The 2014-2015 Mount Pearl Atom ‘A’ Blades hockey team has been recognized for its enthusiasm, leadership, respect and commitment as young athletes on the ice and off. As well as capturing three championships, this special group of young boys played an active part in the Blades’ annual food drive and understands its importance.
According to Sport Alliance Business Manager, Mike Bugden, the Recognition Award is presented to young athletes and volunteers who exemplify the values of good sport - kids who stand out for enthusiasm for their respective sport, teammates and club. Simply put, it’s all about young people celebrating the joy of the sport experience and demonstrating values like fairness, dedication, respect, and enthusiasm for the fun of playing the game and giving back.
These young players had a phenomenal hockey season, capturing the Don Johnson Hockey League Atom A Division Championship to go along with their 1st place finish during the regular season. During the annual MPMHA Christmas Tournament, the team also captured their division title, and wrapped up the year with the Provincial Atom A Championship title.
Head coach Trevor Murphy explained that each of the 17 players on the hockey team has contributed in some way to its success. They are a great group of young people. Over the course of the year these boys have played 46 games and amassed a record of 40 wins, 4 losses and 2 ties. This achievement is impressive, but the fact that the team has played well as a group and overcome various adversities is what makes the coaching staff proudest.
Most Memorable
Achievement
While the team’s accomplishments are indeed memorable, the most impressive accomplishments of this special group of boys are seen off the ice. They have each grown and matured over the season showing leadership, respect and commitment whether that be representing the association at various team events or helping in the community. One particularly memorable event took place at a local food bank. The team was proud to be a part of the MPMHA Annual Food Drive and this was a very special day for our association and community. But more than just participate, the boys stayed behind and met with staff to ask questions and learn why this was such an important community event.
Meet the players
and volunteers
Goalies – Avery Loveless, JT Tobin. Defence – Travis Badcock, Evan Kennedy, Liam Marshall, Ryan Murphy, Nathan Nolan, and Jacob Payne. Forwards – Jaden Dyke, Nathan Frelich, Reegan Hiscock, Michael Kielly, Noah King, Cameron Pennell, John Randell, Braedy Walsh, Evan Wicks. Coaches – Trevor Murphy, John Kennedy, Jim Hiscock, Colin Pennell. Manager – Brian King.
“Our staff is incredibly proud of this group of young players. They had a wonderful season on and off the ice,” stated Trevor Murphy. “Certainly, the team’s on ice performance was impressive, but the way that they conducted themselves during team events, and developed as young people over the course of the season is something which makes this team special. Mount Pearl Minor Hockey is dedicated to developing minor hockey players, but the association is also dedicated to community involvement and assisting in the overall development of young people.”
The Mount Pearl Sport Alliance and Recognition Award sponsor, Mount Pearl Dental are proud to recognize the 2014-2015 MPMHA Atom ‘A’ Blades for enthusiasm, leadership, respect and commitment as young athletes.
Heritage house given more options
Mount Pearl council has given the go ahead to an application to expand the possible commercial uses of what may be the oldest building in the city.
Planning and development committee chairman Andrew Ledwell reminded his colleagues on council last week that there has been some interest lately in the vacant property at 906 Topsail Road, which is for sale.
“It is one of only two heritage properties within the City of Mount Pearl, the other one being Admiralty House,” Ledwell noted.
The two storey property at 906 Topsail Road was built in the late 1890s or early 20th century as a summer retreat for his family by Patrick McGrath, a noted journalist, senior bureaucrat and politician.
“We’ve recently receive two enquiries, both for commercial purposes regarding 906 Topsail Road, one for a clinic, the other for a salon,” Ledwell explained.
Neither use is permitted in the City’s Heritage Use Zone. But Ledwell noted both of the parties who have enquired about the property have indicated they intend to maintain some of the heritage aspects of the property.
A briefing session was scheduled in May, Ledwell added, but when the City advertised it in The Telegram, nobody responded, so it was cancelled. At first the development committee members were prepared to add the salon and clinic uses to the list of activities that can occur within a heritage property, but after some further discussion, opted to make them discretionary uses.
“That will allow council a bit more flexibility and the ability to try to retain some of the significant heritage aspects of these properties,” Ledwell added.
Put to a vote, council approved the recommendation to amend the development regulations to allow a salon or clinic in the building.
Simms proposes ‘fix it and bill them’ policy for utilities
Mount Pearl Mayor Randy Simms says he is ready to ‘go to war’ to get Newfoundland Power and other utility companies to clean up their utility boxes and other infrastructure that has been tagged by graffiti artists.
Simms didn’t mince words when he delivered the message at last week’s public council meeting. The issue came up during discussion of council’s ‘Out of the Box – Traffic Box Project.’
Deputy Mayor Jim Locke, who chairs the council committee that oversees the program, noted some 10 to 12 traffic boxes, which house the equipment used to operate traffic lights, were painted by local artists last year, including Councillor Paula Tessier, who painted a traffic box at the corner of Ruth and Commonwealth. “And they look great,” Locke said.
The City and the Association for the Arts in Mount Pearl, which coordinates the program, are taking proposals from artists interested in participating this summer. “We have a lot of talent here and so we’re looking forward to beautifying all these boxes,” Locke said. Not only does it dress up the neighbourhoods, it also cuts down on graffiti “tagging,” he noted.
