Confusion about duplicate “Mothers Against wind Turbines”? Heres the facts!

To Whom it May Concern….

     I have been receiving a lot of calls and e-mails, from concerned, and confused people, regarding my website, and another with a similar name.I am writing this letter, to clarify my position, and to explain why there has been a division, in the Mothers Against Wind Turbines organization.
People deserve to know the truth!
     Two of the original board members, gave their resignations, verbally, two days before the April 11th, Spring Fling, fundraiser.  They gave the reason, that they were no longer able, to do their jobs.  I had no problem with the situation, as they had not been heavily involved, for several months, and others had been doing the work, that they would have done.  Things would carry on, as usual.
     Then….the night of the Spring Fling, April 11th, they took the money that we had raised, without allowing the organizers, and main contributors to the event, to even count it.  They later announced, that they would be “removing” me, taking the name I had invented, to protect my son, and other children, as well as keeping the money, that we had raised, with very little help from them.
     In order to protect my name, I have trademarked it, and I own the domain name, mothersagainstwindturbines.com.  The other group is under the domain name, mothersagainstturbines.com.  Please do not get the two confused.  I am in no way affiliated with Mothers Against wind Turbines “Inc.”  That is the two people that verbally resigned!
     I have made the other group aware, that I have trademarked the name, and that a trademark supersedes a Corporation, but they refuse to stop using our trademarked name.  When they attempted to “remove me”…there was no proper meeting, no minutes taken, no agenda, no accountability, on their part.  They did not even call in a mediator, as they should have.  They accused me of breaking rules, that they themselves did not follow, and there was NO accountability, for their actions…..it was disgraceful!
     As many of you are aware, Susan and I hosted, and organized all of the MAWT dinners.  We did this with help from our community.  Now I’ve been made aware, that the other group is hosting a dinner, in Lowbanks.  As I said, this is the other people, from the Lowbanks/Haldimand area.  I am not involved in this event, in any way!  Our group is now known as “the original Mothers Against Wind Turbines TM”.  I thank you all for your continued support, and understanding!  I am sorry that this has happened, but as you can see, it was not my doing!  My focus is still to protect my son, and by doing so, protect all of our children!
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Sincerely,
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Shellie Correia

 

Lying Liberals have Got a lot of Nerve…..More finger-pointing from Wynne’s team!

Reblogged from Sun News!

I’d love to give you details of Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne’s campaign platform released Sunday.

Sadly, I can’t.

The Liberal campaign chose to release further details of their platform in Thunder Bay.

She took it as far away as she could from Toronto, no doubt to attract as few reporters as possible.

Only those news outlets that could afford the $7,000-$8,000 that the campaigns are charging reporters to sit in their buses could be there.

Those of us on more modest budgets are left to follow the campaign online.

And their Livestream system was a joke. It didn’t work.

At one point, I thought she said they’d “invest in in” and “build more hops.”

It could mean they’re going to invest in infrastructure and build more hospitals, but why take the risk of misquoting her?

If they want positive ink, they need to act in a more competent fashion.

Meanwhile, PC Leader Tim Hudak held a news conference to push his Million Jobs platform — and to counter Mississauga South Liberal Charles Sousa’s assertions that the Tories had their numbers wrong.

It started to sound like an economist’s version of how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.

I start to giggle when I hear a Liberal accusing anyone of getting their numbers wrong.

This is the party that came to power in 2003 by lying. They lied again in 2007, when they slammed John Tory’s plan for faith-based funding. By the 2011 election they were allowing “religious accommodation” in public schools.

One school in Kathleen Wynne’s own Don Valley West riding actually allows Friday prayers in a public school cafeteria for Muslim students.

If that’s not publicly funded faith-based schooling, I don’t know what is.

This is the government that told us their appalling Green Energy Act would create 60,000 jobs. In fact, as former auditor general Jim McCarter pointed out in a scathing report, not only did it not create jobs, it’s caused massive job losses in the manufacturing sector because the added cost of electricity has wreaked havoc in the rust belt.

Now we have Sousa, he of the avuncular voice, lecturing the Tories on their numbers.

To paraphrase a negative Working Families’ ad in the 2003 election, “Not this time, Charlie.”

If anyone actually believes the nonsense Sousa and his Liberal buddies are spouting in yet another say-anything-to-get elected campaign, they deserve the bad government they’ll get.

This is the same Liberal Party that scrapped the Mississauga gas plant during the last election, saying it would cost $40 million. The bill to scrap two plants came in at a whopping $1.1 billion.

Their May 1 budget was a joke. If they implement it, this province will be plunged even deeper into debt — and likely see a credit downgrade.

