 3, 2013.
Another small operator who was given up by a client. It should be interesting when those two are in the same court room with one testifying against the other.
If you wonder why the police go to all this bother and why so much tax money is spent on court cases – pause and think about the mess the city of Toronto is in. Rob Ford got his drugs from dealers who put envelopes in his vehicle or met him in dark places.
The police have never managed to get all the drugs off the street – there is just far too much money in that business for it to ever be eradicated. And there are too many of us who want access to the stuff.
Are some drugs basically the same as alcohol? Do we want drugs sold over the counter just the way Scotch and Rum are now sold? Picking up a bottle of fine 15-year-old single malt is one of the pleasures of life – at least for me it is. Am I going to be able to at some point drive to the equivalent of an LCBO and by my prime, smartly packaged marijuana? Justin Trudeau thinks we should be able to do that – heck we’re already buying the stuff from people who meet in dark corners and don’t want you to know where they live.
The stuff never worked for me. I’m happy to enjoy a glass of good wine or better yet a can of really good Belgian beer with a wedge of Stilton cheese and some crisp English crackers. But we each have our favourites – don’t we?
Investigators remind the public to utilize Crime Stoppers to report any illegal drug, gun or gang activity at 1-800-222-TIPS(8477), through the web at www.haltoncrimestoppers.com or by texting “Tip201” with your message to 274637(crimes)
November 8, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. Liberal government has decided that if they can’t get the private sector to use the cash hoard they have then they will spend their way of out the mess we got into back in 2008 when Wall Street almost bankrupted the world.
Charles Sousa, Ontario’s Minister of Finance told the provincial Legislature on Thursday that the government’s economic plan, released today, “makes strategic investments in people and infrastructure to support an innovative business climate.” And just what is an “innovate” business climate? Sounds like corporate happy talk.
The government’s plan “builds on the province’s strengths and the potential of our people and is the surest, fairest way to balance the budget by 2017-18.”
The government maintains that the opposition wants drastic, across-the-board cuts to the vital programs and services on which the people of Ontario rely. “That will harm our economy, not help it. The people of Ontario are worried about the future and they need the support, steady hand and investment of their government.” said the Minister.
“We choose to address our economic challenges by investing in our future: giving individuals, communities and industries the tools and opportunities they deserve. And so in the Fall Economic Statement I announced a number of actions, including:
We will create two new ways to fund crucial infrastructure investments without raising taxes – The Trillium Trust and the introduction of Green Bonds
We will spend $35 billion over three years to modernize infrastructure, creating 100,000 jobs a year
We will work with businesses to identify tools that encourage them to invest their cash reserves in the economy, creating jobs, improving productivity and leading to province-wide growth
We will introduce Ontario’s first ever Seniors Grant to help non-profit community groups promote healthy, active and engaged seniors across the province
We will work to make sure everyone in Ontario can retire with comfort and secure
We will make it easier for Ontario’s small businesses to hire and grow by cutting the Employer Health Tax for 60,000 Ontario small businesses.”
So what does the Fall Economic Statement mean for you?
It means your government claims that you will have the support you need to care for your families and contribute to the economy. It means communities across Ontario will be safe and strong. And it means Ontario will promote a competitive environment that draws investment and creates jobs.
Might this also mean our government is changing direction and repositioning itself before it goes to the polls for your support.
Let’s see what they can do – but please – actually do something before you ask for our vote.
November 8, 2013
By Ray Rivers.
BURLINGTON, ON. Aren’t you glad you don’t live in Toronto and have to admit that Rob Ford is your mayor? Did he really say he was ‘hammered’ on the Danforth and smoked crack in one of his drunken stupors? And was that the mayor in that police video urinating on a street, behind a school? He was just marking his turf, Toronto. And he’s not quitting the mayor’s office because, in his words, the people elected him to do a job. I guess they deserve the government they elected.
 Ford passes screen test for his first video – drunk on the Danforth.
David Simon is a former police reporter and novelist who wrote the television series “The Wire”, describing various facets of criminal life in the City of Baltimore. Chief Blair appears to have followed that script, using telephone records, and then wiretapping to get the real dope on Ford and his gangland-drug buddies.
Not enough to charge him yet but we know where this is going – we’ve seen the Wire.
Ford makes great comedy for the international media but this is really not a laughing matter. The Globe and Mail is taking this seriously. They have called him out as a liar and demanded his resignation. The Star has released another video of Ford going manic, threatening to kill someone in no uncertain terms. The man is out of control but the rest of City Council is powerless, or gutless, to stop him.
And the Wynne government can’t intervene since Ford’s allies would label that political interference faster than you can fill a crack pipe.
At the most senior government level both Ford’s fishing buddy, Harper, and his family friend, Flaherty, are keeping their heads down. I wonder what our law and order PM really thinks of his crack-smoking friend now. Of course, Toronto’s drama has been a great distraction to the other conservative theatre in Calgary, last weekend and in Ottawa, seemingly forever.
Senate-gate overshadowed the Conservative convention in Calgary and the PM, now off-script and acting like a deer caught in the headlights, went with his gut – and let his right-wing base take over the agenda. There was a resolution to restrict abortions and another to declare war on public servants and their pensions. But this is just the appetizer. Canada’s most ideologically positioned right-wing PM in living history, is bent on even more social transformation between now and the next election in 2015.
 Senator Wallin and Prime Minister Harper during better times.
Harper is at his best when he feigns the underdog and goes on the defensive against the so-called establishment and the elites. And he did that well – divorcing himself from the senators he handpicked for the Red Chamber and blaming the judges he appointed to the Supreme Court for blocking his will to reform the Senate.
The irony is that Harper is the establishment now. He has been PM for the last seven years. And if he doesn’t like how his program is going, he could always try to change the channel.