Simms, who has been a big proponent of the program, agreed. “It’s really good,” said the mayor. “We need to expand on it where we can. But I have to say one of the things I am particularly frustrated with – and I think we have to bring in a strategy on it – are all of the boxes that are not ours. I’m thinking to the utility boxes that are owned by the Newfoundland Powers and the telephone companies. They are in a disastrous state. It’s the only word to describe it.”
Simms said he recently received an e-mail from a resident complaining about the state of two boxes near his property. “I believe if there is a mechanism available to us as a City to reach out to our corporate community and tell them ‘Paint these now,’ we should do it. And if they don’t, we should have the power to do it and to bill them. There is no hesitation on my part.”
Evidence shows, Simms added, that if you remove graffiti right away, it helps to quickly end the spread of more graffiti. The mayor acknowledged that it’s probably impossible to have artists paint every utility box in the city.
There are a couple of utility boxes on the corner of Ruth Avenue and Michener Street, Simms pointed out, “that are so unbelievably disgusting and they’ve been that way forever. And I believe it’s time for us to tap these people on the shoulder and say ‘If that’s not painted by Thursday, the City is going to paint it by Friday and we’re going to send you a $2,000 bill - your choice.’ And get it done. And it’s all over the city now. I doubt if there is a single one of these boxes that hasn’t been vandalized in this manner.”
Simms said he loves the Out of the Box program and the artistry is amazing.
“They (the utility companies) should do the same,” said Tessier.
Councillor Dave Aker said he is bothered by the number of super mail boxes in the city and the graffiti being sprayed on them. “The problem with Canada Post,” he said, “is that we probably don’t have as much clout.”
Aker said when the corporation was “selling” the idea of super mail boxes, one of their supposed attributes was that they are hard to spray with paint. Aker said it would be worth the while of city inspectors to look at the mailboxes on Michener Avenue. The corporation should be given a list of boxes that have to be cleaned and held to the same standards as the utilities, he added.
“I’m with you,” said Simms. “I just believe that we need to put a deadline on it. And we need to be prepared to do it ourselves. It’s not enough to just go to them and say we want you to do it and have them pay lip service… We need them to know that they’ve got four days or five days to get it fixed and that they need to work in partnership with us because they’re going to get tagged again and the first people to see that will be us – the people who can fix it first. And we almost need to dedicate some resources to it that they pay for.”
Locke said his understands the frustration and his committee will reach out to the “corporate partners’ about the issue. “Once they’re painted (by the artists) they are generally left alone,” Locke repeated.
Mount Pearl native opens 'template' cafe for rest of chain
Scott Hillyer was a long time working in the restaurant business before things started to suddenly fall into place enabling him to become self-employed as a co-owner of one of the most prominent and fastest-growing coffee shop chains on the Northeast Avalon.
The opening of the Coffee Matters café and restaurant at 39 Commonwealth Avenue in Mount Pearl marks the launch of the chain’s sixth store and an expansion into evening dining. For Hillyer, who grew up and lives in Mount Pearl, the store marks a coming home for him business wise.
“Since I’ve been 15 I’ve been working in restaurants,” said Hillyer. “Food has been my passion.”
Hillyer actually started at Ponderosa Restaurant when he was 14, as a dishwasher. He stayed until age 30, by which time he was a top manager. He then worked in some local restaurants.
Hillyer said people would often remark to him that he should be working for himself. “But I just wasn’t ready,” he said.
The opportunity to do so, however, came unexpectedly, about a year after he was hired as director of operations for what was then a new cafe in town, Coffee Matters, which set up shop at Military Road and soon opened another store at Paradise. The founders asked Hillyer if he would buy them out.
“I said I didn’t have that kind of money,” Hillyer recalled.
But he did manage to buy the Paradise café. That was in 2010. Two years later, Hillyer and his business and life partner Cyril Peach managed to buy the whole chain, trademark and all.
“That was a costly venture,” said Hillyer. “And it was a scary situation because we were just getting on our feet after the Paradise transaction.”
Hillyer’s background in the industry - and Peach’s in the wholesale and retail food industry – helped ensure a successful transition.
Hillyer, now 44 and with three children ranging in age from late teens to early 20s, is grateful to the original owners, Gary Holden and Earl Norman for having faith in him.
“It’s a hard industry to be into,” Hillyer admitted. “And I’ll never forget when they interviewed me. They said ‘Scott, you’re too smart to be working for somebody else, you need to be working for yourself.’ But they were the ones who gave me the break and who had faith in me. They said, ‘Scott, someday your opportunity will come, and it did come.’”
Hillyer and Peach have worked to differentiate their stores in a crowded café market by making their soups and baked goods fresh daily, locally, and by buying local grown vegetables in season. Coleman’s supplies the fresh baked focaccia bread for the sandwiches, while an in house pastry chef tends to the desserts and scones. Cookies and muffins are baked in each of the stores every day. The cafes also use turkey and chicken that don’t have preservatives.
“We really focus on having fresh ingredients made fresh to order,” Hillyer said. “If there is anything that has given us success it’s the card of paying attention to quality.”
The launch of the Mount Pearl café is the next stage in a possible expansion of Coffee Matters into franchises, Hillyer allowed, though he is not fully comfortable with the idea of giving up control of a location to someone else yet.
