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Climate and biodiversity solutions offer endless positive possibilities

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By David Suzuki

There’s no real reason for the climate and biodiversity crises to have gotten to this point, and there’s no good reason for them to continue getting worse. We’ve known for decades what the problem is — while we had ample time to address it — and we have no shortage of solutions. Many of those solutions are already creating positive change and more are being developed every day.

The world is rapidly shifting to electric power, and renewable energy sources — mainly solar, wind and hydro, with storage — are supplying an ever-increasing amount: 30 per cent in 2023, according to the Energy Institute, up from 29 per cent the previous year. Policies such as the Inflation Reduction Act in the United States are showing results, such as lower emissions, cleaner power and increased electrification. Spinoff benefits include reduced pollution and related health care costs, good employment and economic returns.

It’s not enough.

Coal, oil and gas made up 60 per cent of electricity generation in 2023, with polluting coal making up the largest share. Nuclear power generation — which is expensive, potentially dangerous and takes a long time to build — remained steady at nine per cent. Global oil production reached record highs in 2023.

We also know that protecting and restoring natural areas provides a hedge against runaway climate disruption, because oceans, plants, peat bogs and wetlands sequester carbon and keep it from entering the atmosphere. At the 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference (COP15) in Montreal, countries agreed to a 30X30 plan – “to halt and reverse nature loss, including putting 30 per cent of the planet and 30 per cent of degraded ecosystems under protection by 2030.” Progress will be reviewed at COP16 in Colombia later this month.

Technology won’t get us entirely out of the mess we’ve created, but it is and will continue to be a big part of the cure. Technological advances over the past few decades show there’s no reason to think we can’t come up with even better remedies. Most of us now casually carry mini-computers more powerful than the computing systems that put people on the moon! Renewable energy and storage technologies are rapidly improving and dropping in price.

We also need to use less energy and use it more efficiently — which shouldn’t be difficult because those of us living in the industrialized world use exponentially more than necessary. In 2022, Canada had the seventh-highest energy consumption per capita and the U.S. was 10th. Qatar is number one. On average, a person in Canada consumes more than 20 times the energy as a person in Pakistan or the Philippines. Even among northern countries, Canada uses close to twice the energy per capita as Sweden or Germany.

The problem is that rapidly digging up and burning fossil fuels, logging forests and paving over wetlands for development are all extremely profitable. There’s a reason the automobile industry has long focused on building vehicles that require enormous amounts of fuel. Our current capitalist economic system, which measures progress through growth in gross domestic product, or GDP, encourages wasteful consumption. More growth in everything from population to industrial development creates more profit (albeit mostly concentrated in the hands of a few), which leads to more devastation.

Now we’re exceeding six of nine planetary boundaries and are close to breaching a seventh. These are “processes that regulate the stability and resilience of the Earth system.” As the Stockholm Resilience Centre warns, “Crossing boundaries increases the risk of generating large-scale abrupt or irreversible environmental changes. Drastic changes will not necessarily happen overnight, but together the boundaries mark a critical threshold for increasing risks to people and the ecosystems we are part of.”

Climate change, introduction of novel entities (synthetic chemicals Earth can’t process), change in biosphere integrity, modification of biogeochemical flows, land system change and freshwater change have all been transgressed to varying degrees, and “Ocean acidification is approaching a critical threshold.” Only ozone depletion and atmospheric aerosol loading are stable or improving, thanks to international agreements.

It doesn’t have to be this way. We have solutions. But we need to exercise more foresight and imagination. We can and must change the systems that have brought us to this point where our life-support systems are starting to disintegrate.

David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with David Suzuki Foundation Senior Writer and Editor Ian Hanington.

Learn more at davidsuzuki.org.

