Conservatives are our only chance to save province! Lib/NDP promise more of same!

MONTE SOLBERG - Ontario's future in hands of voters

QUEEN’S PARK

Credits: FILE PHOTO/Dave ThomasToronto Sun/QMI Agency

MONTE SOLBERG | QMI AGENCY

Ontario is great. Without Ontario we wouldn’t have the Great Lakes, Bobby Orr or that secret club in Toronto’s Rosedale where the chattering class gathers to decide our future, and to chatter. It’s also Canada’s once and, we hope, future economic growth engine.We need to keep this in mind now that Ontario is in an election, and as the party leaders tour the province in hope of winning the support of unsuspecting voters. They will do this by kissing babies and shaking hands (confusing the two is a definite no-no).The leaders will say optimistic things, criticize their opponents and, we hope, propose fresh ideas. The fresh ideas part is the part that moves the province forward. So far, so good.

But not all ideas are equal. They should fit the times, and address the biggest problems. It is also not a good thing if the proposed ideas make the existing problems even worse. In some cases those new ideas might one day become the biggest problem. This is where the toothy Kathleen Wynne should walk on the stage, smiling, though I’m not sure why she’s smiling.

Ontario’s economy has struggled for years. Sure, as the U.S. economy eventually recovers, Ontario will get towed along behind it, but waiting for another economy to emerge from recession is not a strategy; it’s the lack of a strategy.

So instead of bringing forward new ideas on the economy, the Liberals have essentially declared that it’s not the economy stupid, it’s — get ready for it — retirement income.

Unfortunately, Wynne’s Ontario Retirement Pension Plan idea would actually hold back the kind of recovery that could one day make her pension plan idea more feasible. Oh, the delicious and fattening irony.

That said, the Liberals have not even established that Ontarians require more retirement income. They certainly haven’t made the case that it’s a higher priority than creating jobs, resource development in the Ring of Fire, a sensible energy policy that allows manufacturing to compete, or half a dozen other pressing needs. She is fleeing from those issues, because if she is forced to speak to them she’ll have to acknowledge that her government after a decade in power has not made the progress that it should have made. Their handling of the energy file alone should be a firing offence.

PC Leader Tim Hudak has not set Ontario aflame with his fiery rhetoric or his charisma. Instead he has stayed relevant by hanging in there and not doing anything stupid. Most importantly, his instincts are right. He has set his sights clearly on working-class Ontario with his Million Jobs Plan. He understands that your employer can’t pay into your pension plan if you don’t have an employer because you don’t have a job. That might seem obvious, but not obvious enough that the other two leaders have acted accordingly. Still Hudak must add details to his plan and be credible in selling it.

This is far from a slam dunk for Hudak. Kathleen Wynne remains personally popular. Almost everything hinges on the vagaries of the campaign and whether Ontarians have had enough to want change.

Help PEFCN and APPEC fight the Wind Turbines! Here’s how!

Big Yard Sale on May 24 to benefit PECFN and APPEC legal funds — Donate items / Find treasures

YARD SALE

SATURDAY MAY 24, 2014

(rain date May 25)

9 am to 4 pm

14011 HIGHWAY # 33

FUNDRAISER FOR PECFN AND APPEC

Spring cleaning?

Why not put aside those unwanted items that someone else may be able to use and support the legal funds to stop wind turbines in the County.

Large donations can be dropped off at 7 am the day of the sale at the big barn, 14011 Highway #33, near corner of County Rd 32.

Alternatively, pick up of larger saleable items (no junk or bedding please) can be arranged by emailing contactus@appec.ca .  Include your name, address, phone number and brief description of item(s).

Small items can dropped off at Royal LePage, 104 Main Street Picton from Wednesday May 21 to Friday May 23.

Donate and/or come out to the Yard Sale on May 24 and find a treasure.

Tickets for the South Marysburgh Heritage House and Winery Tour will be available to purchase at the Yard Sale.

 

Government Corruption at every level….even in the Toronto School Board!

TDSB chair funnelled school funds to his charity: probe

The chairman of Canada’s largest school board directed tens of thousands of dollars intended for a Toronto elementary school to his own charity, according to confidential internal reviews of spending during his tenure as principal.

The spending reviews, obtained by The Globe and Mail, are part of a series of internal investigations spanning four years that raise questions about Chris Bolton’s dual roles at a school and a charity before he was elected a trustee of the Toronto District School Board, and conducted by the organization he now chairs. Nearly a decade later, the board continues to grapple with governance concerns arising from Mr. Bolton’s ties to this charity, which is now run by his live-in partner.

Video: Meet the new TDSB leader

None of the reports have been made public and some of them are labelled as drafts. However, their findings are summarized in a 2005 letter, addressed to Mr. Bolton and marked final, that accuses him of a breach of fiduciary duty and lays out a series of allegations that include “misappropriations of funds” and a lack of transparency. No action has been taken by the board.

Mr. Bolton defended his time as principal at Ryerson Community School, saying the school received donations in recognition of its track record for helping students, many of whom came from low-income families. “The money was used for good works in an inner-city community,” he told The Globe.

According to the letter, Mr. Bolton directed to his charity a $50,000 grant that Ryerson received from the Atkinson Foundation. The non-profit foundation, created by former Toronto Star publisher Joseph E. Atkinson, stipulated that the money was to be used exclusively for the benefit of the school. According to the letter, almost half went to non-Ryerson recipients.

