Lowville resident comes home for a break to talk to her neighbours about the works she does in refugee camps.

News 100 blueBy Pepper Parr

May 5, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

She was born and bred in Lowville – the strongest part of her support network is the five girlfriends she worked with at Emmas – at times she moves from place to place with an armed escort.

Lindsay Hawkin - Lowville - couple

Lindsay Hawkin talking to a couple that wanted to know about the gifts of chickens and goats to refugees.

Lindsay Hawkin works for World Vision – she is a project manager – responsible for the delivery of programs to refugees in some of the most dangerous places in the world.
Lindsay, who works and lives among Syrian Refugees was home for as short break and talking to people at the Lowville United Church about her experiences while living in refugee camps as a worker.

Lindsay has been “in the field” for the past seven years, mostly with World Vision but at times with other organizations.

The work that gives her the most satisfaction is when she is working with children and woman. She takes great satisfaction from a clinic that was opened and staffed by women that had a psychological counselling service for women who were victims of sexual abuse – something that is prevalent in the countries she works in.

Lindsay has a degree in political science and a Master’s degree in International Relations. For a period of time she worked for the Canadian government at the embassy in Washington.

She has a strong grasp of both the world wide refugee picture and a solid understanding of what happens day to day in refugee camps with populations of 22,000 plus people.
For much of the time she lives in a shipping container – made of plastic. The containers cost between $2000 and $3000 and are air conditioned.

Lindsay Hawkin Lowville

Members of the Lowville and Nelson United Churches listen to Lindsay Hawkin as tells of her work in Middle Eastern refugee camps.

Lindsay told the small group she was talking to that at the end of December 250,000 people had been killed in Syria, 4.8 million people had to flee the country and 13.5 million people needed some form of humanitarian assistance.
In a country where kidnapping is rampant – three of her staff were taken – and recovered. The hospitals her people work in were bombed

She told the small audience – made up mostly of people from the Lowville and Nelson United churches who were involved with the sponsorship of refugees – that the risk factor may appear high – but if we are careful – we are safe.

Non governmental organizations (NGO’s) strive to create relationships with the people they serve. We are never armed, we do not take sides – our job is to help people who need help. To look for ways to add something to the lives they lives.

“I know why I am here” said Lindsay “to make a difference.”

Zaatari Refugee Camp - Jordan - Google Credit

Zaatari Refugee Camp – Jordan

Working in the Middle East is a personal choice, she said. “I don’t always know why I make the choices I do but I am comfortable with the decisions I make.”  “My work in the Middle East started with a travel bug – I just wanted to see more of the world” – she now works in some of the most dangerous places.

Burn out, depression and PTSD are part of the work that Lindsay does. Some people turn to alcohol or drugs to handle the difficulty they are having. But that is a “rabbit hole” and there is nothing there for you down that hole. “I have been fortunate in that I have strong relationships that support me in the work I do. My five girl friends are a life line – even though I don’t see them very often,

We are called the visibles by the people we serve. That is because we are white and to them we are visible.

The delight Lindsay takes in the work she does comes through in the stories she tells. “We were in Mogadishu on an ocean beach and I wanted to go swimming. One of the woman told me she had never gone swimming so we both waded into the water – her full clothed because women in the Middle East do not expose their bodies. I held her hands and pulled her through the water while she laughed and laughed.

There isn’t much for these people to laugh about added Lindsay

Lindsay met the man she is now married to in Afghanistan. He is a Brit, works as a contract bomb disposal technician. “He is pretty dreamy” she said.

Asked what does she does the moment she is back in Canada. I ask my brother who often picks me up at the airport to buy me a hamburger.

Return to the Front page

Oh Geronimo makes it to second round in CBC Searchlight talent competition - are we looking at another Walk the Earth?

News 100 redBy Staff

May 4, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Burlington’s Oh Geronimo has advanced in CBC Music’s Searchlight contest.

The national competition which now has a field of 25.

The groupThere were about 2,000 hopefuls when Searchlight 2016 opened earlier this year.

There are 23 regions in total, each with a finalist. Oh Geronimo wins the Hamilton region.

Voting for the national round closes Monday, May 9 at 2:59 p.m.

The field is then trimmed from 25 to four.

Searchlight’s judging panel of Maestro Fresh Wes, Sarah Blackwood and Dallas Smith, will decided the three finalists who will move forward.

The fourth finalist will be determined by popular vote.

There also is exposure on CBC Radio’s q and, for the first time, on CBC-TV in a live special when 2016’s four finalists compete before judges and fans.

The lads explain: Oh Geronimo is a project that provides an escape from the daily rigours of adult life. In order to fully express ourselves, we ignore all of the distractions and freefall into the moment. Although Oh Geronimo was created about 3 years ago, the project truly came to fruition in August 2015 with a line-up change and the release of a 7-inch record. After touring the East Coast of Canada, from Toronto to Newfoundland and back, we released our debut full-length album, ‘Sleep Rhythms’, in March 2016.

Oh Geronimo is excited to explore the many roads yet travelled.

Check them out: CLICK HERE

 

Return to the Front page

Commercial motor vehicle inspections take half the trucks pulled over off the road - a road we share with those trucks. Bigger fines and a couple of days in the hoosgow might help.

Successful Commercial Motor vehicle blitz
News 100 redBy Staff

May 4, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Over the course of a two day period a joint commercial motor vehicle blitz was conducted in partnership with the Halton Regional Police Service (20 and 30 Division District Response Team), Peel Regional Police Service, Guelph Police Service and the Ministry of Transportation Ontario.

