When Daniel Igali won gold on the last day of the 2000 Olympics, Bruce Rainnie’s career took off.
It was Rainnie’s first Olympiad as a broadcaster, covering wrestling and weightlifting – in his own words, entry-level positions.
The assignment paid off for Rainnie when Igali won his third match of the day to stand atop the podium.
“I was the guy who got to tell his story to Canada. That was a huge opportunity for me. It went well – well, it didn’t go great, but I was asked back.”
Eighteen years later, Rainnie will be telling the stories of Canadian curlers at the Pyeongchang Olympics.
The former Compass anchor has plenty of experience with the roaring game, but it’s always a challenge, he said.
“It’s the only sport where every competitor in the game has a mic on. Seated beside you are two curlers who have won Olympic medals. So in terms of knowing what’s going on in the game, you are a distant 11th in the pecking order.”
Part of the job is picking the right moments to talk, Rainnie said.
“You have to really adjust and be patient and let the conversation on the ice flow and be a traffic cop of sorts. Make sure the stars of the game are allowed to be the stars.”
Rainnie’s most vivid Olympic memories involve calling Canadian gold medals – including the double victory by curlers Jennifer Jones and Brad Jacobs in Sochi.
He may get a chance to recreate that magic in Pyeongchang.
“Canadian teams are the teams to watch.”
Rainnie’s duties will begin Thursday – a day before the opening ceremony – when the new mixed doubles event begins. John Morris and Kaitlyn Lawes will represent Canada.
“They’re dynamic shot makers and really good sweepers.”
(edit: Morris and Lawes will go for gold against Switzerland Tuesday at 7 a.m. Atlantic time)
Rainnie expects Canada’s Kevin Koe to face Sweden’s Niklas Edin in the men’s gold-medal game.
“Those are the two best teams there. Them along with Brad Gushue are the top three teams in the world.”
Predicting the women’s tournament is a little more difficult, Rainnie said.
“It could be wide open, although I think Rachel Homan, if they’re on, they’re really, really good.”
Great Britain’s Eve Muirhead and Sweden’s Anna Hasselborg should also contend, he said.
Kevin “Boomer” Gallant, Rainnie’s former partner on Compass, said the veteran broadcaster sets himself up for success.
“I’ve never seen a man so prepared to go on air in my life. He prepares himself mentally. His preparation, his delivery, he’s got a lot of assets to be on television.”
Rainnie has an excellent memory, Rainnie added.
“CBC are lucky to have him right now because he is the complete package when he goes on air.”
Monday, February 12, 2018
Friday, February 2, 2018
CBC anchor, weatherman form lasting friendship
The first time Bruce Rainnie met Kevin “Boomer” Gallant, they were kicked out of the room at a CBC function for laughing too much.
A year later, Rainnie joined Gallant on CBC News: Compass and a lifelong friendship was born.
Gallant, who was the show’s weatherman for 31 years, remembers the day in the fall of 2003 when management told him Rainnie would be taking over the anchor’s desk.
“I said, ‘What?’ Christmas came early for Boomer. I knew we'd hit it off. It's just been magic since then on air.”
The chemistry and humour that came to define the pair’s tenure on Compass began right away, Gallant said.
Rainnie’s first night on air was marred by technical difficulties. Gallant started right in with digs at the new anchor.
“It's a wonder he didn’t leave us with all the technical glitches. People see you having fun with the faux pas, and they have fun at home.”
In the two years before Rainnie got married, he had supper with the Gallants 155 times. The kids kept track.
Rainnie values the friendship greatly.
“It’s irreplaceable. That’s a once in a lifetime partnership, for sure. I would never get that again from anyone at any network.”
Even Peter Mansbridge, former anchor of CBC’s The National, took notice of the bond, Gallant said.
“He said there's no other host and weatherman in North America who get along like this on television. It’s a nice testimonial to the friendship we have.”
And it was all spontaneous, Rainnie said.
“We never rehearsed anything. When it went off the rails and we were there to put it back on, that was really entertaining stuff. It’s all from knowing the other guy will play along and come back with something.”
The comfort level between the two men was crucial, Rainnie added.
“When you find someone you can be totally open with, self-deprecating with, and you know they’re not going to be offended, that’s really watchable. People love to watch that. It’s comfortable. It’s hugely, hugely important and I think it was a big reason why the Bruce-Boomer thing worked.”
They became so close that when Gallant’s wife Mae passed away in 2006, Rainnie and his wife Kendra sang and performed at her funeral. That meant a lot to Gallant.
“He was a true friend, still is and always will be.”
The laughter extended well beyond the airwaves of Compass, Rainnie said.
“We’ve never disagreed about anything. We’ve never had an argument. There wasn’t a single day where he wouldn’t have me dissolved into tears with laughter somewhere in a room at CBC.”
Both left Compass last April. Rainnie took over as president and CEO of the Nova Scotia Sports Hall of Fame and Gallant took the plunge into retirement.
They talk on a daily basis, but they both miss the camaraderie. Gallant compared their bond to Abbott and Costello.
“I miss Bruce, our daily banter before we got on air in the newsroom. We disrupted people doing stories for Compass. I’ve always wanted to have fun with whatever I did in life. The last 13 years with Bruce was fun times 10.”
The time spent together when Rainnie visits the Island are memorable, said the former anchor.
“(Gallant) became, outside of my wife, my best buddy. I hope he feels the same. It’s a pretty special thing when we get a chance to get together. The stories start flowing and get exaggerated more and more.”
A year later, Rainnie joined Gallant on CBC News: Compass and a lifelong friendship was born.
Gallant, who was the show’s weatherman for 31 years, remembers the day in the fall of 2003 when management told him Rainnie would be taking over the anchor’s desk.
“I said, ‘What?’ Christmas came early for Boomer. I knew we'd hit it off. It's just been magic since then on air.”
The chemistry and humour that came to define the pair’s tenure on Compass began right away, Gallant said.
