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B.C. Green Party officially nominates 83 candidates

Andrew Weaver

ELECTIONS BC has released its official list of confirmed candidates, which includes 83 B.C. Green Party candidates for the May 9 election.

“I am incredibly proud of the team of candidates that have stepped up to run with the B.C. Greens,” said Andrew Weaver, leader of the B.C. Green Party. “These are 83 outstanding individuals who have stepped aside from their careers as scientists, firefighters and business and community leaders to serve their communities. More than one fifth of our candidates are professionally connected to education – they are current or former teachers, postsecondary instructors, principals and school board trustees.

“I would like to commend our field team on an incredible job well done. It is a much more rigorous process to nominate non-incumbent candidates, of which we have 82, and they have worked day in and day out to see this process through. I look forward to the weeks ahead as we travel the province talking with British Columbians about our vision for change they can count on.”

The full B.C. Greens team can be viewed at http://www.bcgreens.ca/ridings.

‘John Horgan and the BC NDP will get Surrey students out of portables and into real classrooms’

NDP Leader John Horgan with his party’s Surrey candidates on Wednesday.
Photo by Vinnie Combow

NDP Leader John Horgan and the BC NDP announced on Wednesday that they will build schools to make sure Surrey students are learning in real classrooms, not portables.
“Surrey is one of the fastest-growing areas in BC. More than 1,000 new students are coming into Surrey schools each year. Christy Clark’s failure to plan for growth has resulted in 10 per cent of Surrey students –  7,000 kids – learning in portables,” said Horgan.
“We’re going to make sure that students get every chance to succeed. We’re going to build schools that create jobs for people and get Surrey students into real classrooms.”
For every portable in Surrey, $15,000 comes out of the district’s operating budget – money that could otherwise be spent on school programs. Horgan said building proper schools using capital investments will get kids in Surrey out of portables and will free up desperately needed operating money to hire more teachers.
The NDP will invest $10 billion in capital infrastructure that will create 96,000 jobs over five years by building schools, hospitals, transit and other infrastructure that works for BC.

Horgan said the NDP will build new schools and invest in students by:

  • Replacing Surrey portables with real classrooms and building new schools in BC’s fastest growing region
  • Delivering stable and proper education funding to ensure kids have the support they need to thrive
  • Working with local governments, First Nations and communities to build and upgrade schools in every region
  • Building new schools with made-in-BC manufactured wood products where possible, spurring growth and creating jobs in our forestry communities.

Pakistani Hindu youth selected for prestigious US award

 

Washington (PTI): A Hindu youth from Pakistan has been selected for the prestigious Emerging Young Leaders Award given by the US State Department for the positive role played by youngsters in building sustainable peace.
Raj Kumar, from Pakistan, was among 10 youths from across the world who have been selected for the second edition of the ‘Emerging Young Leaders Award’ given by the State Department.
Those selected for the award include youngsters from Malta, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Algeria, Tajikistan, Belgium, Vietnam, Peru and Israel.
The young people selected for the award will visit the US for an intensive programme from April 30 to May 13, specially designed to explore their leadership capacities, strengthen their knowledge of management strategies in the non-profit, government and private sectors, learn and share best practices, and broaden their networks of resources and support, the State Department said in a statement.
Kumar became an active member of the Pakistan-US Alumni Network (PUAN) following his participation in the State Department-sponsored Global Undergraduate Exchange Programme in 2013, the statement said.
He served in various leadership positions within PUAN and secured grants totaling USD 10,000 for projects focusing on countering violent extremist voices and promoting pluralism in society.
Through one of his initiatives, ‘Days of Interreligious Youth Action Promoting Peace through Arts, Sports, Dialogue and Music’, Kumar and his 10-person team brought together 500 community members from different ethnic and religious backgrounds to paint and share messages of peace through art and Sufi music, as well as teach teamwork and sportsmanship lessons, the State Department said.
Through another grant, Kumar provided training to women about Pakistani laws that protect their rights.
“Raj recognises the power of traditional and social media to influence views; he wrote a piece titled ‘My Journey as a Pakistani Hindu’that was picked up by a leading English- language newspaper in Pakistan, Express Tribune,” the State Department said.
He also has spoken about the role of youth in addressing violent extremism on a prominent Pakistani TV network, Dawn News, and has been profiled by a prominent Facebook page, “Humans of Pakistan.”