TruckSafety_Blitz03_GP___Content

Police officer doing a safety check on a truck.

The May 2nd and 3rd blitz received an overwhelming success, 91 trucks were inspected resulting in 187 charges being issued with 53 commercial vehicles being removed from the roadway for unsafe violations. 2 drivers were suspended and 5 licence plates were removed. In one circumstance officers prevented a possible critical situation when they identified one commercial vehicle that had all its lug nuts loose permitting its tire to come unfastened.

These are astounding numbers – more than half the trucks inspected were taken off the road – one had wheels that were close to falling off!

As describe by Sergeant Bistas of the Oakville DRT Team, “taking these trucks with major defects off the road makes our community a safer place to drive”.

Tougher decisions and higher fines are in order here. We share the roads with those trucks.

If any citizen would like to report a traffic concern in Burlington or Oakville they can do so by calling (905) 878 5511 or visiting our website and submitting an online traffic complaint at https://www.haltonpolice.ca/services/reporting/trafficcomplaints.php

Hoosgow: a correctional institution used to detain persons who are in the lawful custody of the government

Return to the Front page

Spending the day with one of the most important people in your life.

eventspink 100x100By Staff

May 4, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Tea, tea, tea and Mummy.

There are a number of organizations offering a Mother’s Day Tea on the weekend.

For many – the parents live in Burlington and their adult children live elsewhere.

Mother with child - kissing

Doesn’t get much better than this does it?

With the warmer weather coming (it feels as if it is here) there are opportunities to get out.

The restaurants will be packed that weekend and besides – you get out to restaurants often enough.

Here are the events we have been told about.

Ireland House
May 8 2016, 11:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Mother’s Day Tea Party – Au Chocolat
This year, we will be celebrating Mother’s Day with a chocolate themed tea party at Ireland House at Oakridge Farm. The day will feature presentations by local chocolatier Bernhard Mueller and a guided tour of the Museum.
The Mother’s Day Tea will serve premium tea from 3Teas and traditional tea refreshments such as sandwiches, scones, sweets and chocolate specialties. Tea times will run at 1 hour and 15 minute intervals, at 11am,
12:45pm, 2:30pm and 4:15pm.
The cost is $40 per person and must be purchased in advance, as seating is limited – Call 905-332-9888. Please request group seating if needed, at time of booking. Not recommended for children under the age of 10.
For more information visit www.museumsofburlington.com or call: 905 332- 9888.

Adult daughter hugging mother with flower bouquet

Making the time for them -they made the time for you.

Save tall yellowGallery 2 in the west end of the city is also offering a tea.
Cheryl Golding and her colleagues at the Gallery 2 on Spring Garden Road are hosting a Mother’s Day Afternoon Tea on Saturday, May 7, from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm
They will be serving: tea/coffee, scones with cream, and a variety of sweet treats.
Cost: $30.00 per person.

St Stephens Mothers Day tea is a ticketed event, tickets will not be sold at the door. Give Linda Draddy a call at 289-337-4403 or email her at: pdraddy@cogeco.ca

M is for the many things she gave me, O is that …

Return to the Front page

Councillor Taylor likes the attention rural Burlington is now getting - residents aren't all that certain there is a benefit for them in all that attention

News 100 greenBy Pepper Parr

May 4, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

I think most of the people who attended John Taylor’s constituency meeting at the Conservation Authority office on Britannia Road Monday evening expected to get a really clear explanation as to why the city decided not to go forward with the Mt Nemo study that started back in 2013.

There was an explanation – sort of. A combination of the things the study didn’t have going for it and the amount of money it was going to require (that is more speculation than fact – no one was able to say during the meeting just how much had been spent).

Mary Lou Tanner

Director of Planning Mary Lou Tanner – joined the city six months ago.

The explanations – three city staff people took a crack at it – was that they were going to go back to all the feedback that came from the Rural Summit in 2013. That event certainly produced a lot of comment – what disturbs is that neither the current planner nor senior policy planner Don Campbell were in place at city hall when that meeting was held.

Staff would have collected a lot of notes and there were probably a number of briefing papers prepared but there is nothing like being in the room to get a sense of what really happened.

It sounded as if the planning people – with a lot of input from the city manager – had decided that everything should come under the Strategic Plan umbrella. The Mt Nemo study didn’t appear to do that – so it got the hook.

Mt Nemo Rural-summit-map-682x1024

Rural Burlington residents look over a large aerial photograph of their part of the city and wonder how ling it is going to remain the way it is.

The Official Plan Review – that is now on again – is to comply with the Strategic Plan. A significant statement in that Strategic Plan is to manage and protect our rural environment. Manage it for who and protect it from what was a question residents asked on several occasions.

The city set out what had been done when the Heritage Character of the Mt Nemo Plateau was being studied.

1. Preliminary Study of the Heritage Character of the Mount Nemo Plateau
2. Heritage Conservation District Study

Assessed character and heritage.

Identified options for the long-term conservation and enhancement of the character and heritage.

Recommended further study.

Key Finding
‘…a distinct historical community represented by a range of heritage features and elements…bounded in such a clear physical manner…the study area can be identified as an organically evolved, continuous Cultural Heritage Landscape’

What is a Cultural Heritage Landscape? A collection of related built form, landscape, vegetation, archaeological resources and other elements that have heritage value.

What is a Heritage Conservation District? What would it do for people within the district. Most felt that all it really was – was another layer of regulation.

