
Bookmark Website
Site Map
Recent Articles
|
Change or die! |
|
That is my advice to the merchants and
other enterprises on Queen Street. Merchants should not expect to
compete with box stores; they cannot. Nor is there any point in
complaining about box stores in Kincardine. They are a fact of life.
Downtown Kincardine must become unique. One person suggested...
7/2/08 Read More
|
|
Beware of Mayor |
|
Kraemer when he says “perhaps.” When Larry
spoke to the Lighthouse issue at Council last week, he rambled,
signifying nothing, but towards the end he did sound an ominous note:
“perhaps in the future” he said in response crying for a decision now.
For the record, I say Mr. Kraemer has no intention of seeing the
Lighthouse properly restored? ...
6/25/08 Read More
|
Survey
Results
|
|
Kincardine
Fred Kirby
July 16, 2008
There are times
when I could swear I am walking along Main Street in Gopher Prairie having a
heart-to-heart chat with Sinclair Lewis but then the sweet sound of the pipes
wafting down Queen Street will bring me back. From now until I witness less
complacency and greater creativity, Queen Street becomes Kincardine’s own “Main
Street”.
It is true that throughout history, towns have experienced their individual
metamorphoses. They do survive but not always in the form citizens may desire. I
have seen banks, majestic with their iconic columns sitting empty except for a
pizza sign and weeds growing out of cracks in once elegant steps. Yes, they
continue to exist but would you want to live there?
Our Main Street does have some fine shops and restaurants. JB’s, Baxter Row’s
Corabelle’s, and Mac G’s come to mind as decent shops for women. Seven Waves
with its attractive decor and special line of Danish clothes is a fine addition.
The Scottish Shop carries a unique line of food and all things Scottish. It
makes a unique contribution to Heritage Kincardine. The restaurant scene has
improved greatly on our Main Street. The Watercress offers a pleasing breakfast
where you can actually eat an egg perfectly cooked just the way you want and you
enjoy a delicious lunch with friends. I cannot comment on Pelican’s Roost at
this point; I have had enjoyable evenings over meals there in the past and
understand it is currently undergoing renovations. The Tramonto, offering
authentic Italian cuisine is the latest addition and where I experienced an
evening of dining easily comparative to most of the finer restaurants in
Toronto. There is a pharmacy on Main Street offering extraordinarily friendly
and helpful service. Condor is a book store chock full with hidden treasures and
if the book is recently published, Fincher will get it for you quicker than box
stores I tried in the past.
There are other stores that add nothing to the attractiveness of our Main
Street. In fact, they are a distraction calling for attention by the
Municipality, Chamber of Commerce, or the BIA. When a landlord wants his tenant
to pay for upgrading the landlord’s building it smacks of Gopher Prairie. When a
building is left empty and allowed to deteriorate for a tax advantage it
suggests negligence by the municipality and complacency by the business
community.
I do not remember saying we should attract exotic shops unless the uninitiated
consider Fast Forward with its wide range of quality TV and radio equipment at
competitive prices “exotic” or an European appliance store selling European
appliances exotic?
Our plastic-covered Council is suited more to Gopher Prairie than meeting the
21st century demands on Kincardine. Heritage Kincardine by the Water will never
become a reality so long as there are merchants, businesses, and landlords who
prefer Main Street in Gopher Prairie.
“If democracy is to flourish, it must have criticism,
If government is to function, it must have dissent.”
-
Henry Steele Commager
A Light on the Law
Meaghan Daniel
July 23, 2008
Battle stories in the David and Goliath
genre are epic, inspirational tales. One modern version we take for granted is
the story of the farmer and the government.
The story of this case begins back in 1992 when Roger Holland of Maidstone
Saskatchewan was issued a game farm license for his elk farm. In 2001,
responding to some issues surrounding Chronic Wasting Disease in the elk and
deer, (a transmissible neurological disease similar to BSE), the Saskatchewan
government introduced a surveillance program. Holland complied with the program
and regulations and was issued herd status certificates indicating that his elk
herd was free from disease until 2003.
In 2003, this provincial surveillance program was broadened to include national
certification. But in order to be certified against disease farmers were
required to sign an indemnification and release. Their signature would mean that
the farmer could not sue Canada for damages suffered under the certification
program and the farmer was to secure Canada against claims related to the
program.
Holland and many others refused to sign. The government reduced the status of
those herd which, in turn, dramatically reduced the value of those herds. So the
farmers sued.
In the case of Holland et. al. v. Saskatchewan of 2004, the court declared that
there was no legislative authority to include an indemnification and release in
the surveillance program and thus the government was wrong to assign the lowest
herd status.
In 2005, the government had still not changed the herd status or attempted to
compensate the farmers, and so the farmers sued. Roger Holland is now the lead
plaintiff of 200 farmers, who put this question before the court: when can a
public authority be held accountable for private damages? It seemed like the law
already had a clear answer – almost never. Citizens can not sue the government
for private damages arising from a policy decision. The elk farmers wished to
sue for the implementation of the 2003 program and the failure to follow the
court order.
