Advertisement

News

Local news from Fort St. John, Taylor, Fort Nelson, Dawson Creek and the rest of Northeast B.C. Energeticcity.ca is your source for news and events! We are the only local news source with full-time staff working in Fort St. John.

Unreleased government-funded report suggests $50 carbon price in Alberta

EDMONTON — Jacking up Alberta's carbon tax is the best way to reduce the province's greenhouse gas emissions from power generation, says a government-funded analysis obtained by The Canadian Press.

Charging large emitters up to $50 a tonne for carbon emissions — an almost 70 per cent increase — would produce the best result, says the report by an international economic consultancy.

But that price would also raise electricity costs more than any other option considered, the Brattle Group concludes.

The study, which has not been released publicly, was delivered to the province's Energy Ministry and electrical regulator in July 2014, before the last provincial election. It is now before a panel charged with designing an overall climate-change policy for Alberta in advance of talks in Paris this December.

Coal-fired power generation is Alberta's second-largest source of greenhouse gases and the 64-page main report weighs nine different ways to reduce them. The options include various carbon prices, early shutdown of coal-powered plants, mandated emissions caps and regulated targets for renewable energy.

The best answer is to beef up Alberta's current system, the report suggests.

"Doing so builds on the existing regulatory framework, can be designed to be effective in reducing emissions, supports the development of renewables through offsets, and is already compatible with the existing wholesale electricity market."

By 2017, Alberta plans to require large emitters to reduce their emissions by 20 per cent per unit of production. Emissions over that level are to cost $30 a tonne.

The Brattle report says reduction targets should increase to 50 per cent. It says exceedances should cost at least $40 per tonne and $50 would be better.

The so-called 50-50 option, it says, would create a 15 per cent cumulative reduction in emissions by 2034 — more than any other option other than early retirement of coal-fired plants.

The report suggests it would also be the most effective at increasing renewable generation by about a third.

The 50-50 option would also cost consumers the most. Including the price of new transmission lines, power costs would go up by 14 per cent.

Forcing coal plants to retire early would cut more carbon and cost consumers less, the report says. But that option brings other costs.

"Our results do not include any added costs such as decommissioning costs. Nor do they include any costs associated with the loss of future revenue streams for coal unit owners."

Power companies provided with a copy of the report declined to comment on its conclusions.

So did the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, whose members would also be affected by an increase in carbon pricing. Spokesman Markus Ermisch said that the recent announcement to double carbon costs to $30, together with tax changes brought in by the province's New Democrat government, could add nearly $800 million to industry costs over the next two years.

Ben Thibault of the clean energy think-tank Pembina Institute said the report downplays the benefits of legislation requiring a set amount of renewable energy. Most of those would appear after the report's cutoff date of 2034, he said.

"They don't have a long enough time frame."

Thibault added the report should have considered a more flexible approach to retiring coal-fired plants early. It's also too concerned with being compatible with Alberta's current carbon-pricing system, he said.

"Does it make sense to double down with the previous government's policy just because it's the one you've already got?" 

The Brattle report is one of hundreds of submissions the province's climate-change panel will consider.

It is expected to deliver its conclusions in November.

— Follow Bob Weber on Twitter at @row1960

 

Bob Weber, The Canadian Press

Advertisement
Latest in News
Canadian Mosaic project visits the Peace Region
Six stories in the news today, Sept. 25

Six stories in the news today, Sept. 25 from The Canadian Press:

———

TOUCHY ISSUES FIRE UP FRENCH DEBATE

The rehearsed talking points largely fell away Thursday as the federal leaders challenged each other directly on some of the touchiest topics in Canadian politics — minority rights, human rights and Quebec sovereignty, to name a few. The third debate of the election campaign, this one in French, also proved to be the most lively, with one-on-one exchanges filled with sharp accusations and forceful declarations.

———

JEWISH GROUPS DISMAYED BY AUSCHWITZ IGNORANCE

Jewish groups said they were astonished that a school trustee running for the NDP in the federal election reportedly said she was unfamiliar with a notorious Nazis death camp. Leaders in the Jewish community reacted with dismay on Thursday after it was revealed that Alex Johnstone, the NDP candidate in Hamilton, Ont., referred to fence posts at Auschwitz as being phallic on Facebook in 2008.

———

FIRED BUS DRIVER TO RUN FOR CHRISTIAN HERITAGE PARTY

A former Calgary transit driver who was fired amid a controversy over Calgary's Pride bus says he is running in the federal election as a candidate for the Christian Heritage Party. Jesse Rau says he will run in the riding of Calgary Signal Hill, where other candidates include former provincial cabinet minister Ron Liepert for the Conservatives, Khalis Ahmed of the NDP and Liberal Kerry Cundal.

———

END RAPE CULTURE, SAY B.C. MUNICIPAL POLITICIANS

British Columbia municipal politicians Margo Wagner and Joan Sorley had been friends for years before they realized they'd both been raped. On Thursday, they spoke about their experiences before the annual Union of B.C. Municipalities convention in Vancouver, which voted overwhelmingly in favour of a resolution calling for a task force to determine how to end a rape culture that is "pervasive in schools, universities, workplaces and elsewhere across Canada."

———

CANADA TO ANNOUNCE ITS PICK FOR OSCAR RACE

Canada announces its Oscar hopeful today. Telefilm Canada will hold a press conference in Montreal to reveal the feature film it's submitted for consideration in the best foreign-language film category. Canada has had four nominees in this category in the past six years. Last year, Canada submitted Xavier Dolan's acclaimed feature "Mommy," but it failed to earn a nomination.

———

LOTTO-MAX JACKPOT REACHES $60 MILLION FOR FIRST TIME

The Lotto-Max lottery will make history tonight by offering an estimated jackpot of $60 million for the first time. Ticket buyers could also win one of 25 Maxmillions prizes worth $1 million each. The $60 million jackpot follows six weeks in which the main Lotto-Max prize went unclaimed.

