A Collection …of articles

Blogs are important, however, we must recognize that 85% of actual news reporting (interviewing, door knocking, rummaging through records etc.) are done by newspapers, that online freelance journalism cannot replace. Our newspapers are being threatened: by govnt, entertainment competition, cuts etc. We must not undermine their importance in questioning (non-opinionatedly) the status quo.

Archive for May, 2008

TTC hybrid bus batteries not living up to green promises

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TTC hybrid bus batteries losing their power
Cells only lasting half of time promised
JEFF GRAY

From Friday’s Globe and Mail

May 16, 2008 at 5:01 AM EDT

The box-like batteries on top of the Toronto Transit Commission’s brand new and premium-priced hybrid electric-diesel buses are lasting only half as long as their manufacturer promised.

They were supposed to last five years, but about a third of the lead-acid battery cells in use in the current fleet of 275 hybrids - which started arriving in 2006 - have already worn out, Gary Webster, the TTC’s chief general manager, said in an interview.

The battery failures come on top of TTC testing that has shown the buses are producing just half the expected fuel savings, using just 10 per cent instead of 20 to 30 per cent less diesel than a conventional bus, although TTC officials expect this number to improve.

Still, Mr. Webster defends the decision to buy the Orion VII hybrids - which cost $734,000, compared with $500,000 for a conventional bus. He says the TTC and the manufacturer, Daimler Buses North America, are trying to sort out the battery problem, which is covered by the warranty and not costing the TTC money.

“We think the hybrid bus is a good bus. That’s the bottom line for us. It’s got some issues, absolutely,” Mr. Webster said. “… We think we’re going to address these issues.”

By year’s end, the TTC will have 564 hybrid buses - making up about a third of its bus fleet - with much of the cost of buying them covered by the federal and provincial governments in funding that mandated buses using alternative fuels. Within five years, close to half of the TTC’s fleet is scheduled to have hybrid engines.

But Adam Giambrone, the city councillor who chairs the TTC, said the battery problems mean the jury is still out on whether the buses were a good investment: “We’re still formulating our opinion on the hybrids.”

He said the hybrid engine could be a “transitional technology” and that down the road, electric buses could come onto the market, or the TTC could, on busier routes, even return to using trolley buses - powered by overhead wires like streetcars - which it abandoned in the 1990s.

Mr. Webster said yesterday that New York has had some similar problems with its fleet of Orion VII hybrids.

But Jake Keyes, a spokesman for Daimler, which runs the former Orion Bus Industries plant in Mississauga where the buses are partly manufactured, said the battery problem was specific to Toronto’s buses and has not occurred with its other hybrid buses running in New York and San Francisco.

The company’s newer models include a different, lithium-ion battery that Mr. Keyes said lasts longer, but Mr. Webster said the TTC is not convinced the new battery will fix its problem.

“… We’ve said to them, ‘Happy to consider it, but you’ve got to prove to us these things actually function,’ ” he said.

It is common for transit agencies to run into kinks with new vehicles, and the TTC has had problems before, including with vehicles running on compressed natural gas that it bought from Orion Bus Industries in the 1990s.

It has had to scrap 50 of those buses and convert another 50 to diesel, after engine problems, potentially leaky gas tanks and other complaints.

The TTC blames its hybrid buses’ fuel-economy problems on the fact that they are being used more on suburban high-speed routes, where hybrid engines are less efficient.

Once more of the buses are running on stop-and-go congested routes downtown, Mr. Webster says, their fuel economy numbers should go up as the bus can rely more on the electric power it creates with its regenerative braking system.

The fuel-economy problems, which likely cost the TTC $1.3-million this year, are a small part of what is expected to be a massive rise in diesel costs as a fixed-price contract for fuel runs out at the end of this year.

The TTC estimates that its fuel bill could go to $97-million next year from $65-million this year, and Mr. Webster has said the transit agency may even consider a “fuel surcharge” for riders.

Military think tank’s funding tied to getting good press

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Think tank’s funding tied to getting good press
STEVEN CHASE

From Friday’s Globe and Mail

May 16, 2008 at 4:15 AM EDT

OTTAWA — The Department of National Defence sets quotas for how many times a year a military think tank it subsidizes must appear in the news media, a contract made public at the request of the NDP shows.

Critics say the five-year, $500,000 deal with the Conference of Defence Associations crosses the line from promoting debate to paying for supportive commentary - especially troubling when the Harper government is trying to sustain public backing for the Afghan mission.

They say it also raises questions about the millions spent by National Defence each year on grants to other think tanks and universities and called on the department to disclose the terms of those deals as well.

A contract the Conservatives tabled in Parliament this week says the department considers the CDA’s key goals to include the need “to consider the problems of National Defence” and “to support government efforts in placing these problems before the public.”

The March, 2007, contract says the grant is part of a program to ensure an “independent voice for discussion and debate on security and defence issues outside of the academic sphere.” It sets out 13 “expected results” for the CDA, including the requirements to:

“Attain a minimum of 29 media references to the CDA by national or regional journalists and reporters;”

“Attain the publication of a minimum of 15 opinion pieces (including op-eds and letters to the editor in national or regional publications).”

NDP defence critic Dawn Black said the contract’s terms make her uncomfortable because she believes it helps the Harper government build public support for Canada’s military mission in Afghanistan.

“This is part of that effort to try and sell the war. These are people who support the government position on the war in Afghanistan, and all of the requirements of this contract indicate they need to be in the news and the op-eds and on television across the country.”

Alain Pellerin, executive director of the CDA, says his organization has received money from National Defence for decades and the media quotas have been part of the agreement with the military since 2002, when a consulting firm told the department it should draw up more performance-based grant contracts.

He rejected the notion that the CDA is a mouthpiece for Ottawa. He said it has previously disagreed with the party in office, including during the 1990s when former Liberal prime minister Jean Chrétien’s government slashed military spending, as well as when former Liberal prime minister Paul Martin decided against joining the U.S. missile shield plan.

Mr. Pellerin said the CDA has backed the current Afghan mission since the Liberals announced it in 2005 because it believes it’s the right course.

He said that media commentary quotas are not something the CDA wanted as a term of its contract, and conceded that the NDP may be right in saying they don’t make sense.

“That might be a valid point. … It’s not something we went out and sought,” he said.

Stephen Staples, head of the left-leaning Rideau Institute, a critic of Canada’s role in Afghanistan, said the CDA has to return the cash to National Defence to maintain credibility.

Mr. Pellerin said those attacking the CDA’s contract are critics of the Afghan war who lost the public debate over whether to extend Canada’s mission there. The operation was extended to 2011 in March

National Defence declined to answer questions on the contract. A spokeswoman said a five-hour window given to respond was insufficient, adding the department would need until today or next week.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s office has in recent months exerted greater control over Department of National Defence communications, particularly after the treatment of detainees captured by Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan fuelled controversy. So today media requests to National Defence are often forwarded to the Privy Council Office, the bureaucratic arm of the Prime Minister’s Office, for scrutiny and vetting before a response is given. This process regularly delays answers from National Defence for days.

Supreme Court rules that crown must prove teens deserve adult sentences - rendering Conservative govnt’s “tough on crime bills” unconstitutional

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080516/SCC_teens_080516/20080516/

Crown must prove teens deserve adult sentences: SCC
Updated Fri. May. 16 2008 9:35 PM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

The Supreme Court of Canada struck down the concept of reverse onus Friday when it comes to sentencing provisions for teens convicted of violent crimes.

In a narrow 5-4 ruling, the court said that it is the responsibility of the Crown to prove young offenders convicted of violent crimes should be sentenced as adult. Before the ruling, the onus rested on teens to prove they should be dealt with as minors.

Friday’s ruling, however, does not bar judges from handing adult sentences to offenders between 14 and 17 years old. But it says that it is now up to the Crown to prove why a stricter sentence is appropriate.

Since 2002, it has been possible to sentence teenagers convicted of murder, aggravated sexual assault or other serious crimes as adults. The provision in question in Friday’s ruling compelled those convicted of such crimes to convince the courts they should not be sentenced as adults.

The court said young offenders should be presumed less morally culpable for their crimes than adults. It said the reverse onus is a breach of justice and of young offenders’ Charter rights.

“A presumption of diminished moral culpability in young persons is fundamental to our notions of how a fair legal system ought to operate,” Justice Rosie Abella wrote in the ruling.

The appeal courts of Quebec and Ontario have already found the reverse onus unconstitutional, but a British Columbia court upheld the provision. All provinces must now adhere to the Supreme Court’s ruling.

The ruling means minors have a constitutional right to be treated differently from adults, Queen’s University legal expert Nicholas Bala told the Canadian Press.

With the ruling, the Youth Criminal Justice Act moves from simple legislation to an extension of the Constitution, Bala said, calling it the most significant case about juvenile justice in all the years of the youth court system.

CTV legal analyst Steven Skurka said the ruling will severely affect the government’s plan to radically overhaul the Youth Criminal Justice system, which was expected to begin later this year.

“(They are) not going to be able to do it in the sweeping way that the government was headed towards,” he said during an appearance on Canada AM on Friday, adding the government had been waiting on this ruling before introducing any legislation.

The ruling came on the same day that Statistics Canada reported that youth homicides in Canada reached their highest point ever in 2006. The report found that while youth crime in general is declining, violent crime is increasing.

The ruling, which comes on the 100th anniversary of Canada’s juvenile justice system, was brought to the top court after a 17-year-old boy assaulted and killed an 18-year-old at a Hamilton, Ont. shopping mall.

“D.B.,” the 17-year-old, was already under two probation orders and was convicted of manslaughter. The Crown wanted to give him an adult sentence of five years, but he was instead sentenced to three years of youth detention.

Friday’s ruling means the three year sentence will be upheld. All of the Supreme Court justices who provided an opinion, including those who dissented, agreed he was given the correct sentence.

With files from The Canadian Press

Critics blast Harper on dithering on campaign for UN Security Council seat

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Critics blast Harper on dithering on campaign for UN Security Council seat
CAMPBELL CLARK

From Thursday’s Globe and Mail

May 15, 2008 at 5:01 AM EDT

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper said yesterday his government has not yet decided whether Canada will stay in the race for a seat on the powerful United Nations Security Council in 2011-2012.