Rainnie’s first night on air was marred by technical difficulties. Gallant started right in with digs at the new anchor.
“It's a wonder he didn’t leave us with all the technical glitches. People see you having fun with the faux pas, and they have fun at home.”
In the two years before Rainnie got married, he had supper with the Gallants 155 times. The kids kept track.
Rainnie values the friendship greatly.
“It’s irreplaceable. That’s a once in a lifetime partnership, for sure. I would never get that again from anyone at any network.”
Even Peter Mansbridge, former anchor of CBC’s The National, took notice of the bond, Gallant said.
“He said there's no other host and weatherman in North America who get along like this on television. It’s a nice testimonial to the friendship we have.”
And it was all spontaneous, Rainnie said.
“We never rehearsed anything. When it went off the rails and we were there to put it back on, that was really entertaining stuff. It’s all from knowing the other guy will play along and come back with something.”
The comfort level between the two men was crucial, Rainnie added.
“When you find someone you can be totally open with, self-deprecating with, and you know they’re not going to be offended, that’s really watchable. People love to watch that. It’s comfortable. It’s hugely, hugely important and I think it was a big reason why the Bruce-Boomer thing worked.”
They became so close that when Gallant’s wife Mae passed away in 2006, Rainnie and his wife Kendra sang and performed at her funeral. That meant a lot to Gallant.
“He was a true friend, still is and always will be.”
The laughter extended well beyond the airwaves of Compass, Rainnie said.
“We’ve never disagreed about anything. We’ve never had an argument. There wasn’t a single day where he wouldn’t have me dissolved into tears with laughter somewhere in a room at CBC.”
Both left Compass last April. Rainnie took over as president and CEO of the Nova Scotia Sports Hall of Fame and Gallant took the plunge into retirement.
They talk on a daily basis, but they both miss the camaraderie. Gallant compared their bond to Abbott and Costello.
“I miss Bruce, our daily banter before we got on air in the newsroom. We disrupted people doing stories for Compass. I’ve always wanted to have fun with whatever I did in life. The last 13 years with Bruce was fun times 10.”
The time spent together when Rainnie visits the Island are memorable, said the former anchor.
“(Gallant) became, outside of my wife, my best buddy. I hope he feels the same. It’s a pretty special thing when we get a chance to get together. The stories start flowing and get exaggerated more and more.”
Bruce and Boomer enjoying next chapter in life
Kevin “Boomer” Gallant used to own 74 Hawaiian shirts. Now he has 12.
Call it a casualty of retirement.
P.E.I.’s most recognizable voice has been off the air for nine months, and he’s enjoying the change of pace.
Following a 31-year career providing the weather on CBC News: Compass, Gallant has taken up biking and goes to the gym four or five times a week.
“I started to eat healthier, less beer in the evenings, lost a few pounds and I feel like a million bucks.”
Gallant logged over 3,000 kilometres on the Confederation Trail last year.
“I have a pretty good attitude about life and I think that helps me get through every day. People ask me what I'm doing and I just tell them, whatever I want to do that day.”
Gallant and Compass anchor Bruce Rainnie both left the show last April. Rainnie had occupied the anchor’s chair for more than 13 years before being hired as president and CEO of the Nova Scotia Sports Hall of Fame.
The timing of Rainnie’s departure led Gallant to follow suit.
“I was sort of preparing for retirement for about a year. When Bruce got the job offer in Halifax, I said, ‘I'm going to go too, let's go together.’ It's been great.”
Meanwhile, for Rainnie, running the Hall of Fame was an appealing option.
“This job would never have come around again in my working lifetime, so I had to explore it. Every day I get to immerse myself in sports stories and sports heroes. That’s a good gig. It’s a good way to spend the next 15 years, if I can pull it off.”
When Rainnie was hired by CBC in 2003, the pair developed a bond on and off the air that made P.E.I.’s supper-hour news must-watch television.
Maureen Martin of Tryon was an instant fan.
“I thought they were wonderful. I miss the both of them.”
The rapid-fire humour made Compass a staple of the supper hour, Martin said.
“It was just a pleasant show to watch. They were always joking with each other. They both seemed quite knowledgeable about what they were doing – just look where Bruce has got himself today. He’s quite smart. It was a very enjoyable hour at suppertime.”
Covering provincial elections was one of the best parts of the job, Rainnie said. He anchored CBC’s coverage of the 2007, 2011 and 2015 results.
“There are very few things that can match the electricity of a live election night on P.E.I. I’ve always been a political junkie. I always describe those as drama without a script.”
Rainnie was in his element flying by the seat of his pants.
“You had to be ready to make those numbers make sense. I loved those nights.
“I thought they were really challenging and energizing and a real test of what I think a broadcaster should be, and that’s someone who can make sense of things on the fly as they’re coming in.”
Anchoring Compass had special meaning for Rainnie.
“There was a daily feeling that what you were doing meant something. It’s a good feeling to know the work you did that day was going to be watched and valued.”
Still, there was an upside to leaving.
“I do not miss putting on makeup. I do not miss having to find a shirt and tie every day I didn’t wear the night before,” he laughed.
As for Gallant, the future is wide open and he plans to spend time with his son, daughter and granddaughter.
“I’m just looking forward to every day ahead with those people. We’re into February, so I’ll soon have the bike out, the shorts and Hawaiian shirts, and away we go again.”
Friday, January 26, 2018
Reporters recall rewarding results
Armed with nothing but a piece of paper and a 1-800 number, Louise Martin sat down and looked into the camera.
A tornado had just struck a local trailer park and killed 11 people.
Martin couldn’t see her audience, but she knew their spirits were broken. Speaking into the living rooms of Red Deer, she was more than a news anchor; she was a comforting voice for people who needed answers.
“We stayed on the air for a long time, being there for the people of the community. They just needed to hear something from someone,” said Martin, who now anchors CBC Compass in Charlottetown.