———

ALSO IN THE NEWS TODAY ...

— The trial continues in Saint John, N.B., for Dennis Oland, accused of second-degree murder in the death of his father, Richard Oland.

— Statistics Canada will release national tourism figures for the second quarter. 

 

The Canadian Press

B.C. politicians assaulted decades earlier demand end of rape culture

VANCOUVER — Margo Wagner and Joan Sorley had been friends for years before they realized they'd both been raped.

The British Columbia politicians were drawn to each other, among the few women on the Cariboo Regional District's board of directors, but it took time to share their stories of sexual assault. 

For Sorley, her rape happened 50 years ago when she was 14 and babysitting. Sadly, she said, she wasn't surprised to learn about Wagner's trauma.

"We know how pervasive it is," she said. "I've spent the last 50 years, probably, being ashamed of this without really realizing that's what I was feeling. No one ever told me it wasn't my fault."

On Thursday, the women spoke about their experiences before hundreds of local politicians at the annual Union of B.C. Municipalities convention in Vancouver.

After a rousing and emotional debate, the union voted overwhelmingly in favour of a resolution calling for a task force to determine how to end the rape culture that is "pervasive in schools, universities, workplaces and elsewhere across Canada."

Delegates also voted to ask the task force to look at ways to improve reporting, arrest and conviction rates across the country.

Sorley said in an interview that rape culture had existed since she was assaulted decades earlier, though the phrase is still new to some people.

While the resolution didn't define rape culture, Sorley cited examples of what it looked like: a Pitt Meadows teenager forced to drop out of school after photos of her alleged assault were circulated, and University of B.C. students singing crude "rape chants."

"Nothing has changed in 50 years," she said. "And so, you know what, now I'm mad. And I think we need to change it."

Wagner told the audience that she didn't report her rape 43 years ago and wouldn't report it if she were raped today because there is no "easy way" to get justice.

After her speech, the 62-year-old said it was incredibly hard to speak publicly about her assault, adding she had been stopped countless times in the convention centre lobby or bathroom by women who recounted being raped, too.

She said the goal wasn't to create a meaningless government task force but to pressure provincial and federal politicians to address the problem.

The passionate discussion stood out among dozens of convention workshops and speeches.

View Royal Mayor David Screech criticized the resolution's wording, saying he didn't believe rape culture was "pervasive."

But Smithers Coun. Greg Brown replied that he had spent enough time in hockey dressing rooms to know the culture was real and casual comments are often left unchallenged.

"These ideas exist and they linger in our culture, in video games, in conversations with boys that are 11 years old using the word 'rape' not even knowing what it means," he said.

Maple Ridge Coun. Kiersten Duncan said it was "ridiculous" to say rape culture wasn't pervasive, noting women must still think about whether the way they dress will draw abuse from men.

"That is a society that we live in. And if you don't think that's real, then you obviously don't know what it's like to live like a woman in today's society."

— Follow @ellekane on Twitter.

Laura Kane, The Canadian Press

RCMP respond to collision on the Alaska Highway
San Diego Padres crowd grows by 1 infant fan in game with San Francisco Giants at Petco Park

SAN DIEGO — A woman who went to see the San Diego Padres left as a brand new madre.

Petco Park announced that a baby boy was born during Thursday night's game against the San Francisco Giants, the first in the ballpark's 11-season history.

Capt. Joe Amador of the city's Fire-Rescue Department tells the San Diego Union-Tribune (http://bit.ly/1KFDBNo) that the baby and mother were taken by ambulance from the park to Kaiser Permanente San Diego Medical Center.

Amador says firefighters had been called for pregnancy medical aid, but the park's own medical system took care of the birth.

The Padres later tweeted that a great crowd of 31,137 enjoyed the game — not including the baby boy born around the third inning.

The Associated Press

No more second-half big blues: Giants hold lead and beat Redskins 32-21

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The New York Giants do know how to hold onto a lead.

New York didn't let Washington steal a victory late, finishing off a 32-21 decision Thursday night on Odell Beckham Jr.'s 30-yard touchdown catch and Rueben Randle's 41-yarder.

The Giants fell apart in the fourth quarter of losses to Dallas and Atlanta. This time, New York (1-2) dominated most of the action against the injury-plagued Redskins (1-2), who lost veteran cornerback DeAngelo Hall to a right leg injury that looked serious.

"We won," Giants coach Tom Coughlin said. "Smile."

The Giants scored in nearly every way possible, beginning with Rashad Jennings blocking Tress Way's punt for a safety on Washington's opening series. Andre Williams scored on a 1-yard run, Josh Brown kicked three field goals, and Beckham toasted Bashaud Breeland to settle matters. Randle had a 41-yard TD catch in the closing minutes, after which Washington's Rashad Ross returned the kickoff 101 yards for the final score.

New York also led at halftime and through three quarters of its losses to the Cowboys and Falcons.

"Players need the reinforcement that comes with closing out the game with a win," Coughlin said.

Prince Amukamara and Uani Unga had interceptions of Kirk Cousins, who struggled once more against New York. Last season, he threw four picks in a loss to New York.

Washington, which has lost five straight to the Giants, got field goals of 44 and 37 yards from Dustin Hopkins, but any thoughts of a comeback ended when Matt Jones fumbled on his way into the end zone with 9 1-2 minutes remaining. A late 4-yard TD pass to Chris Thompson and 2-point conversion brought the deficit to 11, then Randle made his scoring catch.

The victory provides some optimism for the Giants in the muddled NFC East, where Dallas is 2-0 but missing several stars, and Philadelphia is 0-2.

"I felt bad for the first two games," said Eli Manning, who struggled in key situations in the two losses. "We were right there, could easily have won. To not be at our best in final minutes of a game is frustrating. You have to want to get back in that moment, have success and feel good about yourselves."

Manning was coolly efficient, finishing 23 of 31 for 279 yards. Beckham had seven receptions for 79 yards, and Randle had seven for 116.