According to the letter, Mr. Bolton also directed to his charity $10,000 from actor Denzel Washington, who made the donation to Ryerson after using school property during the filming of John Q. The money was used to create a bursary for students at Ryerson, but was controlled by Mr. Bolton’s charity.

A $5,000 donation to Ryerson from a group called the Unum Foundation was also directed to the charity, according to the letter.

In the letter to Mr. Bolton, dated Feb. 25, 2005, he is asked to repay “unauthorized commissions” totalling $3,250 – consisting of a 5-per-cent fee paid to his charity, Friends of Community Schools, for managing the donations.

According to another report, Mr. Bolton also used his charity to purchase a bus, dubbed “White Lightning,” which once got stuck on a highway while on a field trip.

The investigations date back to 2001, when Mr. Bolton was principal of Ryerson Community School, an elementary school in downtown Toronto. He also ran a charitable organization he founded – described in one document as Mr. Bolton’s “alter ego” – and diverted donations for Ryerson to his charity, one report says, allowing him to disperse the funds without scrutiny from the school board.

The Globe has pieced together this chapter of Mr. Bolton’s three-decade career as a teacher and principal, based on documents and interviews with more than a dozen sources familiar with the situation. One report, prepared in 2005 by lawyers at Keel Cottrelle at the request of senior staff at the TDSB, follows an internal school-board report four years earlier, also obtained by The Globe.

The report accuses Mr. Bolton of putting his own interests ahead of the school’s. “Suspected transgressions,” it says, involved “the misuse and possible misappropriation of school board funds and property.”

In response to The Globe, Mr. Bolton said he does not recall receiving the letter from Keel Cottrelle that gave him 60 days to remit all funds “retained and misapplied” by his charity.

It is not clear how the matter was resolved. The Atkinson Foundation did not receive a formal report after it requested details of how the award was used, executive director Colette Murphy told The Globe. The foundation gave the award to Friends of Community Schools, she said, because money typically goes to registered charities. The foundation was aware that Mr. Bolton controlled the charity, Ms. Murphy said.

Several trustees told The Globe they never saw the reports on Mr. Bolton. Sheila Ward, a TDSB trustee and chair at the time, said she did not share the Keel Cottrelle report because there was no proof of any wrongdoing: “The Atkinson grant had nothing to do with us,” she said. “The TDSB had no jurisdiction over it.”

Since Mr. Bolton was elected a trustee in 2003, he has risen through the political ranks, becoming vice-chair in December, 2008, and chair two years later.

During his time as a trustee, his involvement with his charity has remained controversial. Friends of Community Schools received $56,000 in provincial funding dispersed by the TDSB to run a summer camp for 225 children at Ryerson in the summer of 2009. The Globe has reported that Mr. Bolton did not declare his potential conflict of interest and the board has since passed a motion calling for stricter governance rules.

The TDSB began investigating Mr. Bolton in January, 2001, just days before he retired from Ryerson. Mr. Bolton blamed Georgina Balascas, a superintendent at the time, for “instigating” the review.

Ms. Balascas told The Globe: “I just wanted to get answers and clarification around some of the issues that had come to my attention.”

One of the issues was the big white school bus. Not only had Mr. Bolton purchased it without getting approval from the TDSB, she said, it was a violation of the board’s rules for a school to own a bus.

The Keel Cottrelle report says it was the understanding of a former Ryerson secretary that Mr. Bolton bought the bus through his charity to avoid insuring it through the TDSB.

Mr. Bolton said no money changed hands. A transit company in Muskoka gave him the bus in exchange for a tax credit, he told The Globe. Mr. Bolton charged teachers a lower rate than what they paid to use the TDSB’s buses, the report says. Teachers refused to use the bus after it got stuck on a highway during a field trip, according to the report.

The internal TDSB review also examined the relationship between Ryerson and Mr. Bolton’s charity but was unable to account for funding from donations.

Mr. Bolton also said he was not obligated to provide the TDSB with an accounting of the Atkinson money, because his charity received the funds on behalf of Ryerson.

The Atkinson grant was by far the single largest donation to Ryerson. The school received the Ruth Atkinson Hindmarsh Award in October, 1999 in recognition of its highly innovative and effective work with children. At a standing-room only ceremony in the school’s gymnasium, Mr. Bolton was on the stage with Terry Ross, his live-in partner. Much to the surprise of some in the audience, Mr. Ross, treasurer of the charity at the time, accepted the Atkinson cheque.

The TDSB report says the school board could not determine how proceeds of $1,500 from the sale of the bus were recorded. Mr. Bolton denied that he sold the bus, saying he drove it to a wrecker in Toronto and handed him the keys. Ryerson staff gave Mr. Bolton a caricature of him with the bus, which is hanging in his TDSB office.

Where donations for Ryerson school went

THE MONEY

While Mr. Bolton was principal of Ryerson Community School, his charity received the following donations that were intended for use by the school, according to documents obtained by The Globe:

  • $50,000 grant from the Atkinson Foundation
  • $10,000 bursary donated by Denzel Washington
  • $5,000 grant from the Unum Foundation

THE CHARITY

Instead of having these funds go directly to the TDSB or Ryerson, they were directed to Mr. Bolton’s charity, Friends of Community Schools, which handled the money.

