AnnK's BIG Art Show

Some of you are familiar with Ann Kornuta…artist extrodanaire…or as we like to refer to her as “AnnK…Milton’s Artist”.  Every Saturday in the summertime you can find her on Main Street cooking up another masterpiece, chatting with people at the Farmer’s Market.  No matter if the weather is boiling hot or cold and damp, shes out there with her brushes and paints trying to capture another piece of Milton.  Sometimes her paintings are quick and fast while others are more detailed and revealing.

Well tonight was a big night in downtown Milton as the Dorland Haight Gallery put on a show with Milton’s one and only Ann Kornuta.  As I walked up Main Street towards the gallery I could hear the music.  People were coming in and out of the doors, bustling with activity.  As soon as you walked in you were exposed to some of Ann’s newest works.

Her unique style of bright colours and landscapes were on display.  Many of the paintings she does are of Milton, the old and the new and how the town has changed over the last several years.  Im a big fan of her paintings of the downtown core as she always has dazzling colours, interesting shapes and funky styles.

Her paintings can go from bright and cheerful to almost sad and depressing.  In some of her work, you can see how the town itself is developing and an ominous view to what might be happening in the future.

There were a lot of new faces to me and some familiar ones as everyone came out to support our favourite artist.  I actually had a chance to meet Jennifer Smith who is also a Milton blogger for the first time.  (Nice to see you finally!)  Peter Haight, the gallery owner, was also there looking very dapper if I do say so myself.

You can find her paintings at Dorland Haights Gallery in downtown Milton and for a quick view of whats shes been up to recently you can check out her “gallery page” on her website as well.

I love this picture (although its sold) as it reminds me of my house with the balcony and front porch area.  Maybe she can make ME one soon? *cough* hint hint.

Ive always said that this town has a lot of hidden treasures and Ann is one of those talented individuals that should get more recognition than she does.

It was a great show tonight and I cant wait for the next ones.

Gary Carr and Ted Chudleigh draw a line in the sand for Smitherman

First off, I apologize that its been so long in between posts. I need to get back into the swing of it all, as the old saying goes, and post here on a regular basis. Between the late nights with 6 month old baby girl, a federal election campaign (which thankfully is over) and working at HSBC…its been difficult to find the time to update the blog and site.

Now with that election over and done with, I can concentrate on my greater love…this town. Its been hard keeping up on local issues the past little while but Im going to do my best to get back on track. Possible changes with the wards, potential tax increases at both the region and the town of Milton are amongst the pressing issues for our area.

Flipping through the Milton Canadian Champion and the Toronto Star I noticed one issue that did stand out. Gary Carr, the Regional Chair for Halton, along with Ted Chudleigh MPP for Halton have expressed concerns about the amount of development in our area compared to improvements to infrastructure. One of the areas of concerns is the hospital. Milton for example is growing closer and closer to 80,000 residents while not one major improvement has been made to our hospital. That hospital was designed for a town of 35,000 residents and as the years go by, Milton will approach 100,000 and no plans in sight to expand or improve the hospital.

The hospital has made some improvements. With the help and generosity of the public and other individuals and companies, Milton Hospital now has the CT scanner that was so badly needed. Now Milton Hospital needs more than that to adapt to the changes in the region. With Mattamy Homes pumping out new homes by the day and hundreds of moving trucks bringing the belongings of many happy families, excited with the opportunity to share with us, the beauty and the wonderful community we call home, something has to be done with our hospital.

For months Ted Chudliegh has been fighting with the Provincial Government to get this problem noticed by Premier Dalton McGuinty but so far nothing has happened. Everything seemed to have fallen on deaf ears.

What do our local leaders need to do to fix the problem? To date we’ve really heard nothing from Town Council. I know its not their area of responsibility but they do speak for the people. Our municipal leaders are on the the closest to the residents. Many times you can pick up the phone and give them a call to let them know how you feel. Some chose to respond quickly and others chose not to. I know that after talking with many of you during the last municipal election and afterwards, the hospital is a vitally important issue for many of you. As the town and the region grows, so should its infrastructure.

The only problem is our municipal leaders dont seem to have a vision for the future. There doesn’t seem to be a five, ten or twenty year plan on the horizon. Maybe at best a one year plan, and then a plan for re-election. In Milton, we see daily the result of decisions that were made in the past with no foresight as evidenced in their decision to close off 4th Line before they opened up James Snow Parkway a few years back.