REFERENCES:

According to the Energy Institute:

https://www.energyinst.org/statistical-review/home

Inflation Reduction Act:

https://www.wri.org/insights/biden-administration-tracking-climate-action-progress

Nuclear power generation:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/sep/04/mv-ramana-why-nuclear-power-not-solution-energy-needs

Halt and reverse nature loss:

https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/story/cop15-ends-landmark-biodiversity-agreement

COP16 in Colombia:

https://www.cbd.int/conferences/2024

Use exponentially more than necessary:

https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/field/energy-consumption-per-capita/country-comparison

Stockholm Resilience Centre warns:

https://www.stockholmresilience.org/research/planetary-boundaries.html

Have all been transgressed:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/sep/23/earth-breach-planetary-boundaries-health-check-oceans

Mayor’s Office Invites Local Students to be Mayor for a Month | Collingwood

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Collingwood, ON [2 October, 2024] – So you think you can be Mayor? Local students are invited to apply to be Mayor for a Month! Following the initial successful intake in spring 2024, the opportunity to shadow the Mayor returns for fall.

This goal of this initiative is to connect and engage local youth in grades 7-12 with our local government. The Youth Mayor will get the opportunity to attend a Town of Collingwood Council meeting, tour town facilities, get a behind-the-scenes look at how our Town operates, and provide their opinion on Town programs and services. 

“The first Youth Mayor during my term – Grace Johnson – was fantastic and had a great experience as Youth Mayor this past spring! I’m excited to extend this opportunity to more youth in Collingwood this fall and look forward to sharing knowledge about local government with future participants,” says Mayor Yvonne Hamlin.

Benefits of the program include: 

  • Working with the Mayor & other Town officials
  • Connect with the community & local government
  • Learn about career opportunities in local government 
  • Professional photo with the Junior Chain of Office
  • Earning volunteer hours
  • A $250 honorarium

To apply youth are asked to write a short essay, record a video essay, or even create an artistic rendering as to why they want to be Mayor for the Month. 

Submissions are open until October 18, 2024, with the program running from approximately October 28 to November 22, 2024. Submissions may be made directly to the Office of the Mayor using the online submission form or through Collingwood schools.

If you know a student in grades 7-12 please encourage them to participate and help foster the next generation of involved, engaged citizens of Collingwood. Who knows, this may inspire them to pursue a dynamic career in municipal government!  

Questions? Contact the Office of the Mayor at [email protected].

Nominations are Open for the Order of Collingwood

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Collingwood, ON [1 October, 2024] – The Order of Collingwood is an annual time-honoured tradition recognizing exemplary volunteerism within the community by people who improve social, well-being, natural or cultural environment, or recreational character of the Town of Collingwood. This awards program recognizes the vital role of these volunteers whose contributions strengthen our community, making Collingwood an enviable place to live, work, and play.

Order of Collingwood Nomination Process & Requirements:

  • The nominee must volunteer in the Town of Collingwood, to the primary benefit of the Collingwood community, and have received no remuneration or financial benefit from the volunteer participation or service;
  • The nominees do not need to be a resident of the Town of Collingwood, as long as the volunteer contributions benefit the community and residents of the Town of Collingwood;
  • The nominees volunteer contributions must have been made on a continuous basis over a period of time not less than two years with the exception of youth volunteerism;
  • The nominee must not be a member of the current Municipal Council;
  • Awards may be awarded/presented posthumously

Companion to the Order of Collingwood nominees must meet the requirements listed above, and also have previously received the Order of Collingwood, for their continued volunteer efforts to improve the overall character in Collingwood for a period not less than five years.

For more information on the nomination criteria please visit www.collingwood.ca/OrderofCollingwood

Nomination packages should not exceed 4 pages and must include:

  • An electronically completed nomination form on our website;
  • A letter of support from the Nominator (digital format no more than 1 page / 500 words); and
  • Two (2) additional letters of support (digital format no more than 1 page / 500 words).

The deadline for Nominations is Monday, November 4, 2024, and they can be submitted online or via email to [email protected]

We look forward to celebrating the 2024 recipients at the Mayor’s New Year’s Levee in early 2025! More information on nominations and a list of previous recipients can be found at www.collingwood.ca/OrderofCollingwood.

Collingwood is Calling for Feedback on Accessible Taxi Service

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The Town of Collingwood is committed to providing all people with consistent opportunity and access to all Town goods, services, and facilities while ensuring that policies, procedures, and practices are provided promptly and address integration, independence, dignity, and equal opportunity. 

The Town recognizes that accessibility is essential to build on our unique profile as a major tourist destination, a retirement community, and a community that attracts businesses. 