Although Canada has won election to the 15-member Security Council roughly every 10 years since the UN opened in 1946, and served noticed seven years ago it will run for a seat again in 2010, diplomats have warned Mr. Harper’s government the country might face an embarrassing loss this time.

Opposition leaders charged that this is a sign the Conservatives’ foreign policies have reduced Canada’s international standing - but Mr. Harper insisted his government has made the country a more active international player.

The Globe and Mail reported yesterday that Mr. Harper’s government is expected to decide this week whether to campaign for the seat - a decision that will determine whether Canadian diplomats at the UN in New York will step up their efforts to curry support into a full-blown campaign.

Tories consider giving up on bid for top UN seat
Mr. Harper gave no indication yesterday of what that decision would be, and neither he nor his aides would say when it might be made public.

“The cabinet has not made any decision on a campaign, and it’s premature to discuss a campaign,” he said in the Commons.

“However, I can say that we are leaders in several United Nations missions - in Afghanistan, in Haiti, in Darfur. We have cracked down on tyranny in Burma in applying the most severe sanctions in the world. And we have been able to have a resolution on Iran’s human rights record passed in the United Nations.

“We haven’t just made statements, we have acted.”

Opposition politicians, however, argued that Canada’s indecision about whether to run for a Security Council seat reflects a slide in the country’s influence.

“I think they have damaged the international reputation of Canada and they are concerned that if they try, they will fail,” Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion told reporters outside the Commons.

“I want Canada to campaign. … But if you ask if our chances [of winning] have shrunk because this very conservative government has tarnished our reputation, the answer is yes.”

NDP Leader Jack Layton said the Conservatives’ unwillingness to sign international declarations on aboriginal rights or the disabled, or to take a leading role in climate-change talks, have hurt support.

“He’s decided to join in with a George Bush-style of foreign policy that has not endeared Canada to the broad range of countries around the world who used to appreciate our voice for peace, for strong action on the environment, for foreign aid,” he said.

The 15-member UN Security Council, which holds most of the power in the international organization, has five permanent members - the United States, Russia, China, Great Britain and France. Ten other members are elected for two-year terms by the 192 UN members.

Officially, Canada is running - against Germany and Portugal - for one of the two seats that will be chosen from a “regional” block that includes Western Europe, plus Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

Germany, which has campaigned for a permanent seat, is almost assured of winning one seat, leaving Canada and Portugal in a fight for the other.

Canada mounted a high-profile, four-year campaign the last time it ran for a place on the Security Council seat, for the 1999-2000 term, when Canada and Holland beat out Greece.

“This is something that should have started already,” said Liberal foreign affairs critic Bob Rae. “These things take time, and people need to know that Canada is serious. We indicated much earlier, in 2001, that we were going to be interested in the position when our name came up, and the idea that we wouldn’t is just incomprehensible.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My comment:

Over a hundred countries will vote, 43 of them are island states that do not want to see their country go under water because of climate change, it will be tremendously difficult for them to support Canada given the Harper government’s response at the UN Bali Climate Change conference - where Canada had to be dragged kicking and screaming to accept already washed down targets, while acting as the main barrier to tougher mandatory targets while literally being a block (speaking for the U.S.) while there.

Given Canada’s response to not ratifying UN resolutions that would have granted special recognition and rights to Indigenous people, and granted water as a universal human right… it would be very difficult to win this campaign. Its a 4 years campaign - very tough, the previous one say delegates and the Canadian ambassador holding over 22 events per month to convince nations to vote for Canada, once relied on as a middle voice - we’re now increasingly seen as an extension of Washingont while our aid to Africa has also shrunk.

It would be a global and domestic embarassment if we lost, the UN Security Council holds tremendous powers in deciding whether or not to intervene in conflicts, go to war etc.

As well, is $2 million really enough for the over 120 000 people that died in Burma from the cyclone and the 2.5 million affected? That has got to be the shittiest and one of the lowest donation in the world.

Top Police psychologist gets threatened for critical comments about RCMP

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Police psychologist likens RCMP to Putin’s Russia
GARY MASON

From Thursday’s Globe and Mail

E-mail Gary Mason | Read Bio | Latest Columns
May 14, 2008 at 8:52 PM EDT

VANCOUVER — Someone else might have resisted the temptation, especially knowing he might be blackballed as a result. But Mike Webster has never operated that way.

And so, when the respected police psychologist testified this week at the B.C. public inquiry into the use of tasers, he didn’t mince words when asked about the Mounties’ decision to zap an unarmed Robert Dziekanski last October, and more recently, a penknife-wielding 82-year-old man lying in a hospital bed in Kamloops.

“I’m embarrassed to be associated with organizations that taser sick old men in hospital beds and confused immigrants who are arriving in the country,” said Mr. Webster, considered one of the top police psychologists in the world.

Even as the words spilled from his mouth, Mr. Webster knew they had the potential to cause him more trouble with the RCMP. He knew because of a chilling incident late last year that still hangs over his association with Canada’s national police force.

Mr. Webster is a registered psychologist who deals exclusively with law enforcement agencies. His expertise in conflict resolution has been sought to help resolve some of the most volatile situations in recent years, including the showdown with Branch Davidian followers in Waco, Tex., in 1993. He was widely credited with helping avert a bloodbath during the RCMP standoff with native protesters at Gustafson Lake, B.C., in 1995.

He has worked on a contract and fee-for-service basis with the RCMP for more than 30 years. Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, much of his work with the Mounties has been in the area of intelligence gathering. After Mr. Dziekanski died at the Vancouver International Airport last October, media outlets in B.C. sought Mr. Webster’s opinion on the incident. He was honest: he thought it was a disgraceful display of policing. The officers had blasted the troubled Polish immigrant without making any attempt to resolve the matter peacefully.

In early December, Mr. Webster says he received a call from Richard Bent, chief superintendent of the RCMP E Division in Vancouver. The senior Mountie asked Mr. Webster, who lives on Denman Island, B.C., if the two could have a meeting. Mr. Webster knew something was amiss.

He wanted to know immediately what it was about.

“That’s when he said it was about the nature of my comments to the media about the Dziekanski incident,” Mr. Webster revealed in an interview Wednesday. “He said: ‘You’ve upset some of the members here and they’re saying things.’ I said, ‘Like what?’ And he said: ‘Well, they’re saying that maybe you shouldn’t be getting any more work with the RCMP.’”

Mike Webster nearly dropped the phone.

“There was only one way to interpret that comment,” Mr. Webster said. “It was a clear threat.”

Mr. Webster said he told Chief Supt. Bent that he didn’t respond well to threats. And that they wouldn’t change his mind in any event. After stewing about the incident over Christmas, Mr. Webster articulated his anger in a letter to Chief Supt. Bent, which he copied to Gary Bass, the RCMP’s top man in B.C. In it, he reiterated how offended he was by Chief Supt. Bent’s comments, which he considered a blatant form of intimidation.

He said he heard nothing back. But he did begin hearing from his friends inside the force. He said one relayed to him that Mr. Webster’s outspokenness cost the psychologist a small fee-for-service job. One of Mr. Webster’s friends was told: “Don’t be hiring Mike Webster. He’s in shit with us for being disloyal.” Another told him to expect a call from a top RCMP official in Ottawa who was going to fly out to talk to him.

Sure enough, the call came. Two weeks later, Mr. Webster said he was having lunch with an RCMP inspector from headquarters who scolded him for his Dziekanski comments. He suggested the psychologist was being disloyal to an organization that had been good to him over the years. He said Mr. Webster should have waited until the RCMP had concluded its investigation into the incident before giving any kind of opinion on it.

“I told him I didn’t need anything more than the 25 seconds of video that we’ve all seen over and over again to offer my analysis,” Mr. Webster said. “I really gave him a blast. It was just more of the same. The expectation is that if you work for the Mounties you align your values with the corporate culture and if you don’t that’s being disloyal and is unhealthy.”

Chief Supt. Bent said in an e-mail Wednesday that he did phone Mr. Webster because of concerns that Mr. Webster was making statements to the media about the RCMP’s guidelines for handling potentially violent situations that he felt weren’t accurate.

He confirmed that he told Mr. Webster that other RCMP members were upset and didn’t want the Mounties to give the renowned intervention specialist any more work. He said it wasn’t intended to be a threat.

To Mr. Webster, his run-in with the Mounties reflects a more serious and systemic problem inside the organization, one recognized in the report into the RCMP pension-fund scandal. That report suggested the force was a troubled organization that did not abide dissent of any kind. And those who did offer opposing views were often shunted off to dead-end jobs and forced to wave promotions goodbye.

“As a psychologist, I know it’s not healthy for people to live in such an oppressive climate,” Mr. Webster said. “Being a member of the RCMP today is like being part of Putin’s Russia; they don’t tolerate any opinion that doesn’t reflect the party line.”

A devastating charge. Mr. Webster currently has a one-year contract with the Mounties. After it expires next April, he has no idea if more work will be offered to him.

“I find it offensive that I’m expected to park my morals at the door if I’m going to be part of the organization,” Mr. Webster said. “If that’s what it means, I won’t do it. I just won’t.”

Mike Webster has never operated that way.

Tories losing ground with voters

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Tories losing ground with voters
BRIAN LAGHI

From Wednesday’s Globe and Mail

May 13, 2008 at 9:48 PM EDT

OTTAWA — The federal Tories have emerged from a controversy-laden winter scarcely ahead of the equally beat-up Liberals as Canadians express insecurity about their children’s economic future.

The results of a new wide-ranging poll for The Globe and Mail-CTV News finds Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservatives a scant three percentage points ahead of Stéphane Dion’s Liberals, 34 to 31. Mr. Harper’s government has fallen from a height of 39 per cent in February, when the party was inching into majority government territory. Moreover, voters in Ontario, a keystone to a potential Conservative majority, are telling their government that it’s not doing enough to help them weather turbulent economic waters.

The Tories have also experienced significant erosion among voters in Quebec and among those earning less than $50,000 a year.