Hudak said Wynne and New Democrat Leader Andrea Horwath are “paralyzed by a desire to be popular,” while he’s giving voters the straight goods up front.

“The finance minister (Sousa) and Kathleen Wynne are so far in the pockets of the big government unions, they can’t see the reality out there,” Hudak told reporters.

From what I can gather from the glitchy livestream, Wynne promised to send Alberta what’s left of the Ontario manufacturing sector by introducing a new mandatory tax to pay for a pension plan only people now in their 20s will benefit from.

It almost makes you glad the Liberal track record is to lie about what they’ll deliver.

Remember, this is the party that came to power with a promise not to increase your taxes “one cent,” then brought in the biggest tax hike the province has ever seen in the first budget after they were elected.

I can’t believe there are enough suckers out there who are willing to give the Liberals a new mandate.

The polls say differently.

Apparently, the Liberals have such a sketchy platform, they’ll do anything not to tell us about it — and then blame computers.

A Conservative Government is What we Need, to Save our Economy!

Governments rip up renewable contracts

Europe’s renewable energy investors are facing a harsh reality – that the promises from politicians can be taken away at any moment. Canada’s renewable energy investors may soon face that same reality.

Postmedia NewsEurope’s renewable energy investors are facing a harsh reality – that the promises from politicians can be taken away at any moment. Canada’s renewable energy investors may soon f

Companies ‘do not have a right [to expect the compensation] not to be changed’

Governments across Europe, regretting the over-generous deals doled out to the renewable energy sector, have begun reneging on them. To slow ruinous power bills hikes, governments are unilaterally rewriting contracts and clawing back unseemly profits.

In Italy, one of Europe’s largest economies and one that lavished billions in subsidies on the renewable sector, the government in 2013 applied its so-called “Robin Hood tax” to renewable energy producers. Under the new rule, renewable energy producers with more than €3 million in revenue and income greater than €300,000 must now pay a tax of 10.5%.

That follows a 2012 move to charge all solar producers a five cent tax per kilowatt hour on all self-consumed energy. The government also told solar producers that it would stop taking their power – and would offer no compensation – when their output overwhelms the system.

The result of these and other changes, says the solar industry, has been a surge in bankruptcies and a massive decrease in solar investment.

In Belgium – where both regional and federal bodies hand out renewable subsidies – a number of retroactive changes have capped the largesse renewable producers once received. In one region the price for “green certificates” – which producers received for renewable energy – was slashed by 79%. The government original committed to buy green certificates at a benchmarked price for 20 years, then cut it to 10 years.

Belgium’s regulators tried to impose a fee on all energy added to the grid from small- to medium-sized solar producers. While the country’s court of appeals struck down that fee, a defiant regional government plans to reintroduce it next year, forcing all solar producers to pay an annual fee that varies with the power they pump into the grid. Various municipalities, meanwhile, are introducing taxes on new and existing wind turbines.

As in Italy, Belgium’s renewable sector in the county has gone dark –“imploded” in the view of a solar industry publication. Many companies shrank or went bankrupt.

In France the government last year cut by 20% the “guaranteed” rate offered to all solar producers, and retroactively applied it to projects connected to the grid in the previous three months. The government is also considering ending an 11% tax break on solar energy producers.

Perhaps the most dramatic moves occurred in Spain, for years the poster child for those touting a transition to green energy. Since 2000, Spain has given renewable producers $41-billion more for their power than it has fetched on the open market. To recover those subsidies, the Spanish government recently killed its Feed In Tariff (FIT) program for renewables, which paid them an outlandishly high guaranteed price for their power, replacing it with the market price for their power plus a subsidy deemed more “reasonable.” Companies’ profits are now capped at a 7.4% return, following which they must then sell their power at market rates. That measure is retroactive, with renewable energy producers who got too fat off their profits now being starved until they reach the 7.4% cap.

For example, if a company spent $100-million on a solar installation in Spain and was posting a return of 14%, or $14-million, annually on that investment, then the government would cut it off from subsidies until its total return – starting from when it was first built – fell to 7.4%, or $7.4 million, a year.

Wind projects built before 2005 will no longer receive any form of subsidy – a move a wind energy trade group called a “sacking” of the sector that will see more than a third of wind producers lose their subsidy.

The fallout in Spain was immediate. Its solar sector, which once employed 60,000 workers, now employs 5,000. The wind sector is estimated to have laid off 20,000 workers. Ikea – the Swedish furniture retailer that became enamoured of renewables – announced it was cutting its losses and abandoning a solar plant it had built in Spain. Investment in the sector also collapsed. In 2011, Spain attracted $10 billion in solar investment. In 2013, the level of investment dropped by almost 90%.