The charity used $20,500 of the Atkinson grant to fund other community organizations instead of Ryerson, which was the intended recipient of the grant, according to documents.

THE FEE

Mr. Bolton’s charity deducted a 5-per-cent administrative fee from the donations, according to the report. The report says these costs would not have been charged and more money would have been available to Ryerson if the funds had initially gone to the TDSB. The TDSB became a registered charity in January, 1998.

THE BUS

Mr. Bolton used his charity to procure a bus, which was then used by teachers at a fee lower than what TDSB would charge. The bus, which had mechanical problems, was owned by 1247550 Ontario Limited, which was controlled by Mr. Bolton.

The Wind Industry is on Financial Life Support – PULL THE PLUG!

Australian Wind Industry’s House of Cards Collapsing

turbine collapse-1

With Australia’s wind industry in its death throes, STT has already given fair warning to bankers, investors and shareholders with so much as a cent in wind power companies to grab their cash and get out as fast they can (see our post here).

All-wind-power-outfits – like our favourite whipping boys, Infigen – are losing money hand over fist – and have little more to do than to watch their share prices plummet and await a knock on the door from a receiver or liquidator.

As is often the way, financial troubles spread like a contagious disease – the latest to catch the “bug” is Hydro Tasmania.

STT followers will remember Hydro Tasmania as the bunch of liars and thugs that have ridden roughshod over King Island in an effort to spear 250 giant fans all over the jewel of Bass Strait.

In the first round, Hydro Tasmania promised King Island locals that unless 60% supported their planned project, they would simply abandon it – by dropping their planned “feasibility study” (see our posts here andhere). Hydro Tasmania then set about buying the votes it needed to show 60% supporting its project (see our post here).

Those shovelling Hydro Tasmania’s cash out to bribe the locals must have flunked basic arithmetic, because they only managed to muster 58.7% of the vote. But, never mind, Hydro Tasmania simply ignored its earlier promise and launched into its feasibility study, anyway (see our post here). So much for keeping promises.

But, as they say: “what goes around, comes around”.

Hydro Tasmania is losing 10s of $millions on their existing Tasmanian wind farm operations – Musselroe and Woolnorth – and look set to lose 100s of $millions more. And, in the irony of ironies, it’s blaming the Federal Government’s RET Review and the threat that the Government will breach its “promise” to retain the mandatory Renewable Energy Target.

Here’s The Australian on Hydro Tasmania’s date with bad Karma.

Green energy firm Hydro Tasmania faces $20m loss
The Australian
Matthew Denholm
10 May 2014

AUSTRALIA’S largest renewable energy producer, Hydro Tasmania, faces projected losses of up to $20 million a year on wind power deals and blames uncertainty surrounding the Renewable Energy Target.

The state-owned company also revealed it had suspended major spending on $3.6 billion in new wind projects in Australia while the target of 20 per cent by 2020 is reviewed by the Abbott government. Hydro Tasmania chief executive Stephen Davy said significant cuts to the RET could see existing wind farms prematurely abandoned and trigger demands for taxpayer compensation.

A planning document, leaked to The Weekend Australian, shows Hydro Tasmania’s power-purchasing agreements for its major Tasmanian wind farms – Musselroe and Woolnorth – will return a $12.5m loss this financial year, rising to $20.6m in 2014-15. Cumulative losses total $103.6m by 2018-19, according to the document, the authenticity of which was confirmed by the company.

Mr Davy blamed the projected losses largely on uncertainty surrounding the RET, being reviewed amid a push from business, industry and elements of the Coalition to reduce or abolish it to cut power prices.

He said the projections were pessimistic and only part of the equation on wind farm profit­ability, but reflected a significant market decline linked to the pending abolition of the carbon tax and uncertainty on the RET. “Since the time the power purchase agreements were negotiated for these wind farms, there has been significant decline in the market, including the impact of the anticipated removal of a price on carbon,” Mr Davy said. “The market decline has been exacerbated by continued uncertainty about the future of the RET. The ongoing review of the RET has created a lot of uncertainty around wind farm revenues.”

Hydro Tasmania is a major player in renewable energy, particularly through its Chinese wind farm joint venture partners Shenhua Clean Energy.

The Musselroe and Woolnorth wind farms are owned by Woolnorth Wind Farm Holdings, a joint venture between the two companies. The companies have $1.6bn in plans to develop, build and operate a further 700MW of wind farms in Australia by 2020. Separately, Hydro, which exports power to mainland Australia, is investigating a $2bn plan to build the southern hemisphere’s largest wind farm on King Island.

As lobbying intensifies ahead of next week’s closure of submissions for the RET review, Mr Davy said all major expenditure on new wind farms was on hold: “We won’t be able to commit large amounts of money further developing those opportunities until the RET is reaffirmed.”

He warned abolition of the RET would kill off all future wind farm developments.
The Australian

Isn’t it just delicious to hear an accomplished rent seeker – that couldn’t keep the simplest of the promises it made to King Island locals – whining about the Coalition planning to amend (or scrap) the largest (and, hopefully, the last “great”) corporate welfare scheme in the history of the Commonwealth?