Rights groups condemn attack on Sikh cab driver in NYC

New York (PTI): Civil rights groups are strongly condemning a “racially motivated” attack on a Sikh taxi driver here, calling it an assault “on all New Yorkers”.
Harkirat Singh, 25, an immigrant from Punjab who moved to the US three years ago, was assaulted and his turban knocked off by unruly passengers in the early hours of Sunday.
The New York Police Department is investigating the incident as a possible hate crime.
The New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY), a leading Muslim civil rights and advocacy organisation, condemned the “racially and religiously motivated attack” on Singh.
“As brothers and sisters facing increased racially and religiously motivated attacks, this reprehensible attack against Singh resonates strongly with our community,” CAIR-NY Executive Director Afaf Nasher said in a statement.
CAIR-NY Legal Director Albert Cahn said no New Yorker should ever face violence because of his or her faith.
“We are a city united by our diversity. Any attack motivated by religious bigotry is an attack on all New Yorkers and the values we hold dear,” Cahn added.
According to police, Singh was attacked by his passengers during a trip from Madison Square Garden to the Bronx. The passengers reportedly called Singh “Ali Baba,” swore at him, refused to pay the cab fare, and attempted to break the cab meter and partition. The passengers then, while fleeing the police, ripped Singh’s turban from his head.
Sikh rights group The Sikh Coalition urged the NYPD to hold the perpetrators accountable and called on the city administration to make bias prevention a top priority.
“It is one thing for law enforcement to respond to hate crimes after the fact, but we collectively need to start thinking about ways to prevent hate crimes from occurring in the first place,” Sikh Coalition Interim Managing Director of Programs Rajdeep Singh Jolly said in a statement.
Recently, several anti-Sikh attacks have received national attention. Earlier this year in Kent, Washington, a Sikh man was accosted by another man in his driveway and told to “go back to his country”. The individual then shot the Sikh in the arm. Local authorities are looking into the attack as a possible hate crime.
CAIR-NY said there has been an unprecedented spike in hate rhetoric and bias-motivated incidents targeting Sikhs, American Muslims and other minorities since the election of President Donald Trump.
Earlier this month, the NYPD noted that there has been a 100 percent increase in hate crimes. CAIR-NY said the figure is a gross underestimation due to under-reporting.
The attack on Singh occurred just hours after thousands of Sikhs had gathered at Times Square for the ‘Turban Day’ event organised by a Sikh group to spread awareness about the faith.

 

 

 

Trump orders overhaul of H-1B visas, Indian techies to be hit

Washington (PTI): In a blow to Indian IT industry and professionals, US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order for tightening the rules of the H-1B visa program to stop its “abuse” and ensure that the visas are given to the “most-skilled or highest paid” petitioners.

Acting on his ‘Buy American, Hire American’ pledge, Trump signed the order that calls for an overhaul of the program at the Kenosha, Wisconsin, headquarters of tool-maker Snap-on Inc on Tuesday.

“Right now, widespread abuse in our immigration system is allowing American workers of all backgrounds to be replaced by workers brought in from other countries to fill the same job for, sometimes, less pay. This will stop,” Trump told an enthusiastic audience in Wisconsin before signing the order.

He said the order sets in motion the first steps to initiate “long-overdue” reforms to end “visa abuses”.

“Right now, H-1B visas are awarded in a totally random lottery, and that’s wrong. Instead, they should be given to the most skilled and highest-paid applicants, and they should never, ever be used to replace Americans,” he asserted.

“No one can compete with American workers when they’re given a fair and level playing field, which has not happened for decades,” he said.

Trump said his administration is going to enforce ‘Hire American’ rules that are designed to protect jobs and wages of workers in the United States.

“We believe jobs must be offered to American workers first. Does that make sense?” he said.

But the New York Times noted that Trump’s announcement came at a jittery time for the White House, as he faces the 100th day of his presidency without much to show for it in the way of legislative accomplishment, after the defeat of his health care overhaul.

“And his two high-profile executive orders cracking down on immigration from predominantly Muslim nations have been stymied by the courts,” the paper pointed out.

Trump’s executive order also declares that American projects should be made with American goods.

“No longer are we going to allow foreign countries to cheat our producers and our workers out of federal contracts.

Everyone in my administration will be expected to enforce every last ‘Buy American’ provision on behalf of the American worker, and we are going to investigate every single trade deal that undermines these provisions,” he said.

According to the executive order, the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Secretary of Labour, and the Secretary of Homeland Security shall suggest reforms to help ensure that H-1B visas are awarded to the most-skilled or highest-paid petition beneficiaries.

In a statement, the White House said H-1B visas are supposed to bring the highest skilled and paid labour to the United States.

But according to studies, 80 per cent of the approved applications were for the two lowest wage levels allowed.

“Currently, companies routinely abuse the H-1B visa program by replacing American workers with lower paid foreign workers,” it said.

Reforming the H-1B visa system was one of the major election promises of Trump. As per several US reports, a majority of the H-1B visas every year are grabbed by Indian IT professionals.

India accounts for the highest pool of qualified IT professionals, whose services go a long way in making American companies globally competitive.

