Not Doer's playbook

Ashton lays out veritable potpourri of socialist policy

18th September 2009

I have to hand it to NDP leadership hopeful Steve Ashton. The guy actually stands for something.

While his two opponents -- Andrew Swan and Greg Selinger -- run around offering almost no new ideas on where they'd like to take government, Ashton is out there almost every day laying out a smorgasbord of tangible campaign pledges.

Yesterday alone, Ashton announced more substantive policy ideas in one day than we've heard from his two opponents combined since the beginning of the race.

Ashton says he would jack up welfare rates for all recipients to ensure they can meet the true cost of living.

Major shift

In some cases, that would mean increasing annual welfare payments by $13,000 for single, employable recipients. It would be a major policy shift for government.

Ashton also pledged no one living with a serious disability would live in poverty. For a single individual in Winnipeg, that would mean government would have to ensure everyone with a serious disability was getting no less than $18,000 a year -- the so-called poverty line.

Ashton would build 1,500 new subsidized housing units over five years. He would expand affirmative action programs. He'd bring back the tuition freeze and ensure every high school kid could get a summer job.

It's a veritable potpourri of socialist policy -- something his opponents have steered very clear of.

I wouldn't be surprised if Ashton pledged to bring in anti-scab legislation -- a law banning replacement workers during strikes.

Swan and Selinger have had very little in the way of tangible policy ideas, preferring instead to boast about how many MLAs and cabinet ministers they have in their back pockets.

Selinger has vowed to improve high school dropout rates, but hasn't said how. He says he would extend the 60% tuition rebate to students who are still in school. He would raise the floodway gates in the summer to regulate the city's riverwalk. And yesterday he pledged to make Red River College the "hub for plug-in hybrid technology."

Not very inspiring stuff.

Swan says he'll raise welfare rates by $20 a month and exempt the wages of apprentices or journeymen from the province's payroll tax. And he won't make a decision on the proposed harmonized sales tax for at least two years.

It's a pretty thin gruel.

By contrast, Ashton has been laying out a much broader policy platform that embraces traditional New Democratic values. It may not win the NDP an election in 2011. Manitoba voters have little appetite for a hard shift to the political left.

But Ashton at least stands up for what he believes in.

Selinger and Swan prefer to take a page out of the Gary Doer playbook: do nothing, stay in the political centre and don't rock the boat.

Inaction was the secret to Doer's political success. Even the political risks he did take in order to appease organized labour -- including robbing workers of the right to secret-ballot votes in some cases during certification drives -- were done early in his mandate to cushion the blow.

Selinger and Swan are hoping to mimic that strategy.

What will be fascinating to watch is where party faithful land on all this. Are they prepared under Swan or Selinger to keep drinking the same watered down wine they've been sipping since 1999? Or do they believe it's time to get back to traditional NDP principles and support the kind of social-democratic campaign Ashton is proposing?

We'll find out Oct. 17.

 
President of BC Professional Fire Fighters Association, Mike Hurley, Edmonton Fire Fighters President Greg Holubowich, I.A.F.F. 6th District VP Lorne West and Canadian Trustee and UFFW President Alex Forrest  were in attendance at the Memorial for Ted Hall and Arnie Quinones who died in the Line of Duty in the Station Fire near Los Angeles.

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Firefighters died in effort to escape

Authorities believe Ted Hall and Arnie Quinones were searching for a way out for personnel trapped at Camp 16 when overrun by fire. Their vehicle plunged down a mountain, killing the two men.

Everything that has made the Angeles National Forest wildfire so fierce and intractable -- extreme heat, treacherous terrain, bone-dry conditions left by years of drought -- seems to have converged on the lonely hilltop where Ted Hall and Arnie Quinones died.

Hidden in the forest, high above the Antelope Valley to the north and Los Angeles to the south, the hilltop is a hostile place now. By Monday, the flames had reduced the bluffs in every direction to a blackened moonscape, interrupted only by boulders, plumes of smoke and downed power lines draped like bunting from the gnarled limbs of charred trees. Dust devils, tiny tornadoes of ash and soot, raced up the hills, and small rodents overcome by smoke lay dead on the ground.

Until Sunday, this was home to tiny, remote prison Camp 16, where Los Angeles County Fire Capt. Tedmund "Ted" Hall, 47, and Firefighter Specialist Arnaldo "Arnie" Quinones, 34, had worked for eight years and four years, respectively, supervising inmates trained in wilderness protection.

Hall, who was married and the father of two grown sons, and Quinones, married and expecting his first child in the next few weeks, were killed Sunday when their truck went over the side of a dirt road and fell 800 feet into a canyon.

Selfless act

Although the investigation was just beginning Monday, state corrections officials said it appeared Hall and Quinones may have died while searching for an escape route for three corrections workers, other fire personnel and 55 inmates who rode out the fire inside the camp's dining hall as flames roared up the adjacent hills.