Spain’s Supreme Court offered no sympathy to the solar industry, in ruling against its argument that the government’s retroactive changes were wrong.  “The evolution of the energy sector …  was putting the financial sustainability of the electricity system at risk,” the court decided, adding that the companies “do not have a right [to expect the government compensation regime] not to be changed.”

Europe’s renewable energy investors are facing a harsh reality – that the promises from politicians can be taken away at any moment. Canada’s renewable energy investors may soon face that same reality.

Brady Yauch is an economist and executive director of Consumer Policy Institute, a division of Energy Probe Research Foundation.

Memorial Day for Wind Turbine Victims in Massachusetts!

Memorial Day Fairhaven & Falmouth Massachusetts

http://falmouth.patch.com/groups/opinion/p/memorial-day-fairhaven–falmouth
Memorial Day Fairhaven & Falmouth – Remember the Wind Turbine Victims Massachusetts

Memorial Day Fairhaven & Falmouth

Posted by Frank Haggerty , May 26, 2014

Memorial Day Wind Turbine Victims

Memorial Day Fairhaven & Falmouth Massachusetts
Remember the Massachusetts wind turbine victims on Memorial Day
The Massachusetts Democratic Party Platform has declared an actual war on fossil fuels. The party has prioritized its attention and action on the scale equivalent to a major war. The decision has been made to take immediate action at all levels of government.
Massachusetts has a renewable energy goal of 2000 megawatts of renewable energy by the year 2020.
Reference : Climate Crisis in this link; http://massdems.org/state-committee/governance/platform/
There is a war brewing in American over commercial wind turbines that, in times past, could not have been predicted or imagined. This is a war that involves the invasion of American’s rights and freedoms and will, if allowed to continue unabated, lead to the destruction of the U.S. Constitution as well as our democracy.
Investigative journalists should understand that their reckless ignorance of wind turbine victims rights could have an adverse effect on this nation’s Constitutional right of the freedom of speech as exercised by its journalistic community.
There are those who are not afraid to expose serious government abuses.
On Veterans Day ,November 14, 2011 the Town of Fairhaven and wind turbine contractors used that day to start construction of two massive megawatt wind turbines. The work continued through the Veterans Day weekend to clear land. The abutters to the wind turbine site were taken by surprise with no formal warning. Where was the respect for all the Veterans on this weekend ?
The common problem with commercial wind turbines is the two types of noise described in a wind turbine study done for the Town of Mattapoisett in 2005. The reference to the two distinct types of noise was dropped in order to build the Falmouth wind turbines in 2010. State officials were aware of noise issues in 2005. No turbines were ever built in Mattapoisett because of the reference to the two types of noise.
Residents of Falmouth & Fairhaven in order to file a noise complaint against the turbines had to fill out special written certified noise complaints which had to be documented by local town officials. The state felt that people would huff and puff and just go away. Today, Massachusetts is faced with thousands of certified noise complaints.
For the last four years state and local boards of health officials have ignored the documented noise complaints. They have taken no action.
The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection has found the turbines out of state noise regulations and has taken no action.
The war on fossil fuels declared by the Massachusetts Democratic Party Platform is ongoing. Laws and regulations are being ignored that effect the wind turbine victims around the wind turbines. These victims are viewed as collateral damage in the war on fossil fuels.
The general public has been conditioned over the past years to expect the abutters of the wind turbines to sacrifice their health and constitutional property rights so the rest of us can breathe clean air.
Massachusetts officials in the executive branch of government have used obfuscation as a method to stop the thousands of wind turbine noise complaints. Massachusetts appointed wind turbine advocates to conduct a state wind turbine study with a predetermined conclusion.
The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center is now paying the Town of Falmouth up to 1.8 million dollars to pay court costs of the wind turbines against the wind turbine victims.
How much longer can local residents fight for their health and rights without resources.
The war continues in Falmouth with the town filing lawsuit after lawsuit against itself.
Folks, The wind turbine victims in Massachusetts are veterans of the actual war declared by the Massachusetts Democratic Party Platform. These people are not dead but are and have been wounded by the poor placement of commercial wind turbines.
Ed & Sue Hobart of Falmouth put up a brave fight against the wind turbines. The cost of litigation, health and noise from the turbines caused them to give up their dream home on six acres of land in Falmouth.
They are the real heroes today.
On this Memorial Day I ask you all to remember all the victims of the wind turbines and the ongoing war on fossil fuels.
Remember NIMBY used to mean “not in my back yard.” Today it means “next it could be you. “


Liberal Wind Turbines Invading Ontario!

KAGAWONG – Looks like Martians landed on Manitoulin Island this spring. Liberal Martians.

They hulk on McLean’s Mountain behind Little Current, Manitoulin’s metropolis, pop. 1,500.