Their partial victory in court has etched out an exception to this rule. The
Supreme Court stated that a citizen may now sue the government for private
damages, if their policy or action goes against a court order. This decision
essentially means that the farmers may now begin another lawsuit. The first step
is to have their class action suit certified by the court. Once this happens,
the trial itself may start.
I will be rooting for David.
The Eco-Geek
Dave Vasey
July 2, 2008
The wild, western trip is getting me
further down the rabbit hole of food politics and grassroots agricultural
initiatives in Canada. In British Columbia, we went to the now cooperative Mecca
of Nelson, where the largely urban community has ensured that local farmers are
being provided for through community supported agriculture or CSA’s. Though
still a developing model, CSA’s represent a genuine hope for community and rural
pride, while generating funds for farmer’s pocketbooks..... Read
more
A commentary for the National Farmers
Union-Ontario
Grant Robertson
July 2, 2008
MPP Ernie Hardeman wants you to
see the signs
There has been a seemingly unusually
high level of talk around issues dealing with compensation and who should be
asked to bear the brunt of costs for societal good. It has been on the minds of
many local farming friends and the NFU has been having internal discussions
around some of these issues as well.
There has been a great deal of legislation, public comment and other actions
that have as their basis an issue of who benefits and who pays the costs. The
issues vary from protection for species at risk, our water, protecting farm land
and other similar issues. Often there is a connection to the environment of the
province. Very few thinking citizens are against protecting water, the natural
world or farm land. In theory they are all very good and necessary things. It is
the practical application of these societal goals that causes concerns to be
raised.
Let’s be blunt. In the 20th century we took our natural heritage for granted,
particularly here in North America. Water is plentiful, so it seems a good place
to flush away all our problems. Cheap oil meant we could travel with little cost
from far flung distances each and every day. We lost our understanding of the
interconnectedness of all life, so we forgot about the necessary stewardship of
our fellow planet sharing creatures.
With the exception of the vast north of this province, much of the land mass of
Ontario is owned by farmers. Private property owners hold most of the recharge
areas for our water, our animal corridors and the land on which our urban areas
are expanding. The trouble arises with government when they then make these
private landowners primarily responsible for protecting our water, land, the
future of food production, and our wildlife under pressure. While there are good
programs for farmers and rural landowners to access, like the Environmental Farm
Plan, they still place the primary financial burden on the individual.
Society, all of us, caused the problems we are now facing. It was borne of our
very lifestyle and our lack of long term thoughts to the consequence of our
actions. It was government and their experts that recommended tiling and
draining land that might have performed a better service to the province by
recharging water, or being a green area. Those same experts advised removing
treed fence lines to maximize production, isolating wildlife populations and
their travel corridors. It was not farmers that made the decisions to not
intensify urban settings within current borders, but instead create sprawl on
Ontario’s prime farmland. The simple reality is that all of us created the
problems and it is going to take all of us to fix them.
Expecting the farm community to shoulder the costs for broader societal benefits
is not only wrong-headed, it is a blueprint for needed action not taking place.
Unlike other businesses farmers do not have a market mechanism to recoup
increased costs by passing on the costs to the end users or purchasers of
products. To find real solutions we the people of Ontario are going to have to
come to terms with the need to fully compensate rural landowners for these
societal benefits. If governments at all levels are really looking for positive
actions and not just looking for voter-positive headlines, then we need to find
ways to share the entire costs across all of society. If we want rural
landowners to take land out of production, we need to pay them for lost income.
If we want species protected we need to understand that the last refuges of
these animals were not created by the landowner, but by the destruction of the
habitat for which we are all responsible. Foisting off the costs for the things
we all broke would not be okay in any other area of society. It is time to make
sure that compensation for fixing these problems is not something that people
need to fight for, but central to the solutions we wish to enact.
Grant Robertson is a senior elected official with the National Farmers
Union-Ontario and a National Board Member of the NFU. Grant and his family farm
near Paisley, Ontario. The author can be contacted at grant@bmts.com
If you have been forwarded this commentary and would like to be added to the
distribution list please send an email to grant@bmts.com with “subscribe” in the
subject line.
Municipal Musings is a website primarily dedicated to municipal affairs:
the good,
the bad, and the ugly. The principal subject is the Municipality of
Kincardine,
Ontario, located on the beautiful shores of Lake Huron, 310 Km from Detroit
and 225 Km west of Toronto at the intersection of Highway 21 and 9.
The
heading ‘Kincardine’ gives you articles and comments on Kincardine.
‘Elsewhere’ takes you to issues in other municipalities as well as broader
political subjects.
Feedback
via the ‘contact’ button is welcome; your issues are my issues when they
include transparency, fairness, and justice.
The
column, Municipal Musings, appears weekly in the
Kincardine
Independent,
a small town newspaper that dares to be good and is read far and wide. The
column seeks fair practices and transparency in municipal council’s
activities and accountability by councillors and managers. Citizens
deserve nothing less.
Fred Kirby
“Local
government operates on a gentleman’s agreement that the officials won’t
tell how incompetent the Councillors are as long as the Councillors don’t
tell how idle the officials are.” - Yes,
Prime Minister
“The death of democracy is not likely to be an
assassination from ambush.
It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and
undernourishment.”
(Robert Maynard Hutchins)
|
|
|