“We were feeding them as much (information) as we could. We were the voice of reason for people at home. I went home and cried my heart out.”
While speaking to Holland College journalism students on Jan. 15, Martin stressed local news is important because it directly impacts people’s lives.
“We cover road closures and weather. Those stories matter and it affects your everyday life. That is news to me.”
Some stories are emotional to cover, said Martin, but that helps her connect with viewers and interview subjects alike.
When Anders Breivik murdered dozens of people in Norway in 2011, Martin spoke to one of the victims as he was being prepped for surgery.
“He was crying. I let him cry. You need to see I’m a human and not a robot.”
Martin’s husband, Ken Linton, said that trait made her a good choice to host P.E.I.’s supper-hour news program.
“Louise is a good fit for Compass. She shows emotion. She’s not a robot reading the news.”
The couple didn’t know what to expect when they moved to the Island, but Linton said it’s been a positive experience.
“People warned us about what it would be like. They said Louise would be recognized a lot. The people are very nice and respectful.”
Dave Stewart has been a reporter with The Guardian since 1995. In a career that’s seen it all, he said the heartwarming stories stand out.
“It’s the good people you meet that turn into good stories that really, really stick with you.”
In the summer of 2016, Stewart got an email from a man named Francis Menard, who was trying to find his birth mother on P.E.I. and had exhausted other options.
Stewart wrote the story and was stunned to see what happened next.
“Within hours of that story going up online, his birth mother reaches out to him. That just doesn’t happen in this business, not that quick.”
But the story didn’t end there. Stewart interviewed the mother and Menard also met his birth father. The couple was divorced.
“Some day you’re sitting down in a rocking chair and you think back on the stories you did that might have made a difference. Covering the legislature, press conferences, city council, that’s not the rewarding aspect of the job.
“Knowing you brought a family together – that feeling you get, the tingles down your spine, that warm sensation – those are the stories I remember the most.”
The newspaper industry can be tough to work in, but stories like Menard’s are rewarding, Stewart said.
“When you know you’ve made a difference in someone’s life in a good way, it makes all those bad phone calls you receive over the years worth it.”
Martin told the students the media can play a role in bringing people together.
“Be kind to one another, respect one another and help one another. The world can be a nasty place sometimes.”
A tornado had just struck a local trailer park and killed 11 people.
Martin couldn’t see her audience, but she knew their spirits were broken. Speaking into the living rooms of Red Deer, she was more than a news anchor; she was a comforting voice for people who needed answers.
“We stayed on the air for a long time, being there for the people of the community. They just needed to hear something from someone,” said Martin, who now anchors CBC Compass in Charlottetown.
“We were feeding them as much (information) as we could. We were the voice of reason for people at home. I went home and cried my heart out.”
While speaking to Holland College journalism students on Jan. 15, Martin stressed local news is important because it directly impacts people’s lives.
“We cover road closures and weather. Those stories matter and it affects your everyday life. That is news to me.”
Some stories are emotional to cover, said Martin, but that helps her connect with viewers and interview subjects alike.
When Anders Breivik murdered dozens of people in Norway in 2011, Martin spoke to one of the victims as he was being prepped for surgery.
“He was crying. I let him cry. You need to see I’m a human and not a robot.”
Martin’s husband, Ken Linton, said that trait made her a good choice to host P.E.I.’s supper-hour news program.
“Louise is a good fit for Compass. She shows emotion. She’s not a robot reading the news.”
The couple didn’t know what to expect when they moved to the Island, but Linton said it’s been a positive experience.
“People warned us about what it would be like. They said Louise would be recognized a lot. The people are very nice and respectful.”
Dave Stewart has been a reporter with The Guardian since 1995. In a career that’s seen it all, he said the heartwarming stories stand out.
“It’s the good people you meet that turn into good stories that really, really stick with you.”
In the summer of 2016, Stewart got an email from a man named Francis Menard, who was trying to find his birth mother on P.E.I. and had exhausted other options.
Stewart wrote the story and was stunned to see what happened next.
“Within hours of that story going up online, his birth mother reaches out to him. That just doesn’t happen in this business, not that quick.”
But the story didn’t end there. Stewart interviewed the mother and Menard also met his birth father. The couple was divorced.
“Some day you’re sitting down in a rocking chair and you think back on the stories you did that might have made a difference. Covering the legislature, press conferences, city council, that’s not the rewarding aspect of the job.
“Knowing you brought a family together – that feeling you get, the tingles down your spine, that warm sensation – those are the stories I remember the most.”
The newspaper industry can be tough to work in, but stories like Menard’s are rewarding, Stewart said.
“When you know you’ve made a difference in someone’s life in a good way, it makes all those bad phone calls you receive over the years worth it.”
Martin told the students the media can play a role in bringing people together.
“Be kind to one another, respect one another and help one another. The world can be a nasty place sometimes.”
Travellers plan around Caribbean hurricane damage
Brodie MacNevin’s wedding plans
were plunged into uncertainty when Hurricanes Irma and Maria razed parts of the
Caribbean in September.
The
St. Catherines, P.E.I., native and his girlfriend Andrea were to be married in
Cayo Santa Maria, Cuba, in February. But Irma scored a direct hit on the resort
town off the country’s northeast, decimating the local airport and causeway.
Their
resort re-opened after several weeks of reconstruction efforts, but not without
some changes, said MacNevin, who now lives in Chezzetcook, N.S.
“The
resort looks different now. It used to have, I’ll say, that Cuban feel, a lot
of bright colours. During the restoration, they modernized it a little more.”
But
they had chosen the hideaway for its traditional feel, he said.
“They
had modern resorts down there that looked like a hotel here in downtown
Halifax. If you’re going to Cuba, you want to think you’re in Cuba. There’s
nothing we can do about that now.”
The
aftermath of the hurricanes had many Caribbean travellers scrambling to
determine the extent of the damage.
