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indulging in copious amounts of fringe.

With temperatures rising above 30C in what are now the deepest days of August, the appropriately named 27th annual Edmonton International Fringe Festival – The Big Kahuna embraced the summer heat as it began this week.

Being the first Friday of Fringing, I decided to take it easy, enjoy the sun, the busking entertainment (including the always entertaining Be Arthurs), and of course… the food. As is the case for all of Edmonton’s summer festivals, Green Onion Cakes (with hot pepper sauce) are a staple (and they remain tasty). But, if it is cream of the iced variety that you crave, look beyond the Fringe grounds for your fix. I discovered through a quick investigation of most of the Fringe vendors that the average price of a regular cone sits around $4.00. But if you wander a block south of the Fringe grounds, you will discover an iced cream stand on the south side of Whyte Avenue sitting between Hudson’s and the Commie where you can purchase a two-scooped sugar cone for the great price of $3.75 (later this weekend, I will post a review of the beer selection at the always popular Fringe Beer Gardens).

In completing my Friday night, I joined a sold out crowd at B-Scene Studios to absorb JEM ROLLS‘ epic 8500 word monologue of a poem to the most wonderful and vacuous of all 20th century creations — the shopping mall. Rolls’ show was an incredibly fulfilling way to complete the first day of my 2008 Fringe experience and I would strongly recommend that everyone try and check it out.

Over the next week, I plan to see a number of shows — including 1UP, 25 Plays About… Love, Albertine Five Times, Cellmates: The Musical!, Cinderella, Killing Kevin Spacey, Sad Victoria’s Pelican Day, The Tool Tall Princess, and Rocket Sugar Factory. I’ll be posting some short reviews and updates of my 2008 Fringe adventures as the week progresses.

If you have any suggestions on shows feel free to post them below or send me an email.

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Alberta Oil Sands John O'Connor

water is boss.

Next week, a group of American journalists will be going on a public relations tour to visit the EnCana Carbon Sequestration test site and the Athabasca oilsands operations, care of the Canadian Embassy in Washington DC — but that’s not all that is happening along the Athabasca River this week.

For the past month, members of the Keepers of the Athabasca Watershed Society (KAWS) have been traveling the of the Athabasca River Basin and holding conferences in communities along the river in order to raise awareness about the importance of the river and the effects contamination and overuse of water by oilsands operations. KAWS’ tour will culminate at a large conference in Fort Chipewyan, downstream from Fort McMurray’s oilsands operations, whose residents have seen an increasing number of cancer rates in recent years. Fort Chipewyan’s former Doctor, Dr. John O’Connor, will be delivering the keynote address. at the conference.

In 2006, O’Connor publicly raised concern that an increase in cancer rates in Fort Chipewyan may be the result of the copious amounts of arsenic dumped into the water by oilsands operations along the Athabasca River. Instead of increased support to deal with this medical concern, Alberta Health and Wellness and Health Canada brought forward professional misconduct charges against O’Connor (three of which have been dismissed by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta).

In 2007, the Alberta Medical Association unanimously passed a motion in support of Dr. O’Connor and the Canadian Medical Association passed a resolution calling for whistleblower protection for doctors like O’Connor. Though they leveled charges of professional misconduct against O’Connor, the government is currently conducing a comprehensive report on cancer rates in the region.

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canadians deported from china.

How many Chinese do you suppose will be deported from Canada during the 2010 Vancouver Olympic Games?

BEIJING — Seven Canadians have been deported from China following a rash of pro-Tibetan protests in Beijing in recent days that has prompted Chinese authorities to tighten security further.

Steve Andersen, 28, from Edmonton, and Maude Cote, 28, from Montreal, along with a Tibetan-German woman were arrested by plainclothes police officers after they reportedly unfurled a Tibetan flag just after 3 p.m. Sunday in Beijing, just outside the southern entrance of Tiananmen Square.

A short time after those arrests, Mike Hudema, a prominent spokesman for Greenpeace in Alberta, was detained along with four other people from Edmonton and Vancouver in a Beijing hotel, their luggage thoroughly searched before being questioned individually in the basement.

The five Canadians who were detained at a Beijing hotel before subsequently being deported were identified as Mr. Hudema, 31, Jasmine Freed, 27, Paul Christopher Baker, 29, Denise Ogonoski, 26, and William Nelson, 26.

LINK

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Canadian Politics David Emerson

david emerson for edmonton-east.

The Edmonton Journal ran an interesting piece this weekend speculating on the potential of Foreign Affairs Minister David Emerson to run in Edmonton in the next general election.