“The Conservatives have been on the defensive for the last several months,” said Peter Donolo of the Strategic Counsel, the polling firm that conducted the survey. “The economy is starting to become top of mind, and they seem to have difficulty going on the offensive.”

Ottawa bureau chief Brian Laghi on federal politics
Can Harper align Venus with Mars?
Internet Links
The complete poll in a PDF file
Mr. Donolo added that the Liberals under Mr. Dion’s leadership may not have done much better over the past few months, but “you know the way it is. The main Opposition party benefits by default.”

The Liberal support of 31 per cent is up a point from last month and four points from February. By contrast, the Tories, at 34 per cent, dropped two points from last month and five points from their postelection high in February. The NDP inched up one point, to 16 per cent, while the Greens stayed the same at 10. The Bloc Québécois continues to lead in Quebec with 38 per cent.

Mr. Donolo said the trend line for the Tories over the winter should be a concern, adding that every time the Conservatives bump into majority territory, they appear to drift back down.

The poll results were released amid a litany of difficulties for the Conservatives, which include the election financing in-and-out scheme, controversies surrounding Foreign Affairs Minister Maxime Bernier, diplomatic leaks that allegedly affected the U.S. Democratic primary campaign of Barack Obama and allegations that party members once offered a million-dollar insurance policy for the parliamentary vote of the late MP Chuck Cadman.

But Mr. Donolo said yesterday that one of the biggest concerns for the Tories should be anxiety about the economy. According to the poll, 47 per cent of Canadians surveyed believe teenagers today will not be as well off at the age of 30 as are current 30-year-olds.

The anxiety about the future also shows up in surveys on the environment, said another pollster, Greg Lyle of Innovative Research Group Inc., and will provide an opportunity for a party that wants to address it.

“It’s an agenda waiting to happen for someone wanting to grab it,” Mr. Lyle said. “It will hit a responsive chord.”

Also potentially disquieting for the Tories is a sense of unease in Ontario.

The survey found that 64 per cent of Ontarians agree that the federal government hasn’t done enough to help the province through its current downturn. More important, Mr. Lyle said, only 22 per cent of those surveyed said they disagreed. The figure is a concern because it suggests that a good portion of Tory supporters in Ontario either believe the government has not done enough or are neutral on the issue.

In Canada’s most populous province, the Liberals lead with 40-per-cent support, compared with 35 per cent for the Conservatives.

In Quebec, the Tories have seen their support drop to 20 per cent from 25 per cent, which is five points below the 2006 election. The Liberals are up five points to 25 per cent.

Another difficulty for the Conservatives appears to be among those earning less than $50,000, where support has fallen to 23 per cent from 33 per cent. On the other hand, the Conservatives have bumped up significantly among those whose household income is greater than $100,000.

Mr. Lyle said the results do not portend an election being sparked by any party.

The survey of 1,000 Canadians was conducted May 8 to 11 and is accurate to within 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

VOTING INTENTIONS

On each survey date, in a Globe and Mail/CTV-sponsored poll, 1,000 Canadians

were asked which party they would support if an election were held the next day.

PREVIOUS POLLS

2006 Jun 7-8, 2006 Jun. 8-11, 2007 Oct. 11-14 Nov. 12-13 Feb. 14-17, 2008 Mar. 13-16 April 10-13
CONSERVATIVE 36% 36% 34% 34% 34% 39% 38% 36%
LIBERAL 30 27 31 29 31 27 27 30
NDP 18 19 13 15 16 12 14 15
BLOC QUEBECOIS 11 10 11 10 11 10 10 8
GREEN 5 9 11 12 8 12 12 10

LATEST POLL May 8-11

Canada Ontario Quebec
CONSERVATIVE 34% 35% 20%
LIBERAL 31 40 25
NDP 16 14 8
BLOC QUEBECOIS 9 N/A 38
GREEN 10 11 9

Note: Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding.

DEAN TWEED/THE GLOBE AND MAIL

SOURCE: THE STRATEGIC COUNSEL

ONTARIO

The rocketing price of oil is upsetting the economic balance in Canada to the point where Ontario is becoming a have-not province, virtually half of Canadians have come to believe.

The results are part of a wide-ranging series of questions, the results of which also demonstrate Canadians believe that economic difficulties in the country’s most populated province could end up hurting everyone.

According to the poll, 49 per cent of those surveyed agreed when asked whether the price of oil is upsetting Canada’s economic equilibrium and leading to Ontario becoming a “have-not province.” While westerners were less likely to feel that way, 52 per cent of Ontarians believed it and an even larger number of Quebeckers - 60 per cent - agreed.

The issue could create difficulties for the Tories in both Ontario and Quebec, said Peter Donolo, a partner with the polling firm the Strategic Counsel.

“That is a trouble area for the Conservatives,” he said. “The concern for the government here is what’s starting as an Ontario problem for them could become a central Canada problem for them if they’re not careful.”

Meanwhile, almost two-thirds of Canadians surveyed say Ontario has lost its position as Canada’s most prosperous province, while three-quarters believe that an economic downturn in the province is bad for everybody.

Of those surveyed, 75 per cent said the rest of the country will be hurt by difficulties in Ontario, with 72 per cent of westerners in agreement. Eighty-three per cent of Ontarians surveyed think economic difficulties in their province will reverberate negatively in the rest of the country.

Brian Laghi

ECONOMIC POSITION

Do Canadians believe that teenagers today will be better off when they are 30 years old than someone who is that age today?

Better off: 22%

About the same: 25%

Not as well-off: 47%

DK/NA/Ref: 7%

Note: Percentages may not add

up to 100 due to rounding.

SOURCE: THE STRATEGIC COUNSEL

They may be afraid for their children, but most Canadians still think they’re better off than their parents were.

According to the Strategic Counsel poll conducted for The Globe and Mail-CTV News, 53 per cent of Canadians surveyed say they think they are better off than their parents were at their age. The most satisfied age group are women over 50, 61 per cent of whom say they are doing better than their parents were. Those least satisfied are men in the same age group, with only 28 per cent saying they’re better off than their folks were.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the wealthiest Canadians are more likely to rate themselves as better off than their parents, with 70 per cent saying they’re doing better.

Similarly, 51 per cent of Canadians believe their economic situation is better than it was 10 years ago. Satisfaction levels rise with education. According to the poll, 60 per cent of respondents with college or university degrees said their economic situation is better than 10 years ago, while only 38 per cent of those with high school education or less felt that way.

But when asked whether the economic position of the middle class has improved, become worse or remained about the same, 36 per cent said it had deteriorated, while only 19 per cent said it had improved. Forty-two per cent said it had remained the same.

In another portion of the survey, a plurality of Canadians think today’s teens won’t do as well as young adults do today. Of those polled, 47 per cent said teenagers today will not be as well off at 30 as are current 30-year-olds, while only 22 per cent believe those adolescents have a rosier future.

The sampling also shows that Canadians think the main reason for the trend in the past 25 years of both parents working outside the home is simple: They need the money. Of those surveyed, 60 per cent said parents both need to work to keep up economically, while 12 per cent said working outside the home was more fulfilling. Twenty-four per cent said both need to work to afford luxuries that their parents didn’t have.

Brian Laghi

GAS PRICES

Agree or disagree: With the price of gas being so high, the federal government should lower the gas tax, even though this may lead to it running a deficit

Somewhat agree: 22%

Strongly agree: 35%

Neither agree nor disagree: 5%

Somewhat disagree: 18%

Strongly disagree: 18%

DK/NA/Ref: 3%

Note: Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding.

SOURCE: THE STRATEGIC COUNSEL

The pain of cutting the deficit, apparently, is nothing compared to the ache Canadians feel when filling up the gas tank.

Voters have told pollsters they’d be fine with allowing the federal government to run a budget deficit if it decided to reduce federal taxes on gasoline. According to the Strategic Counsel survey, 57 per cent of Canadians agree that the price of gas is so high these days that Ottawa should lower the tax even if leads to overspending.

Supporters across the political spectrum would support the move, the poll showed. Indeed, backers of the Greens are the strongest supporters of a cut, with 70 per cent saying the levy should be reduced, pollsters said.

The strong feelings are probably good news for Canada’s left-wing parties, which could campaign against oil companies, said Greg Lyle of Innovative Research Group Inc. The poll found that 50 per cent of Canadians believe oil companies making excessive profits are most responsible for the increase in gas prices.

Brian Laghi

24 SUSSEX DR.

It’s an old house and Canadians don’t seem to mind much if it keeps on looking that way.

Sixty-three per cent of Canadians surveyed say they oppose the idea of spending $10-million to repair the Prime Minister’s official residence at 24 Sussex Dr. in Ottawa. By contrast, only one-third of Canadians support the notion.

“Canadians are implacable egalitarians,” said Peter Donolo, a partner with the polling firm the Strategic Counsel. “I think it would actually take a roof shingle falling off and hitting the Prime Minister on the head for Canadians to support spending any money on it.”

For his part, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said he sees no reason for a substantial renovation at this time, despite suggestions by Auditor-General Sheila Fraser that the renovations be done sooner rather than later.

Brian Laghi

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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080514.wsell14/BNStory/National/home

Tory pitch falling flat, focus group tests find
STEVEN CHASE

From Wednesday’s Globe and Mail

May 14, 2008 at 4:52 AM EDT

OTTAWA — The Harper government is having a hard time convincing Canadians that it is different from Liberal predecessors when it comes to managing the public purse, market research conducted for Ottawa shows.

It’s an image problem for Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservatives, who swept into office 25 months ago with vows to clean up Ottawa and rein in spending after the Liberal sponsorship scandal.

“Arguably, most of what we heard suggests that participants have reverted to seeing this government as indistinguishable in many key respects [from] the previous one,” says a January, 2008, report prepared for the Treasury Board, which vets federal spending.

A consulting firm hired by the Treasury Board conducted 14 focus groups in nine Canadian cities last fall to test marketing messages for the Harper government’s “new approach” to managing federal spending.

“On the whole, participants reacted negatively to most of the messages tested; testifying to the difficulty Treasury Board Secretariat may have in convincing Canadians of the benefits associated with this new approach,” said the report, prepared by Patterson, Langlois Consultants.

