Month: January 2024

CORRIERE CANADESE / L’onorevole Di Sanzo presenta la mostra su Madre Cabrini alla Camera dei Deputati

ROMA – Alla Camera dei Deputati, grazie al lavoro dell’Onorevole Christian Di Sanzo (nella foto sopra), eletto in America Settentrionale e Centrale, sarà allestita, nella Sala del Cenacolo presso il Complesso di Vicolo Valdina, la mostra “Madre Cabrini e gli Angeli pellegrini”, concernente la figura di Santa Francesca Cabrini nella storia dell’emigrazione italiana, soprattutto negli Stati Uniti… Read More in Corriere Canadese >>> 

CORRIERE CANADESE / Canadesi pessimisti sulla sanità futura

TORONTO – La maggior parte dei canadesi non ritiene che la qualità dell’assistenza sanitaria nella propria provincia possa migliorare. Nonostante i nuovi accordi sanitari federali con diverse province progettati per sedare la crisi sanitaria in corso in tutto il Canada, dal sondaggio condotto da Leger emerge che da una costa all’altra del Paese i canadesi sono rassegnati a doversi affidare a una sanità che non li soddisfa… Read More in Corriere Canadese >>> 

CORRIERE CANADESE / Prime crepe nel caucus liberale: McDonald chiede la leadership review

TORONTO – Deve essere ancora Justin Trudeau (nella foto / PMO) a guidare il Partito Liberale alle prossime elezioni o è giunto il momento di un cambio al timone? La domanda circola da tanto tempo nelle stanze del potere di Ottawa, alimentata dai sondaggi choc che danno i grit in caduta libera e lontani anni luce dal Partito Conservatore, dalla crisi del consenso del primo ministro, dalle polemiche, dalle accuse e dai veleni per un leader logorato da otto anni di potere. Ma fino a questo momento, nessun esponente del gruppo parlamentare aveva osato mettere in dubbio Trudeau, che nel bene e nel male le ultime tre elezioni le ha vinte e che, nel 2015, ha posto fine all’interregno lungo nove anni di Stephen Harper… Read More in Corriere Canadese >>> 

Olivia Chow: “We don’t cut services, we strengthen them”

TORONTO – After last week’s town hall telephone calls and the meetings organized by the city administration, it is time to take stock for the Mayor of Toronto, Olivia Chow, as she deals with the 2024 Budget.

Today, in a press conference together with the fire chief Matthew Pegg in the Riverdale fire station, the first citizen – answering journalists’ questions on the 2024 Budget – began by recalling that she had “inherited a financial disaster, having to face a deficit of 1.8 billion dollars. I could repeat what the Mayors of the past have done: cut services or cut emergency funds; or, I could protect them and improve them”, she said, then going on to list some numbers: Budget 2024 includes money for 52 more firefighters, more fire inspectors and 911 dispatchers, as well as 63 additional frontline and support staff for Toronto Paramedic Services, as well as money for the new Toronto Community Crisis Service to deal with people in crisis.

The first citizen added that there is also more money in the Toronto police budget, but it is $12.6 million less than what the Toronto Police Services Board approved in the budget request voted on last December. A decision, as is known, already contested by Chief Myron Demkiw who last week spoke to the City Council, pointing out how the proposed cuts will undermine the efficiency of the police force which will not be able – due to a lack of policemen – to keep up with the ever-increasing crime rate. “Let me set the record straight” Chow replied today, “the Toronto police are receiving millions of dollars more in their budget, there are no cuts” she said, referring to the overall increase compared to 2023.

But the 2024 Budget has not only generated discontent among the police: the entire citizenry is worried about the proposed increase in property taxes to 10.5 percent to address the budget hole: an increase that could become 16.5 percent if the federal government does not allocate $250 million for refugees. And precisely on this last point, the first citizen announced that on Wednesday she will meet the federal Minister of Public Security, Democratic Institutions and Intergovernmental Affairs, Dominic Leblanc, to talk about the type of support Toronto needs. “Good things take time. We still have time” Chow said. “My budget won’t come out until February 1st.” And then she concluded: “I spoke to both the federal and provincial governments to say ‘look, look at all the problems and challenges that we face that other cities don’t have’. And I said this to everyone, in so that they support us even more.”

Now the first citizen will have to complete the process, bringing the 2024 Budget to the City Council for final approval.

In the pic above: Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow (from Twitter X – @MayorOliviaChow)