Liquor consumption bylaw amended in Gananoque

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

Liquor consumption bylaw amended in Gananoque A bylaw for consumption of liquor in public places has been amended by Gananoque council.Doing so now allows the organizer of any event the ability to determine if they want public alcohol to be allowed or not.On Oct. 18, 2022, council passed a bylaw to allow the consumption of liquor in public places. Joel Stone Park was the only location cited in the bylaw.On Dec. 6, 2022, council defeated a motion to consider a motion to repeal the bylaw. On Jan. 17, 2023, council passed a motion directing staff to bring back a report to amend the consumption of liquor in public places bylaw to exclude scheduled/booked events in Joel Stone Park to allow the organizer of any event the ability to determine if they want public alcohol to be allowed or not.Event organizers who book events in the park with the intention of selling alcohol must still obtain a special occasions permit and fence the licensed area. This will also need to be properly signed and communicated to attendees. They will also nee...

Analysis: How ‘grade obsession’ is detrimental to students and their education

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

Analysis: How ‘grade obsession’ is detrimental to students and their education By: Nathan Rickey, Queen’s University, Ontario; Andrew Coombs, Memorial University of Newfoundland; Christopher DeLuca, Queen’s University, Ontario, and Danielle LaPointe-McEwan, Queen’s University, OntarioGrading has been central to most education systems for over a century.During the 1800s, students’ achievement in school was communicated to parents through oral progress reports (typically through a visit from teachers to the student’s parents at home). These oral reports were later transformed into written reports and then into grades, first in secondary school, then in the elementary years.Grades were initially seen as an efficient way to communicate student achievement in school to parents. Grades are meant to represent, using letters or numbers, the quality (and at times, the quantity) of student learning in a subject, either on assignments or on report cards.It’s a common perception that students “earn” grades for their achievement at school; in this way, gr...

EU nears deal to restock Ukraine’s diminishing ammo supplies

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

EU nears deal to restock Ukraine’s diminishing ammo supplies BRUSSELS — The EU is finalizing a €2 billion deal to jointly restock Ukraine’s dwindling ammunition supplies while refilling countries’ stocks, according to documents obtained by POLITICO. The plan has two major elements. First, the EU will spend €1 billion to partially reimburse countries that can immediately donate ammunition from their own stockpiles. Secondly, countries will work together to jointly purchase €1 billion in new ammunition — the idea being that together they can negotiate bigger contracts at a lower price-per-shell. EU ambassadors will discuss the proposal — prepared by the EU’s diplomatic wing, the European External Action Service — during a meeting on Wednesday.The scheme — which POLITICO first reported on earlier this month — has come together rapidly in recent weeks in response to Ukraine’s pleas for more ammunition, specifically the 155-millimeter artillery shells it desperately needs to both hold territory a...

Liz Truss is gone. But Tories still dream of tax cuts on budget day

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

Liz Truss is gone. But Tories still dream of tax cuts on budget day LONDON — Six months after Liz Truss’ ‘mini-budget’ meltdown, tax cuts remain a highly-prized ideal among U.K. Conservatives. Under the new Tory regime, they look set for short-term disappointment. U.K. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt will give his budget speech Wednesday — the first time there’s been a full-fat budget since October 2021, when someone called Rishi Sunak was in charge at the finance ministry. Hunt will ask the country, and his party, to hold tight in the face of a murky outlook for growth in 2023, resisting all calls for major tax cuts. It was reported by the Guardian Tuesday evening that what small fiscal headroom he has available will be spent on increasing free childcare for working families.That policy will be warmly welcomed, given the U.K.’s painfully-high childcare costs, but it’s not the only rabbit his backbenchers had hoped to see plucked from the chancellor’s hat on Wednesday afternoon. After all, it wouldn’t be budget w...

Europe is out of the immediate energy crisis

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

Europe is out of the immediate energy crisis Ben McWilliams is a consultant, Simone Tagliapietra is a senior fellow and Georg Zachmann is a senior fellow in the field of energy and climate policy at Bruegel, Brussels.After surviving the most perilous winter on record without any serious interruptions to gas or electricity supply, Europe’s energy crisis is morphing into a new, less acute phase.In fact, the Continent has emerged from this emergency with very healthy volumes of stored gas — a rather remarkable feat that was grounded by the commitment of governments to allow markets to function. Higher prices drew liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes away from Asia and encouraged demand reduction at home.Most significantly, however, Russia has now exhausted its substantial market power over European supply. Over the last 12 months, as Moscow selectively cut exports, intraday price movements were recorded that, in magnitude, exceeded the absolute price pre-invasion. But today, Russian pipeline exports account for around 7 percent of...