What a shocking sight it is as you approach the century-old iron swing bridge, the only land link.

When I left last October, there was nothing between that ridge and God but treetops and clouds.

Now? Someone call Orson Welles.

“It’s like we’ve been invaded,” Deb Turner tells me at Turners of Little Current, a 135-year-old department store.

The War of the Worlds giants also march along the Cup and Saucer trail behind M’Chigeeng, the closest Ojibwa reserve to my woodsy shack near Kagawong, “Ontario’s Prettiest Village.”

“They’re a blight,” says Deb’s husband, Jib, who is running for Tim Hudak’s Tories.

Jib’s great-great-grandmother was migrating west when her boat arrived at this Paradise and she declared, “I don’t know about you, but I’m staying right here.”

Who could blame her? Or the Martians? The Ojibwa call this Spirit Island with reason.

The invaders, of course, are not really Martians, but windmills. McGuinty Mushrooms. Dalton’s Big Wind. Built so Liberals could feel warm and fuzzy.

There are 24 on McLean’s Mountain and two at M’Chigeeng, each 150 metres, including blade. They dwarf the Peace Tower, the Taj Mahal, Rogers Centre, even Adam Vaughan’s ego. They are higher than Rob Ford on a Saturday night.

You could live with them, I guess, if they were productive or cost-effective or were going to save us from Doomsday …

But here’s the rub: At 10 a.m. Sunday, of 13,116 megawatts total output across Ontario, just 130 megawatts came from windmills, according to a government website (ieso.ca) where nuclear and hydro still reign.

The “others” category even out-produced windmills. “Other” what, the solar reflection from Kathleen Wynne’s spectacles?

The province has 1,026 windmills to date. So according to my solar-powered calculator we’ll need 1,035,234 of the beasts to meet our energy needs. You’ll have one in your driveway.

I doubt there’ll be one in Ms Wynne’s backyard. No need to go NIMBY when you’re premier. I poke my head out of the deep woods long enough to be dumbfounded that polls give her a good shot at retaining power.

What are we, masochists? The most cynical, interfering, scandalous, overripe government in memory is even-money to repeat?! McGuinty, Wynne, McWynnety?

The Liberals’ Green Energy Act (GEA) has foisted “wind farms” on rural Ontarians while blindly ignoring wind’s unreliability, the millions it costs to connect to the grid, and minimal ecological gains.

But you know this already. Everyone from the Fraser Institute to the auditor general has slammed the GEA as hasty and wasteful — and a key reason your hydro bills are soaring.

Windmills are a boondoggle on par with Ornge, eHealth, the $270-billion debt and the infamous gas plants.

In the real world, heads would fall. The fact this election is still close does not say much for Tim Hudak but anyone’s better than Premier Mom and, before her, Premier Dad. Surely.

Island voters seem discombobulated, too. As of noon Sunday, an online poll in the superb little Manitoulin Expositor had Jib Turner at 26.4%, the NDP at 25.4% and Liberals at 25.05%.

Tighter than a deer’s arse in fly season.

Algoma-Manitoulin was longtime Liberal, before the NDP stole it in 2011.

As for windmills, opposition ran 68% in a Sudbury Star poll as construction began.

There are supporters, too. I bump into Audrey Jones, whose family’s dairy farm is newly decorated with windmills. (They reportedly earn landowners up to $30,000 rent.)

When I suggest the behemoths are alien to this idyllic, summery isle, she says:

“We live here year-round and make a living from our land to the best of our ability. Is that wrong?”

On the other hand, Dr. Bill Studzienny, a dentist in Gore Bay, down the shore from me, declared last summer he would not work on the teeth of pro-windmill politicians.

Studzienny told me he feared his hand would shake in anger during a root canal.

“I’m only human,” he said. “Would a woman want to see a gynecologist who has no respect for her (views)?”

Makes sense to me, long as it’s no emergency, but the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario disagrees. It recently charged Studzienny with “disgraceful, dishonourable or unethical conduct.”

Mmmm. “Disgraceful, dishonourable, unethical …”

If Kathleen McWynnety and company were dentists, they’d be outta here.

Tories will take the Wind out of the Wind Scam! Fantastic!