Geographically defined area
Protects from unsympathetic alterations
Applies to a collection of historic buildings, streetscapes, landscapes
Areas are referred to as “designated”
Tool to manage change in accordance with a set of Guidelines (Heritage Conservation District Plan)
Plans are unique and is developed with the community

Chronology:

June 2013 Council direction to undertake preliminary research
January 2014 Preliminary assessment presented to Committee
January 2014 Council direction to consult with public
February 2014 Public consultation event shared findings of the preliminary assessment
 April2014 Public consultation event to discuss the preliminary study, proposed next steps in starting a Heritage Conservation District Study
May 2014 Council Decision: To proceed with the Heritage Conservation District Study
October 2014 MMM Group retained to complete the HCD study
February  2015 Public meeting to present research and field work completed by MMM Group to date
February 2015 Council direction: Place Official Plan Review reports and Mount Nemo on hold pending start of the new city manager and Strategic Plan.
January  2016 Official Plan Review restarted.

Between February of 2015 and January of 2016 city council was working its way from what started out as a four year Strategic Plan to a document that covers the next forty years.

Rural Burlington residents wanted to know what the benefit was for them from this new approach. The comment was that while downtown grows “up” – the result of intensification, the rest of Burlington would grow outwards which would have more people using the rural part of the city.

It was about 15 months ago that rural Burlington began the discusion about what it wanted to be. Some things were clear - others not as clear. The early draft of a vision got put on a huge board and for the most part the communuty liked the look of what they had said to each other.

The early draft of a vision got put on a huge board and for the most part the community liked the look of what they had said to each other.

Most residents resented the layers of regulation they had to deal with: Conservation Halton, Niagara Escarpment Commission, the Region and then the city. It was too much.

Pros and cons

Once the planners had determined what the pros and cons were – the decision was pretty easy to make.

The planning department had two new staffers: a new director and a senior policy advisor – they reviewed everything they had and came to the conclusion that a Conservation Heritage District wasn’t needed, didn’t fit in all that well with the Strategic plan and certainly wasn’t’ what the residents wanted. Their graphic setting out the pros and the cons was enough to convince the politicians.

graphic02Staff saw the killing of the Heritage Conservation Districts as an opportunity to refocus; build on community feedback received to date and find the local vision that they believed came out of the Rural Summit in 2013.

The air park didn’t get as much as a mention.

Part two will follow.

Return to the Front page

Annual Prescription Drug Drop-Off Day - May 14th between 10 and 3pm

News 100 redBy Staff

May 4, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Keep you and your loved ones safe and dispose of old prescription medication.

HRPS crestThe Halton Regional Police Service would like to remind everyone that the annual Prescription Drug Drop-Off Day will be held on Saturday, May 14, 2016, between 10 am and 3 pm.

Members of the public are encourage to drop-off their old and unused prescription medication safely and confidentially at one of several locations throughout the Region of Halton.

HRPS Headquarters: 1151 Bronte Road, Oakville
Acton: HRPS 10 Division, 315 Queen Street Halton Hills:
Halton Hills Town Hall, 1 Halton Hills Drive Milton:
Milton Sports Centre (rear lot), 605 Santa Maria Drive Oakville:
Town Hall, 1225 Trafalgar Road Burlington:
City of Burlington Operations Centre, 3330 Harvester Road

The Halton Regional Police Service also has Prescription Drug Drop-Off Box located at every police station in the Region of Halton providing the public an opportunity to safely disposed medication prior to them falling in the wrong hands.

Thanks to the drop-off boxes, the Halton Regional Police Service has collected an incredible amount of prescription drugs.  The following is a list of the most common prescription drugs collected between June 2015 to April 2016: –

2500 Oxycodone pills –
750 Morphine pills – 40 ml Morphine –
2350 Lorazempam pills –
260 Hydromorphone pills –
15 ml Hydromorphone –
390 Codeine pills –
140 ml Codeine –
115 Fentanyl used patches* *Used Fentanyl patches are strongly sought after in the illicit drug market.

Return to the Front page

Burlington Green film schedule - Why does so much food end up in land fills? May 5th

eventspink 100x100By Staff

May 3rd

BURLINGTON, ON

We all love food, so why are we throwing nearly half of it in the trash?

The Burlington Green people invite you to watch food lovers Jen & Grant take on quite a challenge.

BG bananaThis couple vowed to quit grocery shopping and to survive solely on foods that would otherwise be thrown away fir six months.

The film takes a glimpse into our standards for food production, and where this system is failing, leaving millions of pounds of food in the landfill, and half the world malnourished.

When: May 5, 2016, 7:00 – 9:00 pm ( doors open at 6:30 pm)
Where: Burlington Public Library (Central Branch), 2331 New Street
Admission: $5/person
*Complimentary refreshments courtesy of Goodness Me!

This event is part of the 2016 Eco-Film Festival presented by BurlingtonGreen, the Burlington Public Library and Halton Green Screens.

Future films on the program:

This Changes Everything
June 2, 2016 (join us for our AGM beforehand!)
Directed by Avi Lewis, and inspired by Naomi Klein’s international non-fiction bestseller This Changes Everything, the film presents seven powerful portraits of communities on the front lines, from Montana’s Powder River Basin to the Alberta Tar Sands, from the coast of South India to Beijing and beyond.

Interwoven with these stories of struggle is Klein’s narration, connecting the carbon in the air with the economic system that put it there. Throughout the film, Klein builds to her most controversial and exciting idea: that we can seize the existential crisis of climate change to transform our failed economic system into something radically better.

Flight of the butterflies
September 22, 2016

This film is about the remarkable Monarch butterfly migration, the most incredible migration on Earth, and the determined scientist who spent 40 years trying to discover exactly where the butterflies mysteriously disappeared when they flew south for winter.