To ensure the needs of residents who require accessible transportation are met, in addition to our accessible buses, the Town offers Transit PLUS taxi service, with a more customized door-to-door transportation solution. Transit PLUS provides accessible transit service for residents of Wasaga Beach, Clearview, and Collingwood. Pre-registration is required by contacting Landmark Bus at 705-446-1196 or [email protected]

The Town wants to hear from current and potential Transit PLUS users and is consulting with the Accessibility Advisory Committee to learn about the potential options residents are interested in.

Please visit the project page at engage.collingwood.ca/accessible-taxi to take a brief survey. Printed copies are also available at Town Hall, 97 Hurontario Street.

The deadline for survey submissions is 4:00 p.m. on Friday, October 18, 2024.

CONTACT Community Services and the South Georgian Bay Community Health Clinic team up to operate and manage Supportive Rapid Rehousing Program in the Town of Collingwood

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Midhurst/September 26, 2024 – The County of Simcoe has partnered with CONTACT Community Services, with support from the South Georgian Bay Community Health Clinic, to operate and manage programs at the County’s Supportive Rapid Re-Housing Program (SRRP) temporary facility in Collingwood. Earlier this summer, the County of Simcoe worked closely with The Common Roof and the Town of Collingwood to bring this new program to the town to help address system-wide housing needs.

The County has secured a contract with CONTACT Community Services, with support from the South Georgian Bay Community Health Clinic, to provide comprehensive, 24/7 on-site services, staffed with trained professionals. This SRRP will begin welcoming its first residents this fall. Full operating details will be posted to simcoe.ca/SRRP.

Quotes

“We want to thank all our partners who have joined together to build up housing options in the Collingwood area for seniors who find themselves living unhoused. With support from CONTACT Community Services and the South Georgian Bay Community Health Clinic, we know that many seniors in our community will have a fresh start on life. A start that gives people the specific support they need to thrive within their community.”

~Warden Basil Clarke, County of Simcoe, County of Simcoe

“We are so pleased that the County of Simcoe has moved forward and selected CONTACT Community Services to operate the SRRP facility in Collingwood. This facility will support seniors (55+) experiencing situational homelessness and assist them in securing long-term housing. Thank you to the County of Simcoe, The Common Roof, and CONTACT Community Services for working together to bring this much-needed initiative to our community.”

~Mayor Yvonne Hamlin, Town of Collingwood

“CONTACT Community Services is thrilled to be able to deliver this much-needed service to seniors in need. Collingwood is an incredible community, and we are keen to build out the collaborative foundation with the Town and South Georgian Bay Community Health Clinic to ensure the program is successful.”

~ Jennifer Lloyd, Board Chair, CONTACT Community Services

“Being a part of this program proposal was one of the most memorable experiences. Over the last decade, we have witnessed a significant rise in seniors experiencing homelessness. Knowing that this supportive housing model will be available is an integral part of the overall regional effort to address homelessness in our communities and CONTACT is poised to continue our person-centered and community-driven model to help address this need.”

~ Emily McIntosh, former Executive Director, CONTACT Community Services

“CONTACT Community Services is known in South Simcoe for quality seniors programming. Offering this supportive housing service in Collingwood is a natural extension of what the organization does so well. Seniors are the heart and history of our communities. Working with partners such as Community Connection, the SGBCHC, and other service delivery providers such as Elizabeth Fry, is an incredible example of what is accomplished when community comes together. We are excited to launch the program and to work with residents to ensure its tenants are appropriately supported.”

~ Brenda Pufek, Acting Executive Director, CONTACT Community Services

“We are excited to welcome CONTACT to our Collingwood Common Roof and Rotary Hub location as the service provider for the SRRP. One of the goals of The Common Roof, and our shared service approach, is innovation through collaboration, which is being demonstrated through this partnership to support a community need.”

~ James Thomson, President and CEO, The Common Roof

About the Supportive Rapid Re-Housing Program (SRRP) in Collingwood

The Supportive Rapid Rehousing Program (SRRP) aims to provide services, housing and support to individuals who have fallen on difficult times and helps to place them into permanent housing quickly. These individuals are seniors (55+) who have been identified as situationally homeless. This SRRP gives wrap around, in-house support to find and integrate individuals into permanent housing. This is NOT a shelter, it’s a temporary home for individuals as they prepare for independent living situations.