Hall and Quinones were repositioning their truck on the small path, a stone's throw from the camp, "apparently taking action to protect the camp facilities and personnel," county Fire Chief P. Michael Freeman said in a statement. No one knows why the truck went off the road, he said; it appears, said Capt. Michael Brown, that Hall and Quinones may have been "overrun by fire."

Investigators said they were not yet sure how all the survivors got down the mountain after the fire passed.

But California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Secretary Matthew Cate said in a statement that Hall and Quinones "are to be credited with helping to save the lives" of the others. "If it wasn't for their selfless actions, the loss of life could have been greater," Cate said.

Word of the deaths raced through firefighting circles Monday; between them, Hall and Quinones had been firefighters for 34 years and had worked in more than a dozen stations throughout L.A. County.

Tributes to the two men poured in, from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, from U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, from local elected officials. In Sacramento, the Assembly planned to adjourn in the firefighters' honor. And at a fire camp near La Cañada Flintridge on Monday, a flag was lowered to half-staff and firefighters who were touched by the incident -- those who knew Hall and Quinones or took part in retrieving their bodies -- met privately with a chaplain and counselor.

Still, there was little time to mourn; the blaze, dubbed the Station fire, had ballooned overnight and was advancing in three directions.

"We all grieve together," Brown said. "But we all understand the dangerous nature of our job. There is still a job to complete."

Special place

Camp 16 was part of an unusual collaboration between the county and state corrections officials.

Roughly 100 state inmates were serving their sentences at the camp, one of six inmate camps in L.A. County. The men lived in a single-story dormitory now reduced to a concrete slab and cinder block walls, and many were trained in frontline wildland management, sent into wilderness areas that machines could not reach.

They hauled around sandbags to protect against winter floods, cleared hiking and running trails, "anything where additional hands are needed," Brown said. Some of their most important work came during fire season, when they helped clear brush and establish breaks to halt advancing flames -- under the watchful eye of Hall, who served as their superintendent, and Quinones, one of their foremen.

The camp positions are considered prestigious and are sought after within the department, said Battalion Chief Nick Duvally. Firefighters interviewed Monday said their work is invigorating but that flurries of intense activity are often followed by hours spent idling on fire lines. At the camps, Duvally said, "You are always on the edge."

On Monday, reflecting the chaos surrounding the incident, abandoned hoses were still strewn around, and even getting to Camp 16 was hazardous. Tree limbs, still smoldering, had fallen across the access road, and flames licked at its edges wherever there was unburned foliage.

At the camp, east of Mt. Gleason and west of Mill Creek Summit, solemn-faced investigators from the Fire Department and the California Highway Patrol huddled on the dirt path where Hall and Quinones last drove.

The gates of the camp had been burned away, leaving jagged stumps on both sides of the path. The wind surged up the side of the ravine where Hall and Quinones died, coating investigators' faces with soot, sweeping in swarms of bees and sending huge crows somersaulting through the air.

Officials said it was clear that Hall and Quinones had died during a harrowing firestorm.

Tough job

About half of the inmates housed at Camp 16 had been evacuated earlier in the weekend; the 55 who remained were trained in wildfire suppression, officials said.

When flames approached the facility, the prisoners, corrections employees and other personnel ran into a parking area, where they watched the structure burn, said corrections department spokeswoman Terry Thornton.

She said it appears that Hall and Quinones were looking for a way out when their truck slipped off the road. All inmates have been accounted for, officials said.

Quinones joined the county Fire Department in 1998 and graduated from the Fire Academy three years later.

He served at stations in Palmdale, Covina and La Cañada Flintridge and joined the crew at Camp 16 after being promoted to specialist in December 2005.

He is survived by his wife, Loressa, and his mother, Sonia Quinones.

Hall joined the department in April 1981 as a student worker before he had even been accepted into the academy.

After graduating in 1983, he served at a host of fire stations and facilities, including stations in Lakewood, Whittier, La Puente and La Cañada Flintridge.

He was promoted to captain in January 2001 and began working at Camp 16 a few months later.

He is survived by his wife, Katherine; sons Randall, 21, and Steven, 20; and his parents, Roland Ray and Donna Marie Hall.

County Fire Capt. Rudy Gilson on Monday recalled sharing eggs and sausage with Hall while battling another recent fire in the national forest. Hall spoke, as usual, about two things: fire tactics and his family, his colleague remembered.

"He spent every free moment with his family," Gilson said. "Camping, get-togethers, motorcycle riding -- anything outdoors. . . He lived life to the fullest."

As the flames marched through the forest last weekend, Hall took pains to ensure that firefighters sent there to battle the blaze had cots to rest on and enough food and water.

"He was a person who would do anything for you," said county Fire Investigator Gil Sanchez, as he stood on the charred hilltop Monday afternoon. Sanchez, a leader of the accident investigation, counted Hall among his close friends.

"He wanted to make sure everyone was taken care of -- before he took care of his own needs," Sanchez said. "This is taking a toll on all of us."
 

