Not Doer's playbook
Ashton lays out veritable
potpourri of socialist policy
By
TOM BRODBECK
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.
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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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