Stephen Harper is also Canada’s Teflon man. Like his buddy Ford nothing seems to stick to him, and there are no consequences, at least not yet. The RCMP have apparently just taken possession of Duffy’s emails so that may shed more light on the PMO’s involvement. The expelled senators are threatening to take legal recourse against the government, and no doubt against what they must now consider to be the duplicitous PM, calling the shots that got them expelled. As they say, hell hath no fury like a senator scorned.
 Can the time in the penalty box count as time earned for their pensions?
In the meantime, I am getting sick of it all. What was once amusing political theatre is rapidly becoming a boring sad tragedy – enough already! The creative TV series “The Wire“ focused on character development and thus was a refreshing change from most stereotypical good/bad-guy American police shows. But even in this series the bad guys got their just rewards.
Ray Rivers writes weekly on both federal and provincial politics, applying his more than 25 years as a federal bureaucrat to his thinking. Rivers was a candidate for provincial office in Burlington where he ran against Cam Jackson in 1995, the year Mike Harris and the Common Sense Revolution swept the province. He developed the current policy process for the Ontario Liberal Party.
Background links:
Globe & Mail calls for Ford resignation
Federal Tories eager to edge away from Rob Ford
Star points to details of Ford behaviour.
Government party makes policy decisions.
Drunk Mayor makes video debut.
November 5, 2013
By Pepper Parr
BURLINGTON, ON. BurlingtonGreen seems to be upping their game. They have an Annual General Meeting later this month – November 21st – starts at 6:15. Central Library. One word to describe these things – BORING.
But they have upped the game and are bringing in a highly rated speaker: broadcast journalist Donna Tranquada of CBC fame. Tranquada will share the inspiring story of a successful grassroots campaign that stopped a proposed mega quarry northwest of Toronto. The Food and Water First organization sprung from this citizens’ movement and is dedicated to protecting Class 1 farmland and source water regions across the province.
BurlingtonGreen represents a community that has no reason to be shy about its successes in stopping developments that they believe are harmful to the community. The win at a Tribunal level hearing that stopped the addition to the existing Nelson Quarry in North Burlington was a major environmental win. Tranquada should know that she is partying with champions.
Burlington Green delegated at a city council meeting Monday evening arguing that the city should not, at this point at least, put any money into any steps that will advance the construction of a barrier that will make LaSalle Park Marina a Safe Harbour.
LaSalle Park Marine Association (LPMA) Executive Director John Birch has been beavering away to have the marina upgraded with a wave barrier that is needed to prevent damage to boats during rough weather.
 Trumpeter swan – magnificent creatures that many think need the marina space at LaSalle Park to survive the winters. Nonsense according the Marina Association.
The marina maintains they are close to being un-insurable given the number of claims their members have had to make. Upgrading the harbour to give it the wave barrier it maintains it needs was coming along just fine – until Beverly Kingdon took on the fight to save what she believes is the only place the Trumpeter Swans can winter. The swans were very close to extinction at one point.
Without going into all the details – and there are pages of them, Kingdon believes that the creation of a wave barrier will do serious harm to the trumpeter swan habitat. Not so maintains the LPMA.
BurlingtonGreen has jumped into the fray and Michael Jones, past president of the Save our Waterfront Committee that Councillor Meed Ward used to propel herself into office has involved himself. Jones, who is also a sailor – he sails out of the Royal Hamilton Club, delegated at a Standing Committee and asked that the city not put any money into the wave barrier until a Part Two Environmental Assessment that has been asked for is completed.
The marina types argue that the Minister of the Environment hasn`t agreed to calling for a Part Two Environmental Assessment and delays in having the design work done will delay the project.
What we have is a difference of opinion between a significant environmental organization and a marine association – these things happen all the time.
What was different and very significant was the person who spoke for Burlington Green at the city council meeting.
 Vanessa Warren
Vanessa Warren, who politically came out of nowhere, when she took the leadership of the Rural Burlington Greenbelt Coalition that brought he city into the Burlington Executive Airpark dispute that has the city fighting a significant course case to determine just who determines where landfill can be dumped.
Warren has proven to be a very able communicator. She brings energy and a focus to the work she did for the Coalition. The politicians loved listening to her – she has had them close to eating out of her hands at both the Regional and municipal level.
So there she was Monday evening delegating to city council to save the habitat for the trumpeter swan and explained that she was asked to bring “fresh eyes” to the issue.
Warren brings far more than “fresh eyes”. BG has two very able spokespeople in Jones and their Executive Director Amy Schnurr. Would it be unreasonable to suggest that Warren is not so much “fresh eyes” but a bigger calibre of gun that the swan people feel they need to win this battle?
Or are we seeing the first step into the political arena for Warren who has been asked by a number of people to take on Councillor Lancaster in Ward 6? Was Lancaster watching the person she might be running against and asking herself – can I beat this woman?
Our political leaders come out of the community – we just may have seen a potential leader poke her head out just a little and tip her toe into the water.
Council didn’t buy the argument Warren put forward – they went for the Staff recommendation which was to Direct the Director of Parks and Recreation to report back to Budget and Corporate Services Committee during the 2014 Capital Budget regarding 50% co-share funding for the construction level engineered design for the permanent wave break at the LaSalle Park Marina; and
Direct the Director of Parks and Recreation to continue to support the LaSalle Park Marina Association in their efforts to pursue federal and provincial funding
Those two directions were approved without a word of debate or discussion and no one asked for a recorded vote on the item.
The next opportunity for the environmentalists to de-rail the plans to build the wave break will be during budget deliberations.
If we see Ms Warren actively involved in that process assume you will see her name on a ballot come the October 2014 municipal election. She would be a welcome addition the council we have in place now.
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