“This is why we built this store,” he explained. “I was part of building the Military Road location, and even though it is absolutely beautiful, it’s ornate and it fits that building perfectly because of where it is – the trim package on that was $225,000 – to do the columns, to do the baseboards and to do everything else. So when I looked at the business model, I needed to give somebody a brand for $200,000 from start to finish.”
The Mount Pearl store is a template of what a buyer would get if Coffee Matters ever goes the franchise route. Six stores in, Hillyer and Peach have refined their knowledge of what works best. Everything behind the counter has been designed and placed to be within an arm’s span of a barrista. “Whereas in our other stores, you’ve got to walk too much, you’ve got to go too far. So thinking of franchising I had to be able to give somebody something that is going to work,” Hillyer noted. “Where I’ve worked in this industry my whole life, I knew that some of the stores were just not flowing properly. With this store we were three days trying to simulate counters, plus we brought in some great people like CORE Engineering. We paid them to come in and help us design the store – give us proper air flows, give us proper temperatures. So really this building is state of the art when it comes to that.”
All the research and work, Hillyer said, has even enabled him to know better for the next store what brand of equipment to buy. “So if someone called me tomorrow and said ‘I want to open up,’ I could tell them almost to the penny what it would cost for equipment and all that kind of stuff.”
Hillyer said he’s designed the overall business so that all six stores – downtown, Paradise, the Hibernia Interpretation Centre in Manuels, the Ches Penney YMCA on Ridge Road, ‘Canteen Matters’ at the new double rink in Paradise, and now the Mount Pearl shop - are within a 15 to 20 minute drive from each other. This makes deliveries easier and allows him to spend time in each café throughout the week.
“I tend to be in every store at least once or twice a week and physically working it,” Hillyer said. “I think that’s another key to our success – I’ve really put my face to the name of what Coffee Matters is. And in any company that’s really important.”
Hillyer said he and his partner were looking for a location in Mount Pearl for about two years. “We knew Mount Pearl needed it,” he said. “We do a lot of internal research, we survey our customers and we collect data… And then when I started seeing the mayor of Mount Pearl and the councillors from Mount Pearl coming to my Paradise location constantly to have business meetings and stuff, I said ‘Geeze, we’ve got to get into Mount Pearl.”
But everything he and Peach looked at was either too large or too small. Eventually they settled on a deal with the landlord at 39 Commonwealth.
When Coffee Matters advertised for staff, it got 122 applications. “People want to be part of something in Mount Pearl,” Hillyer said. “And being part of a coffee house, or any new business, is what they want. A coffeehouse is a place where a lot of kids like to work because it’s interactive. And being a barrista is a big thing for the kids today, it’s the hot thing, learning how to make lattes and cappacinos.”
With the first liquor licence for a Coffee Matters café, the company is moving to an expanded evening dining menu. Lamb is the most popular item, Hillyer said.
“And for myself, I grew up in Mount Pearl and my family is from Mount Pearl, so if I was going to do an extra special store, this was where we were going to do it,” Hillyer said. “If this works, we’ll take this template and renovate and do the same thing downtown.”
It’s been a lot of growth for a small company in three years. “We started with 12 employees, and now we employ 142,” Hillyer said.
The three person headquarters staff has moved office out of Hillyer’s basement to a building at 1 Moffatts Road, also in Mount Pearl. In addition to the cafes, the company caters events. “We’ve got 46 weddings booked this season,” said Hillyer.
Even if Coffee Matters gets around to franchising, or his children eventually buy him out, Hillyer can’t see himself ever retiring from the business completely.
“I’ll never, ever give anyone full ownership of the company until I’m dead and gone,” he said, laughing. “When you work so hard for something it’s very, very hard to just let it go.”
Stoyles collides with colleagues over PlayOn tournament
This month’s nearly record-setting PlayOn ball hockey tournament sparked a bit of rough play at Mount Pearl council. But councillor Lucy Stoyles, who tried to lay a body check on any notion of the City hosting the event again next year, found herself severely shorthanded in the chamber.
Some 565 five person teams participated in the tournament, making it the second largest in the country. However the closure of a section of one of the busiest thoroughfares in Mount Pearl had some business owners and residents, according to Stoyles, stewing.
The puck dropped on the debate when councillor Paula Tessier extended a “heartfelt thanks” to the residents and businesses of Mount Pearl for using alternate driving routes for three days around the ball hockey venue, which stretched along Old Placentia Road from Ruth Avenue to the Smallwood Drive intersection and included the Summit Centre and Glacier parking lots.
That comment drew Stoyles into the play.
“Where do I start?” said Stoyles. “I’m not one not to support sport in the city, but I certainly don’t think it was the right place for such a tournament.”
Stoyles said she received many calls about the inconvenience of the road closure, including from Churches. “One church, St. Peter’s Parish, had four christenings on Saturday, and people with babies had to walk down Ruth Avenue,” she noted. “They were totally disgusted that the whole parking lot was full of people using it for PlayOn (parking).”
Some of the young people at the tournament showed no respect to the families trying to get to Church, Stoyles added.
A major disruption at the Salvation Army Church was avoided on Sunday morning, she noted, by having the City’s park patrol and municipal police in the area.
