Skip to main content

Okay, give us an account

A letter to the premier dashed off very quickly without much re-thinking or even re-reading because then I would just pause and never send it. The minister of environment told a member of a citizen lobby group I'm connected with to “hold us accountable” and that hearing from people face to face or phone or personal email is better than form letters.

So here goes...

The wildfires are terrifying. Not because they've been anywhere near me, but because they are evidence the climate scientists have been right all along, and a hellish future of floods, fires and famines awaits us sooner than we think. And we're just idling our cars with our “gas tax holiday” full tanks.

I was extremely disappointed to hear you briefly discuss the fires with Marcy on CBC the other morning and mention in passing the huge expense of purchasing more fire bombers, but not the reason we need them (climate change) and certainly not your failure to show any leadership on climate (pausing pollution pricing instead of embracing its potential).

Manitoba is a wonderful province and it has so much potential but we need to do so much better. And that leadership needs to come from the top.

Manitobans need massive mode shift – and it's going to take all levels of government to fund public transit within cities, between cities and increases of active transit pathways. Not another cent for road expansions. Mass transit isn't just better for the environment; it's a justice issue. A rich city isn't one where the poor drive cars but where the rich take public transit, as a mayor of Bogota has said.

Manitobans need a much better deal from Hydro to incentivize more solar installations. Hydro can't rest on its laurels with the power of dams – not with catastrophic droughts in our future.

Manitoba needs to update the building code to ensure that whatever weather we have, we don't need to use as much energy to protect ourselves from it.

Manitobans need to learn to value our waste better, and to work harder to ensure it can be reprocessed. It's shameful that we're among the last provinces to implement a deposit return system. The piddling $.10/pristine beer can is nowhere near enough in this economy.

There's plenty that needs to be done and there's great citizens groups like Manitoba Energy Justice Coalition, Citizens' Climate Lobby, Climate Change Connection and more that have plenty of strong suggestions for you. Please listen to them. It's long past time to move the needle in the opposite direction on climate change.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Our pensions for ICE? Stop it now!

A campaign from LeadNow with a few spicy sentences from me. The CPP is funded by the wages of 22 million people across the country, LeadNow says, and the Investment Board has a responsibility to ensure those savings are not used in ways people fundamentally reject. Dear Mr. John Graham, CEO of CPPIB, and CPPIB board members, I am writing as a contributor to the Canada Pension Plan—one of millions of people whose wages fund this plan and whose future depends on it. This is our CPP, and it must answer to us. I am horrified that CPP investments include companies linked to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). In effect, the people who pay into CPP are having their own money used to help fund Trump-era immigration enforcement and the harms associated with it. Canadians are appalled by the actions of ICE. What a betrayal you would use our own money to fund these bullies violating human rights.  CPP is not abstract capital—it is our deferred wages. Contributors should not ...

June 12

It's the Friesens' appointment with US immigration regarding Joshua's citizenship today. Please pray that everything will go smoothly, all the proper permissions will be granted, and that all of the following paperwork will fly through their respective channels so they can have this settled already.

Biking in 2025

According to Strava, I did 587 bike rides covering 3,807.3 km in 2025. Additionally, I did 81 walks covering 238.2 km in 2025. For comparison, in 2024, I did 643 bike rides covering 3,824.7 km and 75 walks covering 260.4 km. Neither of these were “normal” years for me as I spent 3 months in Europe both times.  2024 includes a few days of tourist traipsing around Istanbul and a 30 km walk from Amsterdam to Utrecht in solidarity with the people of Gaza. In 2025, I did an epic 70+ kms of biking around North Holland, but otherwise went absolutely nowhere many days, living at a retreat centre where my work was just steps away from my sleeping quarters. By contrast, in 2023, it was 761 bike rides covering 4247.4 km.