The True Cost
November 24, 2016

This eye-opening documentary examines how the developed world’s desire for cheap, stylish clothes has led to the widespread abuse of the Third World sweatshop labourers who make them, the degradation of local environments, the waste produced, and what the fashion industry can do to change the situation.

Return to the Front page

Art Gallery volunteers being treated to a PRIVATE performance - Haley to entertain 300 plus their guests.

eventspink 100x100By Staff

May 2nd, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Burlington has thousands of people who volunteer – and it could use an additional thousand tomorrow – there is no reason to be at home doing nothing in this city. Volunteers make the place work.

The Art Gallery of Burlington has 300 + volunteers and they wanted to find a way to thank them in a very special way.

They found a way – they are sponsoring a PRIVATE performance of the Hayley Marie Remple concert at the Performing Arts Centre.

Volunteers only –

The performance – named “An Evening in Paris” is a combination of superb flute playing by Hayley Marie interspersed by short gossipy videos of the men who composed the music she will be playing.

Remple has certainly done her research – she tells all kinds of little known facts about some of the greatest composers the world has ever heard.

While Beethoven is not one of the composers she will be playing – the video on him is a delight– Remple calls them Two minute Talks.

Try this one – it is a hoot.

 

Return to the Front page

Just how late the transit bus is going to be is now just a phone call away. Real-time bus arrival service starts on Wednesday

News 100 blueBy Staff

May 2, 2106

BURLINGTON, ON

As of noon on Wednesday, May 4, 2016, riders can call 905-639-0550 – there they can enter the bus stop I.D. number to get real-time bus arrival time.

Bus station 1Bus stop I.D. numbers are displayed on the bus stop signs across the city or riders can search by route through the new Integrated Voice Response (IVR) system phone line. In June, real-time information will also be made available online which will feature a new mobile friendly website.

Phone disruption
In order to prepare the system, there will be a temporary shut-down of the customer service phone line (905 639-0550) at 10 a.m. for approximately 15 minutes. Please plan ahead by accessing the printable schedules online at www.burlingtontransit.ca under Schedules and Maps or if you need to contact us for urgent matters that are not schedule related, please use this temporary phone extension: 905-335-7869 ext. 6602.

NOTE: This extension will only be serviced during the temporary customer service phone line disruption.

Return to the Front page

School board's join forces to promote wellbeing and practical mental health coping strategies.

News 100 redBy Staff

May 2, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

The Halton District School Board will be recognizing Children’s Mental Health Week, May 2-8, 2016 with a range of activities offered at schools throughout Halton. These events will focus on mental health promotion and promote an awareness and understanding of the importance of wellbeing and practical mental health coping strategies.

Activities include:

• Munn’s Public School in Oakville will focus on the positive effects of being physically active. The school will host a Yoga day on May 3 and a Jump Rope for Heart event on May 6.

• Burlington Central School will host ‘Compliment Days’ and hand out apples to students as they enter the school in the morning to encourage healthy eating.

• Bruce Trail Public School in Milton students will post positive sticky notes or ‘thought bubbles’ throughout the school to encourage each other.

• Forest Trail Public School in Oakville will be hosting a ‘We Care Wednesday Appreciation Day’ in which students and staff members will express appreciation to one another.

• Stewarttown Public School in Acton will be incorporating a ‘May the Force Be with You’ theme including ‘Yoda Yoga’ and a ‘Jolly Jabba Walk’.

Clara Hughes - Lets talk - mental health

Clara Hughes – Olympic medal winner and spokesperson for mental health.

The week will culminate with the 3rd annual Halton Run for Youth Mental Health on May 7. It’s a collaborative effort between Halton District School Board, Halton Catholic District School Board and CameronHelps. More than 400 people have registered to participate. The event aims to unite students, families and staff to show their support for youth mental health and break the stigma.

“We are pleased to recognize Children’s Mental Health Week as part of our continued commitment to promoting the positive mental health and well-being of our students,” said Mark Zonneveld, Board Superintendent of Education (Student Services). “This is an important initiative as schools have a significant role to play in building skills and sharing knowledge to help promote wellness.”

Return to the Front page

Summer recreational programs directory now on line - Registration for adults starts May 14

News 100 blueBy Staff

May 2, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

The Summer Live & Play Guide is one line and available in print now.

Registration for the recreation, fitness, sports and culture programs listed in the guide opens on Saturday, May 14 for adults 19+. Registration for all other programs is open now.
“We wait all year long for our great summer weather and now is the time to get out and play,” said Chris Glenn, director of parks and recreation. “The city and its partners have something for everyone with programs and events ranging from swimming lessons and splash pads to camps, concerts in the park, bocce ball and so much more, all offered at multiple locations around Burlington.”

Ward 3 Mountainside Pool update July 30Mountainside Recreation Centre is featured on the cover of the summer guide. Recently renovated, this facility features a 50-meter outdoor pool with a one metre diving board, a double loop waterslide, shade structures, and a splash park, set to open on June 18. The park area of Mountainside features two playgrounds, a skateboard park, a basketball court and nature trails. A virtual tour of Mountainside Recreation Centre and park is available online.

The Summer Live & Play Guide is the City of Burlington’s guide to recreation, sport and culture programs and events offered throughout the city. The online Live & Play Guide allows residents to view available activities and register for programs directly. The online guide is mobile-friendly and allows pages to be easily searched and shared through email and social media. To receive future copies of the online guide by email, subscribe to the Live & Play e-newsletter at www.burlington.ca/enews.

