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2019-16

Saturday May 4, 2019

May 11, 2019 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Saturday May 4, 2019

Province’s funding cuts jeopardize 6,166 subsidized child care spaces in Toronto, staff says

Provincial funding cuts and policy changes could result in 6,166 fewer subsidized child care spaces in Toronto and cost the city more than $80-million this year alone, according to city staff.

In a memo to the mayor and council obtained by CBC Toronto on Thursday, City Manager Chris Murray detailed the potential impacts of a reduction in child care funding that was outlined in the province’s recent 2019 budget. The fallout will be compounded by considerable changes to existing child care-related cost-sharing models, the memo says.

“As with recent changes to the provincial/municipal cost-sharing arrangements for public health, the City was not consulted or provided with any advance warning of these changes,” the memo says.

Murray cautions that city staff are still awaiting precise numbers from the province, but they estimate that, cumulatively, the changes will cost Toronto $84.8 million this year. That figure includes a $28.6-million reduction in direct provincial funding and $56.2-million due to cost-sharing changes, the memo explains. 

“This represents a direct pressure on the 2019 Children’s Services Operating Budget, which city council has already approved and for which the municipal levy bylaw has been passed,” it continues.

The result is the potential loss of 6,166 subsidized child care spaces in Toronto, the memo estimates.

The overall number of child care spaces is not expected to change, but a smaller number will be filled by children who have access to the subsidy, the city says. (Source: CBC News) 

 

Posted in: Ontario Tagged: “For the People”, 2019-16, Beer, Buck-a-beer, Carbon taxes, corner stores, daycare, Doug Ford, horse racing, Justin Trudeau, Kathleen Wynne, Ontario

Friday May 3, 2019

May 10, 2019 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Friday May 3, 2019

Move over, Doug Ford. Jason Kenney is Canada’s new disruptor

Jason Kenney is back. First stop, Ontario. 

Days after being sworn in as Alberta’s new premier Tuesday, sweeping to power with a 55-per-cent majority unrivalled by any politician in Canada today, Kenney wants to win over Ontarians.

Direct and in person.

Best known as a savvy Harper-era federal minister, officially responsible for immigration and multiculturalism, but unofficially assigned to wooing and winning the 905 vote, Kenney has reinvented himself as a fiery prairie populist.

All these years later, the Oakville-born Alberta premier still has an eye, and an ear, for the GTA.

Now he wants to be heard.

Not just by the Bay Street crowd who rewarded him with standing ovations during a lunchtime speech on Alberta’s energy woes, or from the smiling Ontario premier who pledged his support Friday (after bearing a private grudge against him for years — more on that later).

The new premier is getting his message out any way he can, not least in the pages of the Toronto Star. Which is why he sat down for a wide-ranging interview about Alberta’s plight, his political fight, and his plan to disrupt Canada even if it means talking up disunity in a country that still frets about national unity.

Ontarians, he says, should hear him out.

“Obviously, Ontario is sort of the elder brother of the federation, and I think it can play a role,” he tells me. The response at Friday’s business lunch showed “they get what Alberta is going through.”

Many politicians lay claim to a 100-day plan of action. Kenney, however, has unveiled a 100-hour agenda of disruption that he has spent years mapping out.

And he is just getting started — threatening B.C. with a fuel blockade and confronting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau with a constitutional challenge over control of energy resources. (Continued: Toronto Star) 

 

Posted in: Canada Tagged: 2019-16, Alberta, Bill 69, bulldozer, Canada, Jason Kenney, Ottawa, oversight, Parliament, tour

Thursday May 2, 2019

May 9, 2019 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Thursday May 2, 2019

Where is your climate change plan? Liberal ministers ask Scheer

The House of Commons resumed sitting on Monday for what’s set to be an intense session before Parliament adjourns for the last time before the federal election will be called, and the governing Liberals came out swinging bright and early against Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer.

April 2, 2019

Environment and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna and Finance Minister Bill Morneau began their day criticizing their main opponent for his lack of a climate plan. Meanwhile, Scheer was elsewhere on the Hill doing the same over the government’s approach to current trade tensions with China.

At issue specifically for the Liberal ministers: Scheer’s lack of a climate change plan, despite his consistent attacks on the government’s imposition of a federal price on carbon — up to $50 per excess tonne by 2022 — in provinces who don’t implement their own. The federal Conservatives say the government’s plan is little more than a “tax grab.”

It was exactly a year ago, on April 29, 2018 during a sit-down interview on CTV’s Question Period, Scheer said that he would be unveiling a climate plan ahead of the 2019 election that will meet the Paris targets without a carbon tax.

September 20, 2016

Asked whether the plan will meet the UN targets for combating climate change, otherwise known as Paris Agreement, Scheer said “of course.”

The Paris agreement sets out an international plan to limit global warming to below two degrees.

“I will unveil a plan that reaches the targets that we have already voted in favour of,” Scheer said at the time.

In June 2017, Scheer and his caucus voted in support of the Canadian government implementing the Paris Agreement, stating it was in the best interest of Canadians and recognizing that climate change is a global issue.

Though, eight months later it was on CTV’s Question Period again where he walked back that promise. He could not commit that his plan would mean the targets, instead he said his plan would have “meaningful reductions.” (Source: CTV News) 

 

Posted in: Canada Tagged: 2019-16, Andrew Scheer, ape, Canada, carbon tax, climate change, gorilla, Justin Trudeau, monkey, policy

Tuesday April 30, 2019

May 7, 2019 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Tuesday April 30, 2019

Doug Ford links Ontario floods to climate change: ‘Just rips your heart out’

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he believes climate change is among the reasons eastern Ontario homeowners are trying to save their homes from flooding for the second time in three years.