A modular, pre-built housing structure was placed on The Common Roof property located at 199/197 Campbell Street, Collingwood (home to 6 community-based non-profit organizations and groups), to serve as housing for the SRRP program. This is a temporary modular building, which can house between 10-15 people at a time (excluding staff/support teams).

Supporting vulnerable individuals in our community

The County of Simcoe and the Town of Collingwood are committed to expanding support for and availability of supportive housing in the area. Through the County, this expanded system provides capacity to better transition individuals who have been identified as situationally homeless into permanent housing while alleviating pressures on regional shelter systems. This strategy is one of the pillars within the County’s 10-Point Homelessness Prevention Strategy.

Affordable Housing has been a key priority for Collingwood Council and staff for many years. The Town recently completed an Affordable Housing Master Plan (AHMP) in November 2023, which provided the Town a set of 26 recommendations for tackling the housing issue. The Town is committed to collaborating with other levels of government to facilitate affordable housing initiatives that bring much-needed housing to our community.

About the County of Simcoe

The County of Simcoe is composed of sixteen member municipalities and provides crucial public services to County residents in addition to providing paramedic and social services to the separated cities of Barrie and Orillia. Visit our website at simcoe.ca.

About The Town of Collingwood

The Town of Collingwood is a progressive community located in the heart of a four-season recreation area on the southern shore of Georgian Bay. The area is well known for its many natural amenities and its rich heritage. Collingwood is a destination for tourism and many business, sporting, and cultural events Collingwood acts as a gateway to the South Georgian Bay region, with stunning landscapes that encourage an active lifestyle, and inspire the local arts and culture community. Downtown Collingwood might just surprise you with 30 plus restaurants, 60 plus boutique shops, spas for relaxing, and live music for grooving…all in the only downtown core recognized by Canada’s Registrar of Historic Places! More recently, the harbourfront area is emerging as an extension of the downtown district. Plans for expanding the amenities and events in the harbourfront area promise to make this a much more prominent tourism destination.

About CONTACT Community Services

For more than 40 years, CONTACT Community Services has proudly served the communities of South Simcoe. CONTACT Community Services is a proactive leader in South Simcoe providing responsive services in housing, employment, and community support. CONTACT remains an active, innovative, and responsive community leader. Today, they have a community office in Alliston, an employment office (with housing support) in Bradford, and community thrift stores in two locations.

About The Common Roof
The Common Roof seeks to lead in the development and empowerment of strong, compassionate social communities through innovative shared services. We are a community-based social enterprise providing sustainable and professional workspace for human-service not-for-profit agencies. At its core, The Common Roof seeks to inspire and empower change in the following areas:

  • Encourage organizations to operate efficiently and effectively.
  • Mobilize community support to meet local community identified needs.
  • Develop and manage philanthropic investment.

The Common Roof is a registered charitable organization based in Simcoe County.

Together, we are building inclusive, healthy communities for children, youth, and their families. To learn more about The Common Roof, to donate, or get involved please visit www.thecommonroof.ca, follow us on social media Twitter and Facebook or sign up for The Common Roof Newsletter.

Collingwood and New Tecumseth Cheers to Provincial Funding Announcement of $70M for Water Treatment Plant Expansion

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Collingwood, ON [25 January 2024] – The Town of Collingwood and New Tecumseth are excited to share that earlier today, Brian Saunderson, MPP for Simcoe-Grey announced that the Ontario government is investing $69,999,999.58 into the Town of Collingwood’s water treatment plant expansion to enable the construction of new homes in Collingwood and the Town of New Tecumseth as part of the Housing-Enabling Water Systems Fund. Both municipalities extend our sincere thanks to the province for critical funding, which will be instrumental in supporting the success of this significant project. 

The Water Treatment Plant Expansion Project Tender with the lowest bidder Kenaidan Contracting Ltd (“Kenaidan”) is estimated to be in the range of $270M.