Holland
College Graphic Design instructor Mike Thomas had tentative plans to travel
south in March along with his wife Nancy, several relatives and friends.
Their
first reaction to the news was one of compassion for the people affected, he
said, but they soon realized they needed to do a lot more diligence.
“We
were planning on travelling down, where do we go, where can we go, how many of
these resorts have been damaged beyond repair and when are they going to be
fixed?”
![]() |
Mike Thomas and his wife Nancy had to take hurricane damage into consideration when planning their Caribbean getaway. |
They ultimately
decided on a resort in the Dominican Republic, but the decision required a wary
eye, Thomas said.
“(The websites)
are always going to advertise the best things. They’re not going to say, ‘We’re
a wreck! Please still come down.’ They’re going to say everything’s put
together.”
Maritime
Travel counsellor Larissa Newell said their operations are now more or less
back to normal, which is surprising to some of their clients.
“A
lot of people think things are still pretty ravaged. They’re pretty surprised
to hear everything is back up and running and that Cuba recovered so quickly,
because certain areas were hit pretty bad.”
Some
cruises are being diverted to different destinations rather than the
still-damaged St. Maarten, Newell said.
Puerto
Rico was hardest hit by the hurricanes, and Newell said it’s not available as a
destination, but cruises leaving from there are going smoothly.
“But I would not
send anyone there as a destination. I know certain parts of the island still
don’t have any power.”
She
said there are no direct flights from the Maritimes to the worst-affected
areas, so those operations have not been affected.
As
for MacNevin and his fiancée, they still don’t know what to expect when they
touch down in Cayo Santa Maria.
“We’re
a little nervous about it. They probably lost some shoreline. I know they lost
all kinds of trees. The landscape’s going to be different. They don’t really
update their pictures that much.”
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
From wartime London to Canada's most idyllic province
Maureen Bicknell had just settled into bed when she heard the roar of an engine.
She looked out the window. It was dark, but the lights of an airliner were visible as it took off from nearby Heathrow Airport.
The three-year-old was almost asleep a few minutes later when an explosion on the street jolted her out of bed. It was the unmistakable sound of a German air raid.
Her mother, Irene, ran into the room. She threw herself on top of Maureen as the ghastly air raid sirens rang out.
“I’m protecting you,” Irene said.
London had underground bomb shelters, but Irene refused to take her daughter there. People had been killed in stampedes before.
“People panic down there when there’s bombs. If we’re going to go, we’ll go above ground,” she told Maureen.
Maureen’s father, Victor Bicknell, was a bombardier in the British army with the 74th field regiment. He had been stationed in Egypt as part of the North African campaign, which began on June 20, 1942.
Shortly after Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt signed off on the campaign, the German and Italian forces pushed the front from Libya back into Egypt.
The fighting resumed on June 27 in the Egyptian city of Mersa Matruh.
Bicknell was killed in action the next day. He never got to meet his daughter.
Two years later, Irene married Arthur Craig, a corporal in the Canadian army. While he fought on the western front, she worked in a shop making guns and ammunition for the war effort.
By 1945, Nazi Germany was on its last legs and the time had come for Irene and her daughter to board a ship to Canada with other war brides. Maureen was three months shy of her fourth birthday when she left England forever.
They arrived at the port of Liverpool on May 17, ready to board the RMS Queen Mary.
Maureen looked up at the ship. It was an enormous ocean liner, a thousand feet long with three stacks.
There was only one problem. Irene was eight months pregnant. Women that far along in their pregnancy weren’t supposed to travel on the ship.
She remembered the advice her doctor had given her.
“When you board, wear a large coat, suck in your stomach and stick out your butt.”
It worked.
Inside, the vessel was not short on entertainment options. There was a cinema, a squash court, a library and drawing room, restaurants and a cocktail lounge. The Queen Mary even had a furniture store.
Irene had taken her wooden racket and used it at the tennis court.
She and Maureen had a cabin to themselves during the nine-day journey. Maureen spent a lot of her time sitting on the top bunk.
She looked out the porthole. There were several battleships in the ocean beside them. Each one had a battery with guns.
“They don’t look that big to me,” Maureen thought.
The warships escorted the Queen Mary on both sides to protect from enemy attacks.
Maureen’s mind wandered to the porthole itself. Small and round, she wondered what would happen if she opened it. Would she fall out?
A few days later, she got seasick. The ship’s nurse came along with medicine, but Maureen refused to open her mouth.
“I don’t want it.”
The nurse returned. Maureen looked up.
It was the biggest orange she had ever seen.
“If you take the medicine, this orange is yours.”
She did what she was told. Fruit was a rare treat.
The ship was crowded. There were 102 children on board, along with their mothers. Some of them were teenagers.
Maureen felt intimidated, but she did befriend one boy her age.
It was May 25. Eight days had passed since they left Liverpool. It was time for lunch. A waitress passed out the menus.
Maureen looked down at the kids menu. There were lots of options, a far cry from the food rationing in London. She ordered boiled eggs and peach cream cake.
Irene ordered potage minestrone soup and coffee from the adult menu.
The next day, May 26, Maureen looked out the porthole. The shores of Nova Scotia were visible in the distance.
After nine days on the North Atlantic, the Queen Mary docked at Pier 21 in Halifax harbour.
Irene and Maureen made their way off the ship and were herded into a two-storey brick building housing the immigration offices. When that was done, they went to the assembly hall on the second floor.
Maureen looked across the hall. A large man dressed in a dark blue uniform and cap was approaching them.
“I’m Gilbert Bell, Arthur’s brother-in-law,” he told Irene.
He was a captain on one of the ferries that operated between Borden, P.E.I., and Cape Tormentine, N.B.
Bell drove them to their new home on the Point Road in Tryon, P.E.I., where Arthur’s parents lived.
Maureen's new grandparents ran a large farm. She looked out at the property. There were cows, hens and geese, which she had never seen before.