Ill wind blows for turbines if Tories win: Wilson 18

By Morgan Ian Adams, Enterprise-Bulletin

Simcoe-Grey Progressive Conservative candidate Jim Wilson (second from right) makes a campaign announcement during a stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport, Friday, May 23, 2014. With Wilson are, from left, pilot Alexander Younger, pilot and airport board chair Charlie Tatham, and pilot Kevin Elwood. Morgan Ian Adams/Collingwood Enterprise-Bulletin/QMI Agency

Simcoe-Grey Progressive Conservative candidate Jim Wilson (second from right) makes a campaign announcement during a stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport, Friday, May 23, 2014. With Wilson are, from left, pilot Alexander Younger, pilot and airport board chair Charlie Tatham, and pilot Kevin Elwood. Morgan Ian Adams/Collingwood Enterprise-Bulletin/QMI AgencCLEARVIEW Twp. —The Progressive Conservative candidate for Simcoe-Grey says he’d put a stop to a company’s plans to erect wind turbines near the local airport should his party form the next government.

By Morgan Ian Adams, Enterprise-Bulletin
CLEARVIEW Twp. —The Progressive Conservative candidate for Simcoe-Grey says he’d put a stop to a company’s plans to erect wind turbines near the local airport should his party form the next government.

In a campaign stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport Friday morning, during which he slammed the existing Green Energy Act and the impact he says it has had on electricity bills, Jim Wilson promised a Progressive Conservative government would do what it could to halt WPD Canada’s plans to erect turbines near the facility should his party win the June 12 provincial election.

WPD’s proposal is to erect eight turbines in the area north of County Road 91; at least two of the proposed 500-foot-tall turbines are within an area the municipal services board that manages the airport say are a potential safety hazard to aircraft, especially in the landing or take-off phase, while another three turbines are considered on the edge of that area.

WPD’s plans are presently under technical review by the Ministry of Environment.

“We’ll do whatever it takes to stop WPD Canada from putting the wind turbines in this vicinity,” said Wilson. “It is in process, and it may end up in a lawsuit, but we just can’t allow it.”

“If you’re going to prevent death, you do everything you can to do that — you have a moral obligation to do that.”

The airport board, and several landowners in the area, have been fighting the proposal for several years; both Collingwood and Clearview Township municipal councils have also voiced their opposition.

One of those landowners, Kevin Ellwood — who has a private aerodrome on his farm on County Road 91, and is faced with the prospect of having a turbine in the path of his landing strip — has filed 39 access-to-information requests of various ministries on WPD’s proposal.

Some of those requests are now before an adjudicator to see if the information will be released.

The turbines, said Ellwood, are “dangerous and significant threats to pilots and their passengers.”

Ellwood and Wilson both point to a crash in South Dakota in April that killed four, after a Piper 32 aircraft collided with a turbine in poor weather conditions. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating, but authorities have not released any details on the crash.

Regional airport board chair Charlie Tatham, who was on hand for Wilson’s announcement, said he’s tried to point out to provincial officials that the location of the turbines “pose a lethal danger… yet they choose to ignore it.

“To ignore it could lead to someone’s death at some point,” he said.

WPD’s position has been the location of the turbines will have a negligible effect on airport movements.

Wilson, however, remains unconvinced, and says the location of the turbines is just one of the problems with the Green Energy Act, which the Conservatives claim will cost electricity customers $46 billion over the next 20 years, paying out contracts for wind and solar power at rates that far exceed current electricity prices.

“Hopefully we can stop it, that there’s some escape clauses (in the agreements)… but I don’t know the full extent of these (contracts and what’s hidden in them,” said Wilson. “There are thousands, tens of thousands of these contracts that are essentially secret and covered up from the public. This one just keeps on rolling ahead and (government) doesn’t seem to be listening to anybody.”

Wilson said a former provincial Liberal cabinet minister warned the legal costs of putting a halt to some of these contracts would be in the billions of dollars, but that point is irrelevant when considering the long-term cost of paying out energy contracts — or worse, if someone dies because a plane hits a wind turbine located close to the airport.

“It’s a lot cheaper than paying people 20 years of contracts when they get paid whether the wind blows or the sun shines. It’s going to bankrupt the province, so you might as well just cut your losses,” said Wilson.

“It’s a moral choice, it’s an expensive choice, but it’s one we’re going to have to make. Hopefully we can get to the bottom of this on day-one (of a new government)… it may require that we talk to our lawyers, it may require new legislation to undo the Green Energy Act, and if we have to do that… well (the legislature) is supreme.”

Tim Hudak and the Conservatives will End the Money-Grabbing Wind Scam!

wilson
Simcoe-Grey Progressive Conservative candidate Jim Wilson (second from right) makes a campaign announcement during a stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport, Friday, May 23, 2014. With Wilson are, from left, pilot Alexander Younger, pilot and airport board chair Charlie Tatham, and pilot Kevin Elwood. Morgan Ian Adams/Collingwood Enterprise-Bulletin/QMI Agency

CLEARVIEW Twp. —The Progressive Conservative candidate for Simcoe-Grey says he’d put a stop to a company’s plans to erect wind turbines near the local airport should his party form the next government.