The report also warned Ottawa to assume that Canadians are not broadly aware of the Harper government’s agenda and achievements. “The tested messages may be susceptible to the erroneous presumption that awareness of the government’s agenda is building.”

The Conservatives frequently blame the former Liberal governments’ 13-year tenure when they face criticism.

But the research report warned this doesn’t work.

“When an acknowledgment of problems is accompanied by any detectable attempt to lay blame or pass the buck, the behaviour is seen as consistent with that of previous governments,” the report said.

“It appears equally imperative that the government be seen to be assuming responsibility for that state of affairs, even if the root problem may reasonably be attributed to a previous government.”

The firm told Ottawa that receptiveness to messages about how the federal government is managing money hadn’t improved over last year, despite the fact the pitch included phrases that were especially designed to resonate, including “obtaining measurable results, taxpayers’ money, value for money and reflecting Canadians’ priorities.”

“We are simply confronting evidence that the negative disposition … toward initiatives such as the [new expenditure management system] has become ingrained - reinforced by the perception that nothing significant has changed in government in years.”

Canadian Taxpayers Federation director John Williamson said the fact that the Harper government failed to rein in spending during its first two years may be contributing to public cynicism. Program spending grew nearly 14 per cent over that period.

Mike Storeshaw, spokesman for Tory Treasury Board President Vic Toews, said the study’s purpose was to determine ways to better communicate with Canadians.

Monsanto’s Harvest of Fear

http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/05/monsanto200805

Videos
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Investigation

Monsanto’s Harvest of Fear
Monsanto already dominates America’s food chain with its genetically modified seeds. Now it has targeted milk production. Just as frightening as the corporation’s tactics–ruthless legal battles against small farmers–is its decades-long history of toxic contamination.
by Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele May 2008

Gary Rinehart clearly remembers the summer day in 2002 when the stranger walked in and issued his threat. Rinehart was behind the counter of the Square Deal, his “old-time country store,” as he calls it, on the fading town square of Eagleville, Missouri, a tiny farm community 100 miles north of Kansas City.

The Square Deal is a fixture in Eagleville, a place where farmers and townspeople can go for lightbulbs, greeting cards, hunting gear, ice cream, aspirin, and dozens of other small items without having to drive to a big-box store in Bethany, the county seat, 15 miles down Interstate 35.

Everyone knows Rinehart, who was born and raised in the area and runs one of Eagleville’s few surviving businesses. The stranger came up to the counter and asked for him by name.

“Well, that’s me,” said Rinehart.

As Rinehart would recall, the man began verbally attacking him, saying he had proof that Rinehart had planted Monsanto’s genetically modified (G.M.) soybeans in violation of the company’s patent. Better come clean and settle with Monsanto, Rinehart says the man told him—or face the consequences.

Rinehart was incredulous, listening to the words as puzzled customers and employees looked on. Like many others in rural America, Rinehart knew of Monsanto’s fierce reputation for enforcing its patents and suing anyone who allegedly violated them. But Rinehart wasn’t a farmer. He wasn’t a seed dealer. He hadn’t planted any seeds or sold any seeds. He owned a small—a really small—country store in a town of 350 people. He was angry that somebody could just barge into the store and embarrass him in front of everyone. “It made me and my business look bad,” he says. Rinehart says he told the intruder, “You got the wrong guy.”

When the stranger persisted, Rinehart showed him the door. On the way out the man kept making threats. Rinehart says he can’t remember the exact words, but they were to the effect of: “Monsanto is big. You can’t win. We will get you. You will pay.”

Scenes like this are playing out in many parts of rural America these days as Monsanto goes after farmers, farmers’ co-ops, seed dealers—anyone it suspects may have infringed its patents of genetically modified seeds. As interviews and reams of court documents reveal, Monsanto relies on a shadowy army of private investigators and agents in the American heartland to strike fear into farm country. They fan out into fields and farm towns, where they secretly videotape and photograph farmers, store owners, and co-ops; infiltrate community meetings; and gather information from informants about farming activities. Farmers say that some Monsanto agents pretend to be surveyors. Others confront farmers on their land and try to pressure them to sign papers giving Monsanto access to their private records. Farmers call them the “seed police” and use words such as “Gestapo” and “Mafia” to describe their tactics.

When asked about these practices, Monsanto declined to comment specifically, other than to say that the company is simply protecting its patents. “Monsanto spends more than $2 million a day in research to identify, test, develop and bring to market innovative new seeds and technologies that benefit farmers,” Monsanto spokesman Darren Wallis wrote in an e-mailed letter to Vanity Fair. “One tool in protecting this investment is patenting our discoveries and, if necessary, legally defending those patents against those who might choose to infringe upon them.” Wallis said that, while the vast majority of farmers and seed dealers follow the licensing agreements, “a tiny fraction” do not, and that Monsanto is obligated to those who do abide by its rules to enforce its patent rights on those who “reap the benefits of the technology without paying for its use.” He said only a small number of cases ever go to trial.

Some compare Monsanto’s hard-line approach to Microsoft’s zealous efforts to protect its software from pirates. At least with Microsoft the buyer of a program can use it over and over again. But farmers who buy Monsanto’s seeds can’t even do that.
The Control of Nature

For centuries—millennia—farmers have saved seeds from season to season: they planted in the spring, harvested in the fall, then reclaimed and cleaned the seeds over the winter for re-planting the next spring. Monsanto has turned this ancient practice on its head.

Monsanto developed G.M. seeds that would resist its own herbicide, Roundup, offering farmers a convenient way to spray fields with weed killer without affecting crops. Monsanto then patented the seeds. For nearly all of its history the United States Patent and Trademark Office had refused to grant patents on seeds, viewing them as life-forms with too many variables to be patented. “It’s not like describing a widget,” says Joseph Mendelson III, the legal director of the Center for Food Safety, which has tracked Monsanto’s activities in rural America for years.

Indeed not. But in 1980 the U.S. Supreme Court, in a five-to-four decision, turned seeds into widgets, laying the groundwork for a handful of corporations to begin taking control of the world’s food supply. In its decision, the court extended patent law to cover “a live human-made microorganism.” In this case, the organism wasn’t even a seed. Rather, it was a Pseudomonas bacterium developed by a General Electric scientist to clean up oil spills. But the precedent was set, and Monsanto took advantage of it. Since the 1980s, Monsanto has become the world leader in genetic modification of seeds and has won 674 biotechnology patents, more than any other company, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data.

Farmers who buy Monsanto’s patented Roundup Ready seeds are required to sign an agreement promising not to save the seed produced after each harvest for re-planting, or to sell the seed to other farmers. This means that farmers must buy new seed every year. Those increased sales, coupled with ballooning sales of its Roundup weed killer, have been a bonanza for Monsanto.

This radical departure from age-old practice has created turmoil in farm country. Some farmers don’t fully understand that they aren’t supposed to save Monsanto’s seeds for next year’s planting. Others do, but ignore the stipulation rather than throw away a perfectly usable product. Still others say that they don’t use Monsanto’s genetically modified seeds, but seeds have been blown into their fields by wind or deposited by birds. It’s certainly easy for G.M. seeds to get mixed in with traditional varieties when seeds are cleaned by commercial dealers for re-planting. The seeds look identical; only a laboratory analysis can show the difference. Even if a farmer doesn’t buy G.M. seeds and doesn’t want them on his land, it’s a safe bet he’ll get a visit from Monsanto’s seed police if crops grown from G.M. seeds are discovered in his fields.

Most Americans know Monsanto because of what it sells to put on our lawns— the ubiquitous weed killer Roundup. What they may not know is that the company now profoundly influences—and one day may virtually control—what we put on our tables. For most of its history Monsanto was a chemical giant, producing some of the most toxic substances ever created, residues from which have left us with some of the most polluted sites on earth. Yet in a little more than a decade, the company has sought to shed its polluted past and morph into something much different and more far-reaching—an “agricultural company” dedicated to making the world “a better place for future generations.” Still, more than one Web log claims to see similarities between Monsanto and the fictional company “U-North” in the movie Michael Clayton, an agribusiness giant accused in a multibillion-dollar lawsuit of selling an herbicide that causes cancer.

Monsanto’s genetically modified seeds have transformed the company and are radically altering global agriculture. So far, the company has produced G.M. seeds for soybeans, corn, canola, and cotton. Many more products have been developed or are in the pipeline, including seeds for sugar beets and alfalfa. The company is also seeking to extend its reach into milk production by marketing an artificial growth hormone for cows that increases their output, and it is taking aggressive steps to put those who don’t want to use growth hormone at a commercial disadvantage.

Even as the company is pushing its G.M. agenda, Monsanto is buying up conventional-seed companies. In 2005, Monsanto paid $1.4 billion for Seminis, which controlled 40 percent of the U.S. market for lettuce, tomatoes, and other vegetable and fruit seeds. Two weeks later it announced the acquisition of the country’s third-largest cottonseed company, Emergent Genetics, for $300 million. It’s estimated that Monsanto seeds now account for 90 percent of the U.S. production of soybeans, which are used in food products beyond counting. Monsanto’s acquisitions have fueled explosive growth, transforming the St. Louis–based corporation into the largest seed company in the world.

In Iraq, the groundwork has been laid to protect the patents of Monsanto and other G.M.-seed companies. One of L. Paul Bremer’s last acts as head of the Coalition Provisional Authority was an order stipulating that “farmers shall be prohibited from re-using seeds of protected varieties.” Monsanto has said that it has no interest in doing business in Iraq, but should the company change its mind, the American-style law is in place.

To be sure, more and more agricultural corporations and individual farmers are using Monsanto’s G.M. seeds. As recently as 1980, no genetically modified crops were grown in the U.S. In 2007, the total was 142 million acres planted. Worldwide, the figure was 282 million acres. Many farmers believe that G.M. seeds increase crop yields and save money. Another reason for their attraction is convenience. By using Roundup Ready soybean seeds, a farmer can spend less time tending to his fields. With Monsanto seeds, a farmer plants his crop, then treats it later with Roundup to kill weeds. That takes the place of labor-intensive weed control and plowing.