It’s just not easy saying goodbye to China and Russia

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

It’s just not easy saying goodbye to China and Russia Elisabeth Braw is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, an advisor to Gallos Technologies and author of the upcoming book “Goodbye, Globalization.”Saying goodbye isn’t easy.Hundreds of companies have announced they’re leaving Russia since its invasion of Ukraine began — yet many of them seem to have remained there. Meanwhile, when it comes to China, Apple and other famous multinationals have declared they’re friendshoring to countries like Vietnam, India and even the United States — yet trade between the U.S. and China hit new records last year. So, what’s going on?The bottom line is that it’s extremely hard for companies to withdraw from countries — especially from ones that are hostile or unwilling to let go.For example, a much-consulted list maintained by researchers at Yale University reports that over 1,000 Western companies have curtailed operations in Russia. But, in December, trade and business professors Simon J. Evenett and Niccolò Pisani found that le...

Pope John Paul II and pedophile priests becomes Poland’s top political issue

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

Pope John Paul II and pedophile priests becomes Poland’s top political issue WARSAW — War? Inflation? Corruption? Nope, the big subject dominating Poland’s politics ahead of this fall’s parliamentary election is the legacy of John Paul II.Although the canonized Polish pontiff has been dead since 2005, he’s become the hottest subject in Poland following an explosive documentary aired by the U.S.-owned broadcaster TVN, alleging that when he was a cardinal in his home city of Kraków, he protected priests accused of sexually molesting children.That caused a collective meltdown in the ranks of the ruling nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party, which is closely allied with the powerful Roman Catholic Church.U.S. Ambassador Mark Brzezinski was even summoned (later toned down to “invited”) to appear at the foreign ministry. In a statement, the ministry said it “recognizes that the potential outcome of these activities is in line with the goals of a hybrid war aimed at causing divisions and tensions within Polish society.”PiS also pushed through ...

Europe’s green dilemma: Mining key minerals without destroying nature

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

Europe’s green dilemma: Mining key minerals without destroying nature For decades, the environmental and human cost of mining minerals like lithium and cobalt has largely been hidden from Europe’s view. That’s about to change. As the EU looks to diversify its supply of critical raw materials away from China, it wants to make it easier to tap into domestic reserves of the minerals it needs to build green technology like wind turbines and solar panels. But locals and green campaigners warn that slashing red tape for extraction projects risks taking a wrecking ball to decades of work to preserve nature and biodiversity, pointing out that mining can cause serious water and soil pollution and lead to deforestation and biodiversity loss.In Tréguennec, a coastal area in Brittany in northwestern France, locals are living above what they say feels like a time bomb. Some 130 meters below their homes lies the country’s second-largest deposit of lithium, a key component of the batteries used to power electric cars. Mining that so-called “w...

Nothing to see here: EU shrugs off Silicon Valley Bank collapse

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

Nothing to see here: EU shrugs off Silicon Valley Bank collapse It may be the largest banking collapse since the 2008 financial crisis but for the EU it’s somebody else’s problem.The failure over the weekend of America’s Silicon Valley Bank, which had assets of $200 billion, has prompted fears of wider meltdown, with share prices plummeting and U.S. agencies scrambling to contain the fallout and prevent runs on other lenders.In the European Union, it’s very definitely seen as something that’s happening to other people.“At the EU level, there is very limited presence of Silicon Valley Bank,” Valdis Dombrovskis, executive vice president of the European Commission, said Tuesday. “We are in touch with the relevant competent authorities, but we don’t expect much of a spillover effect.”His was just the latest in a series of chilled-out comments from leading EU figures as they looked on while the financial blowup raged.“I don’t see any risk of contagion,” French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Monday. “We are monitoring the si...

On eve of safety summit, FAA investigates another runway close call

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:18:50 GMT

On eve of safety summit, FAA investigates another runway close call (CNN) — The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating yet another close call between commercial airliners, this time at Reagan National Airport near Washington, DC — the seventh since the start of this year.On March 7, Republic Airways Flight 4736 crossed a runway, without clearance, that United Airlines Flight 2003 was using for takeoff, according to a preliminary review, the FAA said. The United pilot had just been cleared for takeoff from the runway, the agency said.“An air traffic controller noticed the situation and immediately canceled the takeoff clearance for the United flight,” the FAA said.Recordings accessed from LiveATC.net show air traffic controllers in the tower exclaiming, “United 2003 cancel takeoff clearance!” The crew of the United flight responded, “Aborting takeoff, United 2003.”The pilot of the Republic flight had been cleared to cross a different runway, “but turned on the wrong taxiway,...