In a campaign stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport Friday morning, during which he slammed the existing Green Energy Act and the impact he says it has had on electricity bills, Jim Wilson promised a Progressive Conservative government would do what it could to halt WPD Canada’s plans to erect turbines near the facility should his party win the June 12 provincial election.

WPD’s proposal is to erect eight turbines in the area north of County Road 91; at least two of the proposed 500-foot-tall turbines are within an area the municipal services board that manages the airport say are a potential safety hazard to aircraft, especially in the landing or take-off phase, while another three turbines are considered on the edge of that area.

WPD’s plans are presently under technical review by the Ministry of Environment.

“We’ll do whatever it takes to stop WPD Canada from putting the wind turbines in this vicinity,” said Wilson. “It is in process, and it may end up in a lawsuit, but we just can’t allow it.”

“If you’re going to prevent death, you do everything you can to do that — you have a moral obligation to do that.”

The airport board, and several landowners in the area, have been fighting the proposal for several years; both Collingwood and Clearview Township municipal councils have also voiced their opposition.

One of those landowners, Kevin Ellwood — who has a private aerodrome on his farm on County Road 91, and is faced with the prospect of having a turbine in the path of his landing strip — has filed 39 access-to-information requests of various ministries on WPD’s proposal.

Some of those requests are now before an adjudicator to see if the information will be released.

The turbines, said Ellwood, are “dangerous and significant threats to pilots and their passengers.”

Ellwood and Wilson both point to a crash in South Dakota in April that killed four, after a Piper 32 aircraft collided with a turbine in poor weather conditions. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating, but authorities have not released any details on the crash.

Regional airport board chair Charlie Tatham, who was on hand for Wilson’s announcement, said he’s tried to point out to provincial officials that the location of the turbines “pose a lethal danger… yet they choose to ignore it.

“To ignore it could lead to someone’s death at some point,” he said.

WPD’s position has been the location of the turbines will have a negligible effect on airport movements.

Wilson, however, remains unconvinced, and says the location of the turbines is just one of the problems with the Green Energy Act, which the Conservatives claim will cost electricity customers $46 billion over the next 20 years, paying out contracts for wind and solar power at rates that far exceed current electricity prices.

“Hopefully we can stop it, that there’s some escape clauses (in the agreements)… but I don’t know the full extent of these (contracts and what’s hidden in them,” said Wilson. “There are thousands, tens of thousands of these contracts that are essentially secret and covered up from the public. This one just keeps on rolling ahead and (government) doesn’t seem to be listening to anybody.”

Wilson said a former provincial Liberal cabinet minister warned the legal costs of putting a halt to some of these contracts would be in the billions of dollars, but that point is irrelevant when considering the long-term cost of paying out energy contracts — or worse, if someone dies because a plane hits a wind turbine located close to the airport.

“It’s a lot cheaper than paying people 20 years of contracts when they get paid whether the wind blows or the sun shines. It’s going to bankrupt the province, so you might as well just cut your losses,” said Wilson.

“It’s a moral choice, it’s an expensive choice, but it’s one we’re going to have to make. Hopefully we can get to the bottom of this on day-one (of a new government)… it may require that we talk to our lawyers, it may require new legislation to undo the Green Energy Act, and if we have to do that… well (the legislature) is supreme.”

By Morgan Ian Adams
Published in the Barrie Examiner, May 23, 2014

We need to Get the Message Out! Only Hudak is Willing and Able to Repair Damage!

Pretty radical stuff

During the present campaign a great deal has been made of the Conservative plan to create 1,000,000 private sector jobs and reduce public sector jobs by 100,000 to 2006 levels.

Much criticism has been levelled at Tim Hudak and his Party for these election promises.

Funny thing is, even Smokey Thomas, head of OPSEU, agrees there are probably 60,000 superfluous management positions in the Provincial bureaucracy.

The Premier is Tim Hudak’s most vocal critic on these promises. She claims reducing the Public Service by 10% will destroy Ontario’s economy.

Yet she has never told the voters what her own government’s Ministry of Finance concluded in a confidential report on the impact of her proposed Ontario Pension Plan. It found that her plan would result in the loss of 150,000 private sector jobs.

Yet she still promises to implement an Ontario Pension Plan.

The million jobs plan has been derided, but even if it is only an aspirational goal some think it is very achievable. Even the Star agrees. One can understand however why a government, which over 8 years has only managed to double the Ontario debt and deficit while destroying over 300,000 jobs in the Province, wouldn’t understand the plan.

The Conservatives have promised to stop signing contracts for more unneeded wind and solar generation, cancel any applications that have not already been approved and re-evaluate, on a case-by-case basis any approved projects that aren’t already connected to the grid.