The idea that the 41,000 GWh figure set for the large-scale mandatory RET represents some immutable law – or even an implicit promise to maintain that figure – represents wishful thinking at its very best.

The Renewable Energy Act expressly provides for a review of the target to be carried out every 2 years (click here for the relevant section). To believe that the figure – once set – would only ever be maintained or increased – is naive in the extreme – for a company to base its entire business model on it, is just plain stupid.

What is perplexing, though, is how Hydro Tasmania can blame the RET review for losses already incurred? The mandatory RET is, as yet, unchanged, so how can the mere fact of the review (which was only announced in January this year) have caused any booked-losses at all?

STT suspects that Hydro Tasmania has made some “bone-head” plays with its Power Purchase Agreements and/or by banking on a high and rising price for Renewable Energy Certificates.

One likely scenario, is that Hydro Tasmania set a price in its PPAs based on a REC price significantly higher than the prices actually realised (since November last year, RECs have fallen from around $37 to $27 now); or that it has made some bad calls betting in the REC’s futures market. Either way, to blame a regulatory change that hasn’t happened is complete nonsense.

Having said that, Hydro Tasmania is clearly on to something: for wind power companies, the worst is yet to come.

The Treasurer, Joe Hockey sent the wind industry and its parasites into a tailspin after his recent interview with Alan Jones – when he branded wind turbines “a blight on the landscape” and “utterly offensive”. However, it’s what he went on to say about the “age of entitlement” that has wind power investors quaking in their boots (see our posts here and here).

During the interview, Hockey mentioned Coalition plans to scrap the Clean Energy Regulator (CER). Shortly afterwards it was reported from “government sources” that there were no plans to scrap the CER – and that what Joe was referring to was the Coalition’s plan to scrap the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, which has been on the cards since well before the election last September.

The media heat generated by Hockey’s interview on Alan Jones has stirred more than just passing interest from other Coalition members – who hitherto have had little knowledge of, or interest in, the cost of the mandatory RET or the workings of the CER.

Dozens of Coalition members are now transfixed by the insane cost of the mandatory RET (and the relevance and cost of the CER) – in much the same way that our attention gets drawn to a car crash – no matter how much twisted metal, blood and gore, we find it next to impossible to look away or move on.

The CER – which purports to administer the mandatory RET – is under the control of Environment Minister, Greg Hunt. Since Hockey’s interview, young Greg has been bombarded by his Coalition colleagues demanding to know why he plans to retain the CER at all.

As to the fate of the mandatory RET, one earlier idea floated internally by the Coalition was that the annual large-scale target would be reduced from 41,000 GWh to something between 23-27,000 GWh. That much reduced target would then be met by simply sweeping up anything that vaguely constituted “renewable energy” that hasn’t previously been counted towards meeting the current target. On that scenario, there will be no need for any further renewable energy capacity.

However, the same growing gang of Coalition members calling on Greg Hunt to axe the CER, are now calling for the mandatory RET to be scrapped outright. STT hears that Hunt was told by one member last week: “what are we doing, let’s just kill it now”. Oh dear!

The wind industry is nothing more than a house of cards: remove the coercion placed on retailers by the mandatory RET to take insanely expensive, intermittent and unreliable wind power and it will all collapse in a heartbeat.

house-of-cards

 

Marilyn has compiled a list of Liberal blunders. Yes! It is a Very….Long….List…..

Colette Berthiaume
Colette Berthiaume   May 11
Marilyn TaylorI’ve been tracking Liberal scandals and mishaps for 11 years.