Monsanto portrays its move into G.M. seeds as a giant leap for mankind. But out in the American countryside, Monsanto’s no-holds-barred tactics have made it feared and loathed. Like it or not, farmers say, they have fewer and fewer choices in buying seeds.

And controlling the seeds is not some abstraction. Whoever provides the world’s seeds controls the world’s food supply.
Under Surveillance

After Monsanto’s investigator confronted Gary Rinehart, Monsanto filed a federal lawsuit alleging that Rinehart “knowingly, intentionally, and willfully” planted seeds “in violation of Monsanto’s patent rights.” The company’s complaint made it sound as if Monsanto had Rinehart dead to rights:

During the 2002 growing season, Investigator Jeffery Moore, through surveillance of Mr. Rinehart’s farm facility and farming operations, observed Defendant planting brown bag soybean seed. Mr. Moore observed the Defendant take the brown bag soybeans to a field, which was subsequently loaded into a grain drill and planted. Mr. Moore located two empty bags in the ditch in the public road right-of-way beside one of the fields planted by Rinehart, which contained some soybeans. Mr. Moore collected a small amount of soybeans left in the bags which Defendant had tossed into the public right-of way. These samples tested positive for Monsanto’s Roundup Ready technology.

Faced with a federal lawsuit, Rinehart had to hire a lawyer. Monsanto eventually realized that “Investigator Jeffery Moore” had targeted the wrong man, and dropped the suit. Rinehart later learned that the company had been secretly investigating farmers in his area. Rinehart never heard from Monsanto again: no letter of apology, no public concession that the company had made a terrible mistake, no offer to pay his attorney’s fees. “I don’t know how they get away with it,” he says. “If I tried to do something like that it would be bad news. I felt like I was in another country.”

Gary Rinehart is actually one of Monsanto’s luckier targets. Ever since commercial introduction of its G.M. seeds, in 1996, Monsanto has launched thousands of investigations and filed lawsuits against hundreds of farmers and seed dealers. In a 2007 report, the Center for Food Safety, in Washington, D.C., documented 112 such lawsuits, in 27 states.

Even more significant, in the Center’s opinion, are the numbers of farmers who settle because they don’t have the money or the time to fight Monsanto. “The number of cases filed is only the tip of the iceberg,” says Bill Freese, the Center’s science-policy analyst. Freese says he has been told of many cases in which Monsanto investigators showed up at a farmer’s house or confronted him in his fields, claiming he had violated the technology agreement and demanding to see his records. According to Freese, investigators will say, “Monsanto knows that you are saving Roundup Ready seeds, and if you don’t sign these information-release forms, Monsanto is going to come after you and take your farm or take you for all you’re worth.” Investigators will sometimes show a farmer a photo of himself coming out of a store, to let him know he is being followed.

Lawyers who have represented farmers sued by Monsanto say that intimidating actions like these are commonplace. Most give in and pay Monsanto some amount in damages; those who resist face the full force of Monsanto’s legal wrath.
Scorched-Earth Tactics

Pilot Grove, Missouri, population 750, sits in rolling farmland 150 miles west of St. Louis. The town has a grocery store, a bank, a bar, a nursing home, a funeral parlor, and a few other small businesses. There are no stoplights, but the town doesn’t need any. The little traffic it has comes from trucks on their way to and from the grain elevator on the edge of town. The elevator is owned by a local co-op, the Pilot Grove Cooperative Elevator, which buys soybeans and corn from farmers in the fall, then ships out the grain over the winter. The co-op has seven full-time employees and four computers.

In the fall of 2006, Monsanto trained its legal guns on Pilot Grove; ever since, its farmers have been drawn into a costly, disruptive legal battle against an opponent with limitless resources. Neither Pilot Grove nor Monsanto will discuss the case, but it is possible to piece together much of the story from documents filed as part of the litigation.

Monsanto began investigating soybean farmers in and around Pilot Grove several years ago. There is no indication as to what sparked the probe, but Monsanto periodically investigates farmers in soybean-growing regions such as this one in central Missouri. The company has a staff devoted to enforcing patents and litigating against farmers. To gather leads, the company maintains an 800 number and encourages farmers to inform on other farmers they think may be engaging in “seed piracy.”

Once Pilot Grove had been targeted, Monsanto sent private investigators into the area. Over a period of months, Monsanto’s investigators surreptitiously followed the co-op’s employees and customers and videotaped them in fields and going about other activities. At least 17 such surveillance videos were made, according to court records. The investigative work was outsourced to a St. Louis agency, McDowell & Associates. It was a McDowell investigator who erroneously fingered Gary Rinehart. In Pilot Grove, at least 11 McDowell investigators have worked the case, and Monsanto makes no bones about the extent of this effort: “Surveillance was conducted throughout the year by various investigators in the field,” according to court records. McDowell, like Monsanto, will not comment on the case.

Not long after investigators showed up in Pilot Grove, Monsanto subpoenaed the co-op’s records concerning seed and herbicide purchases and seed-cleaning operations. The co-op provided more than 800 pages of documents pertaining to dozens of farmers. Monsanto sued two farmers and negotiated settlements with more than 25 others it accused of seed piracy. But Monsanto’s legal assault had only begun. Although the co-op had provided voluminous records, Monsanto then sued it in federal court for patent infringement. Monsanto contended that by cleaning seeds—a service which it had provided for decades—the co-op was inducing farmers to violate Monsanto’s patents. In effect, Monsanto wanted the co-op to police its own customers.

In the majority of cases where Monsanto sues, or threatens to sue, farmers settle before going to trial. The cost and stress of litigating against a global corporation are just too great. But Pilot Grove wouldn’t cave—and ever since, Monsanto has been turning up the heat. The more the co-op has resisted, the more legal firepower Monsanto has aimed at it. Pilot Grove’s lawyer, Steven H. Schwartz, described Monsanto in a court filing as pursuing a “scorched earth tactic,” intent on “trying to drive the co-op into the ground.”

Even after Pilot Grove turned over thousands more pages of sales records going back five years, and covering virtually every one of its farmer customers, Monsanto wanted more—the right to inspect the co-op’s hard drives. When the co-op offered to provide an electronic version of any record, Monsanto demanded hands-on access to Pilot Grove’s in-house computers.

Monsanto next petitioned to make potential damages punitive—tripling the amount that Pilot Grove might have to pay if found guilty. After a judge denied that request, Monsanto expanded the scope of the pre-trial investigation by seeking to quadruple the number of depositions. “Monsanto is doing its best to make this case so expensive to defend that the Co-op will have no choice but to relent,” Pilot Grove’s lawyer said in a court filing.

With Pilot Grove still holding out for a trial, Monsanto now subpoenaed the records of more than 100 of the co-op’s customers. In a “You are Commanded … ” notice, the farmers were ordered to gather up five years of invoices, receipts, and all other papers relating to their soybean and herbicide purchases, and to have the documents delivered to a law office in St. Louis. Monsanto gave them two weeks to comply.

Whether Pilot Grove can continue to wage its legal battle remains to be seen. Whatever the outcome, the case shows why Monsanto is so detested in farm country, even by those who buy its products. “I don’t know of a company that chooses to sue its own customer base,” says Joseph Mendelson, of the Center for Food Safety. “It’s a very bizarre business strategy.” But it’s one that Monsanto manages to get away with, because increasingly it’s the dominant vendor in town.
Chemicals? What Chemicals?

The Monsanto Company has never been one of America’s friendliest corporate citizens. Given Monsanto’s current dominance in the field of bioengineering, it’s worth looking at the company’s own DNA. The future of the company may lie in seeds, but the seeds of the company lie in chemicals. Communities around the world are still reaping the environmental consequences of Monsanto’s origins.

Monsanto was founded in 1901 by John Francis Queeny, a tough, cigar-smoking Irishman with a sixth-grade education. A buyer for a wholesale drug company, Queeny had an idea. But like a lot of employees with ideas, he found that his boss wouldn’t listen to him. So he went into business for himself on the side. Queeny was convinced there was money to be made manufacturing a substance called saccharin, an artificial sweetener then imported from Germany. He took $1,500 of his savings, borrowed another $3,500, and set up shop in a dingy warehouse near the St. Louis waterfront. With borrowed equipment and secondhand machines, he began producing saccharin for the U.S. market. He called the company the Monsanto Chemical Works, Monsanto being his wife’s maiden name.

The German cartel that controlled the market for saccharin wasn’t pleased, and cut the price from $4.50 to $1 a pound to try to force Queeny out of business. The young company faced other challenges. Questions arose about the safety of saccharin, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture even tried to ban it. Fortunately for Queeny, he wasn’t up against opponents as aggressive and litigious as the Monsanto of today. His persistence and the loyalty of one steady customer kept the company afloat. That steady customer was a new company in Georgia named Coca-Cola.

Monsanto added more and more products—vanillin, caffeine, and drugs used as sedatives and laxatives. In 1917, Monsanto began making aspirin, and soon became the largest maker worldwide. During World War I, cut off from imported European chemicals, Monsanto was forced to manufacture its own, and its position as a leading force in the chemical industry was assured.

After Queeny was diagnosed with cancer, in the late 1920s, his only son, Edgar, became president. Where the father had been a classic entrepreneur, Edgar Monsanto Queeny was an empire builder with a grand vision. It was Edgar—shrewd, daring, and intuitive (“He can see around the next corner,” his secretary once said)—who built Monsanto into a global powerhouse. Under Edgar Queeny and his successors, Monsanto extended its reach into a phenomenal number of products: plastics, resins, rubber goods, fuel additives, artificial caffeine, industrial fluids, vinyl siding, dishwasher detergent, anti-freeze, fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides. Its safety glass protects the U.S. Constitution and the Mona Lisa. Its synthetic fibers are the basis of Astroturf.

During the 1970s, the company shifted more and more resources into biotechnology. In 1981 it created a molecular-biology group for research in plant genetics. The next year, Monsanto scientists hit gold: they became the first to genetically modify a plant cell. “It will now be possible to introduce virtually any gene into plant cells with the ultimate goal of improving crop productivity,” said Ernest Jaworski, director of Monsanto’s Biological Sciences Program.