Stoyles said not only were the parishioners of those two Churches, as well as residents “totally disrupted by the PlayOn hockey, which I don’t think ever should have happened, closing our city streets and endangering some of the public,” but so were some businesses.
Some people working at businesses in Glenhill Plaza either couldn’t find parking spaces, or if did, couldn’t get their cars off the lot later, Stoyles said. “Tols at Tols’ Time-Out (Lounge) normally has his poker tournament up there – nobody came,” Stoyles said. “He had to cancel his poker tournament.”
A fundraiser held in the plaza later in the evening was impacted by a lack of parking, she said. “Besides that, the parking lot at Kent’s was blocked with nobody in Kent’s store,” said Stoyles.
Olympic Drive, which houses the Mount Pearl Fire Station, was “so dangerous that if there was a real emergency, I don’t know how the fire trucks would have gotten through,” Stoyles continued. “The traffic buildups and the line ups and the inconvenience to our residents – I certainly hope we don’t do it again.”
Stoyles said she would like to know how much it cost the City to host the event. “I noticed driving up and down Old Placentia Road there is an awful lot of damage done,” Stoyles said. “Everything is cleaned up and it looks nice but, there’s hardly any grass left up there at all and it’s going to cost the City a lot of money to put it back the way it was.”
Stoyles said the event itself is good, but there are better places for it, such as Memorial University where it was hosted in past years.
(The organizers went to Mount Pearl this year, because construction of a science building on the MUN lot displaced the tournament.
If the city is going to play host again, Stoyles suggested, maybe it could look at using parking lots in the industrial park on a weekend when the businesses there are closed.
“It’s not that I’m not supporting it, but I really don’t think we should be closing down city streets to have an event like this and frustrating our residents, especially our Churches, who on Saturday evening and Sunday morning were more than put out,” Stoyles argued.
Stoyles said the next time council considers hosting the tournament, there should be a public vote in the chamber and not just in a private meeting as happened this time.
Councillor Dave Aker said he shares Stoyles’ concerns but wouldn’t want to see the event shut down. Often, he argued, there are hiccups experienced when doing something for the first time and organizers can learn from the experience. “I sympathize and empathize with the businesses,” he said, but “I think it is a good location.”
The tournament, Aker pointed out, is consistent with the sports tourism aims outlined in the City’s strategic plan. He suggested council refer the issues to a committee for assessment and look for ways to get rid of the hiccups in the future. “I support PLayOn, but next year, as you (Stoyles) articulated, clearly it has to be different,” Aker said.
Councillor Andrew Ledwell concurred. “I do regret that some of the incidents that Councillor Stoyles identified have happened, but as councillor Aker rightly says, when you host an event for the first time, you’re bound to get hiccups, you’re not going to get everything right the first time.”
Ledwell said some 3,900 young people had a great time at the event. “And to be frank, I’m more concerned about that than about 30 people playing poker on Saturday afternoon,” he said. “So I hope we do it for a number of years to come.”
Deputy Mayor Jim Locke said the work that was done by City staff prior to the tournament, which included patching the pavement along Old Placentia Road, would have been done anyway. “So it’s not like we used up overtime hours or anything like that,” he said. “It’s work that would have been done, we just prioritized it.”
Locke agreed with Aker that the event falls in line with the City’s sports tourism goals. All the feedback he received, Locke added, was positive. Some business operators saw their sales go up because of the crowds attending the games and liked the event because it was family oriented, he said
“It had a nice community feel to it,” said Locke. “How long have they been running the (St. John’s) Regatta – a hundred and something years, and they still have hiccups. Things happen. I’m not dismissing any of the issues councillor Stoyles raised. There were people who were inconvenienced, but I’m not suggesting we throw the whole event out because of that. I think these are all manageable issues that have been identified.”
Before offering his view, Mayor Randy Simms invited the City’s Director of Community Services, Jason Collins, to offer an assessment. “What was unique about PlayOn was the magnitude of it,” allowed Collins.
He explained that because the tournament was moved from its usual location, the City became involved relatively late in the planning process, which explains some of the hiccups. “When it came to the businesses and community groups, there are certainly things that I think the PlayOn organization and the City can do better in the future,” he said.
Collins said officials have held a debriefing on the event and a report will go to council with recommendations. The PlayOn organizers, he observed, were extremely responsive to suggestions and questions raised by City personnel.
Mayor Simms said the City has the right to host the event for four years. He noted that he asked for a report on any negative comments received by the City, but had yet to see any.
“I will take exception to one comment councillor Stoyles made and really only one,” Simms said. “There are a bunch of things she said that I can think can be challenged, but the closing of streets and endangering of the public – that did not happen. The general public in Mount Pearl at no time were endangered. I drove Olympic Drive in the morning, afternoon and night on both days that it happened and there was no point where two vehicles could not pass. We received no commentary at all from our fire and emergency services, which actually exist on the street, that they were blocked in or could not move.”
Simms said he won’t disagree that Church services were affected and the failure to plan for that was perhaps an oversight. He also admitted some people were inconvenienced by the road closure, but that happens with many events, he argued, including City Days.
