Audio Profile by CBC’s Shelagh Rogers
Peter is interviewed by Shelagh Rogers on Sounds Like Canada, CBC Radio One
(duration 23 minutes)
Shelagh Rogers, © CBC.ca, with courtesy
Artist and non-fiction photographer/filmmaker
Peter February 13, 2009 Agriculture, Environment, Land, Food, Planning, Sustainability
Peter is interviewed by Shelagh Rogers on Sounds Like Canada, CBC Radio One
Peter February 6, 2009 Agriculture, Environment, Land, Food, Planning, Sustainability, Civic Engagement, Inspiration, Media & Public Broadcasting, News, Out on the Land, Projects, Social Justice, When Big and Little Worlds Collide
Recently the independent, non-partisan community organization Vote Toronto published a study by York University professor, Robert MacDermid, “Funding City Politics”, citing the very strong connection between elected politicians and the development industry: nearly 70% of political campaign contributions to the winning politicians come from development related corporations, their friends and families.
And what if you’re a candidate who wants to slow down development and make it more ecologically sustainable?
“You’ve got a tough row to hoe:, says MacDermid.
More from CBC Ontario Today
Vote Toronto offers a comprehensive set of recommended Electoral Reforms
Peter February 5, 2009 Agriculture, Environment, Land, Food, Planning, Sustainability, Art, Photography and Documentary, Civic Engagement, Media & Public Broadcasting, Out on the Land, Projects
Stouffville, Ontario. Dewatering
Approximately 43°56’57.22″N 79°15’7.87″W, facing East, circa October 2, 2005
From my series: Elegy for a Stolen Land
As part of the extension of York Region’s $350 million mega-project known as the “Big Pipe”, a large sewer trunk passes through land along the 9th Line in front of this 19th century farm house. The land is dewatered so that workers can get deep into the ground, at or below the water table, to install the pipe.
This trunk of the pipe, to accommodate growth in Stouffville’s secondary plan, is to move sewage to the Duffin Creek Water Pollution Control Plant near Lake Ontario. Rates of dewatering range from 5,000 – 30,000 litres per minute, and the project stretches well up into the Oak Ridge’s Moraine, the natural aquatic battery for all lands southward to Lake Ontario.
On January 3, 2004 The Toronto Star’s Leslie Ferenc reported in an article entitled Close -up: The Big Pipe, that opponents, from the province’s environment commissioner right on down to farmers and individual farm owners, argue—and officials readily admit—that dewatering process has proven to empty aquifers, parch resident’s wells, bleed streams and fields dry, destroy fish and wildlife habitats, and draw effluent away from failing septic tanks into the wider water table. Proponents argue that they will be able to set things right later by implementing mitigating measures.
Such mitigating measures are planned on the assumption that such measures may yet be invented and successfully implemented.
This and other of The Star’s stories about the Big Pipe are no longer freely available on the internet, but you can find a copy of this one here. Environmental Defence and Lake Ontario WaterKeeper have archived some of that coverage. Otherwise they can be sourced through The Star’s paid archive service.
… Comin up next, “Following the money…”
Peter February 5, 2009 Agriculture, Environment, Land, Food, Planning, Sustainability, Art, Photography and Documentary, Civic Engagement, Out on the Land, Projects
Markham, Ontario. Real Estate Billboards.
Approx. 43°54’7.53″N 79°14’27.90″W, Facing south, circa May 5, 2005
From my series: Elegy for a Stolen Land
Before Europeans arrived, these lands were rich in freshwater and wildlife, and home to successive waves of first peoples who saw themselves and the land as one.
Later, due to a combination of soil quality, water availability and growing season—determined by latitude and proximity to the moderating influence of Lake Ontario—settlers turned these lands into productive class 1 farmland that would feed the city it surrounded for more than a century.
On the former pioneer family farm of John Raymer, real estate billboards promote the sale of roughly 2,500 homes on the lands of such former pioneer farmer neighbours as James and Adam Clendenen, and John Reesor. According to official documents filed in 2005: “the GTA/905 Regions of York, Halton, Peel and Durham have been and will continue to be the fastest growing regions in Ontario, collectively growing at twice the provincial rate of growth by adding more than 90,000 new residents each year.”
In a time of increasing global economic uncertainty and wildly unstable fuel prices, those and the other new residents of the past half century inhabit a new land crop of bricks and mortar, and are meanwhile ever more dependent on food imports from the USA, Latin America and Asia.
Peter February 5, 2009 Agriculture, Environment, Land, Food, Planning, Sustainability, Art, Photography and Documentary, Inspiration
In his 2008 essay, Going Home (Anansi), in reference to our changing relationship to land, Governor General’s Literary Award-winning poet and essayist Tim Lilburn writes:
What we are: detached long ago, while still in Europe, from that part of the Western intellectual tradition that would have taught us the suitability of living undivided from one’s earth,” we cannot value what we most need, indeed cannot name it. What we did: we met the new land as conquerors and subjugated it. We moved too quickly over the ground, omnivorous, self-uprooting on principle, marked by the inevitably anarchic character of capitalism… Finally we just filled it with our will, so that the land came to look tired in its heart: almost empty but crammed with human intention, sick with a sameness that came from us.
Peter February 5, 2009 Civic Engagement, Social Justice, When Big and Little Worlds Collide
Peter February 2, 2009 Art, Photography and Documentary, Media & Public Broadcasting, News
Nice little media notice on my recent installation at Harbourfront Centre in, of all places, The National Post, or here is a clipping:
Peter February 1, 2009 Art, Photography and Documentary, Making New Technologies Fit What Is
As one who is constantly torn between the old and the new, I came upon this newfangled equipment:
At the Art Gallery of Ontario the other week, Curator of Photography Maia Sutnik showed me Mike Robinson’s work… and then by chance, I happened to meet him a few nights later: charming fellow, with much to teach us. He had a couple of his recent Daguerreotypes in a little satchel, like gems. Photographs with heft and lasting power. Substance in a time of ephemera!
But how does one embed IPTC metadata in them, let alone PLUS?
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