Saturday 16 May 2020

Premier 'disappointed' more people aren't applying for vacant jobs

---------- Original message ----------
From: "Higgs, Premier Blaine (PO/CPM)" <Blaine.Higgs@gnb.ca>
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 14:05:59 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Yo Minister Mikey a "Long Beard" just called
a few of your hunting buddies Methinks its not fair for CBC to support
the liberal agenda I bet your buddies don't think so either N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

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Thank you.


Bonjour,

Nous vous remercions d’avoir pris le temps de nous écrire.

Tenant compte du volume élevé de courriels que nous recevons
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Merci.


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Email/Courriel: premier@gnb.ca/premier.ministre@gnb.ca




---------- Original message ----------
From: "Moore, Rob - M.P." <Rob.Moore@parl.gc.ca>
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 14:06:00 +0000
Subject: Thank you for your email
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

On behalf of the Honourable Rob Moore, P.C., M.P. thank you for your
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---------- Original message ----------
From: Andy.Fillmore@parl.gc.ca
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 14:05:58 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Yo Minister Mikey a "Long Beard" just called
a few of your hunting buddies Methinks its not fair for CBC to support
the liberal agenda I bet your buddies don't think so either N'esy Pas?
To: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com

Hello, thank you for your email. Our office is currently receiving an
extraordinary volume of correspondence related to COVID-19.

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https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/economic-response-plan.html.

Thank you,

Office of Andy Fillmore
Member of Parliament for Halifax




---------- Original message ----------
From: Premier <PREMIER@novascotia.ca>
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 14:06:09 +0000
Subject: Automatic Reply
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for your email to Premier McNeil. This is an automatic
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We recognize that Nova Scotians have concerns about novel coronavirus
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If you are experiencing symptoms, please use the COVID-19 online
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Premier’s Correspondence Team



---------- Original message ----------
From: Office of the Premier <scott.moe@gov.sk.ca>
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 14:05:58 +0000
Subject: Thank you for your email
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

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---------- Original message ----------
From: Premier of Ontario | Premier ministre de l’Ontario <Premier@ontario.ca>
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 14:05:59 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Yo Minister Mikey a "Long Beard" just called
a few of your hunting buddies Methinks its not fair for CBC to support
the liberal agenda I bet your buddies don't think so either N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

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---------- Original message ----------
From: Office of the Premier <Premier@gov.ab.ca>
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 14:06:09 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Yo Minister Mikey a "Long Beard" just called
a few of your hunting buddies Methinks its not fair for CBC to support
the liberal agenda I bet your buddies don't think so either N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for contacting the Premier of Alberta.

Since May 1, the Alberta government has been moving forward with a
plan to reopen businesses and services and get people back to work.
Information about Alberta’s COVID-19 relaunch strategy is available
here<https://www.alberta.ca/alberta-relaunch-strategy.aspx#stage1>.

As we roll out this plan, it is essential that Albertans continue to
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visit alberta.ca/covid19<http://www.alberta.ca/covid-19> and
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https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies




Replying to @alllibertynews and 49 others
Methinks Higgy et al are gonna have an interesting long weekend scheming about what to do on the 26th N'esy Pas?



https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2020/05/premier-disappointed-more-people-arent.html







https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/covid-19-coronavirus-pandemic-outbreak-roundup-1.5571107



N.B. COVID-19 roundup: Premier 'disappointed' more people aren't applying for vacant jobs

So far 119 New Brunswickers have recovered from COVID-19




Elizabeth Fraser · CBC News · Posted: May 15, 2020 11:51 AM AT




Premier Blaine Higgs sports a red T-shirt during Friday's news briefing in support of truck drivers who continue to work during the pandemic. (Government of New Brunswick/Submitted)

Latest

  • 1 active case of COVID-19
  • Canada and United States keep border closed
  • Court of Queen's Bench moves to Fredericton Convention Centre
  • River Watch program ends for the year
  • Daycares reopen next week
  • Mount Allison University to offer on-campus classes and online delivery
  • Fredericton transit goes back to normal — sort of
  • More Saint John parks reopening this weekend
  • Lobster fishery opens in northern part of the province today
  • What to do if you have symptoms
Premier Blaine Higgs said he's disappointed that unemployed New Brunswickers aren't applying for jobs in agriculture and fish processing plants, as employers are scrambling to find workers.

Last month, the New Brunswick government banned any new temporary foreign workers from entering the province as a way of reducing the risk of COVID-19. Since then, Premier Blaine Higgs has been calling on New Brunswickers and foreign workers already in the province to fill vacancies in the agricultural and seafood-processing sectors.

"These jobs are crucial to New Brunswick," said Premier Blaine Higgs during Friday's news briefing.


Over the past two days, the provincial government hosted a virtual job fair to help connect New Brunswickers looking for jobs with employers.

But there are still roughly 70,000 people still out of work across the province and Higgs said there are plenty of "well-paying" jobs left that pay up to $23 an hour.

Dr. Jennifer Russell, New Brunswick's chief medical officer of health, says one active case of COVID-19 remains in the province. (Government of New Brunswick/Submitted)
 
"If our campaign has not been as effective as it could've been, shame on us," Higgs said.

Higgs said he isn't sure how many vacancies are still available. But earlier this month, he said there were 600 farm and fish plant vacancies in agriculture and fish processing.

"It is concerning that out of 70,000 people we're not able to meet the demands that are a fraction of that."
Higgs said the federal government's decision to pay people unable to work because of COVID-19 $2,000 a month for four months without working, also played a factor in people not applying for jobs.


Nonetheless he plans to work with New Brunswick companies to find the workers they need. And when asked whether he regrets his decision to ban foreign workers, Higgs made reference to the province's lone active case.

"Every decision we've made to this point has been related to public health considerations coming first and foremost."

1 active case of COVID-19 in New Brunswick 

New Brunswick's chief medical officer of health has announced that another person has recovered from COVID-19 in the province.

It has been nine days since the province has reported any new cases.

But Dr. Jennifer Russell is reminding the public to protect themselves over the upcoming long weekend by keeping to their respective two family household bubbles and following physical distance guidelines.

"I want everyone to enjoy this holiday weekend but I want everyone to be safe," said Russell at Friday's news briefing.


New Brunswick premier Blaine Higgs warns people to follow public health rules over the long weekend. 3:08

As residents gear up for the summer months, Premier Blaine Higgs said this Victoria Day long weekend will not look the same as usual.

"We won't be able to visit our friends and family from outside of New Brunswick," he said. "Our borders are still restricted and we can't plan trips to other provinces right now."

There have been 120 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in New Brunswick and 119 of them have recovered from the disease.

There is still one active case remaining in New Brunswick.

"We must act as if the virus is all around us," Russell said.

Canada and United States keep border closed

Premier Blaine Higgs said Friday that the Canada-U.S. border will remain closed past May 21 for an additional 30 days.


Higgs said there was a general consensus from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and fellow premiers to keep the borders closed.

In March, Canada and the United States agreed to restrict non-essential travel across the border as both countries attempted to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.

"We need to maintain our commercial activities, there's no doubt about that, but the border security is considered something that is worth protecting at this point in time."
 

Now that the New Brunswick COVID-19 curve is flat, risk lies at the borders. What’s considered essential and non-essential travel, and how is New Brunswick making sure people coming in are following safety rules? 2:09

Higgs expects the federal government to make an announcement about the border closure next week.
He said New Brunswick borders could remain closed for the entire summer if needed.

On Thursday, Higgs said the province could reopen border with Quebec as early as July


"All of the discussions that we had were around following the tracks that we're on, understanding we're opening up in the same vein and continuing to work with public health authorities.

Court of Queen's Bench moves to Fredericton Convention Centre

The Department of Justice and Office of the Attorney General announced Friday that the Court of Queen's Bench in the judicial district of Fredericton will be moving to the Fredericton Convention Centre.

In a news release, the province said department officials have finalized an agreement with the City of Fredericton through at least the end of 2020. Details of the agreement will not be disclosed.

"The decision is meant to accommodate spacing requirements to hold jury selections and jury trials. It will also ensure the continuity of all Court of Queen's Bench matters, including family court hearings," the news release said. "The move will allow provincial court matters to continue being held at Fredericton's existing justice building."

The province's judiciary has announced that, as of June 1, all matters currently on the docket of the New Brunswick Court of Queen's Bench will proceed on their respective dates as scheduled. However, jury trials will resume as of Aug. 15.

River Watch program ends for the year

After 10 weeks in operation, the River Watch Program for the 2020 freshet season has ended.


Water levels along the St. John River basin continue to decrease and are returning to normal levels.

"The freshet this year looked nothing like 2018 and 2019," said Public Safety Minister Carl Urquhart.
"While we are grateful for this, the New Brunswick Emergency Management Organization and its River Watch partners were ready to respond."

The program started March 9 and provided information on the status of rivers and the potential for ice jams and other flood issues throughout the spring freshet season.

Daycares reopen next week

Daycares across New Brunswick will begin reopening on Tuesday, as part of the COVID-19 recovery plan. They've been shut for everyone but essential workers since March. Some daycares laid off workers and closed completely, but others kept their employees and kept charging parents.

As part of the reopening rules, children won't be able to mingle outside their self-contained groups of no more than 15. Children and staff will have their temperatures checked every morning, one adult per family should be designated for drop off and pick up, and there will be strict cleaning protocols.


At Friday's news briefing, Dr. Jennifer Russell, New Brunswick's chief medical officer of health, said maintaining the two-household bubble is vital to the safe operation of daycares and early childhood education centres

"If each child in a daycare has close contact with only one other household, the risk of spreading the virus is greatly reduced," she said.

It is also important that parents and staff do not enter a daycare if they are feeling unwell.

Mount Allison University to offer on-campus classes and online delivery

Over the upcoming fall-term Mount Allison University plans to offer a combination of on-campus classes and online alternate delivery.

In an email to students, the university said classrooms, labs, and studios will undergo a number of adjustments consistent with public health guidelines, and the continuing need for physical distancing.

Additional planning around the specifics of course delivery is also underway.

Residences will be open this fall to accommodate students.


"Residences, the dining hall, and food services on campus always operate with a central focus on the well-being of students."

Over the summer months, the university said a number of new health and safety measures will be put in place for fall. The university said new measures are designed to support student health upon arrival and throughout the academic year.

Fredericton transit goes back to normal — sort of

As businesses start to reopen, city transit services in New Brunswick's capital will get somewhat back to normal next week.

Starting Tuesday, Fredericton city transit will run hourly throughout the work week, resembling their Saturday schedule, according to Meredith Gilbert, the city's manager of transit and parking.

Buses have cut back to running every three hours during the pandemic.

"Essentially, it's similar to what we normally run on Saturdays, we just won't be offering our peak time half-hour service Monday through Friday," Gilbert said.



Buses are still limited to a maximum of nine passengers at a time.

Although it's not required, the city is urging passengers to wear a mask while using city transit. 

Fredericton city transit will offer hourly services starting next week. (City of Fredericton)

Since the COVID-19 outbreak in March, Fredericton Transit started cleaning city buses twice a day.
Plexiglass shields have also been installed to further protect drivers, as buses will begin accepting fares again.

More Saint John parks reopening this weekend

Several Saint John parks are reopening just in time for the long weekend, said Tim O'Reilly, the city's deputy commissioner of parks and recreation.

Rainbow Park Playground, Station One Skate Park, Rockwood Park Playground, Forest Hills Playground and Dominion Park Playground and Basketball Court will reopen Saturday. Shamrock Park Tennis Courts 1 to 5 and horseshoe pits will also reopen.


"The ones we are all opening are … the larger facilities of higher quality [and] the ones more typically used by the public," O'Reilly said.
Playground equipment will be sanitized with a water-bleach mixture twice daily and hand sanitizer will be provided at each of the locations. Visitors are also required to stay two metres apart.

"It is going to be quite resource-intensive in order to follow those safety guidelines, so we are starting with those few."

If people abuse the hand sanitizer or do not obey the two-metre distancing rule, O'Reilly said the parks will close again.

"It really is a partnership between the city and the public."
Several trails in Rockwood Park will be reduced to one-way traffic beginning Saturday to help encourage physical distancing.


Lily Lake Loop, Clean Air Trail, Fisher Lakes Loop, Harrigan Lake Loop will be marked with signage to indicate which direction visitors are allowed to travel.

Lobster fishery opens in northern part of the province today

The 2020 lobster fishing season for lobster fishing area 23 in northern New Brunswick opened Friday morning after a two-week delay because of COVID-19.
 

Licensed lobster harvesters in four zones that run from Miramichi Bay to Chaleur Bay in northeastern New Brunswick left wharfs around 6 a.m. Friday morning. (Gail Harding/CBC)

About 665 licensed lobster harvesters in four zones that run from Miramichi Bay to Chaleur Bay in northeastern New Brunswick will be allowed to leave wharves at 6 a.m., weather permitting.

Maritime Fishermen's Union president Gaëtan Robichaud said he, like many fishermen, have been busy getting their traps and boats ready for a season shortened to six weeks.

What to do if you have symptoms

People concerned they might have COVID-19 can take a self-assessment on the government website.  People with two of those symptoms are asked to:
  • Stay at home.
  • Immediately call Tele-Care 811 or their doctor
  • Describe symptoms and travel history.
  • Follow instructions.

About the Author



Elizabeth Fraser
Reporter/Editor
Elizabeth Fraser is a reporter/editor with CBC New Brunswick based in Fredericton. She's originally from Manitoba. Story tip? elizabeth.fraser@cbc.ca
With files from Sarah Morin


 




178 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.





David Amos
Methinks Higgy et al are gonna have an interesting long weekend scheming about what to do with the opposition on the 26th N'esy Pas?








David Amos
Content disabled
Methinks Higgy et al are gonna have an interesting long weekend scheming about what to do on the 26th N'esy Pas?


Rick Grayson
Content disabled
Reply to @David Amos: what is your theory in regards to what the Premier and his party will be scheming about? I would really love to hear it, or are you going to do your normal song and dance when asked a question. The song and dance I refer to is something about the premier or the RCMP. So if you actually have something to contribute other than off hand comments why not say it?


David Amos 
Content disabled
Reply to @Rick Grayson: Methinks it a waste of my precious time to play your silly "guess what my name is" game anymore as you flip from one ID to another I already proved my point about you and your associates Nesy Pas?

In the "Mean"time say Hey to Higgy or Batman or the Great Gatsby ot Mr Oliver or Mr Jones etc you choose Tell your RCMP buddies and their other cop pals that I will look forward seeing them again in Federal Court


David Amos
Content disabled 

Deja Vu for you

Reply to @Rick Grayson: Methinks Ray Oliver et al knows that his hero Higgy does not care if the RCMP clues in or not just as long as he keeps spinning his nonsense N'esy Pas?

Go Figure

Brandon Manitoba
Reply to @David Amos: Step aside Scheer here comes my boy Higgs to the rescue!!

David Amos
Reply to @Brandon Manitoba: Methinks you were more effective for Higgy's Police when you posted as Mr Oliver or Mr Jones or whatever other ID you use The Crown must admit that town out west just won't do as per the rules N'esy Pas?

Brandon Manitoba
Reply to @David Amos: That really eats you up doesn't it. Does it sting even a little knowing most everything you fought for in this life has all been a waste?

Brandon Manitoba
Reply to @David Amos: Have an Alpine take a load off it's the long weekend. Unless you gonna sue her again big boy




























Chantal LeBouthi:
Higgs doesn’t mind Irving getting poeples from the two most infected provinces

Higgs politics bad politics




David Amos
Content disabled
Reply to @Chantal LeBouthi: Methinks the ghosts Prime Ministers William Pitt "the Elder and "The Younger" would agree that bad politicking was around long before New Brunswick became part of the British Empire.I have no doubt the Irving Clan were just as familiar with the wicked game just like my Forefathers in Scotland were They came here on the same boat with one of mine after many of your ancestors were displaced N'esy Pas?