As mandated by the Congress, the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) every year issues 65,000 H-1B visas and another 20,000 to those applicants having masters and higher degrees from a US educational institution.

This month USCIS received 199,000 H-1B visa petitions and as a result, the federal agency had to resort to a computerised draw of lots to decide the fate of successful applicant.

Betsy Lawrence, the director of government relations for the American Immigration Lawyers Association, told CNN: “Although released with ceremonial flair, the order will have no immediate impact on H-1Bs.”

“Many of the changes to the H-1B programme contemplated by the administration would require legislative action or rule-making and would take time to go through the necessary processes,” he said.

Meanwhile, some US lawmakers said the executive order signed by Trump calling for a review of H-1B visas was too little and too late.

“This does nothing,” said Senator Charles Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader. “Like all the other executive orders, it’s just words – he’s calling for new studies. It’s not going to fix the problem. It’s not going to create a single job.”

“We already know H-1B visa abuse hurts American workers. Simply reviewing the program is too little, too late,” Senator Dick Durbin said.

US lawmakers have already tabled more than half a dozen legislations in the Congress with specific proposals to reform and improve the H-1B visas systems. Many of those proposals, as per industry body Nasscom, are discriminatory and are targeted towards Indian IT companies.

The US tech industry and corporate sector, however, has welcomed the “much-needed” review of the H-1B visa program and expressed confidence that it would help them bring in the best and the brightest from across the world.

Watch out for traffic disruptions during Vancouver’s 4/20 event!

“WHY drink and drive, when you can smoke and fly” reads a flippant slogan on t-shirts.

But jokes aside, Vancouver Police are notifying the public of potential traffic disruptions during Thursday’s 4/20 activities expected to take place at Sunset Beach and in the area of the Vancouver Art Gallery.

Starting Thursday morning, police are anticipating large crowds to gather at Sunset Beach for the annual 4/20 marijuana demonstration. Traffic will likely be disrupted on Beach Avenue between Burrard and Broughton streets for most of the day.

Police, Fire, City of Vancouver, Park Board and BC Ambulance Service staff will be on hand to monitor the event.

An additional gathering is expected in the area of the Vancouver Art Gallery, with potential traffic disruptions on Robson Street between Hornby and Howe Street.

“Public safety remains our top priority,” says Constable Jason Doucette. “We will continue to weigh the rights of individuals to have their voice heard, while working to minimize the impact that has on others.”

Officers will also be looking for drivers who are impaired by drugs or alcohol. Drivers can expect to see police drug recognition experts and officers equipped with alcohol screening devices on the roads throughout the day.

 

It’s unfortunate Indian Defence Minister Jaitley condemned Ontario assembly’s anti-Sikh riots motion: AAP

 

Harvinder Singh Phoolka in Surrey in 2016.

Chandigarh (PTI): The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) on Wednesday said it is “unfortunate” that Defence Minister Arun Jaitley at a meeting with his Canadian counterpart Harjit Singh Sajjan has condemned the passing of a motion in the Ontario legislative assembly which describes the 1984 anti-Sikh riots as “genocide”.

The party also questioned the “silence” of the Akalis on the matter.

AAP’s Punjab leader H S Phoolka said, “It is unfortunate that Jaitley had condemned the passage of the motion. The Ontario Assembly has rightly declared the killing of the Sikhs in 1984 as genocide.”

“Why is the Akali Dal, an alliance partner in the BJP-led Central government, and Union Minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal are silent on the issue. It is shocking and surprising,” the Leader of Opposition in Punjab Assembly said.

Phoolka claimed that the “silence” of the Akalis and Harsimrat is “supporting” the Congress and Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh’s move to stall the declaration of the killing of the Sikhs in the 1984 riots as “genocide”.

“Amarinder’s barb against the Canadian Defence Minister was aimed at stalling the Canadian Parliament from declaring the November 1984 killings as genocide,” he alleged.

“This motion would put pressure on the Indian government to punish the Congress leaders guilty in the anti-Sikh riots, he said.

Ahead of the Canadian Defence Minister’s visit, the Punjab Chief Minister had said he would not meet Sajjan and described him as a “Khalistani sympathiser”.

On Tuesday, in Delhi, Defence Minister Arun Jaitley had strongly raised with his Canadian counterpart Harjit Singh Sajjan India’s “anguish” over the Ontario legislative assembly passing a motion recently that described the 1984 anti-Sikh riots as “genocide”.

In his talks with Sajjan, Jaitley had condemned the passage of the motion saying it triggered outrage in India and it was a total exaggeration of facts.

Meanwhile, welcoming Sajjan’s visit to Punjab, Phoolka said, “Sajjan has made the Punjabis proud by securing high post in the government of Canada so it is the duty of every Punjabi to welcome him during his visit.”