Infamous for joining Stephen Harper‘s Conservative Cabinet only days after being re-elected as a Liberal MP for Vancouver-Kingsway in 2006, Emerson is rumoured to be seeking a different seat to contest in the next election (the last time Vancouver-Kingsway elected a Conservative was in 1958). Though there was no shortage of backlash against Emerson’s crossing the floor from constituents and opposing partisans, I believe that Emerson’s lack of partisan loyalties is the point which they are missing.

It should have become pretty clear that David Emerson did not enter elected politics to join the “Liberal” or “Conservative” clubs, but to use his skills, experience, and knowledge to do the best job he could as an MP — and it is understandable that being a Cabinet Minister (be it Liberal or Conservative) would put him in a much more effective position to complete this goal. Unlike some politicians, who would cross the floor for more opportunistic reasons, it isn’t hard to see that Emerson isn’t interested in playing the game of petty partisanship.

Would Emerson be a good fit for Edmonton? Raised in Grande Prairie, Emerson earned his Bachelor and Masters in Economics from the University of Alberta, a Ph.D. in Economics from Queen’s University, and has served as British Columbia’s Deputy Minister of Finance, CEO of the Pacific & Western Bank of Canada, and CEO and President of the Canfor Corporation. A heavy weight who would inject as powerful amount of bench strength into Edmonton’s parliamentary delegation, Emerson could fill the high-profile political void left after Liberal Deputy Prime Minister Anne McLellan‘s defeat in 2006.

Which constituency would Emerson run in? With Reform-era MPs John Williams and Ken Epp retiring and the Conservatives having already nominated candidates in both Edmonton-St. Albert and Edmonton-Sherwood Park (Brent Rathgeber and Tim Uppal), and most of the remaining Conservative MPs on the younger edge of the Parliamentary age scale (under 50), the pool of available seats in Edmonton is narrow.

I’m left thinking Edmonton-East. After 11 years in the House of Commons, Conservative MP Peter Goldring is an unlikely pick for cabinet, and though I’m sure he served an extraordinary term as the co-chair of the Standing Joint Committee on the Library of Parliament, it’s not unreasonable to speculate that the 64-year old may have reached the height of his parliamentary career. Though Emerson would face a strong challenge from former NDP MLA Ray Martin, Edmonton could prove to be friendlier territory than Vancouver-Kingsway, should he choose to seek re-election here.

Overall, if he decided to contest the election in Edmonton-East, Emerson could represent Edmonton well in the next parliament if he decided to return to the city of his Alma mater.

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nothing screams confidence like…

… the water company giving out free water filters.


This past week, EPCOR stopped by my house to test the neighbourhood water (Queen Alexandra is an older neighbourhood and apparently still has a few lead pipes), which was fine, but I was a little amused/concerned when I saw that the EPCOR water sample collector had left a complementary water filter for our use.

I’m generally a big supporter of tap water (as opposed to the scam which is bottled water), but I’m wondering if there’s something we should know that EPCOR isn’t telling us…

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germany pushes the boundaries.

After passing a municipal law in June 2008 requiring all newly built or renovated buildings to install solar panels, an epic debate over this renewable energy law is now taking place in the City of Marburg.

Germany is aiming to slash their national greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent from 1990 levels by 2020.

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the state of urban herbage.

It’s been a while since I’ve written about my feelings towards the state of urban herbage, so I thought I would share an interesting book that a friend passed along — Agropolis: The Social, Political, and Environmental Dimensions of Urban Agriculture by Luc J. A. Mougeot.

Agropolis is available online for your reading pleasure care of the International Development Research Centre.

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boycott beijing 2008: cheek refused entry over darfur.

Times Online:

Joey Cheek, an American Olympic gold medallist who has been leading a campaign to stop China from trading arms with the Sudan, has been refused entry to the Beijing Games.

Cheek, who won gold in the men’s 500 metre speed skating event at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, has recruited nearly 400 Olympians and former Olympians worldwide to his cause, called Team Darfur, and was refused a visa at the Chinese embassy in Washington yesterday.

“Despite the fact that I’ve always spoken positively of the Olympic ideal, and never called for a boycott or asked an athlete to break an IOC rule, my visa was revoked less than 24 hours before my scheduled departure,” Cheek said. “The denial of my visa is a part of a systemic effort by the Chinese government to coerce and threaten athletes who are speaking out on behalf of the innocent people of Darfur.”

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continuing the beijing boycott.


As Canadian athletes prepare themselves for competition (in which I wish them good luck), I am continuing my personal boycott of the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games. Following the most recent embarrassing statement from International Olympic Committee Chair Jacques Rogge regarding previous statements on freedom of the press in the People’s Republic of China, I was pleased to see Canadian IOC delegate Dick Pound raise some overdue criticism of China and the distant international committee. But Pound’s criticisms only touched the surface of a larger issue which the IOC has chosen to ignore — the dire state of human rights and political freedoms in China.