It’s important that people are reminded of the Liberal’s dismal failure in office.
Marilyn Taylor’s List of Liberal Scandals:
Green Energy Act (20 billion)
eHealth scandal (almost 2 billion)
Gas plant scandal (1.1 billion theft and cover-up of our tax dollars)
ORNGE scandal (700 million)
Ontario Northland Railway scandal (820 million)
Caledonia Hydro Line scandal (116 million)
Lobbyist scandal (two multi-million dollar scandals)
Eco-Fee Reversal scandal (18 million)
CancerCare Ontario scandal (millions of dollars)
Slush Fund scandal (32 million)
Niagara Falls Commission scandal
Ontario Power Generation scandal
Children’s Aid Society scandal
Nanticoke Coal Power Plant Shutdown scandal
G20 Secretly Approved Police Power scandal
Auto Insurance scandal
Foreign Scholarships scandal (our students pay the highest tuition in Canada while foreign students get free university educations)
Offshore Wind Turbines scandal
Samsung scandal (sole-sourcing)
Pan Am scandal (cost increase from 1.4 to 2.5 billion)
MPAC scandal (over and under-valuation of properties)
OLG scandal (millions of dollars)
Chemotherapy Dosage scandal
Payout for Pan Am CEO (250 million)
Trillium Wind Power and Sky Power Limited lawsuit (500 million)
Cement company lawsuit (275 million) – Quarry outside Hamilton was scuttled for political reasons
School bus service lawsuit
Augusta/Westland lawsuit as it pertains to ORNGE
Elliot Lake Collapse lawsuits (two lives lost due to recovery delays)
Ontario Medical Association lawsuits – applied to Superior Court alleging McGuinty not negotiating in “good faith”
Breast Screening scandal (ensuing lawsuits due to thousands of misread mammograms, one life lost)
Class-action lawsuit for autism funding cancellation
Over 650 new agencies, boards, commissions and entities such as LHIN’s and CCAC’s
Over 300,000 new public servants many of whom, are on the sunshine list
Public sector employment in health care increased by 39%
Public sector employment in social services increased by 39%
Public sector employment in education increased by 34%
Paying more Liberal taxes only to receive fewer services as taxes now being spent to pay the salaries and perks of newly-assigned, Liberal-friendly public servants
Gutted our manufacturing base (job growth across Canada except in Ontario)
One million Ontarians now out of work
Increased spending by 80% while our economy grew by only 9%
More than doubled our debt to 288 billion
Running a 11.3 billion annual deficit
Debt servicing costs will rise from 11.4 billion today to 14.5 billion once the debt exceeds 300 billion by 2017-18
Interest payments on our debt now the third largest budget expenditure after health and education
Task Force on Competitiveness, Productivity and Economic Progress confirmed that McGuinty’s Green Energy Act grossly underestimated the cost to consumers and overestimated the number of new jobs that would be created
Tax collectors getting 45,000.00 severance packages for switching job titles from provincial to federal
Two ministries under an OPP criminal investigation – ORNGE and gas plant scandals
Pharmacy war
Illegal green taxes
Increased smart meter, electricity, hydro, tuition and car insurance costs
Implemented tire tax, electronics tax, eco fee, health premium (tax), WSIB tax increase, HST, beer surtax
Failing grade on ADHD education
Ranking the lowest of all provinces for fiscal performance
Delisting eye exams, physiotherapy, chiropractic care, diabetic strips, etc.
Increasing wait time for cataract surgery
No longer covered for eye exams yet taxpayers paying for sex changes
Wait time for nursing home bed tripled
Failure to disclose elevated radiation levels
OES missed its collection and recycling targets by 59%
Not correcting the foreign ownership of our beer market
Acceptance of garbage striker extortion
Harassing labour inspectors
Kowtowing to green energy lobbies
Imposing blood alcohol rules that punish people who are not impaired
Public utilities donating to Liberals
Voting to cover up the Niagara Parks Commission scandal
Emergency room wait times not meeting provincial targets
Put on notice by Standard and Poor, credit rating downgraded, under a very serious credit watch
Have-not province for the first time in Canadian history
Borrowing more debt than any province except NB
Dramatic cuts in health care services in schools
Nurses getting bonuses despite a wage freeze
Insufficient senior homecare services
Failing grade of Family Responsibility Office
Abstained from vote to investigate CBC expenses
Cash kickback scheme involving government cleaning contracts that ended with the conviction of Liberal officials
Talked about a two-year freeze on wages for public sector while previously giving the OPP a 5% wage increase – the OPP received another raise of over 8% in January, 2014
Energy now unaffordable yet we must pay Quebec and some north-eastern States to take our surplus energy
Encouraging farmers to build small-scale solar projects but having no way to connect them to the power grid
Laid up in US hospital beds as no beds available in Ontario
Refusing public inquiry into G20 fiasco
Giving those who hire only newcomers a 10,000.00 tax credit
Third highest user of food banks
Announced pay freezes knowing that 38,000 were getting a 3% salary increase after the election
Hiding hospital errors from the public
Teachers skipping classes to assist with anti-Conservative campaign
Failing grade in northern forestry management
Almost 40 C. difficile deaths to date
Loss of 6,500 cancer patient health records
Highest rent increase rate in years
Ignoring evidence that wind turbines can cause poor health
Workers at eHealth suing for not receiving bonuses
Liam denied eye care that another child is receiving under OHIP
Ontarians pleading for their lives or dying because they aren’t getting the health care they need
Lady with a brain tumor denied help to cover costs which costs are covered in Manitoba
Electricity rates to rise 42% over five years
Prior loss of 60,000 jobs in the horse racing industry – now attempting to correct this
Presto
Ring of Fire
Muslims praying in our public funded school system while the Lord’s prayer is banned
A pedophile was developing the Liberal’s sex education curriculum
Millions spent to remove the “C” from OLG when Ontario Lottery & Gaming Corporation was changed to Ontario Lottery & Gaming
McGuinty defunded the Centre for Forensic Sciences throwing a world-renowned police team who specialized in retrieving deleted computer files out of work two months before he resigned
Millions spent to needlessly redesign our provincial logo
Legal rights of Ontarians disregarded relative to the Caledonia-Mohawk matter
Education minister signing off on documents that she doesn’t even read
More to come….fresh scandals daily…..

If People don’t have enough food….why burn it?

The Ethanol Disaster

America’s renewables policy is bad for consumers, the environment, and the global poor.

Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0)Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0)Last November, when the Environment Protection Agency (EPA) proposed moderating years of escalating mandates by reducing the amount of ethanol that must be mixed into gasoline, a top ethanol lobbyist seemed perplexed. “We’re all just sort of scratching our heads here today and wondering why this administration is telling us to burn less of a clean-burning American fuel,” Bob Dineen, head of the Renewable Fuels Association, told The New York Times

Here are a few possible reasons why: America’s ethanol requirement destroys the environment, damages car engines, increases gas prices, and contributes to the starvation of the global poor. It’s an unmitigated disaster on nearly every level.

Start with the environment. After all, when the renewable fuel standard (RFS), which since 2005 has set forth a minimum annual volume of renewable fuels nationwide, was first set, one of the primary arguments for mandating ethanol use was that it was a greener, more environmentally friendly source of fuel that released fewer greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere.

This turns out to be complete hogwash. Researchers have known for years that, when the entire production process is taken into account, most supposedly green biofuels actuallyemit more greenhouse gasses than traditional fuels.

Some proponents of the ethanol mandate have argued that the requirement was nonetheless necessary in order to spur demand for and development of more advanced, environmentally friendly biofuel like cellulosic ethanol, which is converted into fuel from corn-farm leftovers. But there are two serious problems with cellosic ethanol. The first is that cellulosic ethanol turns out to be rather difficult to produce; despite EPA projections that the market would produce at least 5 million gallons in 2010 and 6.6 million in 2011, the United States produced exactly zero gallons both years—and just 20,069 gallons in 2012.

The second is that cellulosic ethanol is also bad for the environment. At least in the short-term, the corn-residue biofuels release about 7 percent more greenhouse gases than traditional fuels, according to a federally funded, peer-reviewed study that appeared in the journal Nature Climate Change last month.

The environmental evidence against ethanol seems to mount almost daily: Another study published last week in Nature Geoscience found that in São Paulo, Brazil, the more ethanol that drivers used, the more local ozone levels increased. The study is particularly important because it relies on real-world measurements rather than on models, many of which predicted that increased ethanol use would cause ozone levels to decline.

To make things worse, ethanol requirements are bad for cars and drivers. Automakers say that gasoline blended with ethanol can damage vehicles by corroding fuel lines and injectors. An ethanol glut caused by a misalignment of regulatory quotas and demand has helped drive up prices at the pump. And the product is actually worse: ethanol blends are less energy dense than regular gasoline, which means that cars relying on it significantly worse mileage per gallon.

American drivers have it bad, but the global poor have it far worse. Ethanol requirements at home have helped drive up the price of food worldwide by diverting corn production to energy, which dramatically reducing the available calorie supply. A 25-gallon tank full of pure ethanol requires about 450 pounds of corn—roughly the amount of calories required to feed someone for a year. Some 40 percent of U.S. corn crops go to ethanol production, which in effect means we’re burning food for automobile fuel rather than eating it. Studies by economists at the World Bank have found that a one percent increase in world food prices correlates with a half-percent decrease in calorie consumption amongst the world’s poor. When world food prices spiked between 2007 and 2008, between 20 and 40 percentof the effect was attributable to increased global reliance on biofuels. The effect on world hunger is simply devastating.

Ethanol lobbyists are still pretending the renewable fuels mandate is a success, and Senators from corn-friendly states in the Midwest are still urging the agency not to proceed with the proposed reduction to the mandate. But at this point, ethanol requirements have few serious defenders except the people who profit from its production and the politicians who rely on those people for votes and campaign contributions.

Judging by the cut it proposed last November, even the EPA seems to be wavering. A final regulation has yet to be submitted, but the proposal would reduce the amount of renewable fuels the agency requires this year from 18.15 billion gallons to 15.2 billion gallons. That’sif the EPA sticks to its original plan. The agency is under heavy pressure to moderate its proposed cuts, or avoid them entirely.

Those cuts, if approved, would represent a productive step forward. But they wouldn’t be enough. Congress should vote to repeal the renewable fuel standard entirely. The federal government shouldn’t be telling people to burn less ethanol; it shouldn’t be telling anyone to burn any of it at all.

Unless we get a Conservative Majority….this will be our fate!!!

Constraint payments in Scotland soar by 1,300%

Stirling CastleFrom the Times, 11th May 2014

PAYMENTS to green energy firms under a controversial government scheme that compensates them for wasted power have soared by more than 1,300%.

About £35m has been awarded since the start of the financial year to the owners of 21 renewables projects — all of them in Scotland — because Britain’s power network could not cope with the energy they produced.

The figure is a huge increase on the £2.4m paid in 2011-12 under the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change’s “connect and manage” scheme.

Campaigners warn the compensation payments, paid for by the public through their electricity bills, will continue to increase as more wind farms are built. A 2009 report by Frontier Economics for regulator Ofgem estimated the cost of the scheme would reach £2bn by 2020.

A Question not asked, or answered, yet is would constraint payments be made to a foreign country in the wake of a YES vote on the Independence issue. No doubt Salmond will say ‘YES’ and Danny Alexander ‘NO’. The SNP cadre will blame Westminster, again! But then when did you start believing what any politician says, especially “Tipp ‘Eck”! If it adds cost to rUK fuel bills I think the answer is self evident. Not politically acceptable to the the rUK electorate! Even Milibean should see that 😡 .

 

 

Our only Chance, to repair Damage done by McWynnty Gov’t….A Conservative Majority!!

 

John Raymond Crawford 5:03pm May 11
Provincial Popularity Contest: Hudak not interested, winning, regardless.

May 6th: http://globalnews.ca/news/1313199/ontario-pc-leader-tim-hudak-admits-he-may-not-be-popular/

Hudak admits he won’t win a popularity contest.