Her brother Jimmy was born less than a month after they arrived on the Island.
When Arthur came home from the war, the family bought a mixed farm on the Branch Road. They owned two horses and a cow, and geese that were fattened and sold to pay for groceries.
Irene and Maureen became Canadian citizens on Nov. 16, 1976.
She looked out the window. It was dark, but the lights of an airliner were visible as it took off from nearby Heathrow Airport.
The three-year-old was almost asleep a few minutes later when an explosion on the street jolted her out of bed. It was the unmistakable sound of a German air raid.
Her mother, Irene, ran into the room. She threw herself on top of Maureen as the ghastly air raid sirens rang out.
“I’m protecting you,” Irene said.
London had underground bomb shelters, but Irene refused to take her daughter there. People had been killed in stampedes before.
“People panic down there when there’s bombs. If we’re going to go, we’ll go above ground,” she told Maureen.
Maureen’s father, Victor Bicknell, was a bombardier in the British army with the 74th field regiment. He had been stationed in Egypt as part of the North African campaign, which began on June 20, 1942.
Shortly after Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt signed off on the campaign, the German and Italian forces pushed the front from Libya back into Egypt.
The fighting resumed on June 27 in the Egyptian city of Mersa Matruh.
Bicknell was killed in action the next day. He never got to meet his daughter.
Two years later, Irene married Arthur Craig, a corporal in the Canadian army. While he fought on the western front, she worked in a shop making guns and ammunition for the war effort.
By 1945, Nazi Germany was on its last legs and the time had come for Irene and her daughter to board a ship to Canada with other war brides. Maureen was three months shy of her fourth birthday when she left England forever.
They arrived at the port of Liverpool on May 17, ready to board the RMS Queen Mary.
Maureen looked up at the ship. It was an enormous ocean liner, a thousand feet long with three stacks.
There was only one problem. Irene was eight months pregnant. Women that far along in their pregnancy weren’t supposed to travel on the ship.
She remembered the advice her doctor had given her.
“When you board, wear a large coat, suck in your stomach and stick out your butt.”
It worked.
Inside, the vessel was not short on entertainment options. There was a cinema, a squash court, a library and drawing room, restaurants and a cocktail lounge. The Queen Mary even had a furniture store.
Irene had taken her wooden racket and used it at the tennis court.
She and Maureen had a cabin to themselves during the nine-day journey. Maureen spent a lot of her time sitting on the top bunk.
She looked out the porthole. There were several battleships in the ocean beside them. Each one had a battery with guns.
“They don’t look that big to me,” Maureen thought.
The warships escorted the Queen Mary on both sides to protect from enemy attacks.
Maureen’s mind wandered to the porthole itself. Small and round, she wondered what would happen if she opened it. Would she fall out?
A few days later, she got seasick. The ship’s nurse came along with medicine, but Maureen refused to open her mouth.
“I don’t want it.”
The nurse returned. Maureen looked up.
It was the biggest orange she had ever seen.
“If you take the medicine, this orange is yours.”
She did what she was told. Fruit was a rare treat.
The ship was crowded. There were 102 children on board, along with their mothers. Some of them were teenagers.
Maureen felt intimidated, but she did befriend one boy her age.
It was May 25. Eight days had passed since they left Liverpool. It was time for lunch. A waitress passed out the menus.
Maureen looked down at the kids menu. There were lots of options, a far cry from the food rationing in London. She ordered boiled eggs and peach cream cake.
Irene ordered potage minestrone soup and coffee from the adult menu.
The next day, May 26, Maureen looked out the porthole. The shores of Nova Scotia were visible in the distance.
After nine days on the North Atlantic, the Queen Mary docked at Pier 21 in Halifax harbour.
Irene and Maureen made their way off the ship and were herded into a two-storey brick building housing the immigration offices. When that was done, they went to the assembly hall on the second floor.
Maureen looked across the hall. A large man dressed in a dark blue uniform and cap was approaching them.
“I’m Gilbert Bell, Arthur’s brother-in-law,” he told Irene.
He was a captain on one of the ferries that operated between Borden, P.E.I., and Cape Tormentine, N.B.
Bell drove them to their new home on the Point Road in Tryon, P.E.I., where Arthur’s parents lived.
Maureen's new grandparents ran a large farm. She looked out at the property. There were cows, hens and geese, which she had never seen before.
Her brother Jimmy was born less than a month after they arrived on the Island.
When Arthur came home from the war, the family bought a mixed farm on the Branch Road. They owned two horses and a cow, and geese that were fattened and sold to pay for groceries.
Irene and Maureen became Canadian citizens on Nov. 16, 1976.
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
"It feels kick ass": old garage morphs into creative performance space
Lights and sounds spilled out of a Kent Street garage Oct. 11.
Inside were students in the School of Performing Arts at Holland College performing for the first time in their new rehearsal space.
Outside were fellow students, staff and dignitaries witnessing the grand opening of the garage.
SoPA students had awaited the chance to perform in the new space for months, said vocalist Jocelyn Reyome, whose impassioned Alicia Keys rendition closed out the ceremony.
“We were super anxious over the summer and we finally found out it was opening. We were jumping at the opportunity to perform.”
The original garage was built by the Duncan family, who owned the property for nearly a century. It required a full makeover, complete with new equipment and light and sound systems.
The Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency provided $29,325 in funding for the project. Students from the college’s heritage retrofit carpentry program worked on the rebuild.
Performing arts students will make full use of the new facility, said Reyome, a Massachusetts native.
“It feels kick ass. A lot of other schools don’t have this opportunity to have such an up-to-date performing studio. We feel that we’re lucky and we definitely want to take advantage of it.”
Two of the program’s 11 ensembles performed during the opening with hits from Stevie Wonder and the Black Keys, among others.
Bahamian percussionist Josh Wright was impressed with the new space.