Phoolka said that he has invited Sajjan for a formal meeting with the AAP MLAs but due to shortage of time and pre-scheduled programmes the Canadian minister was unable to meet the AAP legislators.

Premier Christy Clark defends Site C

 

Premier Christy in Surrey to talk up the Liberal candidates at the office of Gurminder Singh Parihar (Surrey-Newton).
Photo by Vinnie Combow

THE largest infrastructure project in BC history might be built in the Northeast, but the economic benefits are already reaching across the province, says the BC Liberal Party.

Premier Christy Clark visited Foundex, one of the 275 businesses across the province benefiting from the Site C Clean Energy Project, in Surrey on Wednesday.

“Surrey may be a long way from Fort St. John, but they’re connected,” said Clark. “North and south, rural and urban – in B.C., we all need each other. Our province can only be successful if we succeed together.”

The largest clean energy infrastructure project under construction in North America, Site C will create thousands of jobs, contribute $3.2 billion to our economy, and generate 100 years of clean, affordable, and reliable power, Clark claimed. During construction, it means opportunity and jobs for businesses across the province, from Salmon Arm to Surrey and everywhere in between.

An employee-owned company with 59 employees and 40 years of history, Surrey-based Foundex has operations as far afield as Fort McMurray and Anchorage. At Site C, Foundex is providing specialized drilling equipment for geotechnical work.

Clark said that in the next 20 years, B.C.’s population is expected to grow by 1 million, and our need for power to grow by 40 per cent. Site C is the only way to reliably meet that need with green power.

She said only the BC Liberals have a plan to control spending, cut middle class taxes by $900 a year, and create jobs to secure a strong B.C. and bright future for our children and grandchildren. And only they will move forward and get Site C built.

She said the BC NDP and BC Greens would halt Site C, derailing the plans of hundreds of businesses large and small looking to grow, hire, and succeed with work from Site C. Their agenda would kill jobs, raise hydro rates, slam the brakes on economic growth – and leave B.C. families and businesses literally in the dark.

120 deaths in March as a result of illicit drug use in B.C.

 

THE number of illicit drug deaths in March remained high, with the third-highest number ever for a single month.

Provisional data from the BC Coroners Service shows that a total of 120 persons died as a result of illicit drug use during the month of March, an average of almost four deaths (3.9) per day for the month. In contrast, there were 79 illicit drug-related deaths in March 2016.

Individuals aged 30-39 and 40-49 continue to account for the largest percentage of illicit drug overdose deaths during the first three months of 2017. Males accounted for 82.7% of the suspected illicit drug overdose deaths.

As in previous months, the vast majority of deaths occurred inside, with 54.8% of all illicit drug overdoses occurring in private residences. The remainder occurred in other inside locations (34.3%) or outside, including vehicles (10.4%). There were no deaths at supervised consumption sites or drug overdose prevention sites.

Chief Coroner Lisa Lapointe noted that fentanyl appears to account for the significant increase in illicit drug overdose deaths since 2012, as the number of illicit drug overdose deaths where fentanyl is not detected has remained relatively stable since 2011.

She said: “The introduction of illicit fentanyl to the illegal drug market has had devastating results, with literally scores of our community members dying in their homes across the province. It has been just over a year since the provincial health officer’s declaration of a provincial health emergency and, while harm reduction measures now in place are reversing thousands of overdoses, long-term measures to stem this tide must include meaningful education beginning at an early age and evidence-based treatment.”

Interest-free student loans and $1,000 completion grant will help students succeed: NDP

A John Horgan BC NDP government will help students get a start in life and get the skills they need to succeed by eliminating interest on BC student loans and offering a $1,000 completion grant to people who complete their studies, it was announced on Wednesday.

“At a time when more and more people are struggling to get by, Christy Clark and the BC Liberals have made it harder than ever for people to upgrade their skills and get ahead in life,” said Horgan.

“We’re going to fix that. We will ensure every British Columbian has the opportunity to pursue post-secondary education and skills training programs by eliminating interest on BC student loans and offering $1,000 in student loan relief for people who complete their studies.

“We have a growing tech sector that is already employing more than 100,000 British Columbians, and they need more skilled employees. We’ll help them grow and help British Columbians succeed by making post-secondary more accessible and affordable.”

The NDP will train skilled workers and create opportunities for people by:

* Making all current and future BC student loans interest free.

* Providing a $1,000 completion grant for graduates of college, university and skilled trades programs to help pay down debt when they finish their programs.

* Investing $100 million to expand technology-related post-secondary programs and investing in talent in information and communications, digital media and entertainment, life sciences and health, clean-tech, IT and engineering and more.

* Eliminating fees for Adult Basic Education and ESL and keeping a cap on tuition fees at colleges and universities.

* Introducing a new graduate student scholarship fund to encourage excellence in BC’s graduate programs.

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