The Giants were super-aggressive with the blitz, with inconsistent results. Cousins' mobility helped him avoid sacks, but the sloppy Redskins couldn't find the end zone until it was too late.

New York, meanwhile, was scoring with variety. Jennings, who rushed for only 32 yards on the night, surged through to block Way's punt out of the side of the end zone for a quick 2-0 lead.

"Everyone has to contribute," Coughlin said, "including starters (on special teams)."

That margin increased to 9-0 after Amukamara jumped Pierre Garcon's route and picked off Cousins' pass deep in Washington territory. Williams rushed a yard for the TD four plays later.

Big plays by Randle (30-yard reception) and Daniel Fells (one-handed catch for 23 yards on third down) set up Josh Brown's field goals of 35 and 36 yards in the first half. Brown made a 48-yard in the third period.

New York was missing five starters, including top draft pick Ereck Flowers at left tackle and cornerback Dominque Rodgers-Cromartie. Washington was hit with several injuries during the game, the worst of which appeared to be Hall's. He had to be helped to the sideline, unable to put any weight on the leg. The team said he had a toe injury.

___

AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org and www.twitter.com/AP_NFL

Barry Wilner, The Associated Press

Ortio stops 35 shots, Jooris scores lone goal as Flames shut out Avalanche 1-0

DENVER — Joni Ortio stopped all 35 shots he faced as the Calgary Flames blanked the Colorado Avalanche 1-0 on Thursday in NHL pre-season action.

Josh Jooris scored the lone goal midway through the first period for the Flames (1-2-0), with 2015 second-round pick Rasmus Andersson picking up the assist.

Jooris was making his pre-season debut after sitting out split-squad games against the Edmonton Oilers.

Reto Berra made 24 saves for Colorado (1-1-0).

The Canadian Press

Fleischmann looking to earn a spot with Habs, has goal and assist in loss to Caps

MONTREAL — Tomas Fleischmann wants to prove he deserves to play for the Montreal Canadiens.

In his first game with Montreal, the 31-year-old Fleischmann scored and added an assist in his team's 4-3 pre-season shootout loss to the Washington Capitals on Thursday night.

The veteran forward is hoping to ink a deal with the Habs before the end of training camp.

"The puck was following me tonight and my teammates helped a lot," said Fleischmann, who played on a line with David Desharnais and Dale Weise. "I felt good. It's not about points, it's about how I play. I have 20 days to prove something, so every day is important to me.

"I worked hard, so hopefully it's going to pay off."

Down 2-0 in the first, Fleischmann brought the Canadiens to within one at 14:20. The Czech Republic native, who played with the Capitals from 2005 to 2011, beat goalie Braden Holtby on his backhand from a tight angle.

Later, after Alex Ovechkin made it 3-2 for the Caps in the second, Fleischmann found Desharnais at the side of the net for the equalizer at 14:14 of the second.

Fleischmann finished the game with his two points and four shots in 20:15 of work. Head coach Michel Therrien used him on both the power play and penalty kill.

"He has experience, and he's able to play in various situations," said Therrien. "We know what type of player he is and we have to be able to learn more about him and eventually make a decision."

After a scoreless overtime period — Montreal got its first taste of the new 3-on-3 set up — Washington's T.J. Oshie scored the lone goal in the shootout.

Oshie, Andre Burakovsky and Ovechkin scored for the Capitals (2-0-1) in regulation time.

The game featured the much-anticipated line of Lars Eller on the left wing, Alex Galchenyuk at centre and new signing Alexander Semin on the right.

Galchenyuk scored an unassisted goal for the Canadiens (0-0-2). The line made up of three first-round draft picks combined for one goal on seven shots.

"We got some chances and made some plays, even though some of them didn't work out," said Galchenyuk of his new linemates. "It's only the beginning, but it was good to get out there."

Burakovsky and Oshie scored for the Capitals in the first period before Fleischmann and Galchenyuk answered back.

Montreal made the most of its few chances in the first period, scoring twice on three shots.

The Montreal power play, which was ineffective for much of last season, finished 1 for 5.

Dustin Tokarski made 19 saves on 22 shots before being replaced by Mike Condon midway through the encounter. Condon was solid, stopping all 21 shots he faced.

Washington's Holtby allowed three goals on 14 shots after two periods. Dan Ellis stopped nine shots in the third and another three in overtime.

"I didn't do a good enough job, but luckily Ellis bailed us out afterwards," said Holtby.

Half of Montreal's regular starters, including Carey Price, Brendan Gallagher and Tomas Plekanec, did not dress for the encounter

Notes: Charles Hudon, Connor Crisp and Brett Lernout made their first career appearances for the Canadiens. … Captain Max Pacioretty (knee) skated with his teammates for the first time at practice Thursday morning.

Kelsey Patterson, The Canadian Press

Oshie scores lone shootout goal as Caps beat Canadiens 4-3 in pre-season play

MONTREAL — T.J. Oshie scored the lone goal in the shootout and added another in regulation time as the Washington Capitals beat the Montreal Canadiens 4-3 in NHL pre-season play on Thursday night.

Montreal got its first taste of the new 3-on-3 set up in overtime, but neither team could make the most of the open ice.

Andre Burakovsky and Alex Ovechkin also scored for the Capitals (2-0-1).

Tomas Fleischmann, Alex Galchenyuk and David Desharnais scored for the Canadiens (0-0-2) in regulation time.

Half of Montreal's regular starters, including Carey Price, Brendan Gallagher and Tomas Plekanec, did not dress for the encounter.

The game featured the much-anticipated line of Lars Eller on the left wing, Galchenyuk at centre and new signing Alexander Semin on the right.

The three first-round draft picks combined for one goal on seven shots.

Burakovsky and Oshie scored for the Capitals in the first period before the Canadiens answered back with two of their own.

Twelve seconds after Oshie scored his first in a Capitals uniform, Fleischmann brought the Canadiens within one at 14:20 of the first.