“I challenge the situation as it relates to Kent’s store,” said Simms. “And the businesses from the pizza shop that exists next to Tols’ Time-Out Lounge through to the Fireside Eatery at the Summit enjoyed business receipts the likes of which they’d never seen in their lives. From the point of view of business, this was a hugely successful event. I’m satisfied that for me – and I’m the mayor of this city and if anybody is going to hear this stuff, take it from me, I hear it – not a single negative comment on this (came) from anyone, anywhere, not even during it, not even when we attended the Special Olympics barbeque held at the Reid Centre right in the middle of this thing… I do believe there are improvements that can be made… Otherwise I have to say I think it went marvellously.”
Kelloway leading the varsity racing pack
Pearlgate Track and Field Club’s Daniel Kelloway captured the 400m title and also helped his 4x400m relay teammates deliver a record-setting performance this past weekend at the Great Northwest Athletic Conference (GNAC) NCAA Division II Track and Field Championships at Western Oregon University.
Competing for Simon Fraser University (SFU), Daniel won the 400m conference title with a time of 47.62, a personal best which also established a new Newfoundland and Labrador provincial 400m record and raised his national ranking to 5th in Canada for the men's 400m.
Kelloway finished off the meet anchoring the SFU 4x400m relay team of Stuart Ellenwood and Cameron Proceviat of British Columbia and Joel Webster of Ontario. In winning the gold medal, they established a new GNAC meet record of 3:13.84.
Coach and mentor Doug Halliday of Pearlgate Track and Field Club was delighted to hear of Daniel's success and immediately tweeted it to the world.
"I’m so proud of the weekend Daniel had. It is a true testament to the work he’s put in on and off the track to recover from injury in 2014. He is right where he needs to be heading into the Canadian Championship this July in Edmonton," said Halliday.
GNAC members include 10 universities located in five American states and Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. The conference is part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the world's largest college sports association. SFU is the first and only international member of the NCAA's Division II.
Kelloway is in his second year of studies at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. Raised in Mount Pearl and competing for Pearlgate since he was seven years old, Daniel has been a bright spot in the province's track and field community for a number of years. He has represented the province twice at the Canada Games and many times at national championships.
While at home between university semesters, Kelloway continues to train hard at his home track, setting a good example for the other 100 members of his club and quietly inspiring the younger athletes to work hard to achieve their track and field dreams, said club president Stephen Pike.
Local groups awarded small 'Wellness' grants
The Parish of the Good Sheppard and the Heart and Stroke Foundation, both in Mount Pearl, were among 80 groups selected for Health and Wellness Grants by the provincial government recently.
The Parish of the Good Sheppard is getting $8,000 to go towards a community garden program. The Heart and Stroke Foundation will receive $5,000 for a “Healthy Drink Choices for Children” program.
The grants provide up to $10,000 to either fully fund a project or as a contribution towards the total cost. The projects must support healthy living and wellness in such areas as healthy eating, physical activity, tobacco control, and injury prevention.
O'Donel student nabs URock Award
Fifteen year old O’Donel High student Megan Glover is receiving a custom painted electric guitar as one of the 2015 URock Volunteer Awards, which were held at the Glacier in Mount Pearl last week. The award was accepted on Glover’s behalf by the principal of O’Donel, Michelle Clemens. It was presented by PC backbencher Kevin Parsons and Transportation and Works Minister David Brazil.
Glover was described as a “young entrepreneur” who is an integral member of her school’s action team, which has been raising $10,000 as part of a goal set by St. Peter’s Junior High to help build a new school in a developing country. Glover is also an ambassador for Easter Seals and has launched her own fundraising venture for the cause, which she calls Megan’s Mega Music. It featured artists including Rex Goudie and Sean McCann.
Though you wouldn’t say it by looking at her, Glover had a narrow escape at just a week and a half old, when she survived a stroke. She was left with cerebral palsy and epilepsy.
Glover couldn’t accept her award in person, because she was visiting New York as part of a school trip. But she sent her thanks via a taped internet message. “I feel so honoured to be receiving this award because I know there are so many other people in Newfoundland who deserve it too,” she said.
As a child, Glover’s family encouraged her and her sister Celia to volunteer and it’s not something she can live without out now, she admitted. “I’d like to thank my family for teaching me that there is no greater reward in life than knowing that you made a difference in someone else’s life.”
Among the people and organizations Glover thanked were Easter Seals, her principal for accepting the award on her behalf, and O’Donel for nominating here. “O’Donel, the most amazing school ever, offers many community activities that makes it easy for me teens like me to give back to society,” she added. “I would like to say thank you to anyone who has ever empowered me to give back to my community and create positive social change.”
The URock Awards, funded by the provincial government, celebrate youth volunteerism. Some eight awards were given out this year. Each individual recipient or group was presented with an electric guitar bearing a design created by a graphic arts student at the College of the North Atlantic. Glover’s guitar was designed by Courtney Oldford.
Liberals offered an earful at seniors policy forum
The Liberal Party of Newfoundland and Labrador’s Official Opposition caucus held a two hour public forum in Mount Pearl last week to discuss health care and housing for seniors.
The aim was held to get input from citizens as to what can be done to resolve some of the issues facing seniors. The meeting, hosted by Mount Pearl South MHA Paul Lane, was part of the Liberals’ ‘Let Connect’ series of forums aimed at developing social policy ahead of the provincial election expected this fall.