“The lights, even down to the sound, it’s perfect, absolutely perfect. (There are) things we can do in here and push ourselves a little bit further.”
Having another space to rehearse will help accommodate the more than 50 students in the program, said West Virginia guitarist Connor Mowery.
“It definitely opens things up. Now we have this nice, big extra practice space, so we have a lot more things going on at one time. Multiple ensembles can be practising all over campus at once.”
During his remarks, Charlottetown MP Sean Casey said he had “great admiration” for the performances on display.
“You can feel the creativity vibrating within these walls.”
Inside were students in the School of Performing Arts at Holland College performing for the first time in their new rehearsal space.
Outside were fellow students, staff and dignitaries witnessing the grand opening of the garage.
SoPA students had awaited the chance to perform in the new space for months, said vocalist Jocelyn Reyome, whose impassioned Alicia Keys rendition closed out the ceremony.
“We were super anxious over the summer and we finally found out it was opening. We were jumping at the opportunity to perform.”
The original garage was built by the Duncan family, who owned the property for nearly a century. It required a full makeover, complete with new equipment and light and sound systems.
The Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency provided $29,325 in funding for the project. Students from the college’s heritage retrofit carpentry program worked on the rebuild.
Performing arts students will make full use of the new facility, said Reyome, a Massachusetts native.
“It feels kick ass. A lot of other schools don’t have this opportunity to have such an up-to-date performing studio. We feel that we’re lucky and we definitely want to take advantage of it.”
Two of the program’s 11 ensembles performed during the opening with hits from Stevie Wonder and the Black Keys, among others.
Bahamian percussionist Josh Wright was impressed with the new space.
“The lights, even down to the sound, it’s perfect, absolutely perfect. (There are) things we can do in here and push ourselves a little bit further.”
Having another space to rehearse will help accommodate the more than 50 students in the program, said West Virginia guitarist Connor Mowery.
“It definitely opens things up. Now we have this nice, big extra practice space, so we have a lot more things going on at one time. Multiple ensembles can be practising all over campus at once.”
During his remarks, Charlottetown MP Sean Casey said he had “great admiration” for the performances on display.
“You can feel the creativity vibrating within these walls.”
PEI struggling to recruit psychiatrists
Suicidal patients could be turned away from the emergency room without receiving treatment due to the province’s psychiatrist shortage, says P.E.I’s chief of mental health and addictions.
Heather Keizer spoke to the standing committee for health and wellness Oct. 3 about the government’s plan to get back to a full complement of 15 psychiatrists. There are 9.5 full-time equivalent working on the Island now.
“It’s conceivable” a suicidal patient could be discharged from the ER without seeing a psychiatrist, Keizer said.
“We should have 15 psychiatrists on call in our emergency room. We have 4.7.”
That means there are now ER shifts with no psychiatric coverage. In the meantime, video conference sessions with off-Island psychiatrists are being used and ER physicians are “well-trained” in suicide risk assessments, Keizer said.
Mental health advocate Sarah Stewart-Clark said she was “very startled” to learn the extent of the shortage.
“I think we’ve all been working from this number (11) that was provided by the province.”
Part of the problem is, during past shortages, the province hired some psychiatrists who were less than suitable, Keizer said.
“Those who have exited have done so in response to a performance review.”
The province has been very accommodating to potential candidates, Henderson said, but that isn’t enough when contending with larger jurisdictions for psychiatrists, he added.
“We have to be more competitive than we are.”
Keizer has been busy interviewing candidates to fill P.E.I.’s recommended complement of 15 psychiatrists, with a focus on Canadian schools.
Committee chair Jordan Brown suggested the government should reach out to Islanders during their first four years of medical school and persuade them to specialize in psychiatry.
Visa issues have delayed the arrival of psychiatrist Dr. Mahesh Nachnani. Henderson told The Guardian on Sept. 3 Nachnani had already been practising on P.E.I. for two weeks.
When she worked in a similar-sized jurisdiction in Ontario, the region had six psychiatrists for a population of 150,000, Keizer said.
“The burden of illness was less. Since I moved here, I’ve seen more severe, more illness, more regularly.”
Mental health expert Todd Leader, who is consulting with Health P.E.I., said he used a work-around situation during a shortage in the South Shore Health Authority in Nova Scotia.
Psychiatrists spent some time each week taking consultation calls from family doctors to allow them to make informed medication decisions.
“It worked great and the doctors’ competence increased over time while we kept working on the psychiatry recruitment challenge.”
Although she approves of the suggested solutions, Stewart-Clark said it will take more than words to restore faith in the provincial government and its handling of mental health.
Heather Keizer spoke to the standing committee for health and wellness Oct. 3 about the government’s plan to get back to a full complement of 15 psychiatrists. There are 9.5 full-time equivalent working on the Island now.
“It’s conceivable” a suicidal patient could be discharged from the ER without seeing a psychiatrist, Keizer said.
“We should have 15 psychiatrists on call in our emergency room. We have 4.7.”
That means there are now ER shifts with no psychiatric coverage. In the meantime, video conference sessions with off-Island psychiatrists are being used and ER physicians are “well-trained” in suicide risk assessments, Keizer said.
Mental health advocate Sarah Stewart-Clark said she was “very startled” to learn the extent of the shortage.
“I think we’ve all been working from this number (11) that was provided by the province.”
Part of the problem is, during past shortages, the province hired some psychiatrists who were less than suitable, Keizer said.
“Those who have exited have done so in response to a performance review.”
“We have to be more competitive than we are.”
Keizer has been busy interviewing candidates to fill P.E.I.’s recommended complement of 15 psychiatrists, with a focus on Canadian schools.
Committee chair Jordan Brown suggested the government should reach out to Islanders during their first four years of medical school and persuade them to specialize in psychiatry.
Visa issues have delayed the arrival of psychiatrist Dr. Mahesh Nachnani. Henderson told The Guardian on Sept. 3 Nachnani had already been practising on P.E.I. for two weeks.