The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the Crown. It may be frail—its roof may shake—the wind may blow through it—the storm may enter—the rain may enter—but the King of England cannot enter!
speech, March 1763, in Lord Brougham Historical Sketches of Statesmen in the Time of George III First Series (1845) vol. 1


Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it.
speech, House of Lords, 9 January 1770




















Rob Brucer
Covid19 won't stop nepotism


David Amos 
Reply to @Rob Brucer: Methinks it has encouraged it N'esy Pas?





















Jos Allaire
Eva day bark key next election, le bat tar!


David Amos 
Reply to @Jos Allaire: Methinks you SANB dudes forgot about Higgy's and Cardy's fondness for butter tarts N'esy Pas? 
 

Jos Allaire
Reply to @David Amos: Higgs, yeh temps kiss form la jell louie!


David Amos 
Reply to @Jos Allaire: Welcome to the circus 
 

Jos Allaire
Reply to @David Amos: C day red tar day, you mean! 


David Amos
Reply to @Jos Allaire: Methinks Higgy et al know that I mean what i say and not what some SANB Straw Man claims I mean as he play with the Chiac lingo N'esy Pas? 
 

Jos Allaire
Reply to @David Amos: Tu oua day bay bit par too, view foo!





















Claude DeRoche
The Irving Boy is shutting our borders to Temporary Foreign Workers who are NOT "stealing our jobs; while opening up the border to Québec workers mostly Montréal the epicenter of Canada's Covid-19 pandemic!
And YES they are stealing our jobs!



David Amos 
Reply to @Claude DeRoche: So you say anyway





























Leigh Smith
Welfare needs to hurt more.


David Amos  
Reply to @Leigh Smith: I concur Methinks higgy's blogging buddy Chucky Leblanc is a glaring example of living high on the hog N'esy Pas? 
 

seraphim blentzas
something smells fishy


David Amos  
Reply to @seraphim blentzas: Methinks it smells like the rotting fish and sewage floating around Shediac N'esy Pas?
























Richard Riel
Tell Higgs to go work for minimum wages and come back to tell us about it.


Bill Hamilton
Reply to @Richard Riel: Mr. Higgs has a stellar work history, a strong work ethic and is highly talented and dedicated. That's why he can now hold a better paying job.
Jos Allaire 
Reply to @Richard Riel: E pour ray pas meme fair stew job la
David Amos
Reply to @Bill Hamilton: Surely you jest 
 

Bill Hamilton
Mr. Higgs can’t get a few hundred people to work despite there being tens of thousands of NB’ers on one or more of Ottawa’s free money schemes. That tells us how well a Guaranteed Annual Income would work.


Mary Smith 
Reply to @Bill Hamilton: Guaranteed Annual Income and Universal Basic Income are two completely different things.

The Universal part means that like with the CERB, if the $1000 earning cap was removed so that anything you make is made on TOP of your benefit with no claw backs whatsoever. It's the opposite of welfare, where with welfare the more you make you more you get clawed back, and people are afraid to earn too much that they'll be worse off and lose their benefit -- but with UBI, the more you work the more you make!

With UBI, you'd get it. Everyone gets it from the poorest to the richest. It's like a pay raise equally to everyone, minimum wages boosted to living wages, bonus/danger pay to essential workers all in one. UBI is Capitalism that doesn't start at $0 but everyone starting of at the poverty line, so there's incentive to work because poverty is not enough to live comfortably, but a stable financial floor for every Canadian citizen over 18 so we can all live and retire with dignity.

If you had a raise, would you work more, less, or the same? Most would work more or the same. Make the CERB Universal and remove the $5000 income threshold, and turn it into an Emergency UBI for the duration of this pandemic, and those jobs would be filled.

Maybe the reason those jobs aren't be filled is that people do not own a car to get there and there's no public transit and transit isn't really the safest thing in a pandemic. Sometimes it takes money to earn money. To get to work you need a car, but you can't afford a car unless you're working. Catch 22 that UBI tackles directly and helps sort it out and allow people to enter the workforce, because expenses like cars, car repairs, day care expenses, etc are barriers to employment because poverty has a cost.
Mary Smith
Reply to @Bill Hamilton: In all UBI trials the only people who worked less were new mothers (who those who took care of families) and those who returned to work to earn more money. We may see a shift in a 4 day work week for some, but we're seeing this shift already and it shows that it makes people more productive and healthier and happier.

"can’t get a few hundred people to work despite there being tens of thousands of NB’ers on one or more of Ottawa’s free money schemes"

These people who are unemployed because of Covid-19 may very well be able to return to their jobs soon. There's a lot of unknowns right now. Without the CERB people who lost income - through no fault of their own - would have gone bankrupt and the fallout would have been colossal. The cost of not providing CERB and other programs would have been huge too, and sometimes you have to think of the cost of NOT doing something. With the CERB it allowed those to still pay rent, mortgage, groceries, etc. It allowed people to stay home and slow/stop the spread if they weren't essential workers. When the economy is un-paused, we'll be alright because the CERB allowed people and businesses to stay afloat. Had we done nothing, we would have seen a wave of bankruptcies and foreclosures and people suffering and lives destroyed - all through no fault of their own. A global pandemic is disruptive, but we chose to put people first and we're all going to be okay and when we un-pause the economy when the dust settles we'll be stronger because of the actions we took.
Leigh Smith 
Reply to @Mary Smith: So do I get UBI plus welfare. If so that sounds like it might be a good go.
Mary Smith 
Reply to @Leigh Smith: UBI makes programs like welfare redundant. You would opt into UBI and be making more on UBI, because it's specifically the Universal part that makes UBI so great because you're free and encouraged to go out and work and keep any money you've made on top of the benefit - the opposite of welfare.

The CBC interview the other day was referencing that the money is there for UBI even without cutting all the social nets - I'm not sure what specific social nets exactly she was referring to, as it was an interview format and there was only so much time provided, it's possible that she was saying that EI would still exist, but no - UBI would not stack on top of welfare. Welfare would cease to exist with UBI. I imagine the specific social nets she was referring to were Child Care Benefit, certain disability supports, linking up people with employment, drug addiction supports, etc.

That's the best thing about UBI is it is the opposite of welfare in every way, while being far superior and proactively eliminating poverty directly and efficiently. UBI works because it removes all the bloated bureaucracy of those other programs. Welfare would cease to exist and be made redundant by UBI.

Child Care Benefit would still remain, as it's essentially UBI for kiddos. CCB 0-18 years old, UBI for 18 years old until you expire. Able to live and retire with dignity. Providing a stable financial floor for every Canadian citizen with no Canadians falling through the cracks.  
Mary Smith
Reply to @Leigh Smith: UBI just brings people up to the poverty level - that's it. It's calculated specifically to find that spot of enough to cover basics and that's it.
Bruce Sanders 
Reply to @Bill Hamilton: You hit the nail on the head!!
David Amos
Reply to @Bill Hamilton: YUP
Mary Smith
Reply to @Leigh Smith:

"Marinescu argues that a UBI would provide more incentive to work than some of the Trudeau government's current pandemic benefits.

The CERB, he said, is "kind of like a scaled-up welfare with the same welfare traps. In some ways, it pays people not to work, or forces them to choose between going back to work or staying another month or two on the CERB.

"And that's precisely what basic income is meant to address — it's a work incentive because you get to keep the money when you go back to work."

Marinescu said the experience of past pilot projects has shown that labour force participation doesn't decline when a UBI is introduced — and that some people have been able to find better jobs with the help of a UBI "because they were able to get off the hamster wheel and retrain."

"No other government program that I've seen could touch the efficacy of a basic income to give people more options in life.""

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/universal-basic-income-covid-coronavirus-pandemic-1.5536144?__vfz=medium%3Dtray_notification#  
Bruce Sanders
Reply to @Mary Smith: Not completely disagreeing, ,but the other alternative would have been to end the lockdown much sooner. Even the data 5 weeks ago demonstrated our healthcare system was never going to reach maximum capacity; which is why we agreed to stay inside. It took a long time for the government to realize this. Not sure why, but that's what it was.

On your UBI. I am in favour of this if 1) all other forms of payments are eliminated, including CPP and EI; for which current contributory payments from workers would be eliminated, and 2) the Constitution is amended to reflect this. I will never support this simply through statute.
Mary Smith
Reply to @Bruce Sanders: "but the other alternative would have been to end the lockdown much sooner"

The thing is, we don't know what we don't know when we don't know it. Had we opened up sooner, it would have been a gamble. We can look back now in hindsight and say that we probably could have, but at the time we had no way of knowing what way the wind blows.

"Everything we do before a pandemic will seem alarmist. Everything we do after a pandemic will seem inadequate"

If we do everything right, it will seem like we overreacted - but that's exactly what we want - because it means we were so successful that it looks like we did more than necessary, but it's a catch 22 and we're a victim of our own success that it looks like we did more than we needed to.  
Bruce Sanders
Reply to @Mary Smith: I am ok to agree to disagree. I have looked at this in conjunction with the other Provinces and about 10 of the States. I realize that everyone overreacted (maybe not in Montreal), and that's in the past, but I just looked at NB data again. We had just reduced daily new cases(from 75 to 40) and hospitalizations for a full week by April 10, and were down to 5 in total of which 3 were in the ICU. We had 184 beds available (for Covid19) as I recall Dr. R saying, and we maxed out at 7. So that'ts why I say i agree to disagree. My only thought, and I posted this in a conversation a month ago here with SarahRose when I stated "am I the only person nervous about these low numbers?!?" (because NB was at the low end of the global distribution of outcomes).
David Amos
Reply to @Mary Smith: Methinks I should repeat that you really should consider running for Cardy's old position as leader of the the NDP N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Reply to @Bruce Sanders: Methinks many would agree that you are being fair N'esy Pas?


Mary Smith
Reply to @Bruce Sanders: That's the thing: "am I the only person nervous about these low numbers?!?"

NB is one of the lowest in testing, it seems to be a pattern. We had suspiciously low numbers in the beginning of H1N1 too. Until we do antibody testing on NB residents we won't know if those who isolated when they thought they had it, but weren't able to access testing, actually had it or not. They had to just assume that they did and stay home and stop transmissions that way (you should stay home if sick any way, Covid-19 or not, especially since secondary infections is what usually gets people in a really bad place).

It will be so, so fascinating to see NB's true numbers. I hope that they use antibody tests on anyone who was sick over the last 6 months and all of their contacts. Until then, we're in a weird Schrödinger's cat situation, left wondering if those who were sick were sick with Covid-19, or something else entirely, but either way through them staying put the virus would have stopped with them - because viruses don't move by themselves, they need us to spread them - and if we stop moving, isolate, and contact trace, we all end up okay.



Mary Smith
Reply to @Bruce Sanders: Regardless of actual numbers, NB is in such a better position now to start opening up than some other places. We all have done a great job, whether or not it was more than was needed, is to be determined. I'm proud of every NB'er who did their part and sacrificed so we can all stay healthy. We're reaping the rewards by slowly returning to normal. Stay healthy and well, NB!
David Amos
Reply to @Mary Smith: "Stay healthy and well, NB!"

How do you and Higgy propose I do that without the Medicare Card I am entitled to?





























Leigh Smith
This problem is on the Feds. The money that was given for no work by JT should have been given to the province. That money could then have been used to sweeten the pot for those who chose to work. Those who did not work would receive far less than those who did.
This would show today's young that working pays more rewards than staying home.



Bruce Sanders
Reply to @Leigh Smith: Good idea!
David Amos
Reply to @Bruce Sanders: I concur






























JJ Carrier
Well, I'm heavily disappointed the PC Party of N.B. put in charge a man who was a failed CoR leader who had it out for non-English in N.B. for years...He was given the right of running the province, in minority position, that once almost killed the right-wingers from the Parti Acadien and CoR so that one-sided leaders like him couldn't rise...Now we also have a failed minister from Nackawic running CoR Lite in cahoots with him, the man who killed the N.B. NDP in his cabinet, and a wannabe part-time Liberal in opposition...There is no true majority in this province and the pool of great MLAs we had for decades of all stripes no longer exists...Other than that, way to go Friday t-shirt guy...And you're welcome


Jos Allaire
Reply to @JJ Carrier: Oui Mon-um. Higgs = Grew truth Tchu!


David Amos
Reply to @JJ Carrier: Methinks your SANB buddies and the irving Clan will be happy to see that you crawled out from under your rock N'esy Pas?


David Amos
Reply to @Jos Allaire: Mai Oui  
 





https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies




Replying to @alllibertynews and 49 others
Methinks the Auditor General always knows what side of the bread the butter is on and when to board the gravy train and with whom N'esy Pas?



https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2020/05/premier-disappointed-more-people-arent.html







https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-auditor-general-blaine-higgs-federal-dispute-1.5570499


Auditor general backs Higgs in federal dispute over infrastructure spending

"We need to get a handle on looking after the assets that we have," says Kim MacPherson


Robert Jones · CBC News · Posted: May 15, 2020 5:00 AM AT



Auditor General Kim MacPherson said efforts by Premier Blaine Higgs to rework the province's $673.2 million infrastructure agreement with Ottawa to do more spending on the repair of decaying structures has merit. (Ed Hunter/CBC)

A campaign by New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs to rework the province's $673.2 million infrastructure agreement with Ottawa to allow for more meat and potatoes spending to fix decaying structures has gotten little federal support so far, but the effort has merit according to New Brunswick's auditor general

"The Premier's position very much aligns with what we've been saying in a number of our reports when it comes to maintaining our infrastructure," said Kim MacPherson in an interview Thursday

"We have a lot of infrastructure for a very small population base that needs to be maintained and we have a lot of aging infrastructure, so I would agree that we need to get a handle on looking after the assets that we have."


Higgs has been sparring with the federal government over his desire to change the terms of a 10 year infrastructure deal signed between Ottawa and the government of former premier Brian Gallant in 2018.

The agreement involves $673.2 million of federal money that can be used to help finance qualifying provincial or municipal infrastructure projects but Higgs has been complaining the categories are too narrow and some money is directed where it is 'not needed'.

Diversion of funds necessary, says Higgs



Former premier Brian Gallant and then federal infrastructure and communities minister Amarjeet Sohi signed a 10 year, $673.2 million infrastructure agreement in March 2018. Premier Blaine Higgs has been asking Ottawa to reopen the deal to allow for more repairs to existing infrastructure. (Submitted/GNB)

According to the terms of the deal, about three quarters of the federal  funds -- $512.3 million --  are to be used to help build new public transit networks and other green infrastructure projects including clean energy and wastewater treatment facilities. The remainder are for various local community, rural and indigenous projects.

Higgs wants to divert large portions of funding into more mundane but foundational needs, like fixing dilapidated assets the province already owns.

"The request we've made to the federal government is to have more flexibility in projects the funds can actually be used for," Higgs said during a news conference Wednesday.

"We are looking at areas where we can maintain current infrastructure or to upgrade current infrastructure and that could apply to hospitals or schools or roads or bridges."


"I am trying to defer future expenses that are coming, that we know of, because of the condition of some of our assets and the more that I can do them now with this funding, rather than do something else that's not needed, it's going to help us recover quicker."

Decaying bridges, nursing homes and more



The Jemseg Bridge was closed to traffic and decommissioned in 2015 after an inspection showed unsafe conditions. An inspection in 2013 had also recommended its closure but was ignored. (Ed Hunter/CBC)

For years MacPherson has been warning about decaying infrastructure in New Brunswick and the need for the province to invest adequately in repairing and maintaining it.

In 2013, her department found that 293 bridges in the province, 11 per cent, were in poor condition and in need of  "significant maintenance work".

In 2016 she reported provincial nursing homes required $285 million in repairs and maintenance work and later this year she is scheduled to report on the condition of provincial public schools.

"We've had a lot of reports on capital assets where we have deferred maintenance issues," said MacPherson 


Premier Blaine Higgs said he wants to divert large portions of funding into more mundane but foundational needs, like fixing dilapidated assets the province already owns. (Government of New Brunswick/Submitted)

"I have said in past reports, only buy and build new assets if you're taking others out of service and there's a business need for this new asset." 


Higgs has said only about 10 per cent of the federal infrastructure money is discretionary and the rest is proving difficult to move around. He said while it is easy to get money approved to buy electric buses under the program, the province's needs are more basic than that.