The night began with Lane stating they are looking to form policy, but it is “far from being complete.” With the input of the public, the Liberals say they will have a better understanding of how to move forward and provide a better government.
One man, Bob Corbett, seemed to strongly disagree that the Liberals would do much to improve the situation of seniors, and had a few choice words for the attending MHAs. He argued the Liberal Party will be no different than the PCs, and that they will follow in their footsteps and spend like “drunken sailors” if they are elected.
Corbett is the Vice President of the Newfoundland and Labrador Public Sector Pensioners Association as well as a former deputy fire chief with the City of St. John’s. He is also Vice President of the Seniors Coalition, an organization, he pointed out, that is not funded by any government program or influenced by any political party, allowing him to “tell it like it is.” Corbett said both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have succeeded in appointing a Seniors Advocate whom the government consults before making decisions that affect seniors. Corbett said it’s time this province made the same move.
Andrew Parsons, MHA for Burgeo-La Poile, promise to bring in a Seniors Advocate, making it “an independent office in the House of Assembly for a person that will represent seniors…independent of politicians.”
Parsons noted that when this idea was recently put to a vote in the House, every PC member voted against it while the Liberal and NDP members voted in favor.
Parsons went a step further, promising the Liberals will place an Independent Appointments Commission in charge of selecting the right people for the advocate’s position, which would allow the person in charge to be outside of any political influence.
Lane suggested the office should have multi-year funding so the advocate won’t be afraid to speak out on issues for fear of losing funds for the program.
Ralph Morris, past president and current representative of the Public Sector Pensioners Association, addressed home care and the long-term care of seniors as well as the income they are receiving now being affected by “clawbacks” in their pensions. Most seniors are only living on GIS and OAS payments, which are not enough to keep up with the cost of living, especially when it comes to homecare in this province, Morris said.
Some seniors are unable to support themselves when a spouse passes away, he added, because they have half the income but the full cost of bills. They are no longer able to afford proper food and medication for themselves, leading to hospitalization and then long-term care where they are stripped of their ability to take care of themselves, he argued. This costs more than it does to keep seniors living in their homes, he pointed out.
“People want to age at home,” said Morris.
Other issues raised during the forum included the loss of disability pensions at age 65 and ‘divorces of convenience,’ which sees some husbands and wives forced to divorce their spouses who are in long-term care so that they are able to keep enough pension money to live at home. Morris said such situations leaves many seniors in poverty, and unless these issues are addressed by the Liberal party before the election, he is advising seniors to refuse to vote for them.
Many people in the crowd presented ideas for the Liberals to consider, such as getting youth involved early so they know what they are expecting as they move into the seniors bracket, and creating a Seniors tax credit for impoverished seniors much like the child tax credit which helps families raise children under the age of 18.
Tracy Moore, a social worker at the Waterford Hospital, suggested there needs to be “dementia care bungalows” or Protective Community Residences created within the limits of St. John’s, Mount Pearl and the surrounding area. Such homes would provide a unique opportunity for people suffering from mild to advanced dementia than they would get from regular residential care, she said.
The facilities would promote independence and quality of life for individuals and their families, said Moore, noting they could be designed as a home-like setting, featuring a private bedroom with access to walking paths. This would provide privacy and comfort as an alternate option to living in a traditional long-term care facility. Residents could wander as they please, she added, and be allowed to use what skills they still possess to take care of themselves if possible.
Eastern Health already has two facilities in Clarenville and Bonavista which Moore suggests are working very well so far. Such an option would allow for traditional long-term care facilities to have only residents who need extreme medical care and attention, while allowing those with dementia to be able to keep some of their freedom as long as they can.
There was little to no response from the Liberal caucus members to these suggestions, but all ideas were written down to be reviewed.
The meeting concluded with Mayor Randy Simms, who is working in the Liberal Opposition Office as a policy advisor, receiving a question about housing for seniors in Mount Pearl. Simms said the city plans to give a piece of land to Newfoundland Housing to make affordable housing “exclusively in the market for seniors” very soon.
Seniors form one of the largest voting blocks in this province, composing one sixth of the population and forecast to make up one quarter of the population within 10 years’ time.
Parsons light-heartedly stated during the meeting that “we ignore you at ou
Television host turned politician campaigning without a spotlight
With the countdown to this fall’s federal election ticking down, former broadcaster and journalist Seamus O’Regan finds himself in a kind of limbo, waiting for the writ to officially drop and for the mainstream media to put some effort into covering the contest in St. John’s – South Pearl, which sees him trying to unseat the incumbent, NDP Member of Parliament Ryan Cleary.
While O’Regan’s entry into the political ring, after a decade as a national broadcaster, was enthusiastically touted by the province’s small political press corps, the spotlight has largely fallen away since that announcement last August. It’s left O’Regan scrambling for attention as the election approaches, while Cleary, an old-fashioned style showman in the style of George Baker, makes every opportunity to grab a headline or soundbite from his podium in parliament. O’Regan has been left trying to snare attention on social media, while quietly and persistently pursuing a ground game of knocking on doors and introducing himself to the electorate one voter at a time.