When she worked in a similar-sized jurisdiction in Ontario, the region had six psychiatrists for a population of 150,000, Keizer said.
“The burden of illness was less. Since I moved here, I’ve seen more severe, more illness, more regularly.”
Mental health expert Todd Leader, who is consulting with Health P.E.I., said he used a work-around situation during a shortage in the South Shore Health Authority in Nova Scotia.
Psychiatrists spent some time each week taking consultation calls from family doctors to allow them to make informed medication decisions.
“It worked great and the doctors’ competence increased over time while we kept working on the psychiatry recruitment challenge.”
Although she approves of the suggested solutions, Stewart-Clark said it will take more than words to restore faith in the provincial government and its handling of mental health.
“I think, after the past year, people have lost trust in our health minister and in Health P.E.I. to manage our mental health system. That trust has to be built back up and it can only be built back up by action.”
Psychiatrist shortage impacting ER patients
Growing up, Tristen Garnhum wanted to be a mechanic or a chef. Now the 19-year-old just wants to stay alive.
Diagnosed with Asperger’s, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, Garnhum is coping with a mental health crisis and a psychiatrist shortage is making things worse, says his mother, Melody.
He has been in and out of the emergency room since Sept. 25, but he has not been admitted.
On Oct. 3, he tried to hang himself in the ER bathroom.
He has gone entire days at the ER without seeing a psychiatrist and has attempted suicide before, Melody said.
“If they were to release my son today, I guarantee you within weeks I’d be burying him.
"Until now, he’s been fighting getting help. This time he’s asking for it. So I know the situation has drastically changed.”
The province has 4.7 full-time equivalent psychiatrists able to work in the emergency room at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and since Sept. 29 there have been shifts with no psychiatrist on call.
The government should have warned the public about the lack of psychiatric coverage, said mental health advocate Sarah Stewart-Clark.
“The fact that the health minister didn't make us aware of that and communicate their plan to get patients through this safely, that was very upsetting to learn.
“When we're not even able to cover call at the hospital, that's very troubling. We need to have coverage for the proportion of our population at a crisis point.”
The psychiatrists and physicians who are available aren’t doing enough to help Tristen, said Garnhum.
“I blame psychiatrists who don’t listen to the families, who don’t really listen to the patients and just shove medication.”
The situation is complicated by previous criminal charges that prevent Tristen from living with minors, which means he can’t live at home.
“(ER doctors) feel it’s a housing situation, not a mental health situation. Yes, the housing situation has aggravated his mental health issues. That I will not deny. But he’s there because of his mental health issues,” Garnhum said.
She has been told, however, Tristen will not be sent home without getting help.
Attempts to contact Health Minister Robert Henderson for help have gone nowhere, Garnhum said. She blames the provincial government for not providing enough funding to provide adequate psychiatric coverage.
“Robert Henderson should never have been handed that portfolio. He does not know how to manage it. He does not care enough. That portfolio deserves a politician who cares about people.”
Garnhum plans to continue fighting for change in the system, for her son and the many others who need help.
“My son is not a statistic. I’m not going to let my son become a statistic. He deserves to have a future.”
Diagnosed with Asperger’s, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, Garnhum is coping with a mental health crisis and a psychiatrist shortage is making things worse, says his mother, Melody.
He has been in and out of the emergency room since Sept. 25, but he has not been admitted.
On Oct. 3, he tried to hang himself in the ER bathroom.
He has gone entire days at the ER without seeing a psychiatrist and has attempted suicide before, Melody said.
“If they were to release my son today, I guarantee you within weeks I’d be burying him.
"Until now, he’s been fighting getting help. This time he’s asking for it. So I know the situation has drastically changed.”
The province has 4.7 full-time equivalent psychiatrists able to work in the emergency room at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and since Sept. 29 there have been shifts with no psychiatrist on call.
The government should have warned the public about the lack of psychiatric coverage, said mental health advocate Sarah Stewart-Clark.
“The fact that the health minister didn't make us aware of that and communicate their plan to get patients through this safely, that was very upsetting to learn.
“When we're not even able to cover call at the hospital, that's very troubling. We need to have coverage for the proportion of our population at a crisis point.”
The psychiatrists and physicians who are available aren’t doing enough to help Tristen, said Garnhum.
“I blame psychiatrists who don’t listen to the families, who don’t really listen to the patients and just shove medication.”
The situation is complicated by previous criminal charges that prevent Tristen from living with minors, which means he can’t live at home.
“(ER doctors) feel it’s a housing situation, not a mental health situation. Yes, the housing situation has aggravated his mental health issues. That I will not deny. But he’s there because of his mental health issues,” Garnhum said.
She has been told, however, Tristen will not be sent home without getting help.
Attempts to contact Health Minister Robert Henderson for help have gone nowhere, Garnhum said. She blames the provincial government for not providing enough funding to provide adequate psychiatric coverage.
“Robert Henderson should never have been handed that portfolio. He does not know how to manage it. He does not care enough. That portfolio deserves a politician who cares about people.”
Garnhum plans to continue fighting for change in the system, for her son and the many others who need help.
“My son is not a statistic. I’m not going to let my son become a statistic. He deserves to have a future.”
Friday, September 29, 2017
P.E.I. mental health system must be client-centred: expert
The key to an effective P.E.I. mental health system is to make it client-centred and focus on early intervention, says a Nova Scotia mental health expert.
Registered psychologist and social worker Todd Leader laid out his vision for a better system in his book, It’s Not About Us: The Secret to Transforming the Mental Health and Addiction System in Canada.
Leader, who has consulted with Health P.E.I. for about three months, gave a public talk Wednesday at UPEI. At the core of his approach is a system designed around the client every step of the way.
“If the client was my mother or my son, how would I want this part of the system to work? It’s a personal question, not a professional question. Whatever the answer is, that’s the definition of a client-centred system,” said Leader.