February 28, 2019

Ford was in the rural west end of Ottawa Friday morning, touring flooded areas along the Ottawa River, where officials are warning a new rain storm will make water levels rise rapidly over the next few days, likely exceeding the levels seen during a 2017 flood.

Ford says when you see the affected people face-to-face it “just rips your heart out.”

“These folks can’t go through this every single year,” he said.

He said local officials desperately need volunteers to help fill and distribute sandbags.

The Ottawa River is just one of several water bodies overflowing this week, forcing thousands of Canadians from their homes in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick, where the Saint John River is experiencing a major flood for the second year in a row.

December 1, 2018

In Quebec, officials said Thursday 3,148 homes are already underwater and another 2,305 are surrounded by it, with 1,111 people out of their residences. In New Brunswick, 84 roads are closed because of flooding, including a portion of the TransCanada Highway.

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson declared a state of emergency because of flooding Thursday, with another 20 mm to 50 mm of rain forecast to fall Friday and Saturday.

Residents in several small communities on the eastern and western edges of Ottawa are sandbagging to keep their homes dry, while paths along the Ottawa River in downtown Ottawa, including behind Parliament Hill, are underwater. About 400 soldiers have been deployed to the Ottawa area to help sandbag and assist with other flood operations. (Source: Hamilton Spectator) 

 

Posted in: Canada, Ontario Tagged: 2019-16, ark, climate change, Doug Ford, environment, floods, noah, Ontario, van

Marvellous Maps

April 30, 2019 by Graeme MacKay

Marvellous Maps

I’ve always been fascinated by maps. When I was a kid I declared to anyone who would listen that when I grew up I was going to work as a “mapmaker”. To train myself I would copy maps out of atlases and try to squeeze as many place names and geographic features as possible. Then I later found out that the correct name for “map making” was “cartography” and that in order to become a cartographer you had to be a whiz in mathematics. Knowing myself to be one of world’s worst math students on record I knew my dream of drawings maps for a living would never pan out.

Nevertheless, as my career evolved over the years into editorial cartooning I’ve been able to put my passion for maps to good use in satire. Here’s a gallery of map cartoons going back a few decades:

Toronto Megacity, 1996
Toronto Megacity, 1996
November 6, 1997
November 6, 1997
April 1, 1999
April 1, 1999
February 9, 2000
February 9, 2000
December 16, 2000
December 16, 2000
September 8, 1999
September 8, 1999
May 16, 2002
May 16, 2002
June 20, 2002
June 20, 2002
October 23, 2002
October 23, 2002
May 30, 2003
May 30, 2003
September 28, 2004
September 28, 2004
May 9, 2006
May 9, 2006
August 2, 2006
August 2, 2006
March 1, 2007
March 1, 2007
August 2, 2007
August 2, 2007
March 31, 2008
March 31, 2008
August 15, 2008
August 15, 2008
September 25, 2008
September 25, 2008
Toronto 2010
Toronto 2010
February 22, 2011
February 22, 2011
September 3, 2011
September 3, 2011
November 8, 2011
November 8, 2011
April 26, 2012
April 26, 2012
May 15, 2012
May 15, 2012
August 22, 2012
August 22, 2012
December 2012
December 2012
March 8, 2013
March 8, 2013
September 8, 2013
September 8, 2013
March 13, 2014
March 13, 2014
February 3, 2015
February 3, 2015
August 15, 2015
August 15, 2015
September 4, 2015
September 4, 2015
ACC - 2016
ACC – 2016
June 23, 2016
June 23, 2016
June 29, 2016
June 29, 2016
June 25, 2016
June 25, 2016
August 25, 2016
August 25, 2016
November 9, 2016
November 9, 2016
November 23, 2016
November 23, 2016
December 1, 2016
December 1, 2016
February 8 2017
February 8 2017
February 23, 2017
February 23, 2017
March 30, 2017
March 30, 2017
April 26, 2017
April 26, 2017
August 11, 2017
August 11, 2017
October 20, 2017
October 20, 2017
June 13, 2018
June 13, 2018
July 24, 2018
July 24, 2018
December 13, 2018
December 13, 2018
April 29, 2019
April 29, 2019
May 11, 2019
May 11, 2019
December 16, 2019
December 16, 2019
April 15, 2020
April 15, 2020
April 18, 2020
April 18, 2020
May 14, 2020
May 14, 2020
June 10, 2020
June 10, 2020
July 14, 2020
July 14, 2020
September 1, 2020
September 1, 2020
September 25, 2020
September 25, 2020
November 24, 2020
November 24, 2020
October 10, 2020
October 10, 2020
February 17, 2021
February 17, 2021
March 11, 2021
March 11, 2021

 

Posted in: Cartooning Tagged: 2019-16, cartography, commentary, gallery, maps, satire

Click on dates to expand

Please note…

This website contains satirical commentaries of current events going back several decades. Some readers may not share this sense of humour nor the opinions expressed by the artist. To understand editorial cartoons it is important to understand their effectiveness as a counterweight to power. It is presumed readers approach satire with a broad minded foundation and healthy knowledge of objective facts of the subjects depicted.

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