The veteran forward, who's hoping to ink a deal with the Habs before the end of pre-season, beat Braden Holtby on his backhand from a tight angle.

After stealing the puck at the Washington blue line, Galchenyuk squeezed a shot between Holtby's legs at 17:31 to tie things up.

Montreal made the most of its few chances in the first period, scoring twice on three shots.

After Ovechkin made it 3-2 with a well-designed tic-tac-toe goal on the power play, Desharnais levelled the score with the man advantage at 14:14 of the second.

Fleischmann, making his Montreal debut, added an assist on Desharnais' equalizer.

The Montreal power play, which was ineffective for much of last season, finished 1 for 5.

Dustin Tokarski made 19 saves on 22 shots before being replaced by Mike Condon midway through the encounter. Condon was solid in the third and overtime periods, stopping all 17 shots he faced.

Washington's Holtby allowed three goals on 14 shots after two periods. Dan Ellis stopped nine shots in the third and another three in overtime.

Notes: Charles Hudon, Connor Crisp and Brett Lernout made their first career appearances for the Canadiens. … Captain Max Pacioretty (knee) skated with his teammates for the first time at practice Thursday morning.

Kelsey Patterson, The Canadian Press

Provocative political issues fire up first French-language debate

OTTAWA — Some of the most touchy subjects in Canadian politics — minority rights, climate change and Quebec sovereignty — had their airing during a lively and edgy French-language debate Thursday.

The broadcast, hosted by Radio-Canada and La Presse, featured one of the most heated exchanges of the election so far, on the controversial question of Muslim women who cover their faces.

Overall, the debate featured an ebb and flow of interesting alliances and clashes depending on the policy subject on the floor.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper and the Bloc Quebecois' Gilles Duceppe had both run provocative television ads expressing the controversial position that women who wear the veil should be made to remove it during the ceremony.

"We're talking about a fundamental question, it's the question of equality between men and women in our society," said Duceppe, who promised the Bloc's first bill in the Commons would be to extend a ban on the veil to other areas, such as public servants.

Although NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau are going head to head for seats in Quebec, they wound up on the same page on the issue — they didn't think a woman should be told how to dress.

"I understand it's a question that makes many people uneasy, but for me, the state is there to defend minority rights, and to defend the rights of women," Trudeau said.

That led to a tense moment during the debate that featured Harper and Mulcair facing each other directly, gesticulating with their hands and nearly yelling.

"Mr. Mulcair, I will never tell my young daughter that a woman should cover her face because she is woman. That's not our Canada, that's not acceptable for me," Harper said.

"Attack the oppressor, don't attack the woman, Mr. Harper ... have the courage to do that," Mulcair said. "But it's not by depriving these women of their citizenship and their rights that you're going to succeed in helping them.

"You're playing a dangerous political game."

Green party Leader Elizabeth May called the issue a "fake debate" that has nothing to do with important questions on climate change, unemployment and the economy.

"For women's rights, where is the inquiry on missing and murdered aboriginal women?" she asked.

Other lively moments came during a discussion on constitutional issues, where Trudeau challenged Mulcair's position that a simple majority in a referendum would be enough for Quebec to separate from Canada.

"Mr. Trudeau says it will take much more than simple majority, but he refuses to say how much," Mulcair said.

Trudeau said Mulcair's own party constitution would require more than just 50 per cent-plus-one of voters to remove "new" from the name of the New Democratic Party.

"A prime minister should fight for the unity of the country, and it won't surprise anyone that's what I intend to do," said Trudeau.

On climate change, most of the firepower was directed at Harper, whom his rivals slammed for not doing enough to reduce greenhouse gases.

Duceppe also took his shots at Trudeau for not opposing the Energy East pipeline project that will run through the province.

On the pipeline issue, Harper accused his rivals of not being in favour of replacing foreign oil with Canadian oil.

"That's false!" exclaimed Duceppe, who was backed by May. "That oil is neither consumed, nor refined in Quebec."

The leaders also debated the plight of Syrian refugees, and Canada's military mission in the region.

Again, Harper was criticized by the four others for not doing enough to bring in refugees. Duceppe pointed out that the military helped bring thousands of people fleeing Kosovo into Canada in a matter of weeks 15 years ago.

But the Bloc leader agreed with Harper once more, on the military mission.

"There are moments in history when we have to intervene militarily...We can't just knock on the door of the Islamic State and say, 'we're here to bring humanitarian aide,"' said Duceppe.

But that was followed up by a particularly prickly moment between Duceppe and Harper, the two leaders who have spent the most time together in the Commons, over Canada's sale of military vehicles to Saudi Arabia.

Duceppe challenged Harper on why that continued, even while it was believed the Saudis were helping ISIS.

Harper responded that Saudi Arabia was an ally.

"So Saudi Arabia is a big ally. Oh good, I've taken note," shot back Duceppe.

This first French-language debate could be key for Trudeau and Mulcair in particular.

The Conservatives managed to win a majority government in 2011 with only five seats from the province, as they cleaned up in Ontario and held on in their western strongholds.

But for the math to work for Trudeau, his campaign needs to tick off a healthy number of ridings in Quebec on election night.

The stakes are arguably even higher for Mulcair, whose base of support is firmly rooted in the province. In 2011, the NDP vaulted into official opposition status when they swept the province under Jack Layton. The NDP held 54 of the 75 seats in Quebec when Parliament was dissolved.

Three different pollsters suggested Thursday that New Democrat support may be beginning to wane. The party is not yet a force in the critical Greater Toronto Area.

"Overall, it's fragile," pollster Jean-Marc Leger said of NDP support. "It's really fragile in Quebec."

The leaders' debate is the third of the campaign but the first to be nationally televised by the major networks. It is also the first to include five party leaders, adding May of the Greens and the Bloc's Duceppe to the mix.