He would also give municipalities more control over the siting of wind projects:

“If people can have a say about a hot dog stand going in for a Canada Day celebration, shouldn’t they have a say about massive industrial wind turbines in their backyard?” Hudak said.

This is indeed good news to those of us that have been fighting Ontario’s insane energy policy for the past few years – maybe it is an indication that someone in government has listened.

Premier Kathleen Wynne said her government remains committed to its overall plan for renewable energy, including wind power.

Hudak’s campaign is disconcerting:

He’s trusting voters to assess the situation and make their choice based on a full understanding of the options. He evidently believes voters understand the damage that’s been done to the province under the Liberals, and the danger of continuing down that path, and being mature enough to choose between repairing it, or continuing along the same route.
– Kelly McParland

Trusting voters? Telling them what you’re really going to do?

Pretty radical stuff!

On the other hand we have promises that no jobs will be endangered, no impact will be felt, and spending can continue to grow at the same old unsustainable pace, or even increase. In the past decade that’s certainly been the approach to winning elections in the province.

It will be interesting to see whether this faith in Ontario voter’s ability to appreciate the options, and in their maturity is justified.

To many of us, companies and individuals, it will signal whether out future remains in this Province or not.

Liberals are Throwing Away our Children’s (and Grandchildren’s), Future!

Warning: Reading about How the Ontario Liberals Keep on Winning Might Make You Sick

Enough is enough.

You would think the sheer waste of taxpayer dollars through scandals and mismanagement would be enough to hang the Liberals.

Especially since, at the same time your money swirls down the toilet, the Liberals continue to run deficits (seven in a row) andIllustration: Truth and Lie pile up debt that your grandchildren’s children will still be paying off.

Yet in spite of their mistakes and outright lies (the hit parade includes: the billion-dollar gas plant cancellation and the failure to provide proper oversight of Ornge air ambulance expenses and out-of-control spending at the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation and elsewhere) they’ve managed to hold onto power for 11 years. How is that?

I’ll give you three reasons. (Hold on, it’s a long explanation.)

1. They buy votes with big spending promises.

George Bernard Shaw got it right. “A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.”

When even the tax-the-rich NDP recognize that Ontarians are taxed to the hilt and refuse to put up with any “new taxes, tolls or fees that hit middle-class families,” you know Ontario must be in financial trouble.

Net debt is projected to climb to $269.2 billion for 2013–14 and hit $324.5 billion by 2017–18 (nearly 40% of Ontario’s economy). In fact, Ontario’s debt has more than doubled since the Ontario Liberals came to power in 2003–04 when the provincial debt stood at $138.8 billion (or 27.5% of the economy).

Interest payments are the third largest expense in the budget. And right now interest rates are low. When rates go back up, each point will add another $3 billion to our annual interest payment, points out economist Jack Mintz.

But in spite of repeated warnings about the need for spending cuts, from former Liberal finance minister Dwight Duncan (who conveniently woke up to the Ontario’s debt problem in his last few months in office) and public servants in Ontario’s finance ministry, what did the Liberals propose in the budget that forced an election?

Big spending promises, of course. Billions for schools and hospitals, roads and bridges, billions more for corporate grants, and millions for a smorgasbord of social services.

With this budget, the Liberals are in fact driving toward a deficit $2.4 billion higher(or 24% more) than they previously projected—in spite of hiking taxes by almost $1 billion. The deficits planned for 2015–16 and 2016–17 also increased by $1.7 billion and $1.8 billion.

In other words, the Liberals forecast spending to jump by $3.4 billion this year, $900 million more than projected in the 2013 budget, with program spending expected to climb by nearly $3 billion to $119.4 billion.

With Ontario already in a fiscal mess, the NDP (yes, the NDP, a party not known for financial responsibility), criticized the budget as “a mad dash to escape the scandals by promising the moon and the stars.”

2. They pander to unions, whose members make up a big chunk of the electorate.  

The real beneficiary of the tax-and-spend Liberals has been the unions.

For starters, over half of Ontario’s program spending goes to pay public-sector workers their salaries and pension benefits.

What’s more, when the Liberals came into power in 2003, only 14,926 public-sector employees were making $100,000 or more. Today, 97,796 Ontario public-sector workers are on the so-called Sunshine List, an increase of 655% in just 10 years.

But, really, who can be surprised when about 70 percent of public-sector employees are unionized (compare this to the roughly 15 percent unionization rate in the private sector)?

The fact is the Liberals have pandered to unions, especially teacher’s unions, handing out massive, unaffordable pay hikes.

From 2003 to 2011, the McGuinty Liberals increased education spending by 45%, hiring 14,000 more teachers (up 10%) and increasing salaries by 24%—all while student enrollment actually dropped by 6%.