'Best value'



The Hammond River covered bridge was closed in 2016 after an excavator fell through its decking. Blaine Higgs says New Brunswick's dilapidated infrastructure needs more attention. (CBC)

He claims repairing old assets will create as many jobs as building or acquiring new ones. He also argues provincial and federal revenues in the future have been made uncertain by the COVID-19 pandemic and it is a mistake to create new assets not knowing if New Brunswick will have the money required to maintain them.

"I'm trying to get the best value I can going forward because whatever I spend today is something somebody's got to deal with tomorrow," said Higgs  "I don't want to have a New Brunswick that is in trouble a year from now."

But so far the Trudeau government has not been inclined to change the arrangement.


One week after New Brunswick auditor general Kim MacPherson published a list of provincial bridges in poor condition, one of the worst - the Lorneville causeway in Saint John - collapsed (CBC)

In a statement, the press secretary to federal Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna said green infrastructure funding includes money that can be spent to upgrade existing assets.

Chantalle Aubertin claimed money can be used to make schools and hospitals "more resilient" and existing streets and sidewalks can be retrofitted to make room for "new pathways and bike lanes that will help Canadians physical distance while staying active and healthy."

"We also continue to move forward with provinces on long-term projects, from better public transit to high-speed broadband to wastewater and clean energy," said Aubertin.

About the Author


Robert Jones
Reporter
Robert Jones has been a reporter and producer with CBC New Brunswick since 1990. His investigative reports on petroleum pricing in New Brunswick won several regional and national awards and led to the adoption of price regulation in 2006. 






42 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.



David Amos
Methinks the Auditor General always knows what side of the bread the butter is on and when to board the gravy train and with whom N'esy Pas?


michael levesque
Reply to @David Amos: you should run for the Liberals cause you talk like a Liberal you don't make sense?


David Amos 
Reply to @michael levesque: Methinks Higgy's fan club is far more redundant that I am N"esy Pas? 





 


https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies




Replying to @alllibertynews and 49 others
Methinks Higgy should agree that Geoff Irvine and Nat Richard of the Lobster Council of Canada and of course Brian Gallant, Kevin Vickers Franky Boy McKenna and Dominic Leblanc told folks to ignore me N'esy Pas?



https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2020/05/premier-disappointed-more-people-arent.html







https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/covid-19-seafood-processing-temporary-foreign-workers-local-hiring-1.5570176

Middle and high school students to process lobster after temporary foreign worker ban

New Brunswick plant owners say processing will move to Nova Scotia and P.E.I.


Connell Smith · CBC News · Posted: May 15, 2020 5:30 AM AT



Russel Jacob, owner of Westmorland Fisheries in Cap Pele, said he had about 25 high school and middle school students in orientation at his plant Thursday. (Submitted by Russel Jacob)

With lobster processing set to begin Sunday, desperate New Brunswick seafood plants are turning to high school and even middle school students to fill the gap left by temporary foreign workers.

The decision by the Higgs government to block foreign workers amid the coronavirus pandemic has left processors in the province saying they have only about half the workforce they need, while counterparts in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island are ready to go "full tilt."

"[The province] pulled the rug from under our feet," said Russel Jacob, owner of Westmorland Fisheries in Cap Pele.

Premier Blaine Higgs said unemployed New Brunswickers and students on summer break can fill some of the 600 job vacancies that were to be filled by foreign workers.
But Jacob describes a virtual job fair launched by the province this week as a waste of time and money that brought "zero" results.

He said he had about 25 high school and middle school students in orientation at the plant Thursday.

Lower expectations

The students will start work Monday, when they will be assigned the easiest jobs, Jacob says.

His own 13-year-old son will be among them.

"When they all heard my son was working, well then word got around and they started applying," he said. "It's good money for them, but it's only a patch, temporarily, for us."


A pre-COVID-19 group photo on the Westmorland Fisheries recruiting page shows the flags of several countries, including Jamaica. (Westmorland Fisheries)

Middle school students must have permission from their parents and will make about $13 an hour.
High school students will be paid about $15 an hour.

Jacob expects they will not perform nearly as well as the experienced foreign workers.

Lobster season in eastern New Brunswick begins Friday, with processing expected to kick off Sunday.

A few kilometres away in Grande-Digue, Luc Doiron of Suncoast Seafood says that in many cases, high school students do not last more than a few days.

Doiron was able to add only five or six New Brunswickers to his workforce to replace 120 foreign workers who were turned away two weeks ago.


Some university students among recruits

He managed to recruit a further 20 students from Cape Breton University in Nova Scotia who will complete their quarantine on Monday.

COVID–19 emergency rules say out–of–province workers with proof of employment may enter New Brunswick, but must self-isolate once here for 14 days prior to commencing work.

He expects his plant will at best be able to achieve 50 per cent of its normal production levels.

"Our competition in Nova Scotia and P.E.I., they have all their workforce because they've been able to bring in their foreign workers," said Doiron. "So they are going to be able to go at it full tilt, while we're going to have to be limiting our access."
Doiron says 60 per cent of his best workers have been coming to the plant for the past five years from Mexico. They took jobs in Nova Scotia after learning they could not enter New Brunswick.
He fears he will now lose them for good to Nova Scotia processors.

In a statement Thursday, spokesperson Erika Jutras of New Brunswick's Department of Post–Secondary Education, Training and Labour, said a new fisheries labour force adjustment committee is working closely with industry to identify solutions.

"We are working with many employers through WorkingNB and have contacted university students as well," said Jutras. "We are also promoting these opportunities to EI and [Canada emergency response benefit] applicants." 

About the Author


Connell Smith
Reporter
Connell Smith is a reporter with CBC in Saint John. He can be reached at 632-7726 Connell.smith@cbc.ca







638 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.




David Amos
Methinks Higgy et al know Russel Jacob and Luc Doiron and their associates should be not laughing at me this weekend N'esy Pas?


David Amos
Reply to @David Amos: For the record I tried to contact both fellas at suppertime but I never heard back from either of them and don't expect to. Methinks Higgy et al would no doubt agree that their buddies Geoff Irvine and Nat Richard of the Lobster Council of Canada and of course Brian Gallant, Kevin Vickers Franky Boy McKenna and Dominic Leblanc told them to ignore me just like everybody else tries to do N'esy Pas?







https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies




Replying to @alllibertynews and 49 others
Methinks Higgy et al know who the Feds are buying votes for with our money N'esy Pas? 


https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2020/05/premier-disappointed-more-people-arent.html







https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-lobster-fishery-northern-new-brunswick-1.5570769



Lobster fishery opens in northern N.B. Friday morning

Fishermen face uncertainty with price and markets for their catch


Gail Harding · CBC News · Posted: May 15, 2020 6:21 AM AT




The 2020 lobster season is scheduled to open Friday at 6 a.m. after a two-week delay because of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Gail Harding/CBC)

The 2020 lobster fishing season for lobster fishing area 23 in northern New Brunswick is set to open Friday morning after a two-week delay because of COVID-19.

About 665 licensed lobster harvesters in four zones that run from Miramichi Bay to Chaleur Bay in northeastern New Brunswick will be allowed to leave wharfs at 6 a.m., weather permitting.

Maritime Fishermen's Union president, Gaëtan Robichaud said he, like many fishermen have been busy getting their traps and boats ready for a season shortened to six weeks.



Wharfs across the region were busy Thursday as traps were baited and loaded onto the boats in preparation for opening day.

The federal government announced an aid package to help fisherman in a season expected to see lower prices and no demand for their catch.


Licensed lobster harvesters in four zones that run from Miramichi Bay to Chaleur Bay in northeastern New Brunswick left wharfs around 6 a.m. Friday morning. (Gail Harding/CBC)

"We have to digest it. There's a good amount of money that's being put aside for the fishing industry, and we needed something like that," said Robichaud.

"But there's always the details that are to come that we want to look at, to see if our members are going to be eligible for that money."

Trudeau pledged close to $470 million to support fish harvesters. The package includes a new $267.6 million benefit to cover 75 per cent of losses for fish harvesters who expect an income drop of 25 per cent this season, up to about $10,000.

Trudeau said the federal government is also introducing a $201.8-million non-repayable grant program to pay up to $10,000 to fish harvesters who own their own businesses. The size of the grants will depend on the fish harvesters' historic revenue, said the Prime Minister's Office.


The government is looking to help some harvesters who say they won't generate enough income to file for employment insurance next year.

Adding to the uncertainty is the lack of a market to purchase the fishermen's catch.

"We know the markets are not there. Where our fish, our lobsters that are from the northern part of New Brunswick is mostly processed and it goes to casinos, cruise lines, restaurants mainly in the States. A lot of you see a lot of that is all closed."


Maritime Fishermen's Union president, Gaëtan Robichaud said there is a lot of uncertainty in the fishery this year. (CBC)

Robichaud said they're hoping those key markets open up.

"If that lobster can't move from the plant we are very scared that within a couple of weeks maybe we will be limited or it'll be hard to bring all our catches."

Robichaud said it will only be a matter of time for fishermen to know what adjustments will be made.

"But at least today I know there will be some kind of help for me," he said referring to the aid package.

Fishermen also have to deal with new COVID-19 safety protocols on the wharfs and on the boats. Only boat captains and crew and fish buyers are permitted on the wharfs. Captains will have to perform a daily pre-board screening to make sure crew members don't have any symptoms of the virus, cleaning and disinfecting of frequently-touched surfaces and implementing two-metre distancing while working.


With files from Catharine Tunney








8 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.



 

David Amos
Methinks Higgy et al would no doubt agree that their buddies Geoff Irvine and Nat Richard of the Lobster Council of Canada and of course Brian Gallant, Kevin Vickers Franky Boy McKenna and Dominic Leblanc told the fishermen to ignore me just like everybody else tries to do N'esy Pas?


David Amos 
Methinks Higgy et al know who the Feds are buying votes for with our money N'esy Pas? 













janice small
I agree Lobster prices for a long time have been out of reach for many consumers and the words sound nice when politicians say buy your local Lobster and support your fisherman...It all good and well when they are over charging us $12.00 lbs and up....Then they scream foul when its $6.00 lbs..


Danny Devo
Reply to @janice small: This seedy industry is playing Canadians bigtime. 










 

Guy Richard
Leave the lobster in the ocean, not worth the price, save a whale.











Eugene Peabody
I wouldn't want your job,keep up the good work bring in those delicious lobster.I hope things get better for the fishermen so they can have a successful season.


Danny Devo
Reply to @Eugene Peabody: Yes and it would be great if this secretive industry could give us a break. Instead of ripping and shipping to China, maybe leave some for Canadians at a decent price, instead of fleecing them to the max for their own resources. Oh let me guess...the resources belong to the corporations.


Danny Devo
It's a good thing these markets are closed. Canadians have been getting ripped off for lobster long enough, while our ocean is being plundered for export. Ban export and reduce the fishery. Also, ban all toxic cages infesting the coastline and killing our ecosystems. These filthy cages are a disgrace. Is our long haired PM funneling cash to these disgusting operations as well? I sure hope not. Trudeau wouldn't know a fish if one slapped him upside the head. He is doing nothing except promoting ...



https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies




Replying to @alllibertynews and 49 others
Methinks many political pundits North and South of the 49th checking out my Tweets and blog about Trudeau and Trump et al and all their nonsense for quite some time N'esy Pas?




https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2020/05/premier-disappointed-more-people-arent.html







https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/trudeau-fish-harvesters-1.5569540



Trudeau urges consumers to 'buy Canadian' as government pledges $470M for fisheries

Ottawa creating new benefit, grant program and proposing changes to EI to support fish harvesters



Catharine Tunney · CBC News · Posted: May 14, 2020 12:00 PM ET




Lobster fisherman in Tracadie Harbour, P.E.I., preparing traps for setting day. (Isabella Zavarise/CBC)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is urging people to "buy Canadian" food to keep fishery workers and farmers in business during the novel coronavirus pandemic.

"To everyone who wants to show their support, buy Canadian. Pick up some Canadian cheese to help a local dairy farmer, have a 'fish fry, or buy Canadian lobster," he said today during his daily press conference.

"Not only will it taste great, it will help the people who keep food on our plates."


Trudeau today pledged close to $470 million to support fish harvesters. The package includes a new $267.6 million benefit to cover 75 per cent of losses for fish harvesters who expect an income drop of 25 per cent this season, up to about $10,000.


Watch: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau urges consumers to 'buy Canadian'



As he pledged close to $470 million to support fish harvesters, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also said people should "buy Canadian" food to keep fishery workers and farmers in business during the COVID-19 pandemic. 1:50

"Over the last two months, a lot of Canadians have faced very challenging situations and very difficult choices. Just take workers in the fisheries industry. You can't harvest lobster from inside your house," said Trudeau.

"So that leaves you trying to figure out how to either space people out on a fishing boat, or cancel your operations. It's not an easy call to make."

Seafood processors and harvesters have said they worry about not being able to hire the labour they need — including temporary foreign workers — while others have called for delays to the spring season as they work to establish proper safety protocols.

Trudeau said the federal government is also introducing a $201.8-million non-repayable grant program to pay up to $10,000 to fish harvesters who own their own businesses. The size of the grants will depend on the fish harvesters' historic revenue, said the Prime Minister's Office.

Trudeau also said the government is looking to help some harvesters who say they won't generate enough income to file for employment insurance next year. The Liberals are proposing measures to allow self-employed harvesters to access EI benefits based on insurable earnings from previous seasons.

Last month, the federal government announced $62.5 million for Canada's fish processing sector to help processing plants implement recommended health guidelines.

Conservative MP Mel Arnold, the critic for Fisheries and Oceans, said Thursday's announcement doesn't address all of the uncertainty facing workers in Canada's fishing industry, including the risk of labour shortages.

"Today's announcement once again fails to provide the clarity that fish and seafood harvesters need. When will fish harvesters be able to apply for these benefits? Will family-run businesses qualify? Does the offshore sector qualify? Minister Jordan owes fish harvesters answers to these important questions," he said in a media statement.

"Labour shortages are also a significant challenge, which is why Conservatives have proposed the creation of a new program to match students and youth employees with jobs in the agriculture and agri-food sector, including fish and seafood. This is just one innovative solution that would help young people, businesses and communities."

NDP MP Gord Johns, that party's critic, said the government also needs to say whether seafood will be included in the newly announced $50 million surplus food purchase program.



"Getting their seafood into Canadian markets is especially important now that President Trump is tightening restrictions on seafood entering the U.S. Canadians want to support their communities by buying locally produced foods," he said.

"A government focus on selling domestic seafood to Canadians would not only support, but also validate, the hard work of Canadian fishers and harvesters."

Aid a welcome backstop, fishermen say

In Atlantic Canada, fisheries groups gave the aid package a positive initial review.

Demand for seafood crashed when the pandemic closed restaurants, cruise ships and other food service markets.

"We're really pleased that the thing has been announced. It seems to touch some of the main things that people were talking about. It provides a backstop," said Cape Breton lobster fisherman Kevin Squires, a local president of the Maritime Fishermen's Union.

On Friday, Squires and 3,000 other lobster harvesters will drop their traps for the opening of the spring lobster season in northern Cape Breton and the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

Squires considers the aid package insurance, but he hopes he won't need it.

"The markets are very poor but they appear to be improving a little bit," he said. "So I think people are a little more optimistic today than they were a couple of days ago. So maybe we won't need nearly as much." 


With files from Paul Withers








3097 Comments






David Amos
Methinks Higgy et al should agree that the Feds are buying votes for with our money. I have no doubt the fishermen were told by their buddy Geoff Irvine of the Lobster Council of Canada and his pals Dominic Leblanc, Brian Gallant, Kevin Vickers, Franky Boy McKenna and and Nat Richard to continue to ignore me N'esy Pas? 




















jeffrey mcpeanne
Remember Trump was saying the same thing, and everyone was upset. Wow! how things have change.


David Amos 
Reply to @jeffrey mcpeanne: Welcome to the Circus


David Amos 
Reply to @David Amos: Methinks many political pundits North and South of the 49th checking out my Tweets and blog about Trudeau and Trump et al and all their nonsense for quite some time N'esy Pas?





