It also marks the beginning of an intense nine-day period that will see three leaders' debates in all, two in French and one predominantly in English.

Follow @jenditchburn on Twitter.

Jennifer Ditchburn, The Canadian Press

Lawyer for woman accusing Kane of sexual assault abruptly quits case over evidence bag

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The lawyer of a woman accusing Chicago Blackhawks star Patrick Kane of sexual assault abruptly quit the case Thursday night, saying he's no longer comfortable representing the woman because of how her mother reported finding an evidence bag they believed once held the woman's rape kit.

Thomas Eoannou told reporters he doesn't believe the story he was told about how the bag was found. But he said he's still confident in the woman's allegations against Kane.

"I don't know how that reflects, and I don't think it does, on the night in question," Eoannou said of the confusion over the bag.

The woman's mother did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment from The Associated Press. The AP does not identify people who may have been sexually assaulted unless they have come forward and voluntarily identified themselves.

The reversal comes after police said Wednesday that the rape kit and its packaging were handled properly. Erie County District Attorney Frank Sedita, reached at home after the news conference, declined comment but said he would address the issue on Friday at a previously scheduled news conference.

Eoannou said he confirmed with prosecutors investigating the case that the bag is authentic. But he says he doesn't know what evidence the bag contained.

Eoannou raised questions about the bag on Wednesday, saying the folded up paper bag was found by the woman's mother in between her storm door and her front door.

"I don't know what's true and what's not true," Eoannou said Thursday night.

The case has been the source of intense speculation and rumour since early August, when Kane was accused of assaulting the young woman in his waterfront mansion after they met at a nightclub. He has not been charged. Authorities have said only that they are investigating.

Kane last week said he did nothing wrong and expected to be absolved. He also apologized for the distraction he has caused his family, teammates, the Blackhawks organization and fans.

John Wawrow, The Associated Press

Minority rights, niqab, Senate among hot topics in French leaders’ debate

OTTAWA — The politically charged subject of minority and women's rights created unusual on-stage alliances — and one of the most heated exhanges of the campaign — during the first French-language debate of the federal election.

Health care, the right to die with dignity, the Senate and the economy also came up Thursday during the first half of the debate, hosted by Radio-Canada in Montreal.

But the question of whether Muslim women who wear the face-covering niqab should be required to show their face while taking the citizenship oath was one of the most widely anticipated discussion points.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper and the Bloc Quebecois' Gilles Duceppe had both run pointed television ads expressing the controversial position that women who wear the veil should be made to remove it during the ceremony.

"We're talking about fundamental question, it's the question of equality between men and women in our society," said Duceppe, who promised the Bloc's first bill in the Commons would be extend a ban on the veil to other areas, such as public servants.

Although NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau are going head to head for seats in Quebec, they wound up on the same page on the issue — they didn't think a woman should be told how to dress.

"I understand it's a question that makes many people uneasy, but for me, the state is there to defend minority rights, and to defend the rights of women," Trudeau said.

That led to a tense moment during the debate that featured Harper and Mulcair facing each other directly, talking loudly over each other.

"Mr. Mulcair, I will never tell my young daughter that a woman should cover her face because she is woman. That's not our Canada, that's not acceptable for me," Harper said.

"Attack the oppressor, don't attack the woman, Mr. Harper ... have the courage to do that," Mulcair said. "But it's not by depriving these women of their citizenship and their rights that you're going to succeed in helping them.

"You're playing a dangerous political game."

Green party Leader Elizabeth May called the issue a "fake debate" that has nothing to do with important questions on climate change, unemployment and the economy.

"For women's rights, where is the inquiry on missing and murdered aboriginal women?" she asked.

Other lively moments came during a discussion on constitutional issues, where Trudeau challenged Mulcair's position that a simple majority in a referendum would be enough for Quebec to separate from Canada.

"Mr. Trudeau says it will take much more than simple majority, but he refuses to say how much," Mulcair said.

Trudeau said Mulcair's own party constitution would require more than just 50 per cent-plus-one of voters to remove "new" from the name of the New Democratic Party.

"A prime minister should fight for the unity of the country, and it won't surprise anyone that's what I intend to do," said Trudeau.

This first French-language debate could be key for Trudeau and Mulcair in particular.

The Conservatives managed to win a majority government in 2011 with only five seats from the province, as they cleaned up in Ontario and held on in their western strongholds.

But for the math to work for Trudeau, his campaign needs to tick off a healthy number of ridings in Quebec on election night.

The stakes are arguably even higher for Mulcair, whose base of support is firmly rooted in the province. In 2011, the NDP vaulted into official opposition status when they swept the province under Jack Layton. The NDP held 54 of the 75 seats in Quebec when Parliament was dissolved.

Three different pollsters suggested Thursday that New Democrat support may be beginning to wane. The party is not yet a force in the critical Greater Toronto Area.

"Overall, it's fragile," pollster Jean-Marc Leger said of NDP support. "It's really fragile in Quebec."

The leaders' debate is the third of the campaign but the first to be nationally televised by the major networks. It is also the first to include five party leaders, adding May of the Greens and the Bloc's Duceppe to the mix.

It also marks the beginning of an intense nine-day period that will see three leaders' debates in all, two in French and one predominantly in English.

Follow @jenditchburn on Twitter.

Jennifer Ditchburn, The Canadian Press

Jewish groups ‘astonished’ that NDP candidate not aware of Auschwitz

HALIFAX — Jewish groups said they were astonished that an educated school trustee running for the New Democrats in the federal election reportedly said she was unfamiliar with one of the Nazis' most notorious death camps.

Leaders in the Jewish community reacted with dismay on Thursday after it was revealed that Alex Johnstone, the NDP candidate in Hamilton, Ont., referred to fence posts at Auschwitz as being phallic on Facebook in 2008.

To them and many others, her claim to a local newspaper Tuesday that she didn't know about the infamous concentration camp was more galling than the comments themselves.