Over the next few years, scientists working mainly in the company’s vast new Life Sciences Research Center, 25 miles west of St. Louis, developed one genetically modified product after another—cotton, soybeans, corn, canola. From the start, G.M. seeds were controversial with the public as well as with some farmers and European consumers. Monsanto has sought to portray G.M. seeds as a panacea, a way to alleviate poverty and feed the hungry. Robert Shapiro, Monsanto’s president during the 1990s, once called G.M. seeds “the single most successful introduction of technology in the history of agriculture, including the plow.”

By the late 1990s, Monsanto, having rebranded itself into a “life sciences” company, had spun off its chemical and fibers operations into a new company called Solutia. After an additional reorganization, Monsanto re-incorporated in 2002 and officially declared itself an “agricultural company.”

In its company literature, Monsanto now refers to itself disingenuously as a “relatively new company” whose primary goal is helping “farmers around the world in their mission to feed, clothe, and fuel” a growing planet. In its list of corporate milestones, all but a handful are from the recent era. As for the company’s early history, the decades when it grew into an industrial powerhouse now held potentially responsible for more than 50 Environmental Protection Agency Superfund sites—none of that is mentioned. It’s as though the original Monsanto, the company that long had the word “chemical” as part of its name, never existed. One of the benefits of doing this, as the company does not point out, was to channel the bulk of the growing backlog of chemical lawsuits and liabilities onto Solutia, keeping the Monsanto brand pure.

But Monsanto’s past, especially its environmental legacy, is very much with us. For many years Monsanto produced two of the most toxic substances ever known— polychlorinated biphenyls, better known as PCBs, and dioxin. Monsanto no longer produces either, but the places where it did are still struggling with the aftermath, and probably always will be.
“Systemic Intoxication”

Twelve miles downriver from Charleston, West Virginia, is the town of Nitro, where Monsanto operated a chemical plant from 1929 to 1995. In 1948 the plant began to make a powerful herbicide known as 2,4,5-T, called “weed bug” by the workers. A by-product of the process was the creation of a chemical that would later be known as dioxin.

The name dioxin refers to a group of highly toxic chemicals that have been linked to heart disease, liver disease, human reproductive disorders, and developmental problems. Even in small amounts, dioxin persists in the environment and accumulates in the body. In 1997 the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a branch of the World Health Organization, classified the most powerful form of dioxin as a substance that causes cancer in humans. In 2001 the U.S. government listed the chemical as a “known human carcinogen.”

On March 8, 1949, a massive explosion rocked Monsanto’s Nitro plant when a pressure valve blew on a container cooking up a batch of herbicide. The noise from the release was a scream so loud that it drowned out the emergency steam whistle for five minutes. A plume of vapor and white smoke drifted across the plant and out over town.Residue from the explosion coated the interior of the building and those inside with what workers described as “a fine black powder.” Many felt their skin prickle and were told to scrub down.

Within days, workers experienced skin eruptions. Many were soon diagnosed with chloracne, a condition similar to common acne but more severe, longer lasting, and potentially disfiguring. Others felt intense pains in their legs, chest, and trunk. A confidential medical report at the time said the explosion “caused a systemic intoxication in the workers involving most major organ systems.” Doctors who examined four of the most seriously injured men detected a strong odor coming from them when they were all together in a closed room. “We believe these men are excreting a foreign chemical through their skins,” the confidential report to Monsanto noted. Court records indicate that 226 plant workers became ill.

According to court documents that have surfaced in a West Virginia court case, Monsanto downplayed the impact, stating that the contaminant affecting workers was “fairly slow acting” and caused “only an irritation of the skin.”

In the meantime, the Nitro plant continued to produce herbicides, rubber products, and other chemicals. In the 1960s, the factory manufactured Agent Orange, the powerful herbicide which the U.S. military used to defoliate jungles during the Vietnam War, and which later was the focus of lawsuits by veterans contending that they had been harmed by exposure. As with Monsanto’s older herbicides, the manufacturing of Agent Orange created dioxin as a by-product.

As for the Nitro plant’s waste, some was burned in incinerators, some dumped in landfills or storm drains, some allowed to run into streams. As Stuart Calwell, a lawyer who has represented both workers and residents in Nitro, put it, “Dioxin went wherever the product went, down the sewer, shipped in bags, and when the waste was burned, out in the air.”

In 1981 several former Nitro employees filed lawsuits in federal court, charging that Monsanto had knowingly exposed them to chemicals that caused long-term health problems, including cancer and heart disease. They alleged that Monsanto knew that many chemicals used at Nitro were potentially harmful, but had kept that information from them. On the eve of a trial, in 1988, Monsanto agreed to settle most of the cases by making a single lump payment of $1.5 million. Monsanto also agreed to drop its claim to collect $305,000 in court costs from six retired Monsanto workers who had unsuccessfully charged in another lawsuit that Monsanto had recklessly exposed them to dioxin. Monsanto had attached liens to the retirees’ homes to guarantee collection of the debt.

Monsanto stopped producing dioxin in Nitro in 1969, but the toxic chemical can still be found well beyond the Nitro plant site. Repeated studies have found elevated levels of dioxin in nearby rivers, streams, and fish. Residents have sued to seek damages from Monsanto and Solutia. Earlier this year, a West Virginia judge merged those lawsuits into a class-action suit. A Monsanto spokesman said, “We believe the allegations are without merit and we’ll defend ourselves vigorously.” The suit will no doubt take years to play out. Time is one thing that Monsanto always has, and that the plaintiffs usually don’t.
Poisoned Lawns

Five hundred miles to the south, the people of Anniston, Alabama, know all about what the people of Nitro are going through. They’ve been there. In fact, you could say, they’re still there.

From 1929 to 1971, Monsanto’s Anniston works produced PCBs as industrial coolants and insulating fluids for transformers and other electrical equipment. One of the wonder chemicals of the 20th century, PCBs were exceptionally versatile and fire-resistant, and became central to many American industries as lubricants, hydraulic fluids, and sealants. But PCBs are toxic. A member of a family of chemicals that mimic hormones, PCBs have been linked to damage in the liver and in the neurological, immune, endocrine, and reproductive systems. The Environmental Protection Agency (E.P.A.) and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, part of the Department of Health and Human Services, now classify PCBs as “probable carcinogens.”

Today, 37 years after PCB production ceased in Anniston, and after tons of contaminated soil have been removed to try to reclaim the site, the area around the old Monsanto plant remains one of the most polluted spots in the U.S.

People in Anniston find themselves in this fix today largely because of the way Monsanto disposed of PCB waste for decades. Excess PCBs were dumped in a nearby open-pit landfill or allowed to flow off the property with storm water. Some waste was poured directly into Snow Creek, which runs alongside the plant and empties into a larger stream, Choccolocco Creek. PCBs also turned up in private lawns after the company invited Anniston residents to use soil from the plant for their lawns, according to The Anniston Star.

So for decades the people of Anniston breathed air, planted gardens, drank from wells, fished in rivers, and swam in creeks contaminated with PCBs—without knowing anything about the danger. It wasn’t until the 1990s—20 years after Monsanto stopped making PCBs in Anniston—that widespread public awareness of the problem there took hold.

Studies by health authorities consistently found elevated levels of PCBs in houses, yards, streams, fields, fish, and other wildlife—and in people. In 2003, Monsanto and Solutia entered into a consent decree with the E.P.A. to clean up Anniston. Scores of houses and small businesses were to be razed, tons of contaminated soil dug up and carted off, and streambeds scooped of toxic residue. The cleanup is under way, and it will take years, but some doubt it will ever be completed—the job is massive. To settle residents’ claims, Monsanto has also paid $550 million to 21,000 Anniston residents exposed to PCBs, but many of them continue to live with PCBs in their bodies. Once PCB is absorbed into human tissue, there it forever remains.

Monsanto shut down PCB production in Anniston in 1971, and the company ended all its American PCB operations in 1977. Also in 1977, Monsanto closed a PCB plant in Wales. In recent years, residents near the village of Groesfaen, in southern Wales, have noticed vile odors emanating from an old quarry outside the village. As it turns out, Monsanto had dumped thousands of tons of waste from its nearby PCB plant into the quarry. British authorities are struggling to decide what to do with what they have now identified as among the most contaminated places in Britain.
“No Cause for Public Alarm”

What had Monsanto known—or what should it have known—about the potential dangers of the chemicals it was manufacturing? There’s considerable documentation lurking in court records from many lawsuits indicating that Monsanto knew quite a lot. Let’s look just at the example of PCBs.

The evidence that Monsanto refused to face questions about their toxicity is quite clear. In 1956 the company tried to sell the navy a hydraulic fluid for its submarines called Pydraul 150, which contained PCBs. Monsanto supplied the navy with test results for the product. But the navy decided to run its own tests. Afterward, navy officials informed Monsanto that they wouldn’t be buying the product. “Applications of Pydraul 150 caused death in all of the rabbits tested” and indicated “definite liver damage,” navy officials told Monsanto, according to an internal Monsanto memo divulged in the course of a court proceeding. “No matter how we discussed the situation,” complained Monsanto’s medical director, R. Emmet Kelly, “it was impossible to change their thinking that Pydraul 150 is just too toxic for use in submarines.”

Ten years later, a biologist conducting studies for Monsanto in streams near the Anniston plant got quick results when he submerged his test fish. As he reported to Monsanto, according to The Washington Post, “All 25 fish lost equilibrium and turned on their sides in 10 seconds and all were dead in 3½ minutes.”

When the Food and Drug Administration (F.D.A.) turned up high levels of PCBs in fish near the Anniston plant in 1970, the company swung into action to limit the P.R. damage. An internal memo entitled “confidential—f.y.i. and destroy” from Monsanto official Paul B. Hodges reviewed steps under way to limit disclosure of the information. One element of the strategy was to get public officials to fight Monsanto’s battle: “Joe Crockett, Secretary of the Alabama Water Improvement Commission, will try to handle the problem quietly without release of the information to the public at this time,” according to the memo.