Hard copies of the guide, printed on recyclable paper identified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) logo, are available at City Hall, 426 Brant St., Burlington Public Library branches or any city recreation centre.

For details on how to register for summer programs and events, see page three in the guide or visit www.burlington.ca/play.

The Nelson pool will not be among the locations available for the summer program.

Nelson pool status.

Return to the Front page

Halton District school board announces a new award to acknowledge unsung heroes.

News 100 greenBy Staff

May 2, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Halton District School Board announces a new award program launched this week by Trustees to recognize and honour “unsung heros”.

The Inspire Awards are designed to acknowledge the contributions and effort of ‘unsung heroes’ including staff, students, school volunteers, parents and community members. Anyone can be nominated for an Inspire Award and nominations can be made by anyone from any organization. The Inspire Awards launch today (May 2, 2016), as part of Education Week in Ontario, held May 2-6.

Through the Inspire Awards, Trustees aim to recognize all voices as a way to celebrate recipients who support staff and students through caring and innovative ways. Nominees can be honoured for their work in a number of areas including achieving diversity and equity, promoting 21st Century learning, encouraging environmental protection action, and supporting student achievement, among other themes. Specifically, this award will be given to an individual or group, formally or informally associated with the Halton District School Board, who has through their actions fulfilled the following criteria in an exemplary way:

• demonstrated caring, initiative, innovation, creativity;
• inspired others; and
• supported students and contributed to their achievement.

Kelly Amos

Board Chair Kelly Amos.

“We are thrilled to introduce the Inspire Awards to recognize those who go above and beyond to support our students,” says Board Chair Kelly Amos. “The definition of inspire is to excite, encourage or fill someone with the urge or ability to do something positive. In keeping with the Board’s multi-year plan, Trustees felt it was important to encourage and recognize the many unsung heroes who either work or volunteer in many capacities to support student achievement and learning in the Halton District School Board.”

Inspire Award nominations will be reviewed by a committee of Trustees. Each nomination will be evaluated on its own merit. The award recipient can choose to accept the honour during a Board of Trustees meeting or by any other way of their choosing.

Nomination forms, general information and Frequently Asked Questions can be found on the Halton District School Board website, www.hdsb.ca, under the ‘Boardroom and Trustees’ tab on the homepage.

Return to the Front page

Someone is going to win a trip to Paris - after they have heard the Hayley Marie Remple performance.

News 100 blueBy Staff

May 2nd, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

There is an opportunity for you to travel to Paris – basically free.

Yes there is a catch – you have to attend the one night only Hayley Marie Remple performance at the Burlington Performing Arts Centre and buy at least one of the $2 raffle tickets.

Eiffel tower

The Eiffel Tower

Should your ticket be drawn – and you must be in the theatre when it is drawn at the end of the performance – you will have won a trip to Paris put together by DH Tours.

On bench - white dress - flute

Hayley Marie Remple will be at the Performing Arts Centre May 12th

The idea came out of one of those late in the day conversations – Mary Mazur, Executive Assistant to the AGB CEO Robert Steven were going over details of the Evening in Paris event that is scheduled for mid May when Robert asked: “Wouldn’t it be great if we could raffle off a trip to Paris the night of the concert.”

DH tour with TICOThey approached DH Tour who said they would be happy to support the AGB with a trip. And what a trip it is going to be.

Return flights from Toronto to Paris
Return transfers from Charles de Gaulle airport to/from hotel
6 nights, central, 3 star hotel in Paris with daily continental breakfasts
Hop-on/Hop-off city sightseeing tour, 48 hour pass
3 day Metro Pass
2 day Musee Pass
All hotel taxes and service charges
All Air taxes
Paris maps and information package.

The concert is part of a month long five province tour Hayley Marie is doing. She has performed in southern California, Germany and France

Hayley Marie Remple scheduled at Performing Arts Centre.

Return to the Front page

Community foundation creates new Mental Wellness Endowment Fund; $100,000 leadership gift from Dan Noonan gets it off to a strong start.

News 100 blueBy Staff

May 1, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Dan Noonan of Argosy Securities took a bold step to strengthen and support a healthy community through a $100,000 contribution to the Burlington Community Foundation (BCF) that has established a new Mental Wellness Endowment Fund.

Colleen Mulholland, President and CEO, Burlington Community Foundation said: “As part of our mental wellness leadership work, we are thrilled to establish this new fund so we can focus on mental wellness through our granting program, now and in the future”. She added that Dan has demonstrated his commitment to the health of our community in numerous ways and this latest gift will provide an on-going legacy for many years to come.”

BCF_Argosy donation

Dan Noonan,third from the left, an Investment Advisor, Argosy Securities is joined by Burlington Community Foundation board members Catherine Brady, Phil Reddon; President and CEO Colleen Mulholland; Leighan Basadur, John Rockx.

BCF is committed to supporting the community and focusing efforts on areas that are most in need. Data from BCF’s Vital Signs Reports over the last few years confirm that mental health issues are growing. And to add to BCF’s findings, recent research by CivicAction estimates that over 1.5 million people in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area’s (GTHA) labour force have experienced a mental health issue. That’s 1 in 2 people. Further, over the next 10 years, current mental health issues in the GTHA labour force could result in almost $17 billion in lost productivity.

Noonan said: “I believe that by supporting the strategic mental wellness efforts of BCF, our community will be strengthened for many years to come.” He added that the team at BCF is doing important work and hope this gift inspires others to get involved.”

The purpose of the Mental Wellness Endowment Fund is to improve mental health and wellness in our communities by supporting valuable mental health programs and services. With only 1 in 3 Ontario adults getting access to much needed programs and services, and sadly, only 1 in 6 of our children and youth getting access, BCF believes this fund will enable vitally needed support at the local level.