“I am proud to announce that we have secured a provincial grant of $70 million dollars towards our water treatment plant expansion. This project is the largest investment in Collingwood and New Tecumseth’s history and tremendous effort has gone into reaching this point,” says Mayor Yvonne Hamlin. “Numerous meetings and discussions which I have been honoured to arrange and attend with the Premier, Minister Calandra, and the provincial Budget Committee, amongst many others, have yielded results for which we are so thankful.  I very much look forward to continuing to work with the Province to achieve our joint goals to enhance our community.”

Staff continue investigating all options to finance this project, including contributions from the federal government. We are also developing an advocacy strategy for the upper tiers of government and have an appreciation for the continued support we are receiving from our development community in our efforts. We are committed to finding a solution that gets the plant built, quickly, and without subjecting our communities to financial hardship.

“The Province of Ontario’s significant commitment and investment in the Towns of New Tecumseth and Collingwood is remarkable. We have worked together tirelessly to develop partnerships and solutions for funding assistance, and we are grateful for the province’s support that ensures we have the services and water needed to continue to prosper today and into the future,” says Mayor Richard Norcross, New Tecumseth.

New Tecumseth and Collingwood are committed to continuing to work collaboratively to ensure the water needs of our respective growing communities are successfully met.  This is an example of how the provincial government and our municipalities have worked proactively to provide the infrastructure and planning, so businesses and people can thrive in our communities.

“This is a transformational investment in a generational project that will build sustainable and resilient communities in Simcoe Grey,” said MPP Brian Saunderson. “By partnering with the Towns of Collingwood and New Tecumseth, the Government of Ontario is making sure that the proper linear infrastructure is in place to support responsible growth that includes much-needed housing, schools, hospitals, and businesses.”

Background

September 12th, 2023, Collingwood Mayor, Yvonne Hamlin and Richard Norcross, Mayor, of New Tecumseth issued a Joint Statement which announced that 3 bids were received from the pre-qualified contractors for the Raymond A. Barker Water Treatment Plant Expansion project.

The unofficial low bid was $212M for construction alone. The total project costs are now estimated to be in the range of $270M, and the timeline to complete the project has also been extended by about two years longer than originally projected. Construction of the expansion has begun and the current schedule for commissioning of the 59,000 m3/d is July 2029, with work continuing at the WTP site until 2031.

This project is an essential and urgent project for Collingwood, New Tecumseth, and the surrounding area, as it can supply significant additional drinking water to the existing 60km pipeline southerly from Collingwood, and westerly to the Town of the Blue Mountains. Without this plant expansion, we will have limited ability to collaborate with our municipal partners to build new homes, meet provincial housing targets, and continue to support commercial and industrial expansions.

Under the Collingwood and New Tecumseth collaborative agreement, grant funding will be used to reduce the overall costs, with the remaining costs shared proportionally to the water taken from the new plant, at 37% for Collingwood and 63% for New Tecumseth. For more information about the project, please visit engage.collingwood.ca/water-treatment-plant-expansion

County of Simcoe to launch new medical dispatch triage system

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Midhurst/September 25, 2024 – With the support of the Province of Ontario, the County of Simcoe is improving emergency medical response to communities across the region. This fall, the County of Simcoe Paramedic Services will join services throughout the province in implementing the Medical Priority Dispatch System (MPDS).

MPDS is an internationally recognized medical call triage and decision support tool that improves the dispatching of paramedics to patients in life-threatening situations, such as a cardiac arrest, unconsciousness or choking.

When calling 9-1-1 to request emergency medical assistance, callers should expect to be asked more detailed questions than in the past. These questions will help dispatchers gather vital information regarding a patient’s condition so that they can assess the situation, determine the nature and urgency of the emergency, and assign the priority level and type of response required.

Patients with non-life-threatening needs may receive a delayed response from paramedics as a result, however dispatchers will remain in contact with callers, ensuring they remain stable and are able to safely wait until paramedics can respond to their needs. A delayed response would only occur if all available paramedics are tasked with more urgent emergencies.

The new system will become active in November 2024. Full details on the MPDS system and what it means for callers of 9-1-1 can be found at simcoe.ca/mpds.