Despite Monsanto’s efforts, the information did get out, but the company was able to blunt its impact. Monsanto’s Anniston plant manager “convinced” a reporter for The Anniston Star that there was really nothing to worry about, and an internal memo from Monsanto’s headquarters in St. Louis summarized the story that subsequently appeared in the newspaper: “Quoting both plant management and the Alabama Water Improvement Commission, the feature emphasized the PCB problem was relatively new, was being solved by Monsanto and, at this point, was no cause for public alarm.”

In truth, there was enormous cause for public alarm. But that harm was done by the “Original Monsanto Company,” not “Today’s Monsanto Company” (the words and the distinction are Monsanto’s). The Monsanto of today says that it can be trusted—that its biotech crops are “as wholesome, nutritious and safe as conventional crops,” and that milk from cows injected with its artificial growth hormone is the same as, and as safe as, milk from any other cow.
The Milk Wars

Jeff Kleinpeter takes very good care of his dairy cows. In the winter he turns on heaters to warm their barns. In the summer, fans blow gentle breezes to cool them, and on especially hot days, a fine mist floats down to take the edge off Louisiana’s heat. The dairy has gone “to the ultimate end of the earth for cow comfort,” says Kleinpeter, a fourth-generation dairy farmer in Baton Rouge. He says visitors marvel at what he does: “I’ve had many of them say, ‘When I die, I want to come back as a Kleinpeter cow.’ ”

Monsanto would like to change the way Jeff Kleinpeter and his family do business. Specifically, Monsanto doesn’t like the label on Kleinpeter Dairy’s milk cartons: “From Cows Not Treated with rBGH.” To consumers, that means the milk comes from cows that were not given artificial bovine growth hormone, a supplement developed by Monsanto that can be injected into dairy cows to increase their milk output.

No one knows what effect, if any, the hormone has on milk or the people who drink it. Studies have not detected any difference in the quality of milk produced by cows that receive rBGH, or rBST, a term by which it is also known. But Jeff Kleinpeter—like millions of consumers—wants no part of rBGH. Whatever its effect on humans, if any, Kleinpeter feels certain it’s harmful to cows because it speeds up their metabolism and increases the chances that they’ll contract a painful illness that can shorten their lives. “It’s like putting a Volkswagen car in with the Indianapolis 500 racers,” he says. “You gotta keep the pedal to the metal the whole way through, and pretty soon that poor little Volkswagen engine’s going to burn up.”

Kleinpeter Dairy has never used Monsanto’s artificial hormone, and the dairy requires other dairy farmers from whom it buys milk to attest that they don’t use it, either. At the suggestion of a marketing consultant, the dairy began advertising its milk as coming from rBGH-free cows in 2005, and the label began appearing on Kleinpeter milk cartons and in company literature, including a new Web site of Kleinpeter products that proclaims, “We treat our cows with love … not rBGH.”

The dairy’s sales soared. For Kleinpeter, it was simply a matter of giving consumers more information about their product.

But giving consumers that information has stirred the ire of Monsanto. The company contends that advertising by Kleinpeter and other dairies touting their “no rBGH” milk reflects adversely on Monsanto’s product. In a letter to the Federal Trade Commission in February 2007, Monsanto said that, notwithstanding the overwhelming evidence that there is no difference in the milk from cows treated with its product, “milk processors persist in claiming on their labels and in advertisements that the use of rBST is somehow harmful, either to cows or to the people who consume milk from rBST-supplemented cows.”

Monsanto called on the commission to investigate what it called the “deceptive advertising and labeling practices” of milk processors such as Kleinpeter, accusing them of misleading consumers “by falsely claiming that there are health and safety risks associated with milk from rBST-supplemented cows.” As noted, Kleinpeter does not make any such claims—he simply states that his milk comes from cows not injected with rBGH.

Monsanto’s attempt to get the F.T.C. to force dairies to change their advertising was just one more step in the corporation’s efforts to extend its reach into agriculture. After years of scientific debate and public controversy, the F.D.A. in 1993 approved commercial use of rBST, basing its decision in part on studies submitted by Monsanto. That decision allowed the company to market the artificial hormone. The effect of the hormone is to increase milk production, not exactly something the nation needed then—or needs now. The U.S. was actually awash in milk, with the government buying up the surplus to prevent a collapse in prices.

Monsanto began selling the supplement in 1994 under the name Posilac. Monsanto acknowledges that the possible side effects of rBST for cows include lameness, disorders of the uterus, increased body temperature, digestive problems, and birthing difficulties. Veterinary drug reports note that “cows injected with Posilac are at an increased risk for mastitis,” an udder infection in which bacteria and pus may be pumped out with the milk. What’s the effect on humans? The F.D.A. has consistently said that the milk produced by cows that receive rBGH is the same as milk from cows that aren’t injected: “The public can be confident that milk and meat from BST-treated cows is safe to consume.” Nevertheless, some scientists are concerned by the lack of long-term studies to test the additive’s impact, especially on children. A Wisconsin geneticist, William von Meyer, observed that when rBGH was approved the longest study on which the F.D.A.’s approval was based covered only a 90-day laboratory test with small animals. “But people drink milk for a lifetime,” he noted. Canada and the European Union have never approved the commercial sale of the artificial hormone. Today, nearly 15 years after the F.D.A. approved rBGH, there have still been no long-term studies “to determine the safety of milk from cows that receive artificial growth hormone,” says Michael Hansen, senior staff scientist for Consumers Union. Not only have there been no studies, he adds, but the data that does exist all comes from Monsanto. “There is no scientific consensus about the safety,” he says.

However F.D.A. approval came about, Monsanto has long been wired into Washington. Michael R. Taylor was a staff attorney and executive assistant to the F.D.A. commissioner before joining a law firm in Washington in 1981, where he worked to secure F.D.A. approval of Monsanto’s artificial growth hormone before returning to the F.D.A. as deputy commissioner in 1991. Dr. Michael A. Friedman, formerly the F.D.A.’s deputy commissioner for operations, joined Monsanto in 1999 as a senior vice president. Linda J. Fisher was an assistant administrator at the E.P.A. when she left the agency in 1993. She became a vice president of Monsanto, from 1995 to 2000, only to return to the E.P.A. as deputy administrator the next year. William D. Ruckelshaus, former E.P.A. administrator, and Mickey Kantor, former U.S. trade representative, each served on Monsanto’s board after leaving government. Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas was an attorney in Monsanto’s corporate-law department in the 1970s. He wrote the Supreme Court opinion in a crucial G.M.-seed patent-rights case in 2001 that benefited Monsanto and all G.M.-seed companies. Donald Rumsfeld never served on the board or held any office at Monsanto, but Monsanto must occupy a soft spot in the heart of the former defense secretary. Rumsfeld was chairman and C.E.O. of the pharmaceutical maker G. D. Searle & Co. when Monsanto acquired Searle in 1985, after Searle had experienced difficulty in finding a buyer. Rumsfeld’s stock and options in Searle were valued at $12 million at the time of the sale.

From the beginning some consumers have consistently been hesitant to drink milk from cows treated with artificial hormones. This is one reason Monsanto has waged so many battles with dairies and regulators over the wording of labels on milk cartons. It has sued at least two dairies and one co-op over labeling.

Critics of the artificial hormone have pushed for mandatory labeling on all milk products, but the F.D.A. has resisted and even taken action against some dairies that labeled their milk “BST-free.” Since BST is a natural hormone found in all cows, including those not injected with Monsanto’s artificial version, the F.D.A. argued that no dairy could claim that its milk is BST-free. The F.D.A. later issued guidelines allowing dairies to use labels saying their milk comes from “non-supplemented cows,” as long as the carton has a disclaimer saying that the artificial supplement does not in any way change the milk. So the milk cartons from Kleinpeter Dairy, for example, carry a label on the front stating that the milk is from cows not treated with rBGH, and the rear panel says, “Government studies have shown no significant difference between milk derived from rBGH-treated and non-rBGH-treated cows.” That’s not good enough for Monsanto.
The Next Battleground

As more and more dairies have chosen to advertise their milk as “No rBGH,” Monsanto has gone on the offensive. Its attempt to force the F.T.C. to look into what Monsanto called “deceptive practices” by dairies trying to distance themselves from the company’s artificial hormone was the most recent national salvo. But after reviewing Monsanto’s claims, the F.T.C.’s Division of Advertising Practices decided in August 2007 that a “formal investigation and enforcement action is not warranted at this time.” The agency found some instances where dairies had made “unfounded health and safety claims,” but these were mostly on Web sites, not on milk cartons. And the F.T.C. determined that the dairies Monsanto had singled out all carried disclaimers that the F.D.A. had found no significant differences in milk from cows treated with the artificial hormone.

Blocked at the federal level, Monsanto is pushing for action by the states. In the fall of 2007, Pennsylvania’s agriculture secretary, Dennis Wolff, issued an edict prohibiting dairies from stamping milk containers with labels stating their products were made without the use of the artificial hormone. Wolff said such a label implies that competitors’ milk is not safe, and noted that non-supplemented milk comes at an unjustified higher price, arguments that Monsanto has frequently made. The ban was to take effect February 1, 2008.

Wolff’s action created a firestorm in Pennsylvania (and beyond) from angry consumers. So intense was the outpouring of e-mails, letters, and calls that Pennsylvania governor Edward Rendell stepped in and reversed his agriculture secretary, saying, “The public has a right to complete information about how the milk they buy is produced.”

On this issue, the tide may be shifting against Monsanto. Organic dairy products, which don’t involve rBGH, are soaring in popularity. Supermarket chains such as Kroger, Publix, and Safeway are embracing them. Some other companies have turned away from rBGH products, including Starbucks, which has banned all milk products from cows treated with rBGH. Although Monsanto once claimed that an estimated 30 percent of the nation’s dairy cows were injected with rBST, it’s widely believed that today the number is much lower.

But don’t count Monsanto out. Efforts similar to the one in Pennsylvania have been launched in other states, including New Jersey, Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, Utah, and Missouri. A Monsanto-backed group called afact—American Farmers for the Advancement and Conservation of Technology—has been spearheading efforts in many of these states. afact describes itself as a “producer organization” that decries “questionable labeling tactics and activism” by marketers who have convinced some consumers to “shy away from foods using new technology.” afact reportedly uses the same St. Louis public-relations firm, Osborn & Barr, employed by Monsanto. An Osborn & Barr spokesman told The Kansas City Star that the company was doing work for afact on a pro bono basis.