In 1999, as recently quoted by Ken Silverstein, Condoleezza Rice stated that: “Economic liberalization in China is ultimately going to lead to political liberalization. That’s an iron law.” Nine years later, the “iron law” of economic liberalization seems to have come along with iron shackles, rather than the political liberalization Rice may have had in mind.

A March 2008 report from the U.S. Department of State describes the People’s Republic of China as “an authoritarian state” with a poor human rights record which has seen“tightening restrictions on freedom of speech and the press” including “increased efforts to control and censor the Internet.” The report also accuses Chinese authorities of other human rights abuses including “extrajudicial killings, torture and coerced confessions of prisoners, and the use of forced labor, including prison labor. The government continued to monitor, harass, detain, arrest, and imprison journalists, writers, activists, and defense lawyers and their families, many of whom were seeking to exercise their rights under law.”

The Chinese Government has also been unwavered in its military and diplomatic support of the brutal regimes in Zimbabwe, Sudan, Burma, and North Korea.

So, I’m left with a couple of questions: Why did the IOC believe that it was appropriate to reward an authoritarian regime such as China’s with the international prestige of the Olympic Games? And will the international attention for the games force China into the “political liberalization” that Rice predicted?

For more information, both Amnesty International and Reporters Sans Frontières are good sources.

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two former politicians walk into a radio station…


Klein: “Jean, welcome to The House.”

Chretien: “I’m happy to be in your house Ralph, but happy to be out of the other House (of Commons). There is a good life after politics.”

Klein: “Yeah, I’m doing a lot less and making a lot more money.”

Chretien: “Same for me Ralph, but when we were in politics we weren’t in it for the money, but for the fun of it.” It would be hard to imagine the personality-challenged antagonists of today — specifically Stephen Harper, Stephane Dion, Alberta’s Ed Stelmach or Ontario’s Dalton McGuinty — engaging in respectful chummy talk now or even a few years after they leave office.

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money and elections in the oil-rich sultanate of alberta.

Campaign expenses from Alberta’s March 3, 2008 Provincial Election were released a couple of weeks ago, here’s a look at expenses by constituency from Alberta’s two main political parties, and some lists of the expenses by the numbers (and the ridiculous amount of money that was spent in an election that produced a record low voter turnout):

Biggest Spenders
1) Sherwood Park – Iris Evans (PC) – $146,664.14
2) Edmonton-Mill Creek – Gene Zwozdesky (PC) – $140.283.18
3) Edmonton-Whitemud – Dave Hancock (PC) – $133,040.37
4) Calgary-McCall – Darshan Kang (Lib) – $117,137.44
5) Calgary-Glenmore – Ron Stevens (PC) – $110,979.96
6) Edmonton-Manning – Peter Sandhu (PC) – $90,853.23
7) Calgary-Elbow – Alison Redford (PC) – $87,846.02
8) Edmonton-Mill Woods – Carl Benito (PC) – $85,950.53
9) Calgary-McCall – Shiraz Shariff (PC) – $75,166.79
10) Lac La Biche-St. Paul – Ray Danyluk (PC) – $74,158.21

Biggest Liberal Spenders
1) Calgary-McCall – Darshan Kang – $117,137.44
2) Edmonton-Mill Creek – Aman Gill – $62,638.66
3) Calgary-Buffalo – Kent Hehr – $61,984.13
4) Edmonton-Ellerslie – Bharat Agnihotri – $57,496.63
5) Calgary-Elbow – Craig Cheffins – $56,109.10
6) Edmonton-Whitemud – Nancy Cavanaugh – $45,055.83
7) Sherwood Park – Louise Rogers – $44,461.28
8) Calgary-Bow – Greg Flanagan – $42,144.24
9) Calgary-Mountain View – David Swann – $40,522.36
10) Calgary-Currie – Dave Taylor – $36,891.07

Biggest bang for their buck (elected MLAs & cost per vote)
1) Battle River-Wainwright – Doug Griffiths (PC) – $2.65 per vote
2) Drumheller-Stettler – Jack Hayden (PC) – $2.43 per vote
3) Rocky Mountain House – Ty Lund (PC) – $3.07 per vote
4) Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills – Richard Marz (PC) – $3.16 per vote
5) Little Bow – Barry McFarland (PC) – $3.31 per vote
6) Strathmore-Brooks – Arno Doerksen (PC) – $3.48 per vote
7) Calgary-Hays – Art Johnston (PC) – $3.54 per vote
8) Lacombe-Ponoka – Ray Prins (PC) – $3.60 per vote
9) Edmonton-Riverview – Kevin Taft (Lib) – $3.88 per vote
10) Drayton Valley-Calmar – Diana McQueen (PC) – $3.99 per vote