They should have realized by now that is a growing problem that wont go away. This is what our leaders at all levels; from the member of parliament for Halton, to Ted Chudleigh, to Milton Town Council and to the Region of Halton; should be talking about endlessly to the provincial government.

It seem though that Gary Carr, the Regional Chair, is taking it to the next step. At a recent meeting of the Region of Halton, Gary Carr is threatening to not approve any future developments until there is a plan in place to address the regions hospitals, mainly Oakville and Milton. More on that here in a Toronto Star editorial of Oct 24th.

“In threatening to freeze local development, including approval for 40,000 new homes, Halton Region is considering a strategy that’s in equal parts a pressure tactic and a cry for help. Burdened by massive infrastructure needs and the unfair downloading of provincial costs, Halton is serving notice that it can’t afford to grow any further. Queen’s Park would be well-advised to take the region seriously. Its plight is by no means an isolated problem.

“Growth is not paying for itself,” region chair Gary Carr explained. “And we have the means to stop growth until (improved funding) has been put in place.”

Halton’s official plan and previous agreements with developers and the province include special wording that allows the region to refuse sewer and water services to new developments “until there’s a financial plan in place acceptable to council,” Carr said. Next month, a council committee is to consider invoking that clause to block 40,000 residences planned for construction over the next several years.

Those new homes would bring another 120,000 people to Halton at a time when the province isn’t paying its share to support residents who are already there. Growth would proceed only if Queen’s Park and developers more effectively cover the cost of municipal expansion, Carr said. The province can’t have it both ways.

This doesn’t appear to be a bluff. A spokesperson for Ontario’s Ministry of Municipal Affairs said Halton might well have the power to carry out its threatened development freeze, depending on the detailed wording of existing agreements and contracts. All this is a signal to Queen’s Park that despite its rising economic woes, the needs of cities will not disappear from the provincial agenda.”

And its not just Gary Carr. MPP Ted Chudleigh has been after the McGuinty government on the same issue and it looks like SOME progress is being made. Here’s the recent Milton Canadian Champion article by Melanie Hennessey.

Smitherman agrees to meeting

Halton MPP calls on minister to meet with regional chair over hospital woes

Melanie Hennessey, Canadian Champion Staff
Published on Oct 22, 2008

A provincial minister has agreed to meet with Regional Chair Gary Carr to discuss the urgent need for local hospital improvements.

The meeting with Minister of Energy and Infrastructure George Smitherman comes as a result of Halton MPP Ted Chudleigh pushing the provincial government to take immediate action when it comes to hospital projects in Milton and Oakville.

Recently, Halton Healthcare Services learned that the Province is delaying the construction of the new Oakville hospital by 13 months.

Milton District Hospital (MDH) is also facing a capacity crisis and is waiting for provincial government approvals for its expansion.

Over the past few weeks, Chudleigh has been using Question Period to push the issue. During Thursday’s Question Period, he told Premier Dalton McGuinty that the health-care situation is Halton is dire.

“This problem is not going away. Milton and Oakville continue to grow. In fact, it’s getting worse,” he said. “Why are you treating the people of Halton like second-class citizens?”

McGuinty deferred to Smitherman to address the issue. The minister said it’s still the Liberal government’s plan to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in the construction of the new Oakville hospital, but there’s just been a “short delay.”

“That project is still very much in our government’s sights,” he said. “We desire to make it happen with the good people of Halton as we recognize their needs must be met.”

Smitherman didn’t say anything about the Milton hospital in his statement.

Chudleigh went on to demand a meeting between the Province and the Region, and Smitherman said he’d be very happy to meet with the regional chair.

This came as welcome news to Carr.

“We’re pleased that he’ll be meeting with us,” he said. “I want to speak with him to tell him first hand about the challenges we have here.”

Carr said he wants to ask Smitherman why he expects the Region to pony up $2.5 billion for infrastructure within the next couple of years and $8.6 billion by 2021 at a time when the Province is pulling back on its spending.

“You expect us to do one thing when you’re doing a totally different thing at the Province?” he said.

The chair said Friday he’d like to wait to meet Smitherman until after the Province’s fall economic statement is delivered today to see what the financial state of the province is.

Carr recently tabled a motion that, if ultimately passed by council, could stop future development until the Province improves hospital capacity in Halton.