Even if Monsanto’s efforts to secure across-the-board labeling changes should fall short, there’s nothing to stop state agriculture departments from restricting labeling on a dairy-by-dairy basis. Beyond that, Monsanto also has allies whose foot soldiers will almost certainly keep up the pressure on dairies that don’t use Monsanto’s artificial hormone. Jeff Kleinpeter knows about them, too.

He got a call one day from the man who prints the labels for his milk cartons, asking if he had seen the attack on Kleinpeter Dairy that had been posted on the Internet. Kleinpeter went online to a site called StopLabelingLies, which claims to “help consumers by publicizing examples of false and misleading food and other product labels.” There, sure enough, Kleinpeter and other dairies that didn’t use Monsanto’s product were being accused of making misleading claims to sell their milk.

There was no address or phone number on the Web site, only a list of groups that apparently contribute to the site and whose issues range from disparaging organic farming to downplaying the impact of global warming. “They were criticizing people like me for doing what we had a right to do, had gone through a government agency to do,” says Kleinpeter. “We never could get to the bottom of that Web site to get that corrected.”

As it turns out, the Web site counts among its contributors Steven Milloy, the “junk science” commentator for FoxNews.com and operator of junkscience.com, which claims to debunk “faulty scientific data and analysis.” It may come as no surprise that earlier in his career, Milloy, who calls himself the “junkman,” was a registered lobbyist for Monsanto.

Dion touts carbon tax, billions in tax cuts

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Dion touts carbon tax, billions in tax cuts
Proposal making some Liberals nervous as gas prices soar

JANE TABER AND BRIAN LAGHI

From Thursday’s Globe and Mail

May 8, 2008 at 3:30 AM EDT

OTTAWA — Stéphane Dion is poised to unveil a carbon-tax scheme and attempt to neutralize any political damage by offering corresponding personal income tax cuts of between $10-billion and $13-billion to working Canadians, senior Liberal sources say.

The Liberal Leader wants this major environmental policy to be the centrepiece of the party’s election campaign platform, according to the sources, and is anxious to reveal it this summer to give Canadians a chance to digest the idea before a federal election.

The plan, according to sources, would shift the 10-cent federal excise tax on a litre of fuel at the pumps into a broad-based carbon tax that would also apply to other fuels, such as for home heating. Sources say that the plan would not add more taxes to gasoline.

But the key is that the money raised – estimated as much as $17-billion – would be returned to middle-class and working Canadians in personal income tax cuts, making it revenue neutral. There could be corporate tax cuts as well.

The policy of a broadly based fuel tax is making some Liberals nervous, because gasoline prices are rising at warp speed and Canadians are being punished at the pumps.

“Just in the short time Dion has mused about a carbon tax, the Conservatives have already preframed the issue negatively in the media,” said a veteran Liberal strategist who opposes releasing the plan now.

“Imagine what they will do with the actual material in a sinking economy,” he says.

“The issue is Stephen Harper and there is a wealth of material to take him down. Instead, we pass that up to launch a summer of Dion. No wonder Liberal morale is so low.”

But without risk there are no rewards, supporters of the initiative say. And in announcing his plan now, Mr. Dion is attempting to grab the “green” ground and attract NDP and Green Party voters.

Senior Liberal sources say he will try to frame the carbon plan as a “revenue shift” or “tax shift,” not a tax.

Those who are close to Mr. Dion say he wants to make a daring move because he believes it is right.

“I know Stéphane well enough; contrary to rumour, he’s got a really strong spirit, strong will, he’s not a coward,” says Peter Russell, professor emeritus in political science at the University of Toronto, who has encouraged Mr. Dion to adopt a carbon-tax policy.

“And he may have a sense that boldness at this time is what the country is maybe looking for.”

A senior Liberal strategist concurs: “I think he is going to run on it and make it the platform of his campaign. He’s a man who believes in what is right. The political side doesn’t really interest him.”

And that’s the problem, according to the insider: The only way to implement ideas in politics is to get elected. Carbon pricing is a complicated issue that the Harper Conservatives will likely portray as just a tax grab.

However, a Canadian Press-Harris-Decima survey released yesterday suggests 61 per cent of Canadians support the idea of a carbon tax on businesses and people, even though an overwhelming majority also favour using taxes to punish or reward green behaviour.

The Tories have repeatedly rejected a carbon tax. They prefer stricter carbon-emission controls for big polluters. The Liberals want to get the issue to the public well before a federal vote to ensure Mr. Dion doesn’t get tripped up trying to explain a complicated scheme during the hurly-burly of an election campaign.

Mr. Dion’s plan follows closely a proposal laid out recently by Jack Mintz, the former president of the C.D. Howe Institute, who recently moved to the University of Calgary.

Mr. Dion and his supporters repeatedly mention the model, created by Prof. Mintz and Nancy Olewiler of Simon Fraser University, when talking about how to deal with the environment.

The Mintz model would shift the federal fuel excise tax to a broad-based carbon tax, which would raise about $17-billion.

“It’s a lot of money and you can cut corporate and personal taxes about 8 to 10 per cent,” Prof. Mintz said.

Meanwhile, a well-placed Liberal source says that Liberal finance critic John McCallum and several former Department of Finance officials have worked on the tax-savings portion of the plan.

The carbon tax and other environmental proposals have been tested by focus groups, insiders say.

The Dion Liberals are also looking at the B.C. Liberal government’s graduated carbon tax, which is to be returned to British Columbians in tax breaks.

Some federal Liberals who are nervous about the carbon-tax initiative have noted that the Gordon Campbell Liberals did not campaign on their plan.

On July 1, when British Columbians will begin their summer holidays, gasoline prices will rise an additional 2.4 cents a litre. However, other Liberals believe that the relatively positive reception given to Mr. Campbell’s ideas will insulate them from future criticism.

And although Prof. Mintz believes in a carbon tax as a way to improve the environment, he doesn’t want it to become a campaign debate.

“I wish it didn’t become an election campaign issue,” he said. “… Right now people don’t know which direction to go in … it’s like a horse race right now amongst the governments and they are all jumping out of the starting gate but they are running in different directions.”

Dion weak, uninspiring but still more likeable than PM Harper: poll

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Dion weak, uninspiring but still more likeable than PM: poll

The Canadian Press

May 8, 2008 at 2:52 PM EDT

OTTAWA — A new poll suggests most Canadians think Stéphane Dion is weak, uninspiring and unintelligible.

But, for all his flaws, they still find the Liberal leader somewhat more likable than Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

The Canadian Press-Harris/Decima survey explores why Mr. Dion’s Liberals have not been able capitalize on lingering reservations about Harper’s Conservatives.

It suggests that Mr. Dion’s biggest problem is his inability to communicate; 58 per cent of respondents said he seems to have trouble communicating effectively.

Fifty-three per cent said Mr. Dion doesn’t offer much optimism or inspiration while an equal percentage said he seems like a weak leader.

Forty-seven per cent said there’s something about Mr. Dion they don’t like, compared to 55 per cent who said the same thing about Mr. Harper.

The telephone poll of just over 1,000 Canadians was conducted May 1-4 and is considered accurate to within 3.1 percentage points, 19 times in 20.

Conservatives spend $1.1-million ad campaign to sell controversial immigration reforms not yet passed

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$1.1-million ad campaign sells reforms not yet passed

CAMPBELL CLARK

From Thursday’s Globe and Mail

May 8, 2008 at 4:59 AM EDT

OTTAWA — The Conservative government plans to spend more than $1-million on an ad campaign in ethnic newspapers to sell controversial immigration changes that are not yet law.

The taxpayer-funded ads taken out in more than 100 ethnic community newspapers in a variety of languages have sparked criticism because the changes have not yet been passed into law, and they were included in a budget bill that, if defeated by the opposition, would trigger an election.

Now, Immigration Department spokeswoman Karen Shadd says the estimated cost for the controversial four-week ad campaign tops $1.1-million.

“$1.1-million? It’s huge,” NDP immigration critic Olivia Chow said.

“It’s not legislation yet, and they should not use taxpayers’ money to promote Conservative propaganda.

“I think they are afraid of the reaction of the immigrant communities.”

Ms. Shadd said in an e-mail that all the ads will run in ethnic or third-language publications or on radio programs, with the exception of one magazine, Canadian Immigrant.

The president of the National Ethnic Press and Media Council, Tom Saras, estimated that the ads have run in about 140 papers so far, and said most ethnic newspapers charge $600 to $800 for a full-page ad.

The print versions of the ads say they are a “public notice,” the label given to advertising supposedly aimed at providing utilitarian information about a policy change.

But critics such as Ms. Chow noted that the new ads contain little or no detail on the nature of the changes, and instead tout the benefits the government says they will bring, like “faster processing times” for immigration applications and “better employment opportunities.”

Ms. Shadd said that the government chose to run the ads to counter what it says is false information about the planned changes.

“Statements have been made that the proposed changes will allow the minister to give instructions on individual cases and that the proposed legislation will negatively impact on family class and refugees - this is not the case, and the public notice campaign seeks to correct that,” she said.

An English-language copy of the ad provided by the government makes no mention of refugees, however.

The planned changes to Canada’s immigration law would give the minister the power to pick classes of immigrants whose applications would be processed first and to send back applications that don’t make the cut.

That represents a major change from the current system, where any immigrant who meets the qualifications can expect to be allowed into Canada eventually, even if it takes years for their application to be processed.

But it will not affect anyone who has already applied to come to Canada, and Immigration Minister Diane Finley has not said which categories will be high or low priorities - raising questions from critics such as Ms. Chow about the point of a campaign now.

Ms. Finley has said the changes will allow her department to whittle down the backlog of more than 900,000 applications.

That will allow them to reduce waiting times, which now can be several years, to a few months, she said.

However, senior officials in her department have conceded that for some applicants the new system could mean longer waits.

While high-priority categories will be processed more quickly, those in lower-priority categories could have their applications returned untouched year after year.

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