"It's disappointing that you still seem to have people who are living in some cocoon of a lack of general knowledge," said Jon Goldberg, executive director of the Atlantic Jewish Council.

"It's just an ignorance that's surprising for someone who's running for office."

Shimon Koffler Fogel, CEO of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, was equally incredulous at the admission and said it may signal the need for greater education about the Holocaust.

Both Fogel and Goldberg say they saw no malice in Johnstone's remarks, but stressed the importance of elected officials knowing their history so that they might work to prevent it from being repeated.

"If we can't draw lessons from those experiences that are going to inform the way we respond to crises, then we are just playing into that old cliche of history repeats itself through neglect or ignorance," he said from Ottawa.

"We're more than surprised that that wouldn't be one of the thousands of things that holds a memory chip in a federal candidate's memory bank, which means that some of the onus is on to make sure people are better informed."

Johnstone and her campaign officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A spokesman for B'nai Brith, a human rights and anti-Semitic advocacy group, said late Thursday that CEO Michael Mostyn had spoken with Johnstone and senior members of the NDP.

"Having had a meaningful conversation with Alex about her comments on Facebook, we feel that she truly appreciates why her Facebook comments were inappropriate," said Mostyn.

For her part, Johnstone promised to work with the organization to raise awareness about anti-semitism.

"I personally pledged to work with their experts to raise awareness about the ever-increasing need to combat racism, discrimination and anti-semitism," she said in the joint statement. "I intend to continue to learn about the Holocaust and speak out against hate in all its forms."

Johnstone had earlier issued an apology on her Facebook page after her comments surfaced via a satirical web-based publication. She conceded that her remarks were inappropriate, but not meant to cause harm.

The Facebook posting from April 2008 featured a friend's photo of part of Auschwitz's electrified fence and its curved, concrete supports at the death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

"Ahhh, the infamous Pollish (sic), phallic, hydro posts," Johnstone commented underneath.

"Of course you took pictures of this! It expresses how the curve is normal, natural, and healthy right!"

After the remarks came to light, Johnstone said in an interview with the Hamilton Spectator that, "I didn't know what Auschwitz was, or I didn't up until today."

A social worker by training, Johnstone is vice-chairwoman of the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board, having been first elected as a school trustee in 2010. She has a Master of Social Work degree, according to her campaign biography.

People commenting on her Facebook page expressed disbelief that someone with a strong background in education might not have known the role Auschwitz played in the decimation of six million Jews in the Second World War.

"How the heck can a person get to your age and not know what Auschwitz was! Your ignorance is mind boggling," wrote one person. 

Another was more direct: "I would submit that you need to visit a Holocaust museum ASAP, otherwise you may need to step down to avoid further issues.

"You seem nice, but...not knowing what Auschwitz was? Wow...I'm sorry, but that's not acceptable in 2015."

Follow @alison_auld on Twitter

Alison Auld, The Canadian Press

B.C. childrens’ advocate says she was misled about teen who died in care

ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — British Columbia's representative for children says her trust in the provincial government has been shaken after she claims she was misled into believing that no kids in care were being housed in hotels.

Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond issued a sharp rebuke following the death of 18-year-old Alex Gervais, an aboriginal teen in care who was killed after falling from a fourth-floor window of an Abbotsford hotel last Friday.

"Very little can assuage my concern today about what has happened to this child," said Turpel-Lafond in an interview on Thursday. "It matters not to me whether it was intentional or not unintentional. There's a boy that's dead."

She said B.C.'s commitment to her to keep children in provincial care safe has been broken.

Turpel-Lafond sent a scathing letter to the childrens' ministry on Wednesday asking for an explanation for the apparent deception. She also demanded written assurance that, effective immediately, no youth would be placed in hotels or in single-room-occupancy living quarters and that youth currently housed in such circumstances would be moved as soon as possible.

Minister of Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux explained that hotels are used to house children in care only in extreme circumstances and policy requires that the ministry be notified whenever this takes place.

"What we learned when the tragedy happened in Abbotsford was that notification had not occurred, and that's not OK," said Cadieux. "We weren't informed."

Following Gervais' death, the ministry discovered that another child is housed in a hotel, though Cadieux said her child welfare director assured her the situation falls within the ministry's guidelines.

An internal review will be launched to discover why the policy wasn't followed, she added.

Turpel-Lafond stressed that her office has no difficulty interacting with the ministry's front-line workers and directed her condemnation towards upper management.

"Who would actually believe them when they tell you they're adamant no kid will be in a hotel and then a young person is in a hotel in crisis and dies," she said. "Will I take what they tell me at face value ever again? Probably not."

Gervais had been living in a hotel for about two months after the province shut down the group home where he had been living over safety concerns, said Turpel-Lafond.

Turpel-Lafond said the young man was in distress and may have taken his own life. Abbotsford police said Thursday they don't suspect foul play in the death.

A report from Turpel-Lafond's office published in December 2014 describes hotels as costly and non-therapeutic placement options and urged the ministry to publicly report whenever they are used as temporary measures.

B.C. New Democrat Leader John Horgan said he was appalled by the news of Gervais' death and called for Cadieux's resignation

"I'm absolutely horrified that the government seems to have yet again left our most vulnerable in a situation that's led to a fatality," he said. "We need to stop defending the ministry and start defending children."

When asked, Cadieux said she was not willing to comment on whether she would consider resigning.

The NDP critic for children and family development, Doug Donaldson, noted the government cut $100 million from the ministry's budget between 2008 and 2013.

"I think the minister is destroying the credibility of her ministry," he said.

— By Geordon Omand in Vancouver

— Follow @gwomand on Twitter

The Canadian Press

Montreal’s women’s team gets new logo and new name: The Canadiennes

MONTREAL — The Canadian Women's Hockey League team in Montreal will now be called Les Canadiennes.

The CWHL club formerly known as the Montreal Stars unveiled a new name, new logo and new marketing and promotions links to the NHL's Canadiens at a Bell Centre news conference on Thursday.