The motion was to be debated by the Region’s health and social services committee yesterday, but was deferred to November 13.

While Chudleigh said he’s also pleased the minister agreed to the meeting, he voiced disappointment with how it came about.

“I shouldn’t have to set up meetings during Question Period,” he said. “I shouldn’t have to stand here (in the Legislature) every day demanding adequate health care for the people of Halton.”

Chudleigh recently presented petitions to the Ontario legislature bearing thousands of signatures from Halton citizens who are calling for the immediate expansion of MDH and completion of the Oakville hospital.

The petitions can still be downloaded and signed at www.tedchudleigh.com .

“Until the Oakville hospital is complete and expansion in Milton has begun, I will not rest,” Chudleigh said. “Together with the Region, health-care organizations and the concerned citizens of Halton, we will show Premier McGuinty the meaning of the word tenacity.”

Melanie Hennessey can be reached at mhennessey@miltoncanadianchampion.com .

Go to the website…sign the petition and keep on our local leaders.

2008 Milton Fall Fair

 

Its coming faster than you think. This years looks to be better than last years event. People come from all around to attend what most people feel is the best Fall Fair in Ontario. Id have a hard time finding one better.

www.miltonfair.com is the site to visit with more details coming in the next few weeks. This years Milton Fair will be held September 26-28, 2008!

Stunts failed

As I mentioned last post, the Green Party of Canada has been doing its best to get “into the picture” and be relevant to Canadians.

A few months back, Elizabeth May and Stephane Dion came up with a “deal” that she would run against Peter MacKay and the Liberal party would run no one against her to help her win in Nova Scotia. Whether that works or not is a different story. Personally I think she’ll fail.

Just recently, a former Liberal (booted out of Dions supposedly “democratic” caucus) joined the Green Party to make history and be the first official Green Party MP in the House of Commons.

These stunts were pulled off with the intention of getting Elizabeth May in the leaders debate in the present Federal election campaign. Thats all it was…a couple of stunts to “raise awareness”.

Problem is, it didnt work. The broadcasters in charge of the leaders debate said, no Green Party. Supposedly 3 of the 4 party leaders said “HELL NO” to Elizabeth May. NDP Leader Jack Layton, said nothing. Bloq…same thing. Conservative Party Leader Stephen Harper was a bit more direct than others by saying that given the “deal” between May and Dion, the Green Party is just another version of the Liberal Party…and shouldnt be included in the leaders debate.

Id much rather have a discussion about the environment without all the BS and the tree huggery that goes on. Instead Elizabeth May has turned the GP of Canada into a joke, deal making party instead of the option it should be for Canadians.

The Green Party is missing something. Its missing a leader that can sell environmental issues to business. No one wants to be preached to. No one wants to be told what to do. Thats what the current leadership of the Greens does.

The message the GP of Canada has is important and needs to be heard. But it doesnt have to come at the expense of tricks and smoke n mirrors. If people would sit down and read what the GP of Canada has to offer they’d read that there are more to the GP than environment. Theres tax issues that need to be discussed. Incentives for businesses to help them move towards a better policy.

Jim Harris started this upward swing towards legitimacy. Too bad the party took a step back with Elizabeth May. As a business person, if you say something that makes sense, both environmentally and fiscally, Im going to listen. Elizabeth May, however good her intentions, fails miserablely.

Green Party Stunts

Its hard to ignore these past few years. You see it in almost every commercial on TV. Its on every piece of material we get in the mail. RECYCLED this or GREEN that. Its now a part of our every day life.

Halton lawns are lined with the green bins every trash day with more and more people taking part in it. The question is how many but as far as I can see in Hawthorne Village, the participation rate is quite high.

Its even moved to politics now with the Green Party of Canada getting more and more noticeable as a federal election gets closer. Many years ago when someone brought up the Green Party ones thoughts would move to someone wearing sandals, long hair and a pony tail carrying a SAVE THE PLANET sign like someone straight out of the 60’s.

Not any more. Jim Harris took the Green Party from the fringe status and made it a household name. Combined with societies change to environmental awareness, we are now hearing about the Green Party with every political poll and hearing of the growing amount of support.

A couple of years back, Elizabeth May took over as leader and well…something changed. Some for the good and some for the bad.