And teachers repaid the favour, “volunteering and voting for McGuinty’s Liberals in huge numbers during the past three elections.”

But following a narrow election win in 2011 (voters were angry over broken promises and higher taxes), McGuinty shifted direction, proposing to freeze teacher wages for two years and curb benefits to reduce the government’s alarming $14.4 billion deficit.

The teachers reacted with predictable outrage.

So despite all their talk about austerity, the Liberals just couldn’t say “no” to their vote-rich cash cow.

While the McGuinty government was calling for wage freezes publicly, it secretly negotiated a three percent wage increase with the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, which represents 35,000 voters, er, government workers.

And forget about Kathleen Wynne taking a firm stance on public-sector wages and benefits.

In a clear bid to win back union support, one of her first moves as premier was to negotiate an LCBO contract that gave 7,000 unionized workers a $1,600 signing bonus over two years—about $9 million— and wage increases of two% in 2015–16.

Her education minister also renegotiated new contracts with the province’s two biggest teachers unions, the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation and the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, offering better maternity benefits, fewer unpaid days off, and an improved “sick-day bank.”

And the quid pro quo?

Millions of dollars spent on attack ads directed exclusively against Tory leaders in Ontario’s 2003, 2007, and 2011 elections—by a powerful coalition of special interest unions that includes the Ontario English Catholic Teachers Association, the Canadian Auto Workers, and the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation and calling itself the Working Families Coalition.

The so-called Working Families coalition first “came together in 2003 to discredit then Tory premier Ernie Eves and get Dalton McGuinty elected.” Their ad campaigns had such a big impact on the election results, they followed up with more of the same in the 2007 and 2011 elections. For this campaign, they’re just getting started, but expect a barrage of attack ads aimed squarely at Tim Hudak.

The coalition’s negative ads effectively doubles the advertising budget of the Liberals at the expense of the Tories through loose election laws around third-party advertising. Unlike political parties, third parties “can spend as much as they want, take contributions as large as they want and keep their financial backers hidden until long after the campaign is over.”

In Ontario’s 2011 general election, Working Families spent $1.6 million to help the Liberals.

Other big spenders included the Elementary Teachers’ Federation—$2.6 million—and the English Catholic Teachers’ Association, which spent $1.9 million to help defeat the PC party. For comparison’s sake, out of 21 registered political parties, only two spent more than $2 million on advertising. The Elementary Teachers’ Federation, the biggest third-party advertiser, spent more on advertising than nineteen political parties combined.

Spending records for the 2007 election (the first year third parties had to register with Elections Ontario) show a similar story. A shocking “90 per cent of the $2.3 million raised by third-party advertisers for the 2007 campaign went to organized labour or groups opposed to specific Tory policy positions.”

Plainly, Ontario’s election laws are giving Liberals with their deep-pocketed union allies an unfair advantage.

3. They reward party insiders with lucrative contracts.

In Ontario, it’s not what you know, but who you know.

From eHealth Ontario and Cancer Care Ontario to the Local Health Integration Networks, the Liberals have a history of rewarding party loyalists with “cushy, untendered contracts” and well-paid appointments.

In 2004, Mike Crawley, the then-president of the Ontario Liberals, was awarded awind power contract that guarantees his company AIM PowerGen $66,000 a day for 20 years. That’s a total of $475 million dollars.

In 2010, nearly two-thirds of the $68 million of taxpayers’ money spent on the 14 LHINs went to cover the salaries and remuneration of government-appointed board members.

Pat Dillon, the business manager of the Provincial Building and Construction Trades Council and the head of the infamous Working Families Coalition, has received a number of appointments—to Premier Wynne’s Transit Panel, the Ontario College of Trades, the WSIB Board, Infrastructure Ontario, and more.

The Globe and Mail recently reported that Ontario Liberal friends and allies were awarded millions of dollars in taxpayer-funded contracts because of loopholes in the rules surrounding government expenditures. The report goes on to say that, “while there is no indication that any of the transactions were illegitimate, the lack of transparency makes it difficult to determine what services were provided at taxpayers’ expense.”

The sad truth? It pays to be a friend of the Liberals. Ontario taxpayer, not so much.

The Ontario Liberals are long past their best-before date

After 11 years, it’s time to hold the Liberals to account.

Imagine if some pimply-faced thug robbed a gas station and got caught, he’d get what? A thousand dollars tops and some jail time.

But the Liberals who have “stolen” billions of taxpayer money through incompetence and cronyism remain unpunished.

It’s time to throw the Liberals out. They’ve inflicted enough damage on the province. It’s time they answered for their crimes against taxpayers.