“We know that access to much needed mental health services can be a life-threatening issue facing many family members, children, neighbours and colleagues,” says Mulholland. “This generous gift to start a legacy of supporting mental wellness in our community is much needed and appreciated.”

The Burlington Community Foundation was established in 1999 as a centre for philanthropy. The Community Foundation collaborates with donors to build endowments, give grants and connect leadership to address our community’s most pressing needs. The Foundation is a 360 degree grantor, with over 78 endowment funds and $10 million in endowed assets. It has distributed $3.2 million in grants since its inception.

Return to the Front page

What does it mean to be sustainable - and why does it matter?

What does it mean to be “sustainable” – why does it matter and if it matters that much – why isn’t every one doing it?

This was a question the Gazette put to Jim Feilders, a committed environmentalist and an engineer with a private practice. Here is what Feilders had to say:

backgrounder 100By Jim Feilders

May 1, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

 

A general definition of sustainability is the ability to continue a defined behavior indefinitely. This can apply to everything from keeping your body alive to the survival of the universe. But most of us think about it in terms of maintaining our lifestyles in the environment in which we live.

The three most common aspects of sustainability are environmental, economic and social. Some like to include culture as a separate item but it generally is included under the social umbrella.

Cod Newfoundland

There was a point when the cod fishery in Newfoundland was a massive industry until the Grand Banks were fished out – it took years to get back the balance that was once in place.

For the environment to be sustainable, the planet has to be able to respond to the human use of resources and pollution created. An example of this gone wrong is over-fishing of the Grand Banks off Newfoundland that resulted in depletion of cod. Wildlife species are becoming extinct by direct killing of animals and destruction of habitat. When the balance of nature is upset, significant changes occur.

We want to know that the planet will be around for future generations. If we don’t maintain a balance between what we do to harm the planet and the capacity of the earth to recover from it, we will find ourselves living on a dying planet. Evidence exists that we are on that path and a global initiative is underway to try to do something about it. Sending too much carbon into the air and oceans is causing global climate change with disastrous impacts. Information is available on the major countries of the world in terms of their biocapacity versus their environmental footprint. It’s just a fancy way of describing whether the environment can absorb all the pollution being produced. Not surprisingly, the US and China are in the red while Canada still has room left over after sucking up all we spew out.

Ecological footpint

Each of us has an ecological footprint – how big might yours be?

Economic sustainability deals with the ability to support a defined level of economic production indefinitely. The most common expression of this is balanced budgets where countries do not spend more than they bring in. As we are all aware, balanced budgets are not common and the devastating effects on the human population are obvious.

Socially, we can be sustainable when the country functions at a defined level of social well being indefinitely. This includes health care, recreational amenities, schools, good transportation, religious buildings and other institutions in a manner that creates a sense of community.

Most of us agree something should be done to keep us sustainable but how we can contribute on an individual basis is perplexing. Governments, particularly local municipal ones, have the greatest role to play through passing legislation to control services, development and pollution. This makes it easier for people to do their part as they are forced into it. Garbage recycling is a good example. Providing a balanced transportation system is another. But government can only push so hard. We live in a free country and have to let our citizens decide on what kind of place in which to live.

Why we don’t do more as individuals has been a topic of discussion for decades. Recently, a Canadian entrepreneur and author, Tom Rand, with degrees in both engineering and philosophy, discusses environmental sustainability in his book “Waking the Frog”. In essence, we are reluctant to change. With our busy lifestyles, we give little thought to what we can do. It is probably not a mass conspiracy of the oil companies. The affluent especially, see no benefit because maintaining their lifestyle is usually just a matter of spending more money when pollution penalties arise.

biocapacity - green fields

The earth needs green fields like this – we need them if we are to survive as human beings on this planet. At this point in time we are losing this battle.

To make our planet sustainable, we can start right within our own communities. We can become involved by exercising age old philosophies of democratic voting, donating financially to worthy causes and directly helping others. When we work together and support each other, the job goes faster and easier. Many forums exist that offer something for everyone to use their specific talents. When stories are heard about dramatic changes such as housing of homeless people in Medicine Hat, Alberta, we are spurred on to do our bit. Burlington is at the tipping point of real change in terms of a sustainable community with the completion of its strategic Plan.

With climate change being such a pressing issue, there are two simple things that we can do right now. Many of us think saving the planet means sacrifices such as taking the bus, turning down the heat and wearing sweaters or yelling at the kids to turn off the lights in unoccupied rooms. But modern technologies for electric and hybrid vehicles and electric heat pumps for heating and cooling our homes are available now that do not require sacrifices.

Despite the apparent higher cost of electricity compared to natural gas and gasoline, these more efficient solutions are actually cheaper on a monthly basis to own and operate.

So get involved where your talents are best put to use and encourage others to do the same. To coin the phrase of BurlingtonGreen: “Together we can make a difference.”

Return to the Front page

Prints of the Michelle Van Maurik white peonies painting will be available for Mother's Day at the Seaton Gallery.

eventspink 100x100By Staff

May 2, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

There are a number of events planned by various organizations for Mother’s Day.

Teresa Seaton is currently hosting an exhibit of Michelle Van Maurik’s  work at the Gallery until the end of May.

While the original of her “White Peonies” is not part of the exhibit there are now copies of a limited edition print available at Teresa Seaton Studio and Gallery on May 7th.
White Peonies was exhibited by invitation at the SNBA Canadian Delegation, Louvre, Paris.