Having a woman as leader of a federal political party never hurts. I’m sure she wasn’t chosen leader because of her gender as only hearing what she has to say proves she knows her stuff. She has continued where Jim Harris left off in raising awareness of the Green Party and what it stands for in the eyes of Canadians. Some have said that Jim Harris legitimized the Green Party sounding more like an accountant than someone talking about the environment. Many of the Green’s policies sound like they belong in the Conservative Party platforms as they discussed tax cuts for using environmentally friendly products.

Can May bring her party to that next level? The level of where each of the candidates in all the ridings could be taken seriously with that MP qualifications. Sadly many of the GP candidates in ridings are volunteers with no real desire to serve in the House and whos job is mainly to raise awareness of the Green Party.

The only problem is the stunts they’ve had to pull off to get even more notice.

Elizabeth May and Stephane Dion had made an arrangement where as if she herself runs in a Nova Scotia riding (against former Conservative leadership candidate and now cabinet Minister Peter Mackay) the Liberals would NOT run anyone against her. This would ensure May gets the advantage of not running against the GREEN SHIFT directly and almost making it a 2 horse race. That’s like taking one of the favourite horses from a race and then calling it fair.

If they were looking to become legit in the eyes of Canadians, let them stand in a fair race and may the best candidate win.

As many pundits have pointed out, the strength of the Green Party is not out east; its not in central Canada. The strength of the Green Party lies in the west. Out in BC the Green Party out polls the Liberals almost 2 to 1. As a strategist, that’s where I would put my strongest chance at a seat in the House of Commons. Having a Green MP makes it impossible to ignore. They would be part of every leaders debate in a federal election and their voices would be heard. Some would argue that more people in a leaders debate is bad.

I mean 9 provinces and 3 territories have to listen to a leader (BLOQ) that they cant vote for…so why crowd the stage because they poll high. When they start getting elected to the House of Commons, THEN we can put the leader in the debate. Thats a discussion for another time.

The fact is that if a political party is represented in the House of Commons, they should be represented in the leaders debate. This leads me to stunt #2.

Recently former Liberal MP Blair Wilson crossed the floor to join the Green Party after leaving the Liberal party due to some election finance issues. Apparently he didn’t appoint an official agent before raising funds and incurring expenses. Its something that most people running for office would know if they were paying attention, but alas he didn’t and while under investigation from Elections Canada he quit the Liberal caucus until it was over. Quoted in an article back in July his first priority was to rejoin the Liberal party and get re-elected in his riding.

That didn’t last long as Elizabeth May and the Green Party woo-ed him over. So fast that he hasn’t been able to change his website yet www.voteblair.ca

Now from July 20th until recently, Blairs priority was to re join the Liberal party. What changed? Did political opportunism rear its ugly head and change his mind? Having someone cross the floor to the Green’s isn’t a new idea seeing as recent as a few years ago, former CPC now Liberal MP Garth Turner even considered joining the Green Party.

Does the Green Party need this kind of stunt to be “relevant” in Canadians eyes? Can the Green Party take that next step without the help of political arrangements and floor crossings to get its message out?

The message is out there beyond a shadow of a doubt. Now in many cases you can lose business if your company isnt green enough for consumers. Hybrids, eco friendly this and that, recycle, green bins, composting, carbon taxes. The Green Party can be relevant if it only stuck with what got it to the dance…policies and awareness. Will they win a seat in the upcoming election? Maybe not. Will they be on the minds of voters as we head to the polls in October (maybe)? You bet they will.

Maybe they need a few more steps in the evolution of a political party to get them to that next step. Jim Harris took them to point A…Elizabeth May has taken them to point B…who can take them that next step to having their first ELECTED Green MP in the House of Commons.

Steam Era Weekend is coming

Or as some people call it Labour Day.

This coming weekend (its pretty sad its Tuesday now and Im already looking to Friday) is Steam Era at Milton Fairgrounds.  For those who are new to town (and for those already here who havent gone) you are missing a blast of a weekend.

You can go directly to the site www.steam-era.com and check out the line up.  Corn roasts every night, mini tractor pulls and showcases of the evolution of tractors from the early 1900’s as well.  If youre nearby listen for the tractors and the steam WHISTLES blaring from the fair grounds.  Lots of other activities and things for the kids to do as well.

Cost is only $6 for adults and 12 and under are free.  It is worthwhile to check it out by the fairgrounds this coming Labour day.