The CN Tower seen through docked sail boats from the Mimico Creek Trail in Toronto, June 7, 2023. As forest fires raged in Quebec and northeastern Ontario, a yellow-tinted smoke settled upon Toronto.The CN Tower seen through docked sail boats from the Mimico Creek Trail in Toronto, June 7, 2023. As forest fires raged in Quebec and northeastern Ontario, a yellow-tinted smoke settled upon Toronto.

Canada becomes the face of ecological disaster + the Annex homes helping the electrical grid

Canadian wildfires, homes helping the electrical grid and tensions over Pride at TDSB.

Good morning. This is the Thursday, June 8 edition of First Up, the Star’s daily morning digest. Sign up to get it earlier each day, in your inbox.

Here’s the latest on Canadian wildfires, homes helping the electrical grid and tensions over Pride at TDSB.

DON’T MISS:

“The new reality”? Canadian wildfires become the global face of unfolding ecological disaster

The air is orange and hazy in Canada and New York. Events are being cancelled, people are feeling sick and residents are being urged to stay inside or evacuate. In Quebec, fires have threatened more than half a dozen towns and Indigenous communities, resulting in the evacuation of more than 11,000 people. The blazes are putting Canada on track to experience its worst wildfire season since 1995, worse than the fires in the Northwest Territories in 2014 and B.C. in 2021. The United States, France, South Africa and other countries are sending fire crews to help. Allan Woods describes the impact the fires are having on different communities and how some leaders are responding.

The Annex homes storing energy, saving money and helping the grid

A pilot project is signalling the future of a carbon free electrical grid. Ten homes in Harbord Village have signed up for the “Powerwