News

Views

Government

On campus

This date in history

Noticed

In the harbour

Footnotes

News

1. Yarmouth ferry

Tina Comeau, editor of the Yarmouth Vanguard, has a thorough and alarming report on the Yarmouth ferry:

YARMOUTH – Bay Ferries has yet to secure a vessel for ferry service running between Yarmouth and Portland for the 2016 season but the province’s minister of transportation says he isn’t concerned. When the province announced at the end of October that Bay Ferries was the preferred candidate to operate the ferry service this season and beyond, it said the company had 45 days to secure a vessel. “Technically, based on the announcement of the negotiations with Bay Ferries, the 45 days has lapsed. That is certainly not a concern for us,” Geoff MacLellan said in an interview late Monday with the Yarmouth Vanguard. […] But what about marketing? How can you market a service set to begin in six months when you don’t yet have a vessel? It’s a question members of the public are asking. […] MacLellan adds you won’t see expectations of 100,000 or 80,000 passengers coming and going set for this year as Nova Star Cruises had done in its two years of operating the service. “One of the takeaways now from those years is we understand what the relative baseline could be, in the high 50,000 range. We don’t think it’s reasonable to raise expectations past that point now because that’s all we have to go on,” he said. “If we do have an increase of 10 or 15 per cent, well that’s good news and we’ll build on that the following year, but it’s been relative consistency of the ridership.

2. Cogswell interchange

The city is looking to hire a “fairness monitor” for the Cogswell interchange project. “The Cogswell Redevelopment Program is a multi-year strategic infrastructure initiative for the urban design, sustainability and economic objectives of the Halifax Regional Municipality,” explains the city. “The program will deconstruct the Cogswell Street Interchange, re-establish the street grid to allow for improved transportation flow and connectivity to the downtown and north end of Halifax. The scope will incorporate the urban design features of walkable communities and green spaces while maximizing the land that is available for mixed-use development in the heart of downtown Halifax’s business and commercial district.”

Continues a tender offer issued this morning:

One of the key initial requirements for project start-up is the engagement of the Prime Design Consultant. Due to the high visibility of this procurement initiative, it has been determined that an independent Fairness Monitor be brought on to provide assurance that the procurement management practices are of the highest standard, and ensure that fairness, objectivity, impartiality, openness and transparency of the RFP process has been maintained.

If someone is going to examine “fairness” in the Cogswell project, the first thing they should do is tell us why the Hardman Group’s proposal to build the convention centre on the site was secretly killed in a backroom deal. How was that fair?

As I’ve explained, the Hardman proposal scored higher than a competing proposal by developer Joe Ramia to build a convention centre at his Nova Centre project on Argyle Street, but the Hardman bid was squashed at a secret meeting of the Halifax council, and miraculously the stars aligned for Ramia:

Through 2008, Joe Ramia had a fortunate run of luck with his Nova Centre proposal. A judge ordered the sale of the Midtown property to Ramia the day before he had to demonstrate ownership. The EOI evaluation team scored the competing Hardman proposal for a convention centre on the Cogswell Interchange higher, but failed to notify anyone about the scoring and didn’t move on to the next step in the process. The concept of using the Cogswell property as a land bank for downtown was adopted by bureaucrats without first being tested in the realm of public opinion. And, contradicting its public vote of just 10 months before, Halifax council secretly voted to deny Hardman the use of the Cogswell land for a convention centre, leaving Ramia with the sole viable convention centre proposal.

This thing stinks. And let’s name names here: Andy Filmore, now the MP for Halifax but then the city planning guru, knows the real story. Peter Stickings, the city’s real estate manager, knows the real story. Dan English, the former city CAO, knows the real story. And there must be a handful of city middle managers and planners who know what really happened.

For some reason auditor general Larry Munroe, who has subpoena power, hasn’t touched this. We need a whistleblower. If that’s you, I’ll protect your identity.

3. Abortion on PEI

“An abortion advocacy group is launching a constitutional challenge against the only Canadian province with a policy against providing abortions,” reports Vice’s Hilary Beaumont:

Despite abortion’s legal status federally, Prince Edward Island has maintained a strict policy of sending women outside the province to receive abortion services, which the province covers under medicare. But on Tuesday, Abortion Access Now PEI (AAN PEI) notified the province of its intent to sue, arguing the policy violates PEI residents’ rights to equal access to healthcare under section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. “PEI’s Abortion Policy is a state-imposed barrier to the right and ability of individual women to exercise control over matters fundamental to their physical, emotional and psychological integrity,” the group said in a release. “Difficulty, uncertainty, delay, lack of access and stigma cause PEI women physical and psychological harm, including harm to conscience and dignity.” […] Officially, no abortions are provided in the province, which has a Liberal government but a strong pro-choice presence. By word of mouth, though, women are able to find doctors willing to prescribe them abortion pills to induce miscarriage. But if the pills don’t work, they can be left in limbo. The story of one such woman, Courtney Cudmore, gained international attention in early 2015 after medication she took to induce an abortion failed, and a doctor subsequently refused her medical treatment. The doctor told her “we are not comfortable” dealing with her situation, and instead directed her to a clinic in Halifax, a four-hour drive away.

4. BMO

Efforts to save the historic BMO building in Amherst have been futile, and the Town of Amherst has issued a tender for the demolition of the building. The bank building was built in 1903, but BMO moved out in the 1920s.

5. Lobsters

“Federal fisheries scientists say their most recent sampling of juvenile lobster in southwest Nova Scotia indicate a decade-long trend of abundant populations is holding steady,” reports the CBC’s Paul Withers:

“We’re optimistic because things have continued to trend up and we haven’t seen any indication of things moving downward quickly. That is where some of our optimism is coming from,” [Adam Cook, a federal research scientist,] said.

Huh. Where have I heard that before? Oh yea:

This was not an isolated incident: DFO routinely suppressed politically inconvenient research into the causes of the cod decline. An internal government report, based on meetings with almost every member of DFO’s Science Branch in 1992, charged that “Scientific information surrounding the northern cod moratorium, specifically the role of the environment, was gruesomely mangled and corrupted to meet political ends.” It noted that the department routinely gagged its scientists, leaving communication with the public to ill-informed spokespersons. “Management is fostering an attitude of scientific deception, misinformation and obfuscation in presenting and defending the science that the department undertakes and the results it achieves,” the report said. “It appears that science is too much integrated into the politics of the department . . . It has become far too convenient for resource managers and others to publicly state that their decisions were based on scientific advice when this is clearly not the case” (Canada 1993, 34, 44, 54, 55).

Views

1. If you read nothing else today, read this

On New Year’s Day, Mary Campbell, a freelance journalist in Sydney, wrote an incredible history of the backroom deals and insider games involving the port of Sydney. A quote or two from the piece doesn’t do it justice. Read the whole thing, and weep.

2. Doyle block “Don’t block gorgeous view of Citadel from new library,” reads the headline of an op-ed piece written by Steve Parcell, an architect who teaches at Dalhousie: The library is not just a building to look at; it’s a building to look from. One of the guiding principles for the library design was to become “a civic landmark and a source of pride and inspiration for all residents.” Can we agree that this elevated promontory and its view of Citadel Hill is a remarkable addition to the city? Westwood Developments (Danny Chedrawe, president) is planning to erect a seven-storey apartment building (plus a rooftop restaurant-bar) that would fill the whole block across from the library. Unfortunately, the western part of this building would block the library’s view of Citadel Hill. This would turn the library into just another building on Spring Garden Road, hemmed in by its neighbours. So much for the library’s status as a civic landmark on par with the Citadel. I’m not against razing the Doyle block and constructing new buildings on the site. But the proposed development is too big, especially on its western end, and clumsily bulky. I think the developer should come back with a proposal for two or three buildings on the block. 3. Cranky letter of the day

To the Chronicle Herald:

As a Cape Breton resident, I’d like to answer the Jan. 4 letter from the spokesman for “People North of Smokey Who Agree to Have Our Monument at Green Cove” regarding the proposed war-memorial statue. In it, the writer cites various other designations that Parks Canada allows on park property. He further compares this proposed memorial with the Vietnam Memorial in Washington. Here’s my problem: the Vietnam Memorial is subtle and tasteful — in fact, it will bring one to tears. The proposed Green Cove memorial is a hideous eyesore. It shouldn’t be allowed in a junkyard, much less our beautiful park. Maybe I’m being paranoid, but it looks suspiciously like a blown-up dashboard Virgin Mary. Jim Austin, Margaree Forks

Government

City

City council (9:30am, City Hall) — budget deliberations continue. Today, council will look at the Parks and Recreation and Library budgets.

Province

No public meetings.

On Campus

Dalhousie

Wednesday

Microalgae-derived chemicals: opportunity for an integrated chemical plant (Wednesday, 4pm, Theatre A, Sir Charles Tupper Medical Building Link) — Azadeh Kermanshahi-pour will speak about, well, microalgae-derived chemicals.

Thursday

Changing the wheels on the bus (Thursday, 11:30am, Slonim Conference Room, Goldberg Computer Science Building) — Elaine Lau, a senior user experience and user interface designer at Oracle, will speak on:

Working in commercial software is like changing the wheels of the train while the train is going down the track. Better wheels make a faster and smoother train ride but the change will always be disruptive to passengers and train workers. So even as we think of how to improve and upgrade our product, we also consider the impact to our users, customers, and internal teams that depend on it. Being part of a product team that has a real impact on people is exhilarating and fraught with complexity at the same time.

Forum on fossil fuel divestment (Thursday, 4–6pm, McInnis Room, Student Union Building) — the Ad hoc Committee of Senate on Fossil Fuel Divestment has released its preliminary report. Divest Dal, the student group advocating for divestment, has issued the following press release:

2016 will be the Year of Divestment In 2014, the Dalhousie Student Union and the Dalhousie Faculty Association both supported our call for Dalhousie University to divest, and the DSU began divesting its own holdings. In 2015 the Dalhousie Senate released an interim report showing that the consensus from Dal’s academic units was to divest. On January 7th, 2016, you have the chance to support this Senate report, and demand that 2016 be the year Dalhousie finally divests. Join us at the SUB (McInnes Room) at 6136 University Avenue between 4 and 6 PM. Your presence is seriously needed – we need to pack this 300 person room! Contact [email protected] or message us on Facebook (Divest Dalhousie).

This Changes Everything (Thursday, 7pm, Ondaatje Auditorium, McCain Building) — A screening of Avi Lewis’s documentary, which is inspired by Naomi Klein’s book, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs The Climate.

This date in history

On January 6, 1781, press gangs grabbed scores of men and boys off the streets of Halifax. Historian Keith Mercer tells the story:

While the Admiralty conceded that too much impressment was counter-productive, the squadron continued to press sailors in Nova Scotia, without seeking colonial permission. This prompted Lieutenant-Governor Richard Hughes to issue a proclamation in December 1778. The terms of the debate had now shifted: the issue was no longer the impressment of citizens, who had been protected since 1775, but rather jurisdiction over press gangs on shore. Admiralty warrants permitted impressment in Nova Scotia’s harbours and on the high seas, but sending press gangs into town sparked outrage and provincial resistance. [Lieutenant-Governor Richard] Hughes, a former naval officer, condemned the Navy’s disregard for colonial authority, especially since press gangs on shore were “frequently attended with Quarrels and Bloodshed and the loss of Life.” Unlike the Assembly in 1775, Hughes did not lobby for unrealistic goals, such as a prohibition on impressment or immunity for domestic shipping. He established regulations instead, to protect Halifax from social unrest in the future. Press gangs were forbidden to operate in town without colonial permission, and searches for deserters were illegal unless sanctioned by the magistracy, according to a provincial statute. Hughes wanted impressment confined to Halifax harbour and he threatened criminal prosecution for non-compliance. In January 1781 the Grand Jury issued a presentment against the Navy. It came in response to a riot sparked by press gangs marching through Halifax “in Contempt of all civil Authority”, tying people’s “Hands behind their Backs, [and] carr[ying] them through the Streets like Malefactors”. Naval officers were reinforced with marines and soldiers, which became common in Nova Scotia in the early nineteenth century. According to [Liverpool merchant Simeon] Perkins, who heard about the [earlier pressing] incident in Liverpool, the Navy instigated a hot press to man HMS Richmond; but unlike most presses on land, which occurred at night, “Marines and Saylors Drove all before them in the Streets in the day time.” The victims were from Halifax and Lunenburg, and many were kept as prisoners in a guard house before being sent onboard the Richmond. While the pressing of citizens was at the centre of this case, and likely accounts for the Grand Jury’s intervention, the issue was jurisdiction over impressment on land. The Grand Jury argued that it was illegal for press gangs to operate in Halifax without permission. It declared its disapprobation for the violence that had occurred and lamented the Navy’s lack of respect for provincial authority. Although the Halifax Sessions could have prosecuted the officers involved, it decided to make reforms instead, to prevent violence for the duration of the war. Nor did the Grand Jury contest the legality of impressment in Nova Scotia; it even declared that it was “truly sensible of the Necessity of procuring Seamen and others for His Majesty’s Service,” and offered to “point out the People that are proper for such Purposes.”

Press gangs would continue to occasionally raid Halifax for seamen. “In 1805 Halifax played host to the most deadly press gang riot in its history,” explains Mercer.

I was especially interested in Mercer’s account of earlier, 1740s-era impressment in the lower colonies, and how that played out through the American revolution. The entire essay is worth a read.

Noticed

In the harbour

CSL Atlas, bulker, Portsmouth, Maine to Bedford Basin anchorage

Atlantic Star, ro-ro cargo, Liverpool, England to Fairview Cove, then sails to sea

NYK Delphinus, container ship, Rotterdam to Fairview Cove

ZIM Monaco, container ship, Valencia, Spain to Pier 42

Atlantic Cartier, ro-ro container, Norfolk to Fairview Cove

Fremantle Highway sails to sea

Footnotes

I’ll be on The Sheldon MacLeod Show, News 95.7, at 4pm today.

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