The Canadiens had announced a partnership with the women's team in March with an eye on finding a new name and look. It started with the Stars wearing jerseys similar to the Canadiens but with Montreal written across the front.

The new jerseys are also in the same red, white and blue as the NHL club, but with a large C with a star in it, which acknowledges the former team nickname.

"It's very exciting," said goalie Charline Labonte, a veteran of Canadian Olympic gold medal teams. "It's like starting a new era.

"It's very flattering to be associated with the Montreal Canadiens with the history they have. To have a similar name, I can't imagine anything bad happening to us."

The Canadiens will help the Canadiennes (the feminine case of Canadians in French) financially and give a boost to promotions and merchandise sales, selling their jerseys alongside those of Canadiens stars like P.K. Subban and Carey Price in their boutiques.  

Canadiennes veteran Caroline Ouellet said that, as a child, she dreamed of playing for the Canadiens one day because no pro women's leagues existed at the time. She hopes that the tie to one of the oldest and most famous teams in hockey will boost the women's game in Quebec.

"The name will be easy for people to remember," said Ouellette. "That's one of our challenges.

"We want people to know we exist. So often I met people who didn't even know we were called the Stars. Being associated with the Canadiens will be huge for our sport. I hope people will give us a chance and come see one of our games."

The Montreal team won Clarkson Cups in 2009, 2011 and 2012, but Quebec, with about 7,000 female players, lags behind Ontario, with more than 35,000, in participation in women's and girl's hockey.

The Canadiennes will not be moved to the Bell Centre, but they hope to draw more than the few hundred who turn out to games at their home rink at the Etienne Desmarteau Centre in the city's east end.

Kevin Gilmour, the Canadiens executive vice president and chief operating officer, said the Canadiennes may eventually move into a new rink expected to open in two years that the NHL club's entertainment branch is building in the suburbs north of Montreal.

The CWHL has worked to build links between its clubs and NHL teams. The Calgary Flames are affiliated with the Calgary Inferno and the Toronto Furies, associated with the Maple Leafs, also have a rebranding planned for this week. The Boston Blades have a loose affiliation with the Bruins. 

CWHL commissioner Branda Andress said the five-team league hopes to expand to six in coming years with more links to NHL clubs.

Les Canadiennes will wear the new jerseys for the first time in their home opener Oct. 17 against the Brampton Thunder.

Bill Beacon, The Canadian Press

B.C. bishop says abstinence is the only healthy choice over HPV vaccine

PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — A Catholic bishop in British Columbia says a vaccine that protects girls against a sexually transmitted infection isn't inherently wrong, but abstinence is the only healthy choice.

Bishop Stephen Jensen of the Diocese of Prince George also said in a September letter to parents of Grade 6 and Grade 9 girls attending Catholic schools that a legal option known as mature-minor consent won't be an option for students in the human papillomavirus vaccination program. 

Mature-minor consent is defined on the BC Centre for Disease Control's website as the authority given to children under the age of 19 to allow, refuse or revoke their consent to be immunized. The centre said that authority takes precedence over parental authority.

"You need to discern the merits of having your child vaccinated or not," Jensen told parents in the letter posted online.

"While the vaccination program is not inherently wrong, parents need to make an informed decision and communicate it in a way that can serve to strengthen their child in the virtue of chastity and reinforce her appreciation of abstinence as the only truly healthy choice."

He said the church and the parish will support parental rights.

The diocese did not respond to email and phone requests for an interview by publication.

In a posting on its website, the diocese provides a type of mission statement that explains the principles upon which its eight Catholic elementary schools operate.

"Children hear, learn, share and experience Catholic faith and values with and from teachers and staff committed to modeling the words and vision of Christ," it said.

HPV is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections, three quarters of sexually active women will get it during their lives and it can become cancerous over time, according to the provincial government website ImmunizeBC.

Northern Health spokesman Jonathon Dyck said in an email that the authority will work with local schools to ensure people make informed choices about vaccinations.

"We want to ensure that the vaccine is offered before people become sexually active as it is a preventative measure, and studies have shown that it does not affect a person's decision about being abstinent," he said.

"It is also an important protection as the person may marry someone who has contracted and carries HPV."

Dyck said the infection is highly contagious and can be spread even without sexual intercourse through skin-to-skin contact.

"The HPV vaccine is safe and up to 99 per cent effective at preventing HPV strains responsible for most HPV related cancers, and genital warts," said Dyck.

Jensen said vaccination teams will visit Catholic schools three times in the coming year and will offer the vaccine on two of those visits. 

The diocese makes no mention in the letter of boys receiving the vaccine.

B.C. Health Minister Terry Lake announced in July that boys and men up to the age of 26 would be eligible for free HPV vaccines in September.

The vaccines are also available at local health units.

-- by Keven Drews

 

The Canadian Press

Guy Turcotte trial hears that he admits to causing children’s deaths

SAINT-JEROME, Que. — Jurors at Guy Turcotte's first-degree murder trial heard Thursday that he admitted to causing the deaths of his two children.

The former cardiologist is charged in the slayings of Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3, in a residence north of Montreal in February 2009.

The admission that Turcotte caused their deaths was read out to the jury two days after he pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The trial also heard from Patrick Bigras, the police officer who eventually arrested Turcotte after discovering the bodies of Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.

"It was upsetting, very upsetting," he testified in reference to that day's events.

Bigras smashed a window to get into the residence and climbed one floor where he saw blood on a door.

Then he discovered the children's blood-spattered bodies.

Bigras said the two were in their beds lying on their backs, wearing only underwear. Their stomachs and abdomens were covered in wounds.

Turcotte stood in the prisoner's box during that part of the testimony, looking downward with his eyes closed.

"The children were already stiff, pale and cold," Bigras testified. "The little boy's eyes were half-open."

Bigras took the children's pulse and quickly realized they were dead.