Jared Rusch
Check out the subreddit https://reddit.com/r/BuyCanadian/


David Amos 
Content disabled 
Reply to @Jared Rusch: Check out Twitter top https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies


David Amos
Reply to @Jared Rusch: BINGO







http://lobstercouncilcanada.ca/about/mandate/


Our Mandate




The Lobster Council of Canada was established in 2009 to bring together all Canadian lobster industry stakeholders including harvesters, live shippers, processors, First Nations, and governments to work on projects of mutual benefit.

The mandate of the Lobster Council of Canada is to enhance the value of the Canadian lobster sector in a sustainable fashion by addressing the issues of importance to the industry. The organization aims to:
  • Focus discussion and action around identified industry challenges.
  • Set goals and targets that will strengthen the sector’s competitive position and enhance Canada’s overall capacity to meet the changing demands of markets.
  • Provide direction on market access issues including sustainability certification, food safety, traceability requirements, to name a few.
  • Coordinate sustained marketing initiatives regionally, nationally and internationally that promote the Canadian lobster industry.
  • Lead industry/government relations and create a shared understanding of key challenges and opportunities facing the sector.
  • Communicate internally to industry to create improved awareness of the key issues, challenges and opportunities facing the industry and to build trust and confidence.
  • Communicate externally to customers by highlighting the positive attributes of lobster to further build the Canadian “brand” through promotional and educational campaigns.
  • Facilitate efforts to improve returns to the industry through innovation and the identification and implementation of changes that will improve the overall value-chain.

Board of Directors

  • Eugene O’Leary, Guysborough County Inshore Fishermen’s Association, Past President
  • Catherine Boyd, Clearwater Seafoods Ltd., President
  • Pam Perrot, Beach Point Processing Company, Treasurer
  • Monty Way, Fish, Food and Allied Workers, Secretary
  • Charlie McGeoghan, Lobster Fishers of PEI
  • Bernie Berry, Coldwater Lobster Association
  • Roger Leblanc, Maritime Fishermen’s Union Local 9
  • Peter Connors, Eastern Shore Fishermen’s Protective Association
  • Kevin Hardy, Fish, Food and Allied Workers
  • Ronnie Heighton, Gulf Nova Scotia Fleet Planning Board
  • Martin Mallet, Maritime Fishermen’s Union
  • Leo Muise, Nova Scotia Seafood Alliance
  • Nat Richard, Cape Bald Packers Ltd.
  • Philip Milligan, Milligan’s Fisheries Ltd.
  • Jerry Amirault, Lobster Processors Association of NS & NB
  • Terry Zinck, Xsealent Seafoods Ltd.
  • Ryan Tremere, By the Water Shellfish
  • Les Ginnish, Amqotom Resource Management Council
  • John Couture, Unama’ki Institute of Natural Resources

Executive Director – Geoff Irvine







After moving East from Quebec at the age of two, Geoff grew up in the village of Smith’s Cove on the shores of the Annapolis Basin in Digby County, Nova Scotia. An Acadia University graduate with a degree in History and Political Science, Geoff is the current President of Acadia’s Alumni Association.

Geoff has enjoyed a 15+ year career in the seafood industry (with a four year “sabbatical” leave in university advancement). He has extensive experience with live, raw, salted and frozen seafood products in retail, raw material inspections, sales, marketing, international trading, event, project and business management. Geoff has developed his knowledge of the business in large and small company settings and was Managing Director and partner in Harbour View Seafoods Ltd., from 1998 to 2006. Geoff has been the Executive Director of the LCC since its inception.


Head Office

35 Parkhill Road, Halifax, NS B3P 1R4

Executive Director

Geoff Irvine
Email: geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca
Phone: 902-497-9128



http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2018/06/heres-little-deja-vu-for-local.html



Friday, 15 June 2018


Heres a little Deja Vu for local fisherman, Dominic Leblanc, the ghost of Keith Ashfield and YOU to enjoy today EH Johnny "Never Been Good" Williamson???

---------- Original message ----------
From: "Gallant, Premier Brian (PO/CPM)" <Brian.Gallant@gnb.ca>
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2018 11:53:44 +0000
Subject: RE: Heres a little Deja Vu for local fisherman,
Dominic Leblanc, the ghost of Keith Ashfield and YOU 
to enjoy today EH Johnny"Never Been Good" Williamson???
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Thank you for writing to the Premier of New Brunswick.  Please be
assured  that your email will be reviewed.

If this is a media request, please forward your email to
media-medias@gnb.camedia-medias@gnb.ca
>.  Thank you!

******************************
*******

Nous vous remercions d’avoir communiqué avec le premier ministre du
Nouveau-Brunswick.  Soyez assuré(e) que votre  courriel sera examiné.

Si ceci est une demande médiatique, prière de la transmettre à
media-medias@gnb.camedia-medias@gnb.ca
>.  Merci!


---------- Original message ----------
From: Brian Gallant <briangallant10@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2018 04:53:42 -0700
Subject: Merci / Thank you Re: Heres a little Deja Vu for local fisherman, Dominic Leblanc, the
ghost of Keith Ashfield and YOU toenjoy today EH Johnny "Never Been Good" Williamson???
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

(Français à suivre)

If your email is pertaining to the Government of New Brunswick, please
email me at brian.gallant@gnb.ca

If your matter is urgent, please email Greg Byrne at greg.byrne@gnb.ca

Thank you.

Si votre courriel s'addresse au Gouvernement du Nouveau-Brunswick,
‎svp m'envoyez un courriel à brian.gallant@gnb.ca

Pour les urgences, veuillez contacter Greg Byrne à greg.byrne@gnb.ca

Merci.


Information Morning - Moncton
Lobster Council of Canada urges federal government to listen to fishermen
00:00 11:24
Geoff Irvine is the executive director of the Lobster Council of Canada. 11:24

http://lobstercouncilcanada.ca/

Geoff Irvine Executive Director
1954 Beech Street
Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4B8
Email: geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca
Phone: 902-497-9128


---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2018 07:53:37 -0400
Subject: Heres a little Deja Vu for local fisherman, Dominic Leblanc,
the ghost of Keith Ashfield and YOU to enjoy today EH Johnny "Never
Been Good" Williamson???
To: votejohnw <votejohnw@gmail.com>,
BrianThomasMacdonald <BrianThomasMacdonald@gmail.com>,
"David.Coon" <David.Coon@gnb.ca>, "Dominic.Cardy" <Dominic.Cardy@gnb.ca>, "Hon.Dominic.LeBlanc" <Hon.Dominic.LeBlanc@canada.ca>,
"Serge.Cormier" <Serge.Cormier@parl.gc.ca>, "serge.rousselle" <serge.rousselle@gnb.ca>, "geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca" <geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca>,
"shediac@mfu-upm.com" <shediac@mfu-upm.com>, "Bill.Morneau" <Bill.Morneau@canada.ca>,
"brian.gallant" <brian.gallant@gnb.ca>, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>,
andre <andre@jafaust.com>, "gabrielle.fahmy" <gabrielle.fahmy@cbc.ca>,
"Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, "Karen.Ludwig" <Karen.Ludwig@parl.gc.ca>, "hon.ralph.goodale" <hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca>, "wayne.easter" <wayne.easter@parl.gc.ca>
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>,
 "Gilles.Blinn" <Gilles.Blinn@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>,
"Mark.Blakely" <Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>

Interesting news today EH?

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/lobster-traps-fishing-right-whales-1.4705828

Lobster fishermen create wall of empty traps at protest against closures
Fishermen rally in Caraquet against latest closure of fishing area to
protect endangered whales
Elizabeth Fraser · CBC News · Posted: Jun 14, 2018 4:14 PM AT


http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2018/06/heres-little-deja-vu-for-local.html

Friday, 15 June 2018

Heres a little Deja Vu for local fisherman, Dominic Leblanc, the ghost
of Keith Ashfield and YOU to enjoy today EH Johnny "Never Been Good"
Williamson???

Messages blocked


Your message to Hon.Dominic.LeBlanc@canada.ca has been blocked. See technical details below for more information.

Your message to Serge.Cormier@parl.gc.ca has been blocked. See technical details below for more information.

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---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2018 07:13:05 -0400
Subject: Heres a little Deja Vu for local fisherman, Dominic Leblanc, the ghost of Keith Ashfield
and YOU to enjoy today EH Johnny "Never Been Good" Williamson???
To: votejohnw <votejohnw@gmail.com>,
BrianThomasMacdonald <BrianThomasMacdonald@gmail.com>,
"David.Coon" <David.Coon@gnb.ca>, "Dominic.Cardy" <Dominic.Cardy@gnb.ca>, "Hon.Dominic.LeBlanc" <Hon.Dominic.LeBlanc@canada.ca>,
"Serge.Cormier" <Serge.Cormier@parl.gc.ca>,
"serge.rousselle" <serge.rousselle@gnb.ca>, "geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca"
<geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca>, "shediac@mfu-upm.com"
<shediac@mfu-upm.com>, "Bill.Morneau" <Bill.Morneau@canada.ca>
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>,
oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre <andre@jafaust.com>

---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 21 Sep 2015 09:46:46 -0300
Subject: Fwd: Hey Williamson your buddy Ashfield knows I tried to talk
to the local fisherman gave up and called Norway to raise some hell
To: "fundynorth@nb.aibn.com" <fundynorth@nb.aibn.com>, "David.Coon"
<David.Coon@gnb.ca>, Art MacKay <fundytides@gmail.com>,
fundyweir@nb.aibn.com, gmfa@nb.aibn.com, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>
Cc: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>,
E May <leader@greenparty.ca>, "geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca"
<geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca>, "shediac@mfu-upm.com"
<shediac@mfu-upm.com>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, May 4, 2012 at 8:10 AM
Subject: Hey Williamson your buddy Ashfield knows I tried to talk to the
local fisherman gave up and called Norway to raise some hell
To: "shediac@mfu-upm.com" <shediac@mfu-upm.com>, "
geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca" <geoff.irvine@lobstercouncilcanada.ca>,
"mariarecchia@nb.aibn.com" <mariarecchia@nb.aibn.com>, "
fundynorth@nb.aibn.com" <fundynorth@nb.aibn.com>
Cc: "John.Williamson" <John.Williamson@parl.gc.ca>, kentp <kentp@parl.gc.ca>,
fundytides <fundytides@gmail.com>


W all know why the Paliamentarians and the their buddy David C Coon
and his many Green Meany pals have been calling me names for years.
However it does not follow the fellas in Norway will  as well. N'esy
Pas Arty Baby MacKay?

http://www.nbmediacoop.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2017%3Apassing-up-responsibility&catid=82%3Aenvironment&Itemid=197

http://www.ecologyaction.ca/content/new-coalition-forms-call-aquaculture-reform-nova-scotia-and-new-brunswick

http://www.careerbeacon.com/corpprof/cooke_aquaculture/cookeaqua.html

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/story/2010/09/29/nb-lobster-fundy-cypermethrin-557.html

http://atlanticcanadaexports.ca/resources/seafood-industry-associations/

Veritas Vincit
David Raymond Amos
902 800 0369

QSLS Politics
By Location  Visit Detail
Visit 26,951
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IP Address   85.200.224.# (Link-net Stromgaten)
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 4 May 2012 07:41:28 -0300
Subject: Attn Kurt Oddekalv, Don Staniford and David Sutherland I
called you fellas from 902 800 0369 to introduce myself
To: kurt@nmf.no, dfs@dfsutherland.com, dstaniford@gaaia.org, Ashfik1a
<Ashfik1a@parl.gc.ca>
Cc: dsanderson@davis.ca, henry.brown@gowlings.com,
jbeedell@langmichener.ca, maritime_malaise <maritime_malaise@yahoo.ca>

http://salmonfarmingkills.com/blog/so-long-thanks-all-fish-goodbye-canada-hello-norway

http://www.scc-csc.gc.ca/case-dossier/cms-sgd/counsel-procureurs-eng.aspx?cas=33120

http://www.nmf.no/default.aspx?pageId=55

http://www.tv2.no/nyheter/magasinet/don-kjemper-mot-norsk-lakseoppdrett-3688619.html

BTW I am this David Amos Trust that corrupt politicians understadn
understand me very well.

http://qslspolitics.blogspot.ca/2009/03/david-amos-to-wendy-olsen-on.html

http://www.nycga.net/members/davidraymondamos/activity/

David Raymond Amos posted an update 3 months, 3 weeks ago


http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/lobster-traps-fishing-right-whales-1.4705828


Lobster fishermen create wall of empty traps at protest against closures

Fishermen rally in Caraquet against latest closure of fishing area to protect endangered whales


About 500 fishermen descended on Caraquet on Thursday to protest against the latest closure of a fishing area in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. (Gabrielle Fahmy/CBC)

Nearly 500 fishermen brought empty lobster traps to Caraquet on Thursday to protest against the closure of fishing areas in the Gulf of St. Lawrence while endangered whales swim there.

The protest came after another round of fishing area closures was announced by Ottawa this week because five North American right whales were spotted between Miscou and the Gaspé Peninsula.

'Why does it have to be one or the other? Why does it have to be just the whales or just the fishermen?'  - Carl Allen, Maritime Fishermen's Union
It's the sixth closure to be announced since the beginning of lobster season,  and it includes a shallow coastal area where fishermen are seeking permission to drop their traps.

The closure, originally set for late Friday afternoon, will now begin Sunday at noon because of strong winds and concerns about safety, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans said.

The fishing closures are among the steps taken by the department to try to save North Atlantic right whales.

Last year, 18 endangered whales were found dead — 12 off the Canadian coast and six off the U.S.
Entanglement in fishing gear and collisions with ships were blamed in some cases.
"We've never entangled one in lobster gear in these areas, ever," said Carl Allen, president of the Maritime Fishermen's Union, who organized the protest.

"All the ones that were entangled in gear, it was snow crab gear out in deeper water, so why are we being targeted? Why are we closing areas right to the shore bank?"


A map shows where the fishing area closures are located. (CBC )
The closures have also applied to snow crab and other fisheries in the gulf.

Allen complained the federal government has not even talked to fishermen to come up with management plans or a protocol that would help the fishery and whales co-exist.  

"I think the whole thing is a reactionary measure to the mess that was created last summer and there's no balance," he said.

"Why does it have to be one or the other? Why does it have to be just the whales or just the fishermen?" 


Carl Allen, president of the Maritime Fishermen's Union, says lobster fishermen can co-exist with endangered whales, but they are being ignored by the Department of Fisheries. (Gabrielle Fahmy/CBC)
Allen said the closures not only hurt fishermen and processing plant workers but also local economies on the Acadian Peninsula.

"The boys are just here for a rally to support their community and to let the world know this is having an effect on the community at large," he said.

In accusing the Department of Fisheries of ignoring their proposals for "co-habitation" with whales, the fishermen said whales don't get close to the coast anyway.

But the federal department disagrees, claiming North Atlantic right whales, especially females and their young, can frequent those waters. 

Booing the government



Acadie-Bathurst MP Serge Cormier was in Ottawa during the protest. Fishermen greeted the news with boos. (Gabriell Fahmy/CBC)
On Thursday, many fishermen created a wall of empty lobster traps in front of the entrance to the building where Serge Cormier, the Liberal MP for Acadie-Bathurst, has an office.

Demonstrators booed Cormier's secretary, when she told them the MP was in Ottawa.

Earlier this week, Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc acknowledged people are being affected by the zone closures and said the department will try to lengthen the lobster fishing season in the fall. 

"I have said over and over again, we will try and replace the number of days of lobster fishing that they will lose because of these closures possibly in the fall," he said.

"We think in September it might be possible to reopen the fishery."

With only about 450 left in the world, North Atlantic right whales are a protected species.

The Fisheries Department has said the closed fishing grounds in the gulf total just under 13,000 square kilometres, including the area that will close Sunday.

Leaving traps at home



The most recent lobster closure will take place on Sunday at 12 p.m. (Gabrielle Fahmy/CBC)
According to some fishermen, the latest closure is the worst one yet.