May 7th: http://ww2.nationalpost.com/m/wp/blog.html?b=news.nationalpost.com%2F2014%2F05%2F07%2Fformer-top-pc-says-tim-hudak-cannot-win-a-popularity-contest-kathleen-wynne-will-be-re-elected

Hudak told that it IS a popularity contest. Critics name Kathleen Wynne as future winner of popularity contest, predicting liberal minority.

May 11th: http://www.ctvnews.ca/mobile/politics/i-m-not-running-a-popularity-contest-ontario-pc-leader-says-1.1816473

Interesting polls: http://www.cp24.com/news/notes-from-the-campaign-trail-poll-gives-tories-lead-1.1815013

Hudak: ‘I’m not running a popularity contest.’

As of recent polls, asking ‘who would make the best premier’, Hudak leads Wynne by 5-points (34% to 29%), with Horwath in third at 28%.

Recent polls suggest that among likely voters, Conservatives are the most committed to getting to the polls, with NDP voters the least committed. The Conservatives have 44% support among voters who ‘will only miss voting due to an unexpected emergency’.

Hudak joked that he didnt want: “…the power of Hudak mania to overwhelm the power of our ideas.”
(Source: May 11th link).

Hudak’s personal popularity is up two points. 72% of voters want a new government. This is up 4 points this month.

The NDP has remained relatively quiet, and are appartently waiting for the political discourse to shift away from who initiated the election in the first place. Expect the NDP to make a late push, and split the left, as Horwath’s strong popularity polling reasserts itself once voters forgive her for tossing out a government that nobody liked.

It’s more likely to be a Conservative minority or majority.

Hudak is set to stick on-point to a simple job-oriented message, and avoid the ‘foreign workers’ style blunders that hurt him last time around.

Support for Hudak continues to rise as he comes out of the gate, controlling the political conversation with a bold plan, balanced by crystal-clear talking points. “This Campaign is about Jobs.” -Hudak

Vote Conservative. -John Crawford


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Unsustainable Renewable Energy Scam, showing fallout, as the pyramid crumbles.

Sun Sets on Spaniards’ Solar Power Dreams

Sun Sets on Spaniards' Solar Power Dreams

AFP

The sun is reflected in a solar panel in a field of Mahora, near eastern Spanish city of Albacete on May 7, 2014.

Albacete:  “The sun could be yours,” the Spanish government promised in 2007, encouraging citizens to invest in solar power. Many who did now wish they could give it back.

Tens of thousands of indebted Spaniards have found themselves lumbered with fields full of expensive solar panels whose subsidies have been unexpectedly cut in the financial crisis.

“How do I feel? Completely fooled,” said David Utiel, a 37-year-old teacher who invested in a solar plant, recalling the government’s sunshine slogan.

“Fooled, swindled, disappointed, disgusted.”

He was one of the 62,000 ordinary citizens in Spain who campaign groups say have been caught in a financial sun trap.

Along with 23 of his neighbours from Madrigueras, near the eastern city of Albecete, he jointly owns nearly 360 solar panels which stand in a field of wild grass and red poppies.

“It was the government that gave us the idea,” he said, walking at the foot of the vast black panels.

“It was supposed to be a good idea to put your money in the whole solar energy thing. They said it could be very profitable.”

In return for promises of a regular return, he invested 450,000 euros ($620,000) in the field in 2007.

“We are completely ordinary people, country people from the village. Some of us work in education, some in farming, others in small businesses,” he said.

“The idea was not to go chasing after subsidies and become millionaires or anything like that. It was to have some kind of pension.”

Long favoured by the state, renewable energies are now feeling the pain of Spain’s economic austerity policies.

Spain’s government is taking drastic measures to slash a 26-billion-euro electricity deficit after years of paying subsidies to keep prices down.

– Betting the farm –

“It’s the government that encouraged us to invest our savings to generate solar energy,” said Miguel Angel Martinez-Roca, president of ANPIER, an association of small sun power producers.

“It then started to apply retroactive cuts by law once the solar plants were already built. They changed the rules half way through the game.”

UNEF, another solar energy association, estimates that since 2007 earnings by owners of solar panels have fallen by up to half in the worst cases, with losses varying according to the type of installation.

It estimated that the complex series of subsidy cuts would cost owners 920 million euros in 2014.

Meanwhile solar companies owe 22 billion euros to the banks, it says.

“It’s a frankly awful situation. Thousands of Spanish citizens are trapped,” lumbered with solar plants costly to maintain, weak revenues and loans, said Martinez-Roca.

David, who mortgaged his house for the solar investment, has received just 3,000 euros in aid in the past six months, six times less than he pays in maintenance and loan repayments.

Another local man, Manuel Alonso Caballero, 39, left his job in the airport sector to set up his own solar power plant.

He says he invested nearly 1.5 million euros and risks losing it all. His farmer parents have had to mortgage their house as his guarantors.

“I went into the solar business because I really believed what they were saying and I really believed in renewable energy, but I realise now that I was wrong,” he said.

“I’ve lost any trust I had and I wouldn’t invest another euro in Spain.”

ANPIER has lodged complaints in the courts against the state and vows to turn to the European Union authorities if its case in Spain fails.

Martinez-Roca said the group is calling a demonstration in Madrid on June 21 against the government.