Biggest Spender per vote
1) Calgary-McCall – Darshan Kang (Lib) – $27.48 per vote
2) Edmonton-Manning – Peter Sandhu (PC) – $22.11 per vote
3) Drayton Valley-Calmar – Norma Block (Lib) – $21.59 per vote
4) Lesser Slave Lake – Pearl Calahasen (PC) – $20.87 per vote
5) Edmonton-Mill Creek – Gene Zwozdesky (PC) – $20.44 per vote
6) Calgary-Buffalo – Sean Chu (PC) $19.58 per vote
7) Edmonton-Beverly-Clareview – Dawit Isaac (Lib) – $18.40 per vote
8) Edmonton-Mill Woods – Carl Benito (PC) – $18.09 per vote
9) Calgary-McCall – Shiraz Shariff (PC) – $18.05 per vote
10) Calgary-Glenmore – Ron Stevens (PC) – $17.23 per vote

PC v. Liberal – Biggest Spending Margin
1) Sherwood Park – Iris Evans (PC) +$102,203
2) Calgary-Glenmore – Ron Stevens (PC) +$88,029
3) Edmonton-Whitemud – Dave Hancock (PC) +$87,985
4) Edmonton-Mill Creek – Gene Zwozdesky (PC) +$77,645
5) Lac La Biche-St. Paul – Ray Danyluk (PC) +$66,245
6) Foothills-Rockyview – Ted Morton (PC) +$60,835
7) Fort Saskatchewan-Vegreville – Ed Stelmach (PC) +$59,636
8) Edmonton-Mill Woods – Carl Benito (PC) +$59,381
9) Dunvegan-Central Peace – Hector Goudreau (PC) +$55,720
10) Airdrie-Chestermere – Rob Anderson (PC) +$55,276

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"no rules" v. campaign finance reform.

It shouldn’t be a surprise that a lot of money drives politics in Alberta, but for those of you familiar/appalled with the City of Calgary’s “no rules” municipal campaign financing mantra should find Naheed Nenshi‘s latest Calgary Herald column interesting.

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freelancers do it better.

As someone who is earning a living through ‘freelance‘ contract work, I appreciated this list: 101 Reasons Freelancers Do It Better.

(h/t Brett Lamb)

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Alberta Oil Sands

beaver lake cree draw a line in the oil sand.

The Beaver Lake Cree Nation is taking legal action (pdf) against the governments of Canada and Alberta and is asking the court to rule government authorization for thousands of oil industry projects on the Nation’s territory as invalid.

(h/t The Tyee)

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let’s look outside-the-antiquated-box.

After my last couple of posts on the dangers of nuclear waste and growing wind power sector, I received more than a couple of emails from readers ranging from fairly positive to the predictable “no, we can’t, we can’t, we can’t” from those who’s thoughts continue to float in an unmarked antiquated box somewhere.

With Ontario-based Bruce Power announcing that over 2,700 jobs would be created with the construction of a nuclear power plant in Alberta’s Peace Country, I thought it would be interesting to take a look at a county that is rejecting nuclear energy, and as a result has seen its renewable energy sector flourish.

In 2002, German legislators turned their backs on nuclear power when they passed of the “Act on the structured phase-out of the utilisation of nuclear energy for the commercial generation of electricity.” Since taking power in 2005, Chancellor Angela Merkel‘s government is continuing plans to phase out nuclear power by 2020.

German renewable energy sector jobs almost doubled from 160,500 in 2004 to 249,300 in 2007, leading some to suggest that as many as 400,000 jobs could exist in this sector by 2020 (over 100,000 more than some previous studies had predicted). In 2007, renewable energy sources in Germany generated 8.5% of that country’s total energy consumption, and saved 114 million tons in carbon dioxide.

Sigmar Gabriel, German Minister for Environment, Nature Conservation, and Nuclear Safety was quoted as saying:

“The systematic expansion of renewable energy is not only good from the environmental and climate policy point of view but also for innovation, growth and employment in Germany.”

Gabriel has also announced that Germany, the world’s sixth largest greenhouse gas emitter, will expand its environmentally friendly energy production target to 27% by 2020.

A recent NASA report (h/t DSB) has reported that Canada’s coastal areas have the wind power density to produced intense amounts of wind energy through offshore wind farms. The construction of offshore coastal wind farms on Canada’s coasts would be a smarter way to meet our energy needs (and maybe make a couple bucks after selling surplus energy south of the 49th parallel).

As our provincial government continues its rosey-eyed high school-style relationship with nuclear power, we as citizens have a responsibility to understand that there are plenty ways to moving forward in filling our energy needs beyond nuclear power. There is a growing need for a larger energy supply, but we have a responsibility to ensure that the effects of our developments do not adversely affect the lives and well-being of the current population, as well as generations to come.

Maybe having antiquated thinkers drive our debate isn’t the smartest idea in the first place?