Russell Vibert of Miscou Island said he will be forced to take out all 300 of his lobster traps from the water.

"There's a small little area we can move in, but it's going to be impossible for all the fishermen to fit into that area," he said.

The 50 or so fishermen from Miscou Island have about 12,000 traps, he said, and the smaller area won't accommodate everyone.

He's decided to bring his traps home.

"If we all try to fit into the area, we're going to lose our traps because they're going to get cut, they're going to get broken." 

Losing 2 weeks of fishing


Vibert said losing two weeks of the season will impact 25 per cent of his haul. Ottawa doesn't realize the effect of the closures on the fishermen's livelihood, he said.

"It's a hard pill to swallow," said the longtime lobster boat captain.

"We're a little island in northeastern New Brunswick and it's our only livelihood and it's all we have."


Russell Vibert, a lobster fisherman from Miscou Island, says he will be forced to remove all of his lobster traps from the water this week. (Gabrielle Fahmy/CBC)
James Stewart, another fisherman on Miscou, said he'll wait until the last possible moment before he removes his traps.

"It's a really small piece of the pie," he said of the area left. "We'll catch all the lobsters in no time."

Meanwhile, the Lobster Council of Canada has said it wants buyers, especially in the U.S., to be aware the industry is doing everything it can to help protect the right whales — even while it costs them money.

"The place where the whales are is new, but Canadian harvesters dealing with whales is not new," said Geoff Irvine, executive director of the council.

"And that story needs to be told. And there's been some pressure from the American body politic and all of that puts pressure on us."

Over the past 12 years, he said. the Atlantic lobster industry has worked closely with government to reduce risks to whales.

Fishermen have been on the lookout for the animals, reported gear losses and imposed self-suspensions on fishing.

He said the amount of rope being used has been reduced and new gear is also being tested.
"The U.S. is our biggest market. And we want to make sure that the story gets out there that we're doing positive things up here."


Information Morning - Moncton
Lobster Council of Canada urges federal government to listen to fishermen


00:00 11:24





Geoff Irvine is the executive director of the Lobster Council of Canada. 11:24
With files from Gabrielle Fahmy, Information Morning Moncton


———- Forwarded message ———-
From: David Amos
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 10:29:20 -0400
Subject: Re: ”Occupy” Wall St and the former spokesperson Bill Csapo
It appears that your email and phone number no longer function WHY???
To: wcsapo@gmail.com, RT-US , ”Frank. McKenna” ,
matt_burton1987@hotmail.com, ”birgittaj@althingi.is” , birgittajoy ,
birgitta , atlantic66girl@hotmail.com, brother.chao@gmail.com,
9.17occupywallstreet@gmail.com, wmreditor@waynemadsenreport.com,
lenbracken@hotmail.com, robin reid , ”j.kroes” , ”Barry.Shaw” ,
”Mackay.P” , bairdj , daniel.towsey@yahoo.com, stoffp1@parl.gc.ca
Cc: occupyfredericton , OccupyBostonMedia , OccupyS , alex_d_29@hotmail.com

From: David Amos
Date: Tue, 22 Nov 2011 12:32:30 -0400
Subject: Andre meet Bill Csapo of Occupy Wall St He is a decent fellow
who can be reached at (516) 708-4777 Perhaps you two should talk ASAP
To: wcsapo
Cc: occupyfredericton

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Mail Delivery Subsystem
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 14:19:35 +0000
Subject: Delivery Status Notification (Failure)
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com

Delivery to the following recipient failed permanently:

9.17occupywallstreet@gmail.com

Technical details of permanent failure:
Account disabled

On 1/12/12, David Amos wrote:
> Franky Boy McKenna oversees this park in the Big Apple and the
> Attorney General of New Brunswick admitted long ago i had issues with
> McKenna and his bankster associates.
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Bod5_Yvhd4k
>
> http://occupywallst.org/users/DavidRaymondAmos/
>
> From: David Amos
> Date: Sat, 17 Sep 2011 23:22:00 -0300
> Subject: i just called from 902 800 0369 (Nova Scotia)
> To: 9.17occupywallstreet@gmail.com
>
> http://qslspolitics.blogspot.com/2009/03/david-amos-to-wendy-olsen-on.html
>
> I am the guy the SEC would not name that is the link to Madoff and
> Putnam Investments
>
>
http://banking.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Hearings.Hearing&Hearing_ID=90f8e691-9065-4f8c-a465-72722b47e7f2
>
> Notice the transcript and webcast of the hearing of the US Senate
> banking Commitee is missing? please notice Eliot Spitzer and the Dates
> around November 20th, 2003 in te following file
>
>
http://www.checktheevidence.com/pdf/2526023-DAMOSIntegrity-yea-right.-txt.pdf
>
> From: ”Julian Assange)”
> Date: Sun, 7 Mar 2010 18:15:46 +0000 (GMT)
> Subject: Al Jazeera on Iceland’s plan for a press safe haven
> To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>
> FYI: Al-Jazeera’s take on Iceland’s proposed media safe haven
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbGiPjIE1pE
>
> More info http://immi.is/
>
> Julian Assange
> Editor
> WikiLeaks
> http://wikileaks.org/
>
>
> From: Birgitta Jonsdottir
> Date: Wed, 8 Dec 2010 07:14:02 +0000
> Subject: Re: Bon Soir Birgitta according to my records this is the
> first email I ever sent you
> To: David Amos
>
> dear Dave
> i have got your email and will read through the links as soon as i
> find some time
> keep up the good fight in the meantime
>
> thank you for bearing with me
> i am literary drowning in requests to look into all sorts of matters
> and at the same time working 150% work at the parliament and
> the creation of a political movement and being a responsible parent:)
> plus all the matters in relation to immi
>
> with oceans of joy
> birgitta
>
> Better to be hated for what you are than to be loved for what you are not.
>
> Andre Gide
>
> Birgitta Jonsdottir
> Birkimelur 8, 107 Reykjavik, Iceland, tel: 354 692 8884
> http://this.is/birgittahttp://joyb.blogspot.com -
> http://www.facebook.com/birgitta.jonsdottir
>
>
>>> >> On Dec 8, 2010, at 1:35 AM, David Amos wrote:
>>> >>
>>> >>> I truly enjoyed talking to you. More to the point I am happy you
>>> >>> took
>>> >>> the time to listen to mean old me. I was impressed with your openess
>>> >>> and honesty. In return I took a bit of time to study you more
>>> >>> closely
>>> >>> on the Internet and I am now even more impressed to view the artist
>>> >>> in
>>> >>> you. To hell with the politics and the money for a minute. At the
>>> >>> risk of sounding odd your sincere soul that I sensed in your voice
>>> >>> came shining through the various webpages. An honest person
>>> >>> practicing
>>> >>> the wicked art of politicking is a rare thing indeed. I must confess
>>> >>> that I grinned at the possibility of crossing paths with another
>>> >>> kindred soul when I saw you employ the expression Me Myself and I
>>> >>> because I often use that expresssion
>>> >>>
>>> >>> I also sent you another email to your politcal email address on June
>>> >>> 24th, 2010 right after you spoke on CBC. (I can resend it if you
>>> >>> wish)
>>> >>> When you folks ignored that and my calls and only sent me nasty
>>> >>> responses I gave up on Iceland and IMMI because I had made everyone
>>> >>> well aware I had no respect for Assange and corrupt parliamentarians
>>> >>> whatsoever. Assange became the big celebrity after releasing the
>>> >>> video
>>> >>> from Iraq but I felt sorry for the kid who went to jail that had
>>> >>> given
>>> >>> him the stuff. Obviously I sent you folks the email below long
>>> >>> before
>>> >>> Assange made the scene in Iceland. Rest assured that I sent him
>>> >>> evidence of my concerns about Iceland or he would not had sent me
>>> >>> his
>>> >>> bragging emails the following March.
>>> >>>
>>> >>> Now that Assange is in jail with no hope of bail like I was a couple
>>> >>> of times after CBC has been yapping about him for weeks I was
>>> >>> feeling
>>> >>> a little vindictive so I opted to tease some of his friends and fans
>>> >>> (such as McCarthy and CBC) by reminding them that I was still alive,
>>> >>> not in jail and kicking like hell. (A host of cops in seven cars
>>> >>> pounced on my son (who was visiting me) and I at 2;30 in the morning
>>> >>> right after the results of the recent election was annnounced
>>> >>> Although
>>> >>> I managed to run them off this time need I say it really pissed me
>>> >>> off
>>> >>> and saddend me to put him on a bus back to Boston)
>>> >>>
>>> >>> I did not send you that email with the pdf files attached from my
>>> >>> new
>>> >>> Yahoo address but you will get it in a bit. Heres hoping you will
>>> >>> enjoy it.
>>> >>>
>>> >>> Best Regards
>>> >>> Dave
>>> >>>
>>> >>> ———- Forwarded message ———-
>>> >>> From: David Amos
>>> >>> Date: Sat, 17 Oct 2009 22:33:10 -0300
>>> >>> Subject: RE: Iceland and Bankers Whereas the politicians ignore me
>>> >>> maybe some fellow bloggers will listen to me eh?
>>> >>> To: jong@althingi.is, kristjanj@althingi.is, olofn@althingi.is,
>>> >>> petur@althingi.is, rea@althingi.is, ragnheidurr@althingi.is,
>>> >>> sdg@althingi.is, sij@althingi.is, siv@althingi.is,
>>> >>> tryggvih@althingi.is, ubk@althingi.is, vigdish@althingi.is,
>>> >>> thkg@althingi.is, thorsaari@althingi.is
>>> >>> Cc: margrett@althingi.is, thorgerdur@thorgerdur.is,
>>> >>> saari@centrum.is,
>>> >>> ha030002@unak.is, svanurmd@hotmail.com, baddiblue@gmail.com,
>>> >>> dominus@islandia.is, birgitta@this.is, einar@smart.is
>>> >>>
>>> >>> ———- Forwarded message ———-
>>> >>> From: David Amos
>>> >>> Date: Sat, 17 Oct 2009 21:23:15 -0300
>>> >>> Subject: Fwd: You mentioned Iceland and Bankers just now and I
>>> >>> smiled
>>> >>> To: johanna@althingi.is
>>> >>> Cc: ”Jacques.Poitras” , Dan Fitzgerald
>>> >>>
>>> >>>
>>> >>> ———- Forwarded message ———-
>>> >>> From: David Amos
>>> >>> Date: Sat, 17 Oct 2009 20:52:42 -0300
>>> >>> Subject: You mentioned Iceland and Bankers just now and I smiled
>>> >>> To: wmreditor@waynemadsenreport.com, lenbracken@hotmail.com
>>> >>>
>>> >>>> ———- Forwarded message ———-
>>> >>>> From: David Amos
>>> >>>> Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 12:24:42 -0300
>>> >>>> Subject: Fwd: RE: Iceland and Bankers etc I must ask the obvious
>>> >>>> question. Why have you people ignored me for three years?
>>> >>>> To: vasilescua@sec.gov, friedmani@sec.gov, krishnamurthyp@sec.gov,
>>> >>>> horwitzd@dsmo.com, wrobleskin@dsmo.com,
>>> >>>> wolfem@dicksteinshapiro.com,
>>> >>>> Lisa.Baroni@usdoj.gov, ssbny@aol.com, service@ssbla.com,
>>> >>>> rwing@lswlaw.com, rriccio@mdmc-law.com, lmodugno@mdmc-law.com,
>>> >>>> griffinger@gibbonslaw.com, mmulholland@rmfpc.com,
>>> >>>> kmalerba@rmfpc.com,
>>> >>>> tlieverman@srkw-law.com
>>> >>>> Cc: webo , John.Sinclair@nbimc.com,
>>> >>>> Norma.Kennedy@nbimc.com, jan.imeson@nbimc.com, mc.blais@pcnb.org
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> I wonder if any lawyer will bother to read this email, understand
>>> >>>> it
>>> >>>> and call me back
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> ———- Forwarded message ———-
>>> >>>> From: postur@fjr.stjr.is
>>> >>>> Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2009 15:06:39 +0000
>>> >>>> Subject: Re: RE: Iceland and Bankers etc I must ask the obvious
>>> >>>> question. Why have you people ignored me for three years?
>>> >>>> To: David Amos
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Dear David Amos
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Unfortunately there has been a considerable delay in responding to
>>> >>>> incoming letters due to heavy workload and many inquiries to our
>>> office.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> We appreciate the issue raised in your letter. We have set up a web
>>> site
>>> >>>> http://www.iceland.org where we have gathered various practical
>>> >>>> information
>>> >>>> regarding the economic crisis in Iceland.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Greetings from the Ministry of Finance.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Tilvísun í mál: FJR08100024
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Frá: David Amos
>>> >>>> Dags: 29.01.2009 19:17:43
>>> >>>> Til: johanna.sigurdardottir@fel.stjr.is, postur@for.stjr.is,
>>> aih@cbc.ca,
>>> >>>> Milliken.P@parl.gc.ca, sjs@althingi.is, emb.ottawa@mfa.is,
>>> >>>> rmellish@pattersonlaw.ca, irisbirgisdottir@yahoo.ca,
>>> >>>> marie@mariemorneau.com, dfranklin@franklinlegal.com,
>>> egilla@althingi.is,
>>> >>>> william.turner@exsultate.ca, klm@althingi.is, mail@fjr.stjr.is,
>>> >>>> Edith.Cody-Rice@cbc.ca, wendy.williams@landsbanki.is,
>>> cdhowe@cdhowe.org,
>>> >>>> desparois.sylviane@fcac.gc.ca, plee@stu.ca, ”oldmaison@yahoo.com
>>> >>>> , ”t.j.burke@gnb.ca” , Dan
>>> >>>> Fitzgerald , jonina.s.larusdottir@ivr.stjr.is
>>> >>>> Afrit: fyrirspurn@fme.is, audur@audur.is, fme@fme.is,
>>> >>>> info@landsbanki.is, sedlabanki@sedlabanki.is, tif@tif.is
>>> >>>> Efni: RE: Iceland and Bankers etc I must ask the obvious question.
>>> >>>> Why
>>> >>>> have you people ignored me for three years?
>>> >>>> ———————————————————
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> FYI Some folks in Canada are watching your actions or lack thereof
>>> >>>> more closely than others. As you well know I am one.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> http://www.topix.com/forum/world/canada/TJHJ5HP501LN7C4MV#lastPost
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> http://www.scribd.com/doc/4304560/Speaker-Iceland-etc
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> http://davidamos.blogspot.com/2006/05/harper-and-bankers.html
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> You folks should not deny certain responses that I have received
>>> >>>> over
>>> >>>> the course of the last few months from your country CORRECT?
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> From: David Amos
>>> >>>> Date: Wed, 8 Oct 2008 13:57:55 -0300
>>> >>>> Subject: Re: Regarding your enquiry to the Prime Ministry of
>>> >>>> Iceland
>>> >>>> To: postur@for.stjr.is
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Thanx
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> On 10/8/08, postur@for.stjr.is wrote:
>>> >>>> David Raymond Amos
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Your enquiry has been received by the Prime Ministry of Iceland and
>>> >>>> waits
>>> >>>> attendance.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Thank you.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> From: Fjármálaeftirlitið – Fyrirspurn
>>> >>>> Date: Sun, 21 Dec 2008 12:23:41 -0000
>>> >>>> Subject: Staðfesting á móttöku
>>> >>>> To: David Amos
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Fjármálaeftirlitið hefur móttekið erindi yðar. Erindinu verður
>>> >>>> svarað
>>> >>>> við fyrsta tækifæri. Vakin er athygli á heimasíðu
>>> >>>> Fjármálaeftirlitsins, http://www.fme.is. Þar má finna ýmsar
>>> >>>> upplýsingar ásamt svörum við algengum spurningum:
>>> >>>> http://www.fme.is/?PageID=863.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> The Financial Supervisory Authority (FME) of Iceland confirms the
>>> >>>> receipt of your e-mail. Your e-mail will be answered as soon as
>>> >>>> possible. We would like to point out our website,
>>> >>>> http://www.fme.is.
>>> >>>> There you can find information and answeres to frequently asked
>>> >>>> questions: http://www.fme.is/?PageID=864.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Kveðja / Best Regards
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Fjármálaeftirlitið / Financial Supervisory Authority, Iceland
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Sími / Tel.: (+354) 525 2700
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> From: David Amos
>>> >>>> Date: Wed, 8 Oct 2008 10:53:47 -0300
>>> >>>> Subject: I just called to remind the Speaker, the Bankers and the
>>> >>>> Icelanders that I still exist EH Mrs Mrechant, Bob Rae and Iggy?
>>> >>>> To: Milliken.P@parl.gc.ca, sjs@althingi.is, emb.ottawa@mfa.is,
>>> >>>> rmellish@pattersonlaw.ca, irisbirgisdottir@yahoo.ca,
>>> >>>> marie@mariemorneau.com, dfranklin@franklinlegal.com,
>>> >>>> egilla@althingi.is, william.turner@exsultate.ca
>>> >>>> Cc: Rae.B@parl.gc.ca, Ignatieff.M@parl.gc.ca,
>>> >>>> lebrem@sen.parl.gc.ca,
>>> >>>> merchp@sen.parl.gc.ca, coolsa@sen.parl.gc.ca, olived@sen.parl.gc.ca
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> All of you should review the documents and CD that came with this
>>> >>>> letter ASAP EH?
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> http://www.scribd.com/doc/2718120/Integrity-Yea-Right
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> http://www.scribd.com/doc/4304560/Speaker-Iceland-etc
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> http://www.scribd.com/doc/5352095/Tony-Merchant-and-Yankees
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Perhaps Geir Haarde and Steingrimur Sigfusson should call me at 506
>>> 756
>>> >>>> 8687
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Veritas Vincit
>>> >>>> David Raymond Amos
>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 2 May 2012 00:06:21 -0300
Subject: Yo MacKay I'm watching a rerun of your Deputy Minister Robert
Fonberg bullshitting the Commitee today
To: "Mackay.P" <Mackay.P@forces.gc.ca>, robert.fonberg@forces.gc.ca,
mieke.bos@forces.gc.ca, "martin.pat" <martin.pat@parl.gc.ca>,
"Michael.Ferguson" <Michael.Ferguson@oag-bvg.gc.ca>,
Kevin.Page@parl.gc.ca, "Byrne. G" <Byrne.G@parl.gc.ca>,
fantij@parl.gc.ca, bairdj <bairdj@parl.gc.ca>, DewarP
<DewarP@parl.gc.ca>, "Harris. J" <Harris.J@parl.gc.ca>, robin reid
<zorroboy2009@hotmail.com>
Cc: jvisser@nationalpost.com, gordon.oconnor.a3@parl.gc.ca,
info@rusembassy.ca, stoffp1 <stoffp1@parl.gc.ca>, "Christopherson.D"
<Christopherson.D@parl.gc.ca>, rchedore <rchedore@mosherchedore.ca>