Maurik white peonies LouvreSizes will include:

Giclee Canvas Print
Size: 24″ X 30″ (same size as the original painting) Limited edition size 100
Size: 16″ X 20″ Limited edition of 200

Giclee Museum grade watercolour paper
Size: 16″ X 20″ Limited edition size: 200
Size: 11″ X 14″ Limited edition size: 200

Michele will be at the Gallery on Saturday May7th from 2 pm – 4pm for signing.

Related links:

Setting up an exhibit.

Teresa Seaton Studio & Gallery
654 Spring Gardens Rd. Burlington ON L7T 1J1
Thurs – Sun, 11am-5pm
Mon – Wed, by chance or appointment
Cell (905) 510 5030

Return to the Front page

Regional compost give away to take place again - starts May 9.

News 100 greenBy Staff

April 30th, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

Some days it feels like there might be some snow coming our way. It is certainly confusing – is it spring or isn’t it. This confusion isn’t something that just happened – it is something we have let happen with the way we have treated this planet.

Our behaviour is changing – slowly.

The Regional government has set up programs that allow us to change the way we handle waste. They are committed to diverting waste from the landfill sites and working towards becoming more sustainable than we have been.

Composting - best way to get a garden to really produce - and this time it is free.

Composting – best way to get a garden to really produce – and it is free.

As part of this commitment the Region will once again offer its popular spring waste events. The Region offers these services to help divert waste from Halton’s landfill by making it easy for residents to properly dispose of waste, helping Halton become a more sustainable place to live.

“Regional Council is committed to protecting and enhancing our rich, natural environment by continuing to work with residents to increase the Region’s waste diversion rate,” said Halton Regional Chair Gary Carr. “Our spring events not only provide residents with an opportunity to properly dispose of waste, but gives residents an opportunity to give back to the community.”

This year’s spring waste events include:

Spring Compost Giveaway
Residents can stop by the Halton Waste Management Site (HWMS), located at 5400 Regional Road 25 in Milton, to pick up high-quality compost free of charge. Residents are reminded to bring their own bags or containers (maximum seven garbage bags or equivalent per household) and a shovel in order to bag their compost.

If you ever wondered how that compost is prepared – take a peek at the short video – the Region has done some useful educational work.  Click here for that video.

Hours of operation are:
Monday, May 9 – Saturday, May 14; 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Sunday, May 15, 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Last year’s Compost Giveaway events, 4,400 residents picked up approximately 2,000 tonnes of compost. Residents also donated $9,784 and close to 4,500 kilograms of food to local food banks as part of the event.

Special Waste Drop-off
To make the recycling of household hazardous waste and electronic waste more convenient for residents, Halton Region hosts several Special Waste Drop-off Days through the year, free of charge. The first event for 2016 will take place on Saturday, April 30 at Robert C. Austin Operations Centre in Georgetown from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Residents are invited to drop off acceptable items, including pesticides, paint, motor oil, antifreeze, propane tanks, computers, stereos, TVs and DVD players. This event is for Halton residents only. No commercial waste will be accepted. For more information and a complete list of acceptable and unacceptable hazardous items, visit halton.ca/dropoff.

If you need more information visit halton.ca/waste or dial 311.

Return to the Front page

Bit by bit some details come out on just what the Adi Development Group wants to do with their Lakeshore - Martha street project - Nautique is looking a lot different today.

News 100 redBy Staff

April 29, 2018

BURLINGTON, ON

One of our intrepid readers pointed us to the fact sheet on the ADI web site where they state occupancy will be in November, 2018 – but just 170 suites.

And had they said subject to approval from the OMB the statements would have been completely correct.

Adi crane

The Adi Development Group appears to be doing everything they can to get another construction crane into the Burlington sky line. This one, one of the smartest looking construction cranes we have seen in some time is up at the Linx project in north Burlington.

The Adi development Group appealed to the Ontario Municipal Board to have their application to build a 26 storey condominium on the property at the corner of Lakeshore Road and Martha.

Susan Schiller, the OMB member hearing the arguments has given both ADI and Burlington planners some time to look at the ideas Adi had when they added a significant chunk to the size of the land assembly.

One would think Adi would make this information public so that buyers could make an informed decision.

The piece we published yesterday where Adi announces their aggressive pricing schedule leaves the sense of a bit of a hustle here.

Nautique ADI rendering - sparse

An architectural rendering of the early 26 storey plans for Martha and Lakeshore Road.

Adi had originally said there would be 226 suites; that got reduced to 192 suites for the OMB hearing. That number is now at 170. It isn’t fully clear yet how they managed to do this – we will dig a bit more.

Getting it - blackIt was suggested that reduced parking and a larger lot with more setbacks may have brought the planners around. We will have to wait until they are all back before the OMB in June for a full reveal.

Return to the Front page

The sweet subtle sound of a flute and some of the best gossip you are ever going to hear about giants in the world of classical music.

eventspink 100x100By Pepper Parr

April 29th, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

A young musician who got hooked on history from her music teacher in high school is going to take to the stage of the Performing Arts Centre May 12th and put on a performance that is a combination of her playing her flute and film clips about the composers who wrote the music she plays.

The film clips are not going to be dry or dusty history explains Hayley Marie. The music during the period of time she is focused on – 1870 – 1910 was boisterous, ribald and vibrant and has been with us for more than 100 years.  Titled “An Evening in Paris” the performance entertains and informs – you will see classical music a lot differently when you walk out of The Centre.