O’Regan recently visited the office of The Pearl to talk about his campaign. The interview began with the would-be Parliamentarian being asked to explain how he got the Liberal nomination, which came after a long announced contender, realtor Jim Burton, suddenly withdrew from the campaign, followed by O’Regan’s sudden candidacy and a quickly called nomination vote, which saw nobody else enter the race. The quickness of the events caused some people to speculate that O’Regan’s friend, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, had a hand in creating the circumstances necessary for O’Regan to secure the nomination.
Jim Burton announced he was running (in January 2014), and it seemed like the party was holding off before they called the nomination. Then he left and within a very short window of time later you announced you were going to run. Then within another short window of time, they called the nomination. What happened there?
Jim has got a very busy business. He called me when I was at my sister’s and said he had decided what he wanted to do. His business is expanding, I think he has almost 60 employees by now. He said ‘This is an important time of my life, my business is doing very well, and I just can’t do it all.’ I had to make a decision, I thought it over and realized that sometimes life grants you opportunities and you’ve just got to take it. So I acted very quickly and said yes, I am going for the nomination.
Why would he call you? Had you two talked previously about you being interested?
Yes, it was definitely something I was looking at. I hadn’t made up my mind, but I was mulling it over and I spoke to others and just wasn’t sure. There were a lot of personal matters weighing on my mind. I had to make sure it was the right thing to do.
Had you talked about it with Trudeau?
Only in the vaguest of terms. He asked me to consider running. We’d known each other for a long time. The idea of two friends doing it together, if we both got elected, was something I thought would be very exciting. We think alike politically and I trust the guy. I wouldn’t get involved with this if I didn’t think the guy would make a superb prime minister.
Why do you want to be a politician? It’s a tough racket.
It is a tough racket and I know that. The interesting thing is, in the five years that I spent (in politics previously) – three years with Ed Roberts as his executive assistant and two years with Brian Tobin as his policy advisor - I know what I’m getting into. I watched how politics affected both of them, the toll that it will take on your personal life, on your family life. But I also have to say just from a selfish point of view, serving people, being in public service, is some of the most fulfilling work you will ever do, if that is the sort of work you are into. And I am. I’m a policy guy, I’m a political guy, I follow it. I’m hugely into ‘how do we make things better in a crazy changing world, how do we make government better, how do I serve the people better?’ All of that stuff really interests me. We’ve done some great stuff during the time I helped the Wells and Tobin government. I’m very proud of my time there. The idea of actually being involved with it myself is enticing. The idea of serving my hometown, my home city, to be here in St. John’s South – Mount Pearl all lined up and I went for it.
Is Roberts as smart as he seems and is Tobin as slimy as he seems?
Yes and absolutely no. Ed is an incredibly bright guy, he was quite good to me. I was very young to be an executive assistant, I worked hard for him and I followed him by example and he was a superb teacher. He taught me an incredible amount. And Brian has got an incredible drive and ambition in him. He doesn’t believe in the status quo, if the status quo doesn’t work. He believes in change, he believes in shaking things up. I think he has, as premier, left an extraordinary legacy for this province and I still keep in touch with the both of them.
Did you pay attention to Don Mills’ remarks (about the population and economic challenges facing the province)? What did you think of those?
I think we’ve got a significant challenge in front of us, there’s no question about it. We’ve got to look more seriously at the immigration into this province. We’ve got to not only attract talent but also retain it. This isn’t just something that would be nice, we need to. We have an aging population that will pose a significant challenge for us ahead. I would put it in the top two challenges that the province will face in the upcoming years.
What’s the other one?
Managing resource development and managing it properly. That is not easy, that is a big file. But it is essential. And diversifying the economy, so we aren’t just relying on non-renewable resources.
What are the challenges with managing the resources?
Being vigilant about making sure the province gets its fair share and being vigilant in that we maximize job potential here and maximize revenue. And that the jobs we create here are high end, sophisticated jobs that we transfer significant technology from other jurisdictions, so that we can build companies here that can go into the rest of the world, much like Norway has done, and be companies that can export their talent and expertise around the world; that is how we’ll grow.
What about the dynamic tension that seems to be growing between the anti-frackers and the people who want more land set aside for reserves and the people who will actually extract and invest in the extraction of natural resources who want more access to the land? Where do you come down on that?
On fracking, I would say there are a lot of jurisdictions around North America that have gone with this, I think we should be diligent and make sure we are doing the right thing. But it is an incredible technology that the Americans have been working on for a long time. I think for a lot of us, it appears as if fracking just occurred. It didn’t. It’s being going on for a long time. Having said that, when it comes to the environment, we have to do our diligence, we absolutely do, we can learn a lot from studies done in other jurisdictions. The topsoil and geology of Newfoundland and Labrador is very unique and we have to make sure we are doing it right.
Are you worried that Cleary has a lead on you?
Ryan Cleary won with 48 per cent of the vote. It is significant. He’s a hard worker and a fighter, I get that. I’m a hard worker and I am a fighter. We have different ways of going about it and at the end of the day, the people of St. John’s and Mount Pearl will decide. It’s amazing, but you could drive yourself crazy thinking about how it could work out. At the end of the day, I just have great faith in the people and they will make the decision that they believe will be best for the riding. But I firmly believe that I would make a solid MP for the people of St. John’s South and Mount Pearl, if I didn’t think that, then I wouldn’t be involved.
How significant is the incumbency advantage here? He’s got access to speaking in the House of Commons, he gets to get interviewed by the media more often than you.