Th snobby bastard doesn't fool mean me anymore than you or  the ex cop
Fantino orthe VERY corrupt lawyer Ward Elcock did in way back in 2003
as the War in Iraq was beginning and Harper wanted in on the fight?
Remember when CSIS boss and the RCMP worked with the liberals and
tried  hardto help Ashcroft send me to Gitmo in order to shut me up?
If not ask the DFAIT who kept their jobs to check their records
closely.

How do you bastards sleep nights knowing about that you are covering
up how the DND and the Liberals helped Bush plan the War on Iraq? I
have been bitching about this for years and long before the CBC
starting reading what Wikileaks wasrelasing CORRECT?

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2011/05/15/weston-iraq-invasion-wikileaks.html

http://baconfat53.blogspot.ca/2010/06/canada-and-united-states.html

Ask your spindoctor Mr Baconfat why he bloggged about it AGAIN after I
had proven to legions of people that I had been torturing the DND and
the Military Police about his revelaions EH Petey Baby MacKay?

Remember when the lawyer Elock got the Deputy job to counsel the
mindless Gordy Baby O'Conner in 2006? I made you and your former
underlings in DEFAIT well aware I called and left the old CSIS bastard
who lied at the Arar Inquiry and a personal message. Paul Dewar should
remember it was about the same time Baird was tabling the Accountabily
Act and Flaherty was putting his first budget in print. Dewar can't
deny it. He answered me in writing. EH Dewar?

http://davidamos.blogspot.ca/2006/05/harper-and-bankers.html

Anyway once I called our sneaky buddy maritime Brent Babock wasn't
long calling me from Boston on his Blackberry and asking me many
questions. I told him to talk to YOUR underlings in Beantown such as
Josie Maguire and the CSIS agent who met in Sheriff Cabral's Jail LONG
before when you were ever the Minister of Foreign Affairs EH Petey
Baby Mackay?

What a snob Fonberg is he fires a bnch of people then tries to strut
his stuff before Parliament and anyone watching CPAC must have noticed
it

http://blogs.ottawacitizen.com/2012/05/01/a-message-from-robert-fonberg-on-work-force-adjustment/

What about this stuff?

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/technology/Canada/6543100/story.html

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/spends+renovate+offices+officials/5999187/story.html

He messed with Kevin Page before you had the writ dropped last year

http://www.parl.gc.ca/PBO-DPB/documents/InformationRequests/Responses/Response_Update_1_IR0036_email_2011_02_17.pdf

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/ottawa-notebook/scathing-auditors-verdict-on-jets-has-watchdog-rechecking-f-35-math/article2413869/

However it looks like the sneaky NDP dudes had fun embarassing him
today and want to do it again on Thursday.

http://www.cpac.ca/forms/index.asp?dsp=template&act=view3&pagetype=vod&hl=e&clipID=5761

It was fun to watch tonight. Leave it to The Dark Lord of Subway
Stop's old buddies in the National Post to put a neocon spin in things
in order to pay back Jason Kenney for allowing a conviceted criminal
who threw away his Canadian citizenship back into Canada. Some ethical
journalist we have EH?

http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/05/01/auditor-general-parliamentary-budget-officer-got-it-wrong-on-f-35-costs-dnd-officials/

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/conrad-black-set-for-return-to-canada/article2419835/?utm_medium=Feeds%3A%20RSS%2FAtom&utm_source=Home&utm_content=2419835

However old Elcock is much worse than the beancounter Fonberg or the
stuffy crook Conrad Black. The lawyer WARD ELCOCK is PURE EVIL.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ward_Elcock

 The money he and you neocons spent on your corrupt friends from many
countries during the Olympics and the G8 and G20 meetings in 2010
should Never be forgotten by any Proud Canadian. However their are
many gohost around the world that would love to have a little pow wow
in an after life as he goes to meet his maker. Elcock is not
investigating human smuggling after CSIS and the RCMP covered up such
things for years.  Of that I have no doubt. If you don't belive me ask
the Indian folks Harper keeps trying to make amends with. Lots of kids
were taken from their loving native Canadian parents and sent to
religious schools NEVER to be seen again. How does Harper and Bush or
anyone apologize to the dead?

BTW It is rather amazing how many Russians are checking my work
lately. The Russians are not dumb and they love their money just like
you do. However its more interesting that the Saudi's and Lookheed
Maritn are often checking me out since I spoke all over the world
about Prez Obama, zionists and Madoff on GCN etc in 2009.

Many Members of the Canadian House of Commons have been checking out
yur spindoctor Mr Baconfat's evil blog since he pounced on me at the
same point in time 2009. The Newfy lawyer Jack Harris and his old
client Byron Prior must agree that there are no coincidences when it
come to the actions of Mr harper and the te boyz in blue N'esy Pas?

http://www.rusembassy.ca/ru/node/205

http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/media/nr/2011/nr20110616-8-eng.aspx

Veritas Vincit
David Raymond Amos
902 800 0369

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 16:01:13 -0300
Subject: I just called them from 902 800 0369 Both independent MPs are
entitled to the same info on May Day EH Ezzy Levant?
To: goldrp1@parl.gc.ca, bruce@brucehyer.ca
Cc: "ezra.levant" <ezra.levant@sunmedia.ca>, occupyTOmedia
<occupyTOmedia@gmail.com>, OccupyBostonMedia
<OccupyBostonMedia@gmail.com>, occupyfredericton
<occupyfredericton@gmail.com>, OccupyNS <OccupyNS@gmail.com>

http://www.petergoldring.com/contact/
9111 118 Ave
Edmonton AB T5B 0T9
Ph. 780 495 3261
Fax 780 495 5142
goldrp1@parl.gc.ca

http://www.brucehyer.ca/
69 N. Court Street
Thunder Bay, ON
P7A 4T7
Tel: 807-345-1818
Toll-free:
1-888-266-8004
Fax: 807-345-4752
bruce@brucehyer.ca


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 15:44:18 -0300
Subject: Mr Thomson you and I just talked perhaps you should ask Mr
Harper what part of his evil spindoctors' emails blogs and emails he
doesn't think I understand?
To: pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, MulcaT <MulcaT@parl.gc.ca>, "bob.rae"
<bob.rae@rogers.blackberry.net>, leader@greenparty.ca, "greg.weston"
<greg.weston@cbc.ca>, acampbell <acampbell@ctv.ca>,
"oldmaison@yahoo.com" <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, bmosher
<bmosher@mosherchedore.ca>, "Mackay.P" <Mackay.P@forces.gc.ca>,
counsel <counsel@barackobama.com>, patrick.j.fitzgerald@usdoj.gov,
"rick. skinner" <rick.skinner@dhs.gov>, "vic.toews.c1"
<vic.toews.c1@parl.gc.ca>, "Bob.Paulson" <Bob.Paulson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>
Cc: PREM Premier <premier@gov.ab.ca>, premier <premier@gnb.ca>,
gthomson <gthomson@edmontonjournal.com>, "Ken.Zielke"
<Ken.Zielke@gov.ab.ca>, "jeff.kasbrick" <jeff.kasbrick@gov.ab.ca>

Mr Harper I made your cohorts well aware that I was playing fierce
hard ball politicking with Yankee neocons BEFORE the nasty lawyer Ezy
Levant let you take his chance to get a seat in Parliament CORRECT?

Better yet at part of this email doesn't Graham Thomson of Post Media
and Premier Redford understand?

The Edmonton Journal has published this zionist spin doctor's words
for years even when he was spinning for the liberals and putting down
his latest hero Harper

http://baconfat53.blogspot.ca/search?updated-min=2012-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&updated-max=2013-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&max-results=47

http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/editorials/LTE/thornton/thorntonlist/thornton_200/thornton215/LTEwinters.pdf

http://www2.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/letters/story.html?id=aaf27117-71ae-4586-9095-1ceef13158af

http://www2.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/letters/story.html?id=4fa8c535-23d0-4173-9df5-5bd11a1c50d1

http://www.edmontonjournal.com/about-edmonton-journal/contactus.html

Graham Thomson (Columnist)
 (780) 429-5288 gthomson@edmontonjournal.com



From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 12:58:35 -0300
Subject: Fwd: A 7.62 solution for Robin Reid David Amos and Charles
Leblanc, and Stephen Harper the GOOD
To: kevin.bissett@thecanadianpress.com

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: BARRY WINTERS <sunrayzulu@shaw.ca>
Date: Tue, 01 May 2012 09:49:31 -0600
Subject: A 7.62 solution for Robin Reid David Amos and Charles
Leblanc, and Stephen Harper the GOOD
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>

One year tomorrow! Amos the pig, his family and Robin the cunt on the
demise! Stephen Harper the good. The blog proves his "goodness".

As my blog says "Canada's new natural governing party"  Canada can
only get better and better!

http://baconfat53.blogspot.ca/search?updated-min=2012-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&updated-max=2013-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&max-results=47


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 14:35:20 -0300
Subject: Its the Big May Day for the "Occupy" wackos My question do
you people remember ME?
To: michael.custardo@canadiantvsales.com, blazare@postmedia.com,
occupyfredericton <occupyfredericton@gmail.com>, "oldmaison@yahoo.com"
<oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre <andre@jafaust.com>
Cc: cuttengreen@gmail.com, "Hoyt, Len" <len.hoyt@mcinnescooper.com>,
"kevin.bissett" <kevin.bissett@thecanadianpress.com>

If you forgot Google

Dave Amos Olsen

and see such things as this

http://qslspolitics.blogspot.ca/2009/03/david-amos-to-wendy-olsen-on.html

http://www.nycga.net/members/davidraymondamos/activity/73610

Trust that I remember you people
The Dark Lord of a Subway Stop who once owned some of you gets out of
jail on Friday and wants to return to Canada correct?

http://www.postmedia.com/company/governance/

Brenda Lazare
Vice President, Legal Affairs
Postmedia Network Canada Corp.
blazare@postmedia.com
416-383-2379

http://shawmedia.ca/advertising/contacts/broadcast/unitedStates.asp

http://foodsecurecanada.org/steering-committee#Baron

http://cuttengreen.blogspot.ca/

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 13:50:54 -0300
Subject: Conrad Brock IS a Financial Advisor for another publicly held
company known as Bell Alliant EH Rick Hancox?
To: bmorrison <bmorrison@morrisonpierce.com>, "Ivan.court"
<Ivan.court@saintjohn.ca>, "oldmaison@yahoo.com"
<oldmaison@yahoo.com>, jferguson <jferguson@town.ststephen.nb.ca>,
"david.barry" <david.barry@nbsc-cvmnb.ca>, jmockler
<jmockler@gmglaw.com>
Cc: Only In Saint John Tees <freeferguson@gmail.com>, "rick.hancox"
<rick.hancox@nbsc-cvmnb.ca>

This BULLSHIT T shirt artist and wannabe beancounter is defintely
playing politics

On 5/1/12, Only In Saint John Tees <freeferguson@gmail.com> wrote:
> I am a t-shirt artist .  Please don't include me in your political
messages
> David Amos.  I love SJ and only want to see it prosper.
> -Conrad
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On 2012-05-01, at 12:02 PM, David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>>
http://www.cbc.ca/informationmorningsaintjohn/2012/04/30/defamation-trial-day-53/
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
>> Date: Mon, 23 Apr 2012 09:29:00 -0300
>> Subject: I am on the phone to Mr Brown of Potash and his lawyer Zed
>> right now My # is 902 800 0369
>> To: kld@barryspalding.com
>> Cc: "Wayne.Lang" <Wayne.Lang@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>,
>> concernedcitizensofpenobsquis <concernedcitizensofpenobsquis@yahoo.ca>
>>
>> Peter T. Zed, Q. C.
>> Partner
>> Practice Areas: Administrative, Utility Regulation, Commercial and
>> Commercial Litigation
>>
>> Law School: Dalhousie University
>>
>> E-Mail: ptz@barryspalding.com
>> Phone: (506) 633-4200
>>
>> Assistant: Kathryn Davison (506) 633-4286 kld@barryspalding.com
>>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 26 Apr 2012 12:49:33 -0300
Subject: Re Phone calls and emails to and from the CRTC, CTV and CBC since
2002
To: ed@veq.ca, fcfa@fcfa.franco.ca, peter.foster@crtc.gc.ca, andre
<andre@jafaust.com>
Cc: millstoneeditor@bell.net, jeanpierre.caissie@aaapnb.ca,
"peter.dauphinee" <peter.dauphinee@gmail.com>, "oldmaison@yahoo.com"
<oldmaison@yahoo.com>, law <law@stevenfoulds.ca>,
"ndesrosiers@ccla.org" <ndesrosiers@ccla.org>

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/backgrnd/language/olmc_members.htm

http://www.millstonenews.com/2011/06/edith-cody-rice.html

Edith Cody-Rice - Publisher

     Edith Cody-Rice is the publisher of the Millstone. She recently
retired from the position of Senior Legal Counsel to the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation where she worked for twenty-nine years. Edith
has worked extensively with journalists  to help them publish their
stories. She is currently a director of the Michener Foundation which
grants awards and fellowships to outstanding journalists.