Eyes with evening in parisThe classical music we know today came out of that period when Debussy, Ravel, Saint Saens,Faure, Wido rand Satie were both writing and performing.
France had taken a terrible beating during the Franco Prusian War during which there was a 135 siege of Paris forcing people to eat horsemeat. France was prostrate on the world stage.

It was out of that terrible defeat that France rose politically, economically but most importantly culturally.

The world saw the first of the Impressionists –Renoir and Monet were painting during this period. And the music just flowed.

Hayley Marie ties together both the music and the story behind the men who wrote the music. It is fascinating – gossip at its very best. She has a fierce interest in preserving the human side of classical music fired by a desire to show how these musical giants interacted with the society they were a part of – it wasn’t’ always a pretty picture.

On bench - white dress - flute

Hayley Marie Remple

Concert goers in the Paris that Hayley Marie Remple talks about was not polite society. Applause was loud, displeasure resulted in booing and throwing fruit at a performer. Patrons were known to jump up on their seats and shout. Fisticuffs were not unusual – Passions of people who were fully informed about the music they were listening to rose quickly – and everyone had an opinion.

The composers were real people with real problems, some had significant addictions and some had personal lives that would rival anything you read about Mick Jagger or Elvis Presley.

Hayley Marie, a Governor General Award winner and three time performer at Carnegie Hall walks on to a stage to present a performance that is part of a month long five province tour.

Remple has performed in southern California, Connecticut, Montreal and Winnipeg. In 2009, she completed her first concert tour of Germany and France.

A century after the deaths of these towering composers scholars are still studying their work and music The France she is going to reflect built the Eiffel Tower and created the statue of Liberty that was given as a gift to Americans.

May 12th – 7:30 pm

Performing Arts Centre

Tickets $35

Box office

Return to the Front page

Medicine and money - how much of the taxpayers dollars should doctors be getting? $6 million in one year?

Rivers 100x100By Ray Rivers

April 29, 2016

BURLINGTON, ON

I recall a doctor once complaining to me that his father, also a doctor, used to make ten times the average worker’s salary while he only made five. We all know that doctors generally make good money, which is why we were instructed by our parents to become doctors and why we’ve told our children to do the same.

The medical association will point out that American doctors are even better rewarded in that wasteful multiple-payer system south of the border. Of course some sports athletes, pop musicians, film actors and even senior bankers now make more. Except we don’t pay any of those people out of a public purse. And public financing is the issue behind the Ontario Government’s efforts to trim back potentially out-of-date medical billings.

Most of Ontario’s doctors work on a piece-work basis, charging OHIP for every patient who goes through their turnstile. And how they get remunerated depends on a highly complicated fee schedule, which gets negotiated between the doctors’ union, their medical association and your government, the health insurer. So how did one eye doctor bill $6.6 million in one year, when the average billing is more like three or four hundred thousand dollars?

turnstylesIn the absence of more detailed information one can only speculate – but it might be that the procedures that doctor used can now be performed more rapidly and efficiently than when the billing rate was set. That would allow more patients through the turnstile and into the cash register. And in that case the Minister has a valid point that the rates need to be revised downwards to better reflect the real cost of that medical service.

In the absence of a competitive market for medical services, value is determined by how long it takes, what kind of hardware is needed and how much skill is required. But even in the US, with a more competitive insurance model, services are priced in a similar fashion. So that is what Ontario’s Minister of Health, Eric Hoskins, who is a doctor himself, is trying to do – ensure that we get value for our medical buck by updating the fee schedule.

Of course that doesn’t resolve the issue of how much doctors should be making. My accountant keeps telling me to look at the net, after tax income, not the gross. So if society feels anyone, be they doctors, bankers or sports celebrities, are bring home too much dough, there is a solution. Just tax it back as we used to do in the 50’s and 60’s. And doing that within reasonable limits will also reduce the growing gap between the rich and poor, which everyone claims to deplore.

Trickle-down economics, as ridiculous a term as that sounds, was the rationale that allowed conservative-minded governments to redistribute income from the poor to the rich. Ronald Reagan was the perfect anti-Robin Hood. Canada’s income gap got a new life following the tax reforms brought in by former PM Brian Mulroney and his Bill C-139, which he ironically termed tax simplification.

Hoskins + doctors

Ontario’s Minister of Health Erik Hoskins, also a doctor, puts the province’s argument forward – the doctor’s lobby has always been effective.

Mulroney virtually dismantled our progressive taxation system, reducing rate classes to only three from the previous ten. He raised the tax rate for the lowest class from 6 to 17 percent and lowered the highest to 29 percent from 34. This placed more of the tax burden on the middle and lower classes. This huge shift in the tax burden also underlay the poor economic performance that plagued his government and the enormous structural deficit that Mulroney created and ran in every single year of his administration.

Our new PM’s first budget has attempted to address that inequality by lowering taxes for middle and lower incomes, and shifting more of the burden back to the wealthy through a new higher tax bracket. And that has brought out the trickle-down crowd once again. Stomping their feet as they hit the pavement in places like the National Post, warning of imminent doom unless the rich, once again, get more money. It’s as if ignorance, greed and stupidity have no bounds.

Rivers-direct-into-camera1-173x300

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 as a Liberal against Cam Jackson in 1995, the year Mike Harris and the Common Sense Revolution swept the province. Rivers is no longer active with any political party.  You can tweet him at  @rayzrivers

Background links:

Health Minister’s Announcement Doctor’s SalariesPay CutsPhysician RemunerationCD Howe Perspective

US Doctor Income$6.6 Million DoctorHistorical Taxation PoliciesHarper’s TaxesTrudeau’s Taxes

How Much is Too MuchThe Trickle-Down Crowd

Return to the Front page