“If at every step of the client’s journey through the program, they ask that question, they’ll end up designing policies that are efficient for the client.”
The title of Leader’s book means the system is about the users, not the workers, who must deal with inconvenience for the sake of the client.
Transforming the system “doesn’t happen without struggle and without pissing people off,” Leader said.
The P.E.I. government consultant said Health P.E.I. is “completely committed to this kind of approach and are trying to figure out the process to make that transition … I give them kudos for embracing the concept and starting the journey.”
The talk was attended by three MLAs. Health minister Rob Henderson was not among them.
Leader’s strategy was implemented in the South Shore Health Authority in Nova Scotia and resulted in wait times dropping from eight months to four to six weeks, without any new funding.
Leader stressed that the clients of the mental health system are the entire public, not just those who use it or those who are mentally ill.
“The mandate is not to provide services – it’s to improve health,” he said.
His plan addresses that by incorporating social and emotional learning into the school curriculum, reducing demand over time.
“There is tons of scientific evidence that if we teach our kids to understand and manage their emotions, those kids grow up with lower rates of mental illness and addiction. If we ignore this part of it, we are always going to have a capacity problem.”
Among Leader’s ideas to increase the supply to meet the demand is removing clinicians from non-clinical meetings, which would free up appointments and reduce wait times.
“It’s about picking apart every single part of the path and maximizing the use of resources for the sake of the client.”
Dr. Sarah Stewart-Clark, the organizer of the #HowManyWade mental health advocacy campaign, said reading Leader’s book gave her new hope for the future.
“In many ways it aligns with the asks in our campaign and I think it's an exciting direction for the province to go in.”
The Facebook campaign publicized stories from 100 families whose needs are not being met by the system and has helped make mental health a hot topic in the Island’s political discourse.
Stewart-Clark said Leader’s vision is finally an answer to the urgent need that has existed for many years. She agrees with Leader that proactive intervention to prevent personal crisis is “desperately needed.”
Part of Leader’s focus is on making the system easier to navigate and access. He said sitting in waiting rooms, not knowing what number to call for help and not having a “warm, compassionate person” answer that phone are all examples that can make the user’s condition worse.
“Waiting rooms are harder on mental health patients than others. It reinforces their low self-esteem and causes the issue they’re there to treat.”
His solution in Nova Scotia was to instruct all mental health professionals to drop everything and meet clients at their appointment time.
Stewart-Clark cautioned the province must deal with the current backlog of users in crisis before it can move forward with Leader’s approach.
“We're not exactly in a place to adopt that plan fully until we address the reality that on the spectrum of mental illness, we are far on the side of severe crises because individuals have not had care for so long.
“The system has been ineffective for so long and we need to address that first.”
Registered psychologist and social worker Todd Leader laid out his vision for a better system in his book, It’s Not About Us: The Secret to Transforming the Mental Health and Addiction System in Canada.
Leader, who has consulted with Health P.E.I. for about three months, gave a public talk Wednesday at UPEI. At the core of his approach is a system designed around the client every step of the way.
“If the client was my mother or my son, how would I want this part of the system to work? It’s a personal question, not a professional question. Whatever the answer is, that’s the definition of a client-centred system,” said Leader.
“If at every step of the client’s journey through the program, they ask that question, they’ll end up designing policies that are efficient for the client.”
The title of Leader’s book means the system is about the users, not the workers, who must deal with inconvenience for the sake of the client.
Transforming the system “doesn’t happen without struggle and without pissing people off,” Leader said.
The P.E.I. government consultant said Health P.E.I. is “completely committed to this kind of approach and are trying to figure out the process to make that transition … I give them kudos for embracing the concept and starting the journey.”
The talk was attended by three MLAs. Health minister Rob Henderson was not among them.
Leader’s strategy was implemented in the South Shore Health Authority in Nova Scotia and resulted in wait times dropping from eight months to four to six weeks, without any new funding.
Leader stressed that the clients of the mental health system are the entire public, not just those who use it or those who are mentally ill.
“The mandate is not to provide services – it’s to improve health,” he said.
His plan addresses that by incorporating social and emotional learning into the school curriculum, reducing demand over time.
“There is tons of scientific evidence that if we teach our kids to understand and manage their emotions, those kids grow up with lower rates of mental illness and addiction. If we ignore this part of it, we are always going to have a capacity problem.”
Among Leader’s ideas to increase the supply to meet the demand is removing clinicians from non-clinical meetings, which would free up appointments and reduce wait times.
“It’s about picking apart every single part of the path and maximizing the use of resources for the sake of the client.”
Dr. Sarah Stewart-Clark, the organizer of the #HowManyWade mental health advocacy campaign, said reading Leader’s book gave her new hope for the future.
“In many ways it aligns with the asks in our campaign and I think it's an exciting direction for the province to go in.”
The Facebook campaign publicized stories from 100 families whose needs are not being met by the system and has helped make mental health a hot topic in the Island’s political discourse.
Stewart-Clark said Leader’s vision is finally an answer to the urgent need that has existed for many years. She agrees with Leader that proactive intervention to prevent personal crisis is “desperately needed.”
Part of Leader’s focus is on making the system easier to navigate and access. He said sitting in waiting rooms, not knowing what number to call for help and not having a “warm, compassionate person” answer that phone are all examples that can make the user’s condition worse.
“Waiting rooms are harder on mental health patients than others. It reinforces their low self-esteem and causes the issue they’re there to treat.”
His solution in Nova Scotia was to instruct all mental health professionals to drop everything and meet clients at their appointment time.
Stewart-Clark cautioned the province must deal with the current backlog of users in crisis before it can move forward with Leader’s approach.
“We're not exactly in a place to adopt that plan fully until we address the reality that on the spectrum of mental illness, we are far on the side of severe crises because individuals have not had care for so long.
“The system has been ineffective for so long and we need to address that first.”
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