🪶🏩Eighteen stories up in downtown #HamOnt, four peregrine-falcon chicks are preparing to attempt their first flights. When they’re ready, a team of volunteers—Hamilton's Falconwatch—will watch from the street and try to keep them safe. [1/6] tvo.org/article/up-up-…
I wrote about the watch last year (tvo.org/article/how-ha…) but then, there were no new chicks in town for them to monitor. Now, after a particularly dramatic year, there's a big family and plenty of excitement expected. The four chicks were banded on May 27 and I attended. [2/6]
To start, climber John Millar (seen from Falconwatch's camera at the nest) descended from the roof of the Sheraton hotel and onto the ledge with the nest. He loaded the chicks into a bag and stayed there so the parents would not see the chicks were gone and abandon them. [3/6]
Once inside, Mark Nash, director of the Toronto-based Canadian Peregrine Foundation, and Anne Yagi, an environmental consultant, weighed each chick, determined their sex and banded them for identification in Canada and the U.S. Then, the birds were returned to the nest. [4/6]
Senior Falconwatch monitor Pat Baker (on the right) says with four fledglings attempting to fly, it'll be tough for volunteers on the ground to track them, but she says the goal remains the same as ever: “To successfully fledge four chicks and see them on their way." [5/6]
Marzuk Gazi, a new volunteer coordinator, will be one of two people working 12-hour shifts managing volunteers. He's excited to start and that anyone keen on joining should reach out. “We’ll need all the volunteers we can get.” [6/6] tvo.org/article/up-up-…
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On the morning of August 19, 1942, Allied troops took part in Operation Jubilee, an amphibious assault on the French port of Dieppe. In nine hours, enemy fighters killed 907 Canadians, wounded 2,460, and captured 1,946.
The Allied force included 582 soldiers from the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry — close to 300 were wounded or captured, and 197 died. Today, #HamOnt's Dieppe Veterans Memorial Park is holding a memorial service to commemorate the 80th anniversary.
I spoke with speaks with Alex Fitzgerald-Black (@JunoBeachCentre) about Dieppe’s legacy, some of its lesser-known ripple effects, and what his team is doing to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the battle. [3/4]
🦠👀⛱️With mask mandates largely lifted and many Ontarians with multiple doses, I asked health officials, including @mustafahirji and @twpiggott, what kind of summer the province has in store — and how public-health units will be spending it. tvo.org/article/hot-vi…#HamOnt
The Hamilton, Niagara and Peterborough health units are all seeing less transmission as well as fewer hospital admissions and outbreaks than in the last few weeks and months. They expect relatively low transmission probably until fall. [2/9]
Despite lower transmission, Hirji worries that abut 8 per cent of PCR tests in Niagara are positive compared to about 2 or 3 per cent through much of the pandemic. Piggott warns healthcare capacity is still very limited. (See here: toronto.citynews.ca/2022/06/10/eme…) [3/9]
I'll be live-tweeting updates on the #OnElxn in #HamOnt and #Niagara tonight for @TheAgenda. Check out TVO (on TV), go to TVO.org, or cruise our social media for live coverage starting at 8 p.m. ET.
Here are the ridings I'm watching:
Haldimand-Norfolk, where polling aggregators are predicting a win for PC candidate Ken Hewitt, mayor of Haldimand County niagarafallsreview.ca/local-haldiman…
Flamborough-Glanbrook, where pollsters predict PC former sitting member Donna Skelly will be re-elected cbc.ca/news/canada/ha…
When it comes to preventing homelessness and supporting unhoused people in Ontario, “we’ve known what the solutions are for a very long time,” says @JesseJenkinson (@MAP_Health). “It’s just whether or not anyone’s going to finally do something about it.” #OnElxn#OnPoli [1/9]
The pandemic exacerbated homelessness but things were bad before. A 2021 Statistics Canada study concluded homelessness in Ontario has been worsening over time, affecting younger cohorts, and shifting to smaller but rapidly growing municipalities. www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/82-003-… [2/9]
.@AbeOudshoorn (@WesternU) says the increase in homelessness came as pre-2018 progress slowed and organizations ran out of capacity to re-house people. Simultaneously, the housing market took off, making it hard to find affordable housing. [3/9]
🏙️🏡In recognition of rapidly rising rents, the four major parties in Ontario are promising some big changes for renters, including rent control and vacancy control. I talked to two housing experts about what impact those policies could have. #OnPoli#OnElxn [1/7]
Ontario units built pre-2018 are subject to rent control, meaning landlords can raise rent by only a set amount each year (typically between 0.5 and 3 per cent). However, landlords can apply to make "above-guideline increases" to recover costs. [2/7]
@ScottLeonTO (@wellesleyWI) and @NemoyL (@TorontoMet) says AGIs can help keep units in good repair, but can also lead to unaffordable increases. Leon suggests policy options such as grants to help repairs while keeping rents affordable (more on that in the article). [3/7]
🌬🏫Good ventilation reduces the risk of COVID-19 transmission. So what’s being done to improve the air kids breathe in schools? I asked the Ministry of Education, Niagara's public school board (@dsbn) and acting MOH, @mustafahirji, and HVAC engineer @joeyfox85. #OnPoli [1/12]
Prior to the pandemic, public health in Niagara didn’t play much of a role in ventilation, Hirji says. But that changed as “we realized that this virus actually spreads through the air, and ventilation can be one of the tools that stops its spread." publichealthontario.ca/-/media/Docume… [2/12]
People are becoming more conscious about the importance of ventilation after devaluing it for too long, Fox says. “This is a societal issue," he notes, but schools are particularly important since “you have so many kids in one place, and they’re forced to be there.” [3/12]