The Niagara Falls Review

Fight for Welland Hospital not over yet

- — Sherman Zavitz is the official historian for the City of Niagara Falls and is the Niagara Parks historian. Reach him at sherman.zavitz@sympatico.ca.

bellhop described one: “Watch them come in to register and you’ll notice their shoes have scarcely been worn. Especially the soles. Hardly even smudged.” Other clues included confusion about how to sign the hotel register and carrying new luggage.

Lotta learned a few statistics: The average couple stayed for three days and spent around $50 each. If that seems like a miniscule amount, keep in mind that 70 years ago a room in a tourist home here cost about $3 a night and you could have dinner in the General Brock (now the Crowne Plaza) Hotel’s Rainbow Room for $2.50.

For many of you, much of the above probably sounds somewhat quaint and very dated. Yes, it was a different era. Now, there are a multitude of ideas about marriage and the marriage ceremony as well as the honeymoon.

One thing that has not changed, however, is the appreciati­on and admiration for the spectacle of the falls and the scenery along the Niagara River. As an immigratio­n inspector on the Rainbow Bridge enthused to Lotta: “I’ve lived here all my life. The falls still get me — the power and the glory — that’s what it is. Then there’s 35 miles of the finest parks human eyes ever set on alongside the river. The Oakes Gardens here are a wonderful sight, too. And the tunnels under Table Rock House poking right in beneath the falls and the Spanish (now Whirlpool) Aero Car to swing you up over the whirlpool by cable for a thrill. And all the rest of it.”

LAURA BARTON

TRIBUNE STAFF “It is not a done deal.” That was the main message delivered by Sue Hotte, chair of the Save Our Welland Hospital group, and other speakers gathered at a press conference held in Welland Friday morning.

Their goal was to get the word out that Welland Hospital can still be saved, even as talks about the proposed south Niagara hospital progress and the province announces $9 billion in new hospital funding across Ontario.

Roughly 20 people gathered by the Niagara Health System sign on the corner of King and Third Streets to show their support for keeping the Welland hospital open and fully functional.

Speakers said their motive isn’t to stop the upcoming south Niagara hospital in Niagara Falls, but to emphasize that each of the hospitals are needed to properly serve Niagara’s communitie­s.

“My dream has always been to have a centre of excellence in the centre of the population,” said Welland resident and Save Our Hospital member Henry Miron.

He went on to talk about how both he and his wife have used the hospital in times of need.

Miron also spoke about the “ballooning ” population, a matter which was also on Welland Mayor Frank Campion’s mind.

He called Welland’s hospital a necessity and said his growing community is going to change a lot in the coming years. He said in 20 years it will be completely different in terms of population, so keeping the hospital around for Welland residents of the future is important to him.

Those present were also skeptical about the geographic­al location of the proposed new hospital.

“The hospital being proposed is not a south Niagara hospital,” he said, adding that people, including Niagara Falls Mayor Jim Diodati, should stop calling it that.

Hotte said the Welland hospital serves 100,000 people, and if it’s taken away, those people will be forced to contend with the distance of going to the proposed location on the corner of Montrose and Biggar Roads in Niagara Falls.

Although the estimate being given is that it takes roughly 15 minutes to get from Welland to the proposed location, Hotte challenged that

Heroin and mushrooms seized

Two people face a slew of drug and weapon charges after Niagara Police conducted an investigat­ion into drug traffickin­g in Niagara Falls. Niagara Regional Police executed number, saying different times of the day and traffic volume are not being taken into considerat­ion.

Wainfleet Mayor April Jeffs noted that having a hospital in Welland and an urgent care centre in Port Colborne are critical to her residents who would have an even farther distance to travel if those centres were closed or their services reduced.

She said it’s necessary to have “equitable, fair access” to health care services for everyone.

Both Hotte and Welland NDP MPP Cindy Forster agree the new hospital seems to be about one thing.

“It all boils down to ‘the buck,’” Forster said.

She went on to say that communitie­s should not be cutting beds and closing hospital doors, but increasing the beds available.

Hotte said the value of a human life is worth much more than what the Niagara Health System is trying to save.

She came to the press conference armed with boxes containing a total of 13,000 signatures on petitions the group previously put out.

“One call, one letter, one email means a lot of people behind that. A lot of people are thinking the same way,” Hotte said of the impact she sees the petitions making.

The petitions are to be handed off to Forster, who will take them to Queen’s Park to demonstrat­e the community’s resolve in keeping the hospital around.

The Niagara Health Coalition is also headed to Queen’s Park for the day of action at the Ontario Legislatur­e on May 31. A flier handed search warrants at two homes on Thursday and seized cocaine, heroin and magic mushrooms as well as cash, a crossbow and various rounds of ammunition. Charged with possession of cocaine for the purpose of traffickin­g, possession of heroin for the purpose out at the Friday-morning press conference noted the group will be there to support the letters being handed over to Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne.

Hotte said people can get in touch to find out more informatio­n by calling her at 905-932-1646 or by emailing niagarahea­lthcoaliti­on@yahoo. ca.

NHS president Suzanne Johnston issued a statement in regards to concerns about the hospital.

In it, Johnston wrote, the announceme­nt of the south Niagara hospital project’s inclusion in the provincial budget is a “strong demostrati­on of confidence in our vision for Niagara Falls and Welland.”

She said she and Campion have had “excellent dialogue” and his advocacy and concern for the healthcare of his city’s residents is something she appreciate­s.

Moving forward, she wrote the NHS acknowledg­es the importance of a 24-hour emergency service and other services in Welland and will continue to explore the different options available for those needs.

The plan so far includes “ambulatory care services like medical and surgical clinics, dialysis, mental health and addictions, Ontario Breast Screening Program services, and full diagnostic­s including CT scan, ultrasound and X-ray offered in a new building, as well as a longterm care centre.”

Her statement said the NHS is seeking to find the best quality care for its patients and their families while maintainin­g a sustainabl­e system. of traffickin­g, possession of psilocybin for the purpose of traffickin­g, possession of the proceeds of crime, possession of a weapon and possession of ammunition is Dennis Pizzi, 45, and Robin McNeil, 34, also of Niagara Falls.

 ?? LAURA BARTON/WELLAND TRIBUNE ?? Sue Hotte, member of the Niagara Health Coalition and chair of the Save Our Welland Hospital committee, talks at a press conference Friday in Welland about the 13,000 petition signatures the group has received from citizens who want to see Welland...
LAURA BARTON/WELLAND TRIBUNE Sue Hotte, member of the Niagara Health Coalition and chair of the Save Our Welland Hospital committee, talks at a press conference Friday in Welland about the 13,000 petition signatures the group has received from citizens who want to see Welland...

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