   Edith is deeply interested in literature and for 19 years held
literary luncheons at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa for many of
Canada's outstanding writers. She was also on the board of directors
of the Writers' Trust of Canada for 15 years and was its chair in the
mid 1990's. She founded a very popular fundraising dinner for the
Trust in Ottawa called Politics and the Pen which raises over $200,000
per year for the Writers' Trust. She was a founding director of the
George Woodcock Fund which provides support to published writers who
face financial need while completing a book project.
   Edith has also been a director of the Writers' Foundation of
Canada, the Ottawa Valley Book Festival, the Ottawa International
Writers' Festival, and is currently a board member of Puppets Up!
International Puppet Festival.   Edith has been a fund raiser for the
Ottawa library.

   Edith serves on the Millstone as publisher, reporter at large, book
reviewer, legal counsel and web designer.

From: Edith Cody-Rice <Edith.Cody-Rice@cbc.ca>
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2009 16:53:07 -0500
Subject: Calls and E-mails to CBC
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
Cc: Rob Renaud <Rob.Renaud@cbc.ca>

Dear Mr. Amos:

CBC personnel have contacted me concerning your calls and e-mails to
them. As you are threatening legal action, would you kindly direct any
further calls or correspondence to me. Other CBC personnel will not
respond further to your correspondence or calls.


Edith Cody-Rice
Senior Legal Counsel
Premier Conseiller juridique
CBC/Radio-Canada
181 Queen Street, Ottawa, Ontario K1P 1K9
Postal Address: P.O. Box 3220, Station C, Ottawa K1Y 1E4
Tel: (613) 288-6164
Cell: (613) 720-5185
Fax/ Télécopieur (613) 288-6279

IMPORTANT NOTICE
This communication is subject to solicitor/client privilege and
contains confidential information intended only for the person(s) to
whom it is addressed.  Any unauthorized disclosure, copying, other
distribution of this communication
or taking any action on its contents is strictly prohibited. If you
have received this message in error, please notify us immediately and
delete this message without reading, copying or forwarding it to
anyone.

AVIS IMPORTANT
La présente communication est assujettie au privilège du secret
professionnel de l'avocat et renferme des renseignements confidentiels
intéressant uniquement leur destinataire. Il est interdit de
divulguer, de copier ou de distribuer cette communication par quelque
moyen que ce soit ou de donner suite à son contenu sans y être
autorisé. Si vous avez reçu ce message par erreur, veuillez nous en
avertir immédiatement et le supprimer en évitant de le lire, de le
copier ou de le transmettre à qui que ce soit.

http://qslspolitics.blogspot.ca/2008/06/cbc-world-to-tackle-bush-on-false-flag.html

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ombudsman de Radio-Canada <Ombudsma@radio-canada.ca>
Date: Fri, 17 Apr 2009 09:24:41 -0400
Subject: Faire suivre : Fwd: I tried to call you all The pdf files
hereto attached prove that  I am no liar and the mp3 and te wav files
in the next two emails speak  volumes
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com

Dear David Amos:

I acknowledge receipt of you three e-mails attached.
The Radio-Canada Ombudsman has a mandate to determine whether
information programs of Radio-Canada has broadcast fully respect
CBC/Radio-Canada*s journalism policy.  Radio-Canada's Office of the
Ombudsman is completely independent of Radio-Canada program management
and thus does not intervene in the editorial process prior to the
broadcast of information programs.  You can read the mandate of the
Ombudsmans  web sites: http://www.radio-canada.ca/apropos/ombudsman/
and http://www.cbc.ca/ombudsman/

Best regards,

Julie Miville-Dechêne
Ombudsman, Services français
Société Radio-Canada
www.radio-canada.ca/Ombudsman

----- Original Message -----
From: David Amos
To: martine.turcotte@bell.ca
Cc: diane.valade@bell.ca
Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2004 12:01 AM
Subject: Re: I am curious

Ms. Turcotte

Great. Thanks for the response. It saves time and unnecessary expense
and redundancy because as I said, your local ATV Station is getting a
hard copy and Mr. Pozen will receive his upon my return to the USA. I
will attach hardcopy of this email to those documents so they will
understand that I am serious about my complaints. But I will remain
true to my word and not forward this email to anyone outside of your
company. Trust that I am seeking friends not more foes. I truly
believe that CTV should capitalize on this story but I am somewhat
dubious after I saw how Bell Canada employed its media to slam the
people striking against Aliant last night. Please never forget I have
been compelled to play the wicked political game and I do understand
the argument at the bottom of this email. I am very much against the
huge mergers at the Global Level. I am certain every lawyer and
politician knows why.
Best Regards
David R. Amos

----- Original Message -----
From: martine.turcotte@bell.ca
To: motomaniac_02186@hotmail.com
Cc: bcecomms@bce.ca ; W-Five@ctv.ca
Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2004 10:28 AM
Subject: RE: I am curious

Mr. Amos, I confirm that I have received your documentation. There is
no need to send us a hard copy. As you have said yourself, the
documentation is very voluminous and after 3 days, we are still in the
process of printing it. I have asked one of my lawyers to review it in
my absence and report back to me upon my return in the office. We will
then provide you with a reply.

Martine Turcotte
Chief Legal Officer / Chef principal du service juridique
BCE Inc. / Bell Canada
1000 de La Gauchetière ouest, bureau 3700
Montréal (Qc) H3B 4Y7
Tel:(514) 870-4637
Fax: (514) 870-4877
email: martine.turcotte@bell.ca

Executive Assistant / Assistante à la haute direction:
Diane Valade
Tel: 514) 870-4638
email: diane.valade@bell.ca

-----Original Message-----
From: David Amos motomaniac_02186@hotmail.com
Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2004 6:12 AM
To: Turcotte, Martine (EX05453)
Cc: bcecomms@bce.ca; W-Five@ctv.ca
Subject: I am curious

Madam

I did not receive a response from you to the last email so I am not
certain if you received it. I must inform you that I will be closing
my briefcase in Yahoo for public view at the end of the week. I have a
great deal of material to add and I only wish certain parties to view
it. I opened it for you the other day as an act of good faith. Mr.
Pozen can check my work in the dockets of the various courts around
Boston they are a matter of Public Record my files are not. As you can
see by this and some following emails. I am very busy dealing with
criminal matters first before filing civil complaints in the USA. As I
told you when you called a lot has been happening. I have made a lot
of cops mad at me and I don't trust them a bit particularly after the
Police Commission is willing to check their work so i have been busy
watching my back and covering my butt. However that does not mean that
I have not thought about our conversation and was curious about a few
things.

I was glad to receive your call and impressed by the fact that you
were more than willing to receive the material and a copy of the
wiretap tape in particular. Your stated willingness to uphold the law
was a rare statement to me. However I was curious why you only
mentioned my voicemail to Mr. Pozen and not the email to your company
and the news program that it owns. Did they not inform you as well? If
they didn't I am not surprised because I have some other rather
interesting denials from the Media. the most interesting would have to
be from the PBS program called Frontline when I introduced its
producer Michael Sullivan to the US Attorney Michael J. Sullivan. Now
that is a story well worth W5 telling. Too bad they showed me their
ass. As a courtesy to you and a further act of good faith, I will not
forward this email to anyone else until after I return to the USA and
nothing has been resolved between BCE and I and I am compelled to name
it in my complaint. I would find it very hard to believe that Mr,
Pozen does not know everything he needs to know about me right now.

I had also called a lawyer, Steven Skurka who had a week long little
special on CTV . I had tried to inform him that I knew my rights his
assistant hollered at me. You from speaking to me yourself that I am
not a rude character. I found it too funny to be treated that way and
I had resolved to serve him this stuff byway of the local ATV Station
that had presented his smiling talking head to me. That is why I was
telling you that you could get this stuff from the local ATV station.
I found it quite strange that you did not rely on them to send it on
to you. Thus I must make an extra copy to comply with your request.

I know the date stamp on the forwarded email is incorrect but that is
because my old laptop goes to the first year in it when I boot up and
sometimes I am too busy or tired to bother changing it. However MSN
tracks it with the true date. Brad Smith and I have a bone to pick as
well and I have been checking his work rather closely since he ignored
my letter to him last year. His boss Bill Gates is gonna be very angry
and Brad Smith and Steve Balmer in the near future if I have anything
to do with it. If you do act ethically and immediately I will settle
with your company very cheaply in comparsion to the bottom lines of my
first two complaints. In fact I will be so impressed I will
immediatlely offer you a better job than the one you have now. Please
study the material I will provide you closely and ask me any thing you
wish.

I will do as I promised and send the material you requested as soon as
I can put it all together. Right now I am on the move and far away
from my printer. Is the following your correct address? Perhaps you
should consider sending someone to the my meeting with the Police
Commission in Fredericton next week in order to hear me speak of these
matters to law enforcement before I return to the USA. Once I do
return there I will serve the Mr. Pozen the material as promised and
call him to testify in my pending trial. The following emails should
explain some of my concerns to you. My wife will be in Canada next
week as well to pick up our kids. I will allow you to speak to her if
you wish. She has had a nervous breakdown over the legal crap and I do
have her Durable Power of Attorney pursuant to M.G.L. 201 B. Mr. Pozen
can ask Robert S. Creedon Jr. about that document. I argued it with
him before the entire Judicuary Commitee on Sept. 18th 2003.

I will call you in a minute to make certain that you get this and the
following emails.

David R. Amos

Martine Turcotte
1000 de la Gauchetiere Ouest
Floor 41
Montreal, Quebec H3B 58H Canada
Tel: (514) 870-4637
Fax: (514) 870-4877

----- Original Message -----

From: David Amos

To: W-Five@ctv.ca

Cc: bcecomms@bce.ca ; oldmaison@yahoo.com

Sent: Sunday, January 06, 1980 4:07 PM

Subject: My turn to tell a tale.



I think is time to let a little something out of the bag for the
benefit of a few Maritimers who think they know something about the
Media.I did notify CBC, the Rogers crowd and Harry Steele's folks that
I knew a little bit about the Media and that I had written a book
about it. Problem is I need an editor and I believe I may have found
one.He comes in the form of a disenchanted newspaper man. But the
thing is I want to put it on the web for all to read for free so there
is no money in it for him. So I guess I wiil sue some big company with
a Prima Facia complaint and settle for a lesser amount out of court.
Lets just say I am looking hard at you dudes. I had zeroed in on the
Yankee media long ago and I am certain folks within the Ottawa Citizen
and Democracy Watch had checked my work(Hey Duff say hey to Dan for
me) I have crossed paths with many of Globemedia's people many times
for many reasons and I can easily prove it. What I haven't bothered to
tell them that I knew the reason Gobal etc never mentioned me was
Frank McKenna and the Irving influence because basically that was a no
brainer anyway. However If Globemedia and all their cohorts didn't
think I knew about the influence Robert Pozen in Boston, you had best
think again. then give Mr. Spitzer, Mr. Galvin, Mr. Shelby and Mr.
Donaldson a call and drop my name along with Mr. Nesters and Mr.
Koski's and tell them my stuff is off to the Arar Commission I am
heading back to the USA to call Mr. Pozen and many folks he calls
friends to court. Perhaps in Ottawa Bill Rowe will truly speak for the
common man after all if the worm turns on his buddies. How do you
people sleep at night? What say you? Why not get honest with the world
and I will settle cheap? I will give one of your lawyers something
real soon before I serve Mr. Pozen his just due byway of this lawyer
Jeffrey N Carp MFS Investment Management
500 Boylston Street Boston MA 02116-3741 617-954-5747 Perhaps he
should call Putnam investments or the Brookline Savings bank and say
hey to Mr Chapman and Mr Tripp for me. I just called Bob Pozen at 617
954-5707 and introduced myself so that he can never say that he never
heard my name.
MFS set to agree to second settlement
· MFS set to agree to second settlement
By SINCLAIR STEWART

00:00 EST Wednesday, March 31, 2004

By SINCLAIR STEWART

00:00 EST Wednesday, March 31, 2004

Sun Life Financial Inc.'s Boston-based mutual fund arm will agree to a
$50-million (U.S.) settlement today with U.S. regulators over
allegations the firm directed trading commissions to brokerages in
exchange for preferential treatment, according to people familiar with
the matter.

Sources said Massachusetts Financial Services Co. will announce a deal
with the Securities and Exchange Commission this morning that will
also include "compliance reforms," in addition to a token $1
disgorgement penalty.

Eric Morse, a spokesman for MFS, declined to comment. A spokesman for
the SEC refused to discuss any talks with the firm.

The embattled fund company is hoping this settlement will enable it to
move beyond the intense public and regulatory scrutiny it has endured
in the past several months.

In early February, MFS agreed to a $350-million settlement with the
SEC and New York State Attorney-General Eliot Spitzer for allegedly
permitting improper trades in some of its bigger funds. That figure
included $225-million in penalties and restitution to investors, along
with $125-million in fee reductions spread out over the next five
years.

The fallout within MFS, which manages about $140-billion in assets,
was also considerable. Its two highest-ranking officials -- chief
executive officer John Ballen and president Kevin Parke -- were each
fined and slapped with temporary suspensions by the SEC, leading to
their departures from the firm. Long-serving chairman Jeffrey Shames
also retired in the aftermath of MFS's problems, and was replaced by
Robert Pozen, formerly a senior executive at Fidelity Investments and
onetime associate general counsel at the SEC.

Mr. Pozen has been charged with cleaning up the mess, and tightening
the firm's internal controls.

He has already hired new legal and compliance officers, added
monitoring staff, and imposed a ban on so-called "soft dollar"
transactions. The firm also prohibited the practice of directing
trading fees to brokerages in exchange for being placed on a preferred
list of customers and receiving better visibility for its funds.

This latter arrangement, known in industry circles as "pay for play,"
is at the centre of MFS's pending settlement with the SEC. Sources
said the current settlement talks advanced fairly quickly because of
the voluntary compliance improvements MFS has undertaken.

In a recent interview with The Globe and Mail, Mr. Pozen attacked the
basis of the regulator's case as "very weak" and said it should have
raised this as a problem when it conducted audits of the company.

Nevertheless, he said he hoped to settle the matter quickly, in large
part to avoid a costly legal battle and prevent nervous investors from
pulling their money out of MFS funds. So far, the damage has been
contained to one major client, the Illinois Teachers Retirement
System, which fired MFS last month as lead manager on a $664-million
portfolio.

The SEC is investigating about a dozen other fund companies for
directed brokerage, although sources say MFS will settle individually,
rather than as part of a group.

Last fall, brokerage powerhouse Morgan Stanley agreed to pay
$50-million to settle charges it failed to tell investors it was
promoting funds with which the firm had a special arrangement. Morgan
Stanley had a "Partners Program" of 14 funds, including MFS, that paid
"substantial" fees in return for the brokerage steering their funds to
investors, the SEC claimed.

The regulator indicated a few months ago it would begin investigating
a number of fund companies for directing commissions, but did not say
which firms it would target.

Sun Life revealed in a filing that MFS was under investigation for
this practice just a couple of weeks after its first settlement with
the SEC and Mr. Spitzer. The news came as a surprise to most
observers, some of whom criticized the insurer's CEO, Donald Stewart,
for not disclosing this probe earlier.

MFS is hoping to recoup some of the $175-million it must repay
investors under the terms of the first settlement by suing firms and
individuals that engaged in market timing and late trading of its
funds. Market timing involves making frequent trades in and out of
funds in order to cash in on minor pricing discrepancies. It is not
illegal, but is usually prohibited by many fund companies, since the
quick trading can raise administrative costs and undermine returns to
investors.

----- Original Message -----

From: R. S. Webb

To: Amos David

Sent: Monday, August 09, 2004 12:50 AM

Subject: Fw: possble story





----- Original Message -----

From: R. S. Webb

To: Amos David

Sent: Friday, November 29, 2002 9:15 PM

Subject: Fw: possble story





----- Original Message -----

From: W-FIVE Viewer Mail

To: 'R. S. Webb'

Sent: Thursday, November 28, 2002 3:03 PM

Subject: RE: possble story



Dear Mr. Amos,

I would like to thank you for your email to W-FIVE, sorry for the
delay in responding.