It’s the same for everybody, I guess it’s somewhat of an advantage for any sitting Member of Parliament over people who choose to take the challenge. It’s not that it can’t be overcome or else we’d never see changes in government. But the only that I know and that I’ve learned is that social media is a component but it doesn’t beat going door to door. It’s been a revelation to me. I’ve always been involved with policy, but I had not gone around and walked door to door. I’d done a lot of constituency work with Ed Roberts up in Goose Bay. I did some constituency work for Bill Rompkey when he was a Member of Parliament as well. So I have got an idea what to do there, but the actual going door to door has been an incredible experience for me. People have been unfailingly polite. They may say ‘Good luck now,’ but it doesn’t mean they’re going to vote for you. I ask them what’s on their mind, what they’re thinking. Sometimes they have time for you, sometimes they don’t want to let the heat out and fair enough. The campaign hasn’t started yet, it’s important that people know that I’m around and people can get in touch with me. I’m just going around introducing myself, letting them know that I am working for their vote.
Are you worried at all that you haven’t defined yourself as much as Cleary has, because the spotlight has been on him? He has that and that is an advantage. Even though you are a celebrity, most people don’t really know who you are.
When you spend three hours a day on a daily morning television show for 10 years - I’ll acknowledge that we baked some muffins and reviewed some movies - but the bulk of it dealt with hard news. And that is something that I’ve always been very passionate about. So people have seen me as a journalist, in the same way that they’ve seen others go into politics as a journalist. I’ve been in people’s kitchens and bedrooms for almost 10 years. They know me but they also know me as someone who has been on top of the issues that affected them, issues of federal and provincial importance. There are assets and liabilities to being known in this way. I think there is a familiarity that isn’t a bad thing, but not everyone may have been impressed with my job on Canada AM. I suffer that exposure as well. The profile it turned up a notch, but ultimately they make the decision.
What are you doing now for a day job?
I still do some consulting work for Ryerson University, I still speak from time to time. Right now, I am 100 per cent committed to winning the riding and that is taking up a lot of my time.
Who’s smarter, Trudeau or Tom Mulclair?
In my mind, it’s Justin. I don’t know Tom as well. I know Justin well, he is savvy; If people want to underestimate him, and they do so at their peril.
You said earlier you’re a policy guy. What sort of policies lie close to your interest?
I would say that going into it from an academic point of view, I’ve sat on the World Wildlife group of Canada. The environment is a big priority for me, but in so much as it relates to how we go about development of major resources in this province and this country so that it is equitable to future generations, so that we don’t get it wrong. I also, academically, was very interested in Aboriginal issues, because I was 13 when I moved from St. John’s to Goose Bay and that had a huge effect on me. Seeing how people lived up here, the importance of Aboriginal issues, and their quality of life. That became something very near and dear to my heart.
You keep your ear to what people are saying at the door to you. I’m very glad that Justin came out with the Canada Child Benefit (policy) that cut taxes for people who make between 44,000 and 90,000 dollars. People are strapped, they’re worried about looking after their parents, and they’re worried about looking after their children. Everything just seems a lot more tenuous these days. It just doesn’t feel as solid as it used to in the past. They worry about their benefits, so anything that we can do to help out the middle class in this country it means that we are doing well for the economy. Anytime we’ve seen a spike in the economy of this country it’s always because we’ve had a healthy middle class, so anything that we can do to strengthen that is a step in the right direction. Going door to door is an education. Not to say that the other issues I have just discussed aren’t important, they are both vital. We have to look after each other.
How do you feel about Canada’s participation in the bombing in the Middle East?
I don’t like getting into things where we don’t know how things are going to go. The mission is very up in the air. Within our lifetimes alone, we understand where that can take us. It was just the other day that it was the 12th anniversary of George W. Bush standing by an aircraft carrier off the coast of California with a banner that said “Mission accomplished.” That was 12 years ago. Let’s just be very wary. We’ve always been a good ally. Certainly these guys, ISIS, are just desperate people who are just doing violent things. We just have to know what we’re getting ourselves into, if we’ve learned nothing else.
What do you make of that young guy, Omar Kadr, who just got released from prison? What do you think of his story and what has happened to him and how it has evolved?
I don’t know. He’s been detained for a long time, I’d prefer he had not been. I’ve followed this story. It’s one of those stories that you weren’t sure if it would ever end and if it did, would it end well. By all accounts, he killed an American soldier, he was considered a terrorist, he’s been found by a court to have served his time. All you can do with someone who has served their time as prescribed by a court, their punishment, all you can do is wish them well afterwards and hope that they can get on with their lives.
Do you think that the federal conservatives have made a bit of a political football out of him?
That’s a tough one. He was in an American prison with a great deal of controversy. When you think about when Obama first got elected, it was one of the first executive orders he had signed (to close the military prison at Quantanamo Bay). So the place doesn’t come without a great deal of controversy. I would have preferred that he had served his time in a Canadian court.
It’s meaningless to speculate about it I guess, but if Pierre Trudeau had been Prime Minister when all of this was going on, instead of Stephen Harper, how would he have treated the case?
I don’t know. Pierre would have abided by the court, he was a jurist. He believed in the court. I just think as a Canadian citizen, I think he should have served his time on Canadian soil.