About County of Simcoe
County of Simcoe is composed of sixteen member municipalities and provides crucial public services to County residents in addition to providing paramedic and social services to the separated cities of Barrie and Orillia. Visit our website at simcoe.ca.

As youth march for a safe climate, politicians pander to polluters

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By David Suzuki

It’s hard for me to imagine what life must be like for young people today. Once again, they took to the streets this month — along with older allies — to call for action on the climate crisis. Yet, here in Canada and elsewhere, politicians are campaigning on whether or not to maintain effective climate policies such as carbon pricing. We need more policies and regulations to address global heating, not fewer!

It’s heartbreaking to see this critical issue being politicized and polarized, to see how little some politicians care for the children and grandchildren and those yet to be born — or for the planet and its life-support systems. Appallingly, some appear to have no understanding of the crisis or deny that it’s even occurring. It’s especially sad when so many solutions are at hand. Whether it’s out of ignorance or avarice, backtracking on necessary climate policies hurts everyone.

The argument that we should elevate the human-invented economy over the natural systems that keep us alive and healthy didn’t hold much water to begin with, but now we’re seeing clearly that they’re interconnected. The climate crisis is costing us more every day.

Longer periods of intense wildfires, fuelled by drier forests and hotter weather; droughts affecting agriculture and food costs; increasing numbers of migrants leaving inhospitable areasinsurance rates spiking as climate-related disasters increase; rising sea levels swallowing homes and flooding coastal areas; pollution affecting health and causing death — all come with steep and increasing costs.

On top of that, volatile fossil fuel markets and rising gas and oil prices are causing inflation and price hikes for everything from groceries to fuel. Meanwhile, industry executives are raking in obscene profits as governments continue to subsidize their deadly enterprises.

Renewable energy with energy storage — wind, solar, geothermal and more — are now far more cost-effective than fossil fuels, and prices are quickly dropping. And although no energy source is without problems, renewable energy doesn’t cause nearly as much damage to land, water, air and human health as coal, gas and oil.

just transition from fossil fuels to cleaner energy (along with greater efficiency and reduced energy use) creates good jobs, spurs innovation, moves us away from boom-and-bust resource economies and gives everyone greater independence from greedy oil and gas profiteers and their politician puppets.

There is no valid economic argument against getting off fossil fuels. That said, the economy shouldn’t even be a factor. Those who study climate disruption and its many impacts have been warning for decades that pumping more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and destroying carbon sinks and natural systems will push us closer to tipping points and planetary boundaries beyond which the hope of resolving the crisis dwindles.

The potent greenhouse gas carbon dioxide remains in the atmosphere for hundreds or thousands of years, so even if we stopped burning fossil fuels today, the planet would continue to heat. But we can slow and eventually reverse the heating by heeding the warnings and ending our addiction to the fuel creating the crisis.

With so many important issues to contend with — housing, health care, affordability and inflation, pollution, overpopulation, crime, violence and war — focusing election campaigns on whether or not to maintain effective climate policies is insane. Our children, many too young to vote, deserve better. We all deserve better.

Much of the problem is that we’re still living under an outdated consumerist economic system that prioritizes profit and encourages greed and waste. It’s a system that was designed when “resources” or “natural capital” seemed abundant and built capital scarce. That’s no longer the case. In shifting to cleaner energy sources and creating greater equity by removing the ability to hoard energy wealth while so many suffer, we must also rethink our economic systems.

Elections should be about things that matter to people, including those too young to vote. They shouldn’t be about scoring points through fear-mongering and propaganda in the service of a dying industry that threatens our health and survival.

I’m a grandfather nearing the end of my life, but I worry that greed, cowardice and ignorance will make life worse for those with lives ahead of them.

Young people are speaking up because their future is on the line. Do they matter to us or not?

David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with David Suzuki Foundation Senior Writer and Editor Ian Hanington.

Learn more at davidsuzuki.org.