We review every email and story idea that we receive here at W-FIVE
and give it serious consideration. Your email has been forwarded to
our executive and senior producer for review. If we are interested in
pursuing your idea further, you will be contacted by one of our
researchers.

Thanks again for your input. Your interest in our program is much
appreciated.



Sincerely,

Lisa-Marie

Production Coordinator

W-FIVE

-----Original Message-----
From: R. S. Webb [mailto:cei@nbnet.nb.ca]
Sent: Thursday, November 07, 2002 2:28 PM
To: W-FIVE@ctv.ca
Subject: possble story

I am a Canadian Citizen who thus far, as a plaintiff, has two Lawsuits
in the US District Court of Massachucetts they are numbered 02-11686-
RGS and 02-11687-RGS. They were removed to that Court from the Norfolk
Superior Court by the US Attorney Michael J. Sullivan very improperly.
However they shall remain there because of my status as a Canandian
Citizen. Judge Sterns has not even held a Conference about the matters
because he likely does not want to hear the matter because I have
presented all Members of the Bar with their worst fear of a catch 22
problem. Accordinging to law he is late. I have complained of 47
defendants 34 of whom are State Defendants( the Attorney General, The
Commission of Judicial Conduct Board of Bar Overseers etc) and 3 are
Federal Treasury Agents. Some of the defendants are over two months
late in their answer to the Summons. The smallest suit amounts to 188
million dollars in the form of relief. There is a lot to these matters
and too much to briefly explain. But in a nutshell my wife's Aunt, who
is buried beside Rose Kennedy, left my wife some money. It was stolen
by her relatives in executing the estate. No news there. But the
crooks are very well connected politically and every part of the old
crony network in Boston covered for them. The crook and our cousin,
Charles J. Kickham Jr of the Kickham Law Office on Beacon St, has been
past President of Bar Associations. He has sat on the Board of
Governors of Harvard Law School etc. I have given much information to
many members of the press who have simply ignored some interesting
facts. What should be somewhat newsworthy is how far a wild colonial
boy has come in prosecuting Pro Se the most profund Yankee
carpetbaggers. My next two lawsuits Under title 18 are wickedly
righteous. I have left one copy of much information in Saint John New
Brunswick at a lawyer's Office, Mosher and Chedore 33 Charlotte St if
some one wishes to view them. I can be reached at this Cell number 506
434- 1379

David R. Amos



LAW

Canadian Media Deregulation Provides Insight Into FCC Proposal



Critics of consolidation say the integrity of the news is being
undermined by the effects of concentrated ownership





Editor's Note: This story has been updated to correct inaccuracies.
Please see the corrected version here.

The original version of this story (see below) posted on May 29, 2003
incorrectly stated that Canada's two national newspapers, The Globe
and Mail and the National Post, recently laid off their online
editorial staffs. According to globeandmail.com editor Angus Frame,
there have been no recent editorial layoffs at globeandmail.com; the
site's 18-person staff continues to write and edit stories that are
published exclusively online. The National Post did not have dedicated
online editorial staff, and did not have online editorial layoffs. The
story also failed to acknowledge that the country's largest newspaper,
the Toronto Star, also has a significant online operation.

The Federal Communications Commission is poised to unveil new media
ownership rules June 2 that some experts believe may change the face
of American journalism.

The new rules would allow media companies to own television stations
and newspapers in the same cities.

The FCC barred companies from owning newspapers and TV stations in the
same market in 1975, but big media owners like the Tribune Co., Knight
Ridder, MediaNews Group and the New York Times say it's time to lift
that ban.

They argue that cross-ownership makes for better journalism: Staffers
working for companies that own newspapers and TV stations in the same
market can work together to create richer, multimedia news reports
that can then run in the company's paper and on their stations and Web
sites.

Advocates say the synergies of convergence lead to cost savings,
increased advertising revenues and greater efficiencies.

Cross-ownership already exists in some markets: The FCC granted about
40 exemptions to the cross-ownership rule in cases where a company
already had television or radio stations and a newspaper in a single
city. The FCC also granted exemptions in larger markets after media
mergers produced cross-ownership situations.

‘The concentration of ownership in a lot of major Canadian cities is
of interest for a lot reasons, but mainly because it provides too much
news coming through one pipeline.’
--Russ Mills, former publisher of the Ottawa Citizen

The Tribune Co., for example, owns television stations and newspapers
in Los Angeles, Chicago, New York and Miami.

How further media consolidation and convergence would play out if the
FCC does lift the ban on cross-ownership has been the subject of hot
debate in the weeks leading up to the commission's June 2 vote.

Experts familiar with the rapid consolidation of media in Canada say
the U.S. should look northward for some lessons on what loosening
cross-ownership restrictions could mean to journalism in the U.S.

In Canada, the deregulation of cross-media ownership occurred
gradually over the last 20 years. Within the past eight years, it has
led to massive consolidation of media companies.

Most of Canada's news media -- including newspapers and broadcast
stations in all of its major cities -- are in the hands of two media
giants: CanWest Global Communications Inc., and Bell Globemedia -- a
division of the country's largest telephone company, Bell Canada.

The rapid media consolidation in Canada has inspired an
often-acrimonious debate over whether Canadian journalists are able to
report objectively on social and political issues and whether the
country's corporate media has allowed business interests to undermine
the role of journalism in a modern democracy.

"Based on the experience in Canada, dropping restrictions on
cross-ownership certainly hasn't worked out well," said Russ Mills,
former publisher of the Ottawa Citizen in Canada's capital city, who
was fired by CanWest in a fight over editorial independence.

"The concentration of ownership in a lot of major Canadian cities is
of interest for a lot of reasons, but mainly because it provides too
much news coming through one pipeline," he said. "When companies use
ownership to control the news, and they do have the ability to do so,
it hurts everyone."

Though the two media conglomerates said cross-media consolidation
would improve online journalism, many media observers say online
journalism at local papers has gone downhill in the wake of
consolidation.

The country's two national newspapers, the National Post, half-owned
by CanWest, and The Globe and Mail, owned by Bell Canada's media wing,
Globemedia, have laid off the online reporters and editors at the two
papers that once produced copy separate from print editions.

The two papers, former online staffers said, were the only ones in
Canada that were doing something other than simply repurposing content
from newspaper pages into newspaper Web sites.

Executives at Bell Globemedia and CanWest have defended the cutbacks,
saying they were a result of cost-cutting efforts and consolidations
undertaken after spending billions of dollars to acquire newspaper and
broadcasting properties.

Consolidation accelerated in 1990s

Canada's restrictions on cross-media ownership were carved largely
from regulatory decisions on broadcasting licenses made since the
1950s by the Canadian Radio-Television Commission -- Canada's version
of the FCC.

By the mid-1980s, Canadian media experts say, exceptions to
cross-media ownership rules had eroded the cross-ownership ban to the
point that it was unenforcable and largely ignored.

By the mid-1990s, consolidation of Canadian media companies had
accelerated on the strength of dot.com economics. And in 2000,
CanWest, the second largest broadcaster in the country, announced a
$3.5-billion deal to purchase a majority of the nation's newspapers --
including papers in the nation's 12 largest cities.

Within weeks, Jean Monty, Bell Canada's CEO at the time, announced
that Canada's largest phone company had set its sights on owning both
content and the multimedia pipelines into consumers' homes.

The decision prompted Bell Globemedia to purchase the Globe and Mail
and the nation's largest TV network, CTV, in 2001.

Despite the rising consolidation of media outlets, the massive
purchases of newspapers by CanWest Global and Bell Globemedia took
many Canadian journalists and media-watchers by surprise.

CanWest and Bell executives convinced Canada's CRTC that convergence
was necessary to attract advertising revenue and reduce costs if
newspapers in many Canadian communities were to survive. And they
promised that resources from new revenues would be devoted to
improving the quality and reach of journalism through the Internet.

When questions about convergence arose during CRTC hearings on both
companies' broadcast licenses shortly after their newspaper purchases,
they promised regulators that they would separate management of
news-gathering operations by their television stations and newspapers.

Officials from the Canada National Newspaper Guild complained that
keeping management separate would not prevent companies from forcing
journalists to perform work for both newspapers and television, to the
detriment of journalistic independence.

Critics -- including journalism professors, journalists, newspaper and
broadcast union officials, and some government officials -- have
argued that the quality of journalism has gone down, not up, as a
result of convergence.

Joyce Smith, an assistant professor at Canada's Ryerson University,
teaches online journalism and worked on the online staff at the Globe
and Mail before those employees were laid off last year.

She said the one opportunity to see convergence succeed might have
been missed by Bell Globemedia in its efforts to cut costs to recoup
some of what it spent on media acquisitions.

"What I found interesting was that the actual idea of convergence
wasn't a hit with people working with just the newspaper or just
television," Smith said. "Where it really happened was with the online
news team. There were things the TV folks could clearly do much better
with the online newspaper. By pooling resources, it all did work much
better.

"But in the tradition of journalism," she said, "reporters were
asking, 'What does this mean for me? Does it mean that I have to file
stories to the Web and then do stand-ups in newsroom, while doing my
piece for the deadline at the end of the day?'

"Basically, (owners) wanted reporters to be one-man bands," Smith
said. "That has been played and replayed here. It made sense from a
business model, but journalists, especially those who have been around
for a while, went into newspapers and TV for a reason. Some are great
at doing both, but not everyone has the same aptitude. And no one has
the time in the day to do it all. Some of the expectations were
outrageous."

Canada reexamining changes

While U.S. media critics and media executives have been testifying
over the past few weeks in Senate hearings on the proposed changes in
the FCC's media ownership rules, Canada is busy reexamining what has
come of its own cross-media consolidations.

Two inquiries are underway by Canadian government officials to explore
the impact of cross-media ownership and consolidation on journalistic
integrity and media responsibility.

The Canadian Senate's Committee on Transport and Communication began
taking testimony at the end of April on those issues and is expected
to report its findings within the next year.

A House of Commons committee on Canadian heritage is expected to
release an 800-page report next month on its own yearlong
investigation into the impact of media concentration and political
efforts by corporations to ease restrictions on foreign ownership of
Canadian media.

But media-watchers, who have a ringside seat on Canada's great media
debate, say they are doubtful that government investigations will
produce any new regulation on media conglomerates.

"The horse is out of the barn," said Arnold Amber, director of the
National Newspaper Guild of Canada. "But the good news is that this
has at least inspired a vigorous national debate on press freedom and
responsibility."

Amber and other critics of media convergence said promises of more
stories and better information from combining print and broadcast news
staffs have largely failed in Canada.

"Bell Globemedia is talking about restructuring and selling off its
media wing," Amber said. "The failure of convergence to bring in
revenues was primarily responsible for the resignation of Bell
Canada's CEO, Jean Monty," who stepped down in April 2002.

Geoffrey Elliot, vice-president of corporate affairs for CanWest, said
that convergence has not led to revenues, or the reduced costs, the
company had hoped for.

But Elliot, and other supporters of cross-media ownership, argues that
all sides have benefited from consolidation.

"We are a family-owned business that saw an opportunity in which the
whole was greater than the sum of the parts," Elliot said. "We saw
substantial potential synergies on the sales side by putting
television and newspaper assets together, since they both serve
primarily advertising clients as sources of revenue, and serve a
combination of local and national markets."

Amber said the companies likely saw their primary financial advantages
from a convergence of back-office technologies -- combining
circulation, sales, printing and management operations.

But it was something else that brought issues to a head in Canada over
media consolidation and sharing newsroom resources: The loss of
diversity of voices within the Canadian media took on new importance,
observers say, after a series of events that led to accusations of
censorship and political bias by CanWest's owners.

In December 2001, CanWest -- which owns 11 major dailies and 22
smaller papers in Canada -- issued a directive to its newspaper
editors that they would be expected to run three editorials per week
that reflected the position of CanWest’s owners on political or social
issues.

The decision was met with a spate of criticism -- especially when
editors were told that other local editorials were not to contradict
those from corporate headquarters.

A byline strike ensued at the Montreal Gazette, and inquiries by the
newspaper guild there led to findings that work by columnists and
cartoonists was spiked when it conflicted with opinions from corporate
headquarters.

Several journalists quit; some staffers published a protest Web site.

The furor finally boiled over into the public arena last June when
Russ Mills, the publisher of the Ottawa Citizen, was fired by CanWest
for running a series of stories and an editorial that outlined alleged
political and financial irregularities in the administration of
Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien.

Elliot, the CanWest vice president, said the controversy arose because
Mills failed to let CanWest's owners know in advance of the series or
the editorial -- which called on Chretien, a friend of CanWest
patriarch Israel Asper, to resign.

Mills said he had not sought permission for either the investigative
series, or the editorial, because he believed in preserving "editorial
independence."

The problem, Mills said, was that the new owners were trying to
dictate local editorial policy from corporate headquarters.

Elliot described the concern over attempts at a national editorial
policy -- which has since been largely abandoned –- as a tempest
without substance.

He said CanWest’s owners were "well within their rights to propose
national editorials," and that their actions were no different that
those of other newspaper ownership groups prior to media
consolidation.

"There has never been any effort to control what was published in news
stories," he said.

Since his firing, Mills has become an outspoken critic of media
consolidation in Canada, and he testified in April before the Canadian
Senate committee conducting media hearings. He was also awarded a
Neiman Fellowship at Harvard University and is the incoming dean of
the journalism program at Algonquin College in Ottawa.

Meanwhile, Mills' firing prompted a public opinion poll by Canada's
largest media union that found that the incident had caused the public
to lose confidence in the media's editorial independence.

The results, union officials said, showed that Canadians were
concerned about press freedom and wanted the government to look into
problems associated with media concentration.

Peter Murdock, then vice-president of the communications union, told
Canada Newswire that the poll "demonstrates that Canadians want their
journalists protected from the whims and prejudice of media barons. It
is a grim warning to media corporations and government that Canadians
believe that the very integrity of the news that feeds our democracy
is being undermined by the effects of concentrated media ownership."

It is clear that online journalism at Canada’s newspapers has changed
dramatically under CanWest’s corporate control.

The company replaced independent newspaper Web sites with a common
site, Canada.com, which allows consumers to access local news by
clicking on the community they are interested in.

Elliot said community news on the Web site comes from local newspapers
and television stations, and said that consolidating that information
on a single Web site provides consumers better access to local news
across the country -- as well as reduces costs.

Bruce MacCormack, former head of interactive media at CanWest, said
supplementing newspaper and television content with a common Web site
has made access to news more efficient and allowed the corporation to
serve consumers better.

"The consumers of online media … were also television viewers and
newspaper readers, and at different points in the day, different media
were the best way to reach those people," MacCormack said.

"Someone watching television in the evening could be told about
stories being developed for the next day's newspaper, which is read on
the commuter train as people go to work," he said. "Then, during
working hours, the Internet was the most effective way to get them up
to date on news, and tease them for television use at night."

"These were handoff mechanisms that worked to reach people, so
consumers and the public were able to access services in the most
appropriate media, for whatever method they could best be served."

CanWest recently filed testimony with the FCC to support the
relaxation of cross-media regulations in the U.S. That testimony
challenges media critics on their central objections to cross-media
ownership.

"Today's media market is the richest and most diverse in the history
of modern media," the document says. "Cross-ownership has strengthened
media companies and encouraged greater diversity and more sources of
information.

"Experience," it adds, "simply does not support the contention of some
opponents of cross-media ownership, that consumers would have access
to fewer point of view, or would see only repackaged versions of the
same content across multimedia platforms."

Smith, the Ryerson professor -- despite her criticisms of the handling
of online media opportunities in Canada -- said she sees differences
between media ownership consolidation in Canada and in the United
States.

"In the U.S., because of the size of the market, the chance of one or
two owners gobbling up everything, I think, would be less than in
Canada," she said. "But there is some caution in that.

"If you are thinking about journalists, there are wonderful things
about operating in a converged environment. It was really exciting
thinking we could potentially have video, and it may be good for news
consumers in the sense that (online video) will be a faster way of
converging types of media.

"But you get a lot of the same stuff. There is no alternative. You are
going to lose some (editorial) voices in the process."


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