“We are not prepared to let them ruin us, insult us and cheat us like this.”

Wynne wants to get rid of Essential Services in Rural Ontario….(we don’t vote Liberal).

WYNNE LIBERALS TO CLOSE 5 (FIVE) HOSPITALS IN

THE NIAGARA REGION! WHAATT???

Bet you’re not seeing this headline in the Toronto Star or any of the other Liberal-backing media.  According to the Globe and Mail:

“The restructuring of Niagara Health, a sprawling network of seven hospitals serving 434,000 in a dozen communities, is part of an effort to consolidate medical expertise, create critical mass and provide higher quality care to patients. The initiative has been in the works for more than 1 1/2 years. Kevin Smith, the government-appointed supervisor of Niagara Health, recommended in a May, 2012, report submitted to Ms. Matthews that aging hospitals in five communities – Port Colborne, Fort Erie, Niagara Falls, Welland and Niagara-on-the-Lake – be permanently closed and replaced with a new one.”

Maybe I’ve just been dreaming for the past decade or so, but hasn’t this been the cornerstone of the hatred and vitriol that the Libs and Dippers have been spewing about the ever-evil Lord of Darkness Mike Harris?

For years, I’ve been reading an endless stream of rants from Liberal lemmings who have gone on and on, ad nauseam about how Mike Harris destroyed the health care system in Ontario by closing….wait for it…..5?  No.  10?  No.  20?  Nooooo!  29 (and in some extreme cases 32) hospitals across Ontario.

Finally one day, I started pressing these Liberal parrots for the exact names of all the hospitals that Mike Harris supposedly closed.  “Well…ummm….uh….Well I don’t know the names, but you can mark my word that if the Liberals say that he closed 29 hospitals, by golly, that’s how many he closed!!!”

So I took it upon myself to do a little research and this is what I found.

Here’s the list of hospitals that the Libs and their sheeple have been saying that Harris supposedly closed.

Brockville Psychiatric Hospital
Hotel Dieu-Grace Site (Windsor)
Hotel Dieu Hospital (Kingston)
Providence Continuing Care Centre, St. Vincent de Paul site (Kingston)
Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital
St. Peter’s Hospital (Hamilton)
St. Joseph’s Hospital (Chatham)
Northumberland HealthCare Corp., Port Hope site
St. Joseph’s Health Centre (Peterborough)
St. Joseph’s Hospital (Brantford)
St. Joseph’s Health Centre (London)
London Health Sciences Centre, South St. site
London Psychiatric Hospital
St. Thomas Psychiatric Hospital
St. Bernard’s Hospital
Wellesley-Central Hospital (Toronto)
Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Hillcrest site (Toronto)
Toronto: Doctors Hospital
Humber River Regional Hospital, Northwestern site (Toronto)
Orthopedic & Arthritic Hospital (Toronto)
Riverdale Hospital (Toronto)
Runnymeade Chronic Care Hospital (Toronto)
Salvation Army Grace Hospital (Toronto)
Whitby General Hospital
Salvation Army Grace Hospital (Ottawa)
Pembroke Civic Hospital
Sudbury Memorial Hospital
Subbury General Hospital
Thunder Bay Regional Hospital, McKellar site
Hogarth-Westmount Hospital (Thunder Bay)
Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital (Thunder Bay)
Lakefield Hospital (private)
Sidbrook Hospital (private)
Grace Villa (private)
Dewson Hospital (private)

I decided to do a cursory check to see how many of these hospitals were in fact closed down.   How?  I called the hospitals.  And here’s what I found….

Brockville Psychiatric Hospital is still open — was never closed

Hotel Dieu-Grace Site (Windsor) — still open — was never closed

Hotel Dieu Hospital (Kingston) — still open — was never closed

Providence Continuing Care Centre, St. Vincent de Paul site (Kingston) — still there….never closed

St. Peter’s Hospital (Hamilton) — still there — never closed

St. Joseph’s Hospital (Chatham) still there….now amalgamated under Chatham Kent Health Alliance….never closed

Northumberland Healthcare — Closed

St. Joseph’s Health Centre (Peterborough) — amalgamated with Peterborough Civic Hospital

Joseph’s Hospital (Brantford) — still there….downsized to a clinic

St. Joseph’s Health Centre (London) — still there — never closed

London Health Sciences Centre, South St. site — still there — never closed

St. Thomas Psychiatric Hospital — still there — moved to a new building

St. Bernard’s Hospital Wellesley-Central Hospital (Toronto) — closed

Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Hillcrest site (Toronto) — became the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute — the largest rehabilitation hospital in Canada

I didn’t bother going any further than that.  It told me enough to realize that as usual, the more times a lie is told, the bigger it gets.  In the case of the Liberal Party of Ontario, though, their lies always start off as whoppers.

I’m anxious to see how much coverage this newest Liberal agenda is going to get.  Are we going to hear screaming from the rooftops about it?  Most likely not.  Because after all, Kathleen Wynne is ‘promising’ to build a new supercentre hospital.  “Promising”.   Wait, isn’t there a by-election coming up?  Of course there is.  So for now, we’ll only hear about the new super hospital.  The hospitals that will be closed, will get headline news AFTER the by-elections. — DQ

Hospital-entrance-sign

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