REFERENCES:

They took to the streets:

https://fridaysforfuture.org

So many solutions:

Costing us more every day:

Migrants leaving inhospitable areas:

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/aug/14/nomad-century-how-to-survive-the-climate-upheaval-by-gaia-vince-review-a-world-without-borders

Insurance rates spiking:

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/article-insurance-coverage-climate-change

Volatile fossil fuel markets:

https://www.iisd.org/articles/press-release/fossil-fuel-energy-drive-inflation

Raking in obscene profits:

Governments continue to subsidize their deadly enterprises:

https://www.imf.org/en/Topics/climate-change/energy-subsidies

More cost-effective than fossil fuels:

https://www.iea.org/news/rapid-rollout-of-clean-technologies-makes-energy-cheaper-not-more-costly

Just transition:

https://www.iisd.org/topics/just-transition

Warning for decades :

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/jul/05/sixty-years-of-climate-change-warnings-the-signs-that-were-missed-and-ignored

Tipping points:

https://www.esa.int/Applications/Observing_the_Earth/Space_for_our_climate/Understanding_climate_tipping_points

Planetary boundaries:

https://www.stockholmresilience.org/research/planetary-boundaries.html

Carbon dioxide remains in the atmosphere:

https://www.nrdc.org/stories/greenhouse-effect-101#gases

Outdated consumerist economic system:

https://davidsuzuki.org/story/climate-crisis-inequality-show-need-for-systemic-change

Ways to Honour National Day for Truth and Reconciliation

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Collingwood, ON [24 September, 2024] – National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is observed on September 30, a day to reflect on the painful and lasting impacts of the residential school system and to honour the survivors, their families and communities. Reconciliation means acknowledging the truth of our shared history. Take this time to learn more.

Ways Community Members can honour National Day for Truth and Reconciliation:

Flag Raising Event
Date: Friday, September 27th
Time: 4:00 p.m.
Location: Community Flag Pole, Collingwood Public Library, 55 Ste. Marie Street 

Join us as we raise the Every Child Matters Flag to commemorate the tragic history of the residential school system and honor the innocent lives taken and the intergenerational survivors. Attendees are invited to add a feather of intention to the Every Child Matters artwork created by CCI students in 2023, reflecting on individual actions that can strengthen relationships and pave the way towards reconciliation. 

Poetry Installation
Starting: Monday, September 30th
Location: Harbourview Park 

Explore a new poetry installation by Collingwood Poet Laureate Jillian Morris, featuring the poem “Spare a Moment.” This installation can be found along the trail through the forest, just west of the Awen’ Gathering Circle. A dedicated Truth & Reconciliation sign will be positioned at the entrance to the snowshoe trail. We encourage visitors to take a moment to reflect and engage with the poem as they walk the trail.

Wear Orange on September 30th
In honor of National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, also recognized as Orange Shirt Day, we invite all community members to wear orange on Monday, September 30th. Every Child Matters buttons will be available at Town Hall, while supplies last, starting Monday, September 23rd during regular business hours.

Orange Feathers in the Community
To further commemorate National Day for Truth & Reconciliation, orange feathers will be mounted to the light standards downtown. Each feather will feature a QR code that links to resources available on the Awen’ Gathering Place webpage.

Together, let’s reflect on the truths of our shared history and work towards a reconciled future for all.

*The Town Hall & Municipal Offices, the Collingwood Museum and Collingwood Public Library will be closed on September 30th in recognition of this important day. Transit will operate as scheduled.

Let’s Have Some Fun: Trivia Night Fundraiser Event

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Gather your friends & join us for our Trivia Night FUNdraiser!

Test your knowledge, enjoy great company, & support a great cause. Our silent auction features exclusive items: consumable treats, memorable experiences & handmade items from local artisans!

Friday, October 4th, 2024 – Side Launch Brewing Co.

$35 per person  (incl. drink ticket + snacks)

Trivia 

  • Trivia starts at 8:00 pm and ends at 10:00 pm
  • Teams should consist of at least 2 people 
  • There will be 7 rounds of trivia 
Food & Drink
  • Your ticket includes one alcoholic beverage ticket & yummy eats
  • Additional drink tickets can be purchased for:
    • Alcohol ticket $8.50
    • Beverage ticket $3.00
Silent Auction

Our silent auction will include exclusive items: consumable treats, memorable experiences & handmade items from local artisans!

For Tickets CLICK HERE