The officer then went looking for a suspect because he had heard noise coming from somewhere on the same floor when he entered the house.

He found Turcotte lying under his bed, vomit at the corners of his mouth.

Bigras testified that he called Turcotte an imbecile and that the accused answered, "Yes, I know."

Earlier on Thursday, jurors saw two knives that were found near where Olivier and Anne-Sophie were found.

The longer one — at 32 centimetres — was found underneath Olivier with blood on the blade. The other one was located on the side of a bathtub in a bathroom adjacent to Turcotte's bedroom.

The Crown has said it intends to prove that Olivier was stabbed 27 times and Anne-Sophie 19 times.

Quebec Superior Court Justice Andre Vincent has ordered that witnesses not be allowed in the courtroom before they testify. They will after they have taken the stand.

The Crown has said the children's mother, Isabelle Gaston, will testify early in the proceedings.

The trial resumes Monday.

 

The Canadian Press

A healthy quarterback becoming an increasingly rare sight in the CFL

WINNIPEG — Bo Levi Mitchell hasn't resorted to tucking a four-leaf clover in his shoe or clipping a lucky rabbit's foot to his uniform.

Heading into Friday's game against the Blue Bombers, the Calgary Stampeders quarterback is one of only three pivots who has avoided injury and started every game for his team this season.

Despite his counterparts falling like dominoes across the CFL, Mitchell said Thursday he's not about to change his style.

"I just go out there and play the way I play football," he said, noting he missed three games last year because of injury.

"I'm not going to change anything up. I'm not going to tell myself not to run more or anything like that."

Ottawa's Henry Burris has also stayed healthy this season, while backup Trevor Harris has had the reins from the get-go in Toronto with No. 1 Ricky Ray recovering from off-season shoulder surgery. Ray is back practising.

The number of injured quarterbacks has climbed every year since 2011, according to CFL statistician Steve Daniel.

Going into this weekend's action, the nine clubs have started 19 different quarterbacks because of injuries or performance, Daniel said, adding Bomber Matt Nichols is counted twice as he's started for Edmonton and Winnipeg.

That number will climb to 20 after B.C. plays this weekend, with Jonathon Jennings expected to start for the Lions in place of recently injured John Beck. It moves to 21 when Hamilton finishes its bye week and has to use a new starter for Zach Collaros, who's out for the season with a knee injury.

Daniel said in a phone interview he dug up stats going back to 2000 and a high of 22 different quarterbacks were used in 2007.

He also calculated the number of quarterbacks who specifically missed playing time because of injury and it's been rising the past five years.

Five quarterbacks were injured in 2011 (the lowest in the past 15 years), six in 2012, eight in 2013, 11 last year and it's up to 12 this season, including Ray.

"Since I've been up here, it's always been you need two quarterbacks to win a championship," said Nichols, a six-year veteran acquired Sept. 2 in a trade with Edmonton.

"It's a long season, take a lot of hits. I think I took we counted 18 hits last week. As a quarterback, you take your punishment. Things are going to happen, you just need to be able to have someone there that can be the next man up."

Nichols is a league-high fourth starting QB for Winnipeg this season after No. 1 Drew Willy went down with a knee injury on Aug. 9.

"As an offensive lineman, it's always frustrating to see those guys go down, even if they're not on your team," Bombers 10-year centre Dominic Picard said. "We take pride in protecting the quarterback so it's tough to see, especially our guys."

Stampeders head coach and general John Hufnagel is thankful he's still fielding his No. 1 pivot, but sympathized with the plight of his coaching peers.

"Some teams are down to their third and fourth quarterbacks, and no matter how much you plan you're not going to have that much depth at the position," Hufnagel said.

"It's very, very unfortunate. We need our star players on the field."

The defending Grey Cup champions are 24-5 when Mitchell starts and have kept him healthy despite starting eight different offensive linemen this season.

Calgary goes into Friday's game as heavy favourites, having defeated the Bombers twice this season and 12 of the past 13 meetings.

Winnipeg is also playing in a short week and had only one full practice since last Sunday's 35-14 loss in Montreal. Its record in games with only four days between is 1-1 this season and 1-8 since 2012.

Notes — Calgary receiver Joe West returns after missing four games with a turf-toe injury … Winnipeg receiver Nick Moore is back after missing one game … Linebacker Ian Wild rejoined the Bombers this week and should play at least on special teams.

Judy Owen, The Canadian Press

Rugby Canada sponsor DHL showcases employees at Rugby World Cup via jersey numbers

TORONTO — Rugby Canada sponsor DHL is making sure every one of its 1,158 Canadian employees is part of the Rugby World Cup.

Photos of the DHL workers have been imprinted in a mosaic on the jersey numbers of the 23 players who dress for each of Canada's games at the 20-country tournament. All of the DHL employees will appear on at least one of the Canada jerseys.

"DHL will take every Canadian employee to the Rugby World Cup … What better way to get our team excited than by making them a part of Team Canada on the pitch," Andrew Williams, CEO of DHL Express Canada, said in a statement.

DHL usually appears on the front of Canadian team jerseys, but such advertising is not allowed during the World Cup. 

The U.S. Eagles are also wearing jerseys that feature a mosaic of fan photos in their jersey numbers with supporters making a donation to be part of the program.

MLS teams did something similar this season to honour their fans.

In another rugby sponsorship move, World Rugby — formerly known as the International Rugby Board —announced Thursday that DHL has extended its partnership with the men's and women's HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series.

Vancouver joins the men's sevens circuit in March.

Rugby Canada, meanwhile, announced Thursday that the women's sevens circuit will return to Langford, B.C., next April. The debut event earlier this year drew some 6,000 as New Zealand won the Cup competition.

As an "official logistics partner" of the Rugby World Cup, DHL says its global arm will transport more than 48 tons of equipment for all 20 participating teams — from match uniforms and scrum machines to tackle bags and ice baths — across 89 team base locations and 13 match venues.

 

The Canadian Press

Close the CTA