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Station Fire Claims Two Fire Fighters in California

Two firefighters, members of  IAFF Local 1014 - Los Angeles County, California, were killed when they drove off the side of a treacherous road in the Mt. Gleason area, south of Acton, around 2:30 p.m., said Los Angeles County Deputy Fire Chief Mike Bryant. They were later identified as Arnaldo Quinones, 35, of Palmdale and Tedmund Hall, 47, of San Bernardino County. 

"This accident is tragic," Bryant said, choking up as he spoke Sunday evening. "This is a very difficult time for L.A. County Fire Department and the men and women that serve day in, day out."

The giant fire in Angeles National Forest continued its slow-motion rampage through the mountains Sunday as it bore down on the semirural community of Acton and threatened to overrun Mt. Wilson.

Crews struggle to contain a 42,500-acre blaze that's 'still very much out of control.' The flames have continued to spread despite relatively low winds, and continuing heat will keep them going.

 

 Buffalo

Two firefighters die as floor collapses at East Side deli fire

Firefighters continue to work at the scene of the fire on Genesee Street near Bailey Avenue this morning.
 

Two Buffalo firefighters were killed and one civilian is missing after an early morning fire on Genesee Street on the city's East Side. Around 10 a.m., two flag-draped gurneys were wheeled from the scene of the blaze at a two-story brick building at Genesee and Wende streets. Reports from the scene indicated the two firefighters may have fallen through the first floor while searching for a civilian victim.

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Fire Fighter and Executive Board Member Tom Bilous attended the final reading of a Bill introduced by Kirkfield Park NDP MLA Sharon Blady.  The Service Animals Protection Act, is designed to protect service animals and the people who use them.  This includes disabled people, search and rescue and police.

Under the act touching, feeding, or impeding the animal’s duties is an offence that could result in a fine of up to $5,000 for the first offence and $10,000 for a second offence. It also allows judges to order offenders to pay compensation to the animal’s owner if loss or damage occurs.

Although animal protection laws exist under the Criminal Code of Canada they provide penalties for injuring or killing animals and do not provide for any course of action to be taken if someone interferes with the ability of a service animal to do its job.

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Westwood fire claims life of former principal

WINNIPEG — A house fire in the city's Westwood neighbourhood has claimed the life of a retired principal of an area school.

Firefighters were called to a home on Byrd Avenue about 10 p.m. and found a fire that had started in the basement had spread to the main floor.

Winnipeg police said this morning a 79-year-old man person died after a house fire.

Neighbours identified the couple who lived in the home as John Atamanchuk, 79, who was principal at John Taylor Collegiate before he retired in 1989, and his 75-year-old wife, Oli.

John Atamanchuk suffered severe burns in the fire. His wife suffered smoke inhalation.  Both were taken in critical condition to the Health Sciences Centre, where John Atamanchuk succumbed to his injuries.

Damage to the home and contents was estimated at $175,000. Police say at this stage of the investigation, the cause of the fire appears accidental.

Another fire just after 3 a.m. at 775 Dufferin Avenue sent one firefighter to hospital with minor injuries.

The fire began in the kitchen of a one-storey woodframe home. Damage to the structure was estimated at $50,000.

 

Erna Braun, MLA for Rossmere, makes Private Member's Statement re National Firefighters Week and Presents a copy of the Statement to UFFW Executive
   

 

Mr. Speaker, I rise to recognize National Firefighters Week, September 6 to September 12. This is a week that asks us to remember the dedication of firefighters across Canada. I echo the words of our Premier (Mr. Doer) when I say that Manitoba firefighters represent a unique group of highly dedicated men and women who routinely place the safety and needs of, others before their own.

I am therefore proud to be a part of a government that has consistently supported firefighters. Manitoba made history when it amended the Workers' Compensation Act in 2002 to reflect medical and scientific studies that show a strong association 'between the dangerous working' conditions experienced by firefighters and the occurrence of certain diseases.

These amendments made Manitoba the only Canadian jurisdiction to have a law presuming that certain diseases: primary site brain cancer, bladder or kidney cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma or leukemia, are caused by firefighting. Other provincial jurisdictions have since. Introduced and passed similar legislation.

      This tremendous achievement did not go unnoticed and our Premier was the first politician in over a decade to address the International Association of Fire Fighters convention that year.

Manitoba's leadership on this issue continues. Just last month the United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg president, Alex Forrest, won election as a trustee to the International Association of Fire Fighters.                       

      Mr. Speaker, I want to take this time to say thank you to those who choose this profession as a way of life.                                                      .             .          .                                                    .

I also want to take a moment to give thanks to the families of firefighters.

      It is also a time to remember with solemn reflection and honour those who have sacrificed and lost their lives in the line of duty. We have experienced a number of losses this year and the family and friends of those firefighters remain in our hearts and in our prayers.                     .

To the firefighters across this province, I wish to say thank you. Thank you for the bravery that you show, thank you for the volunteer hours that you devote in addition to your job and.

Thank you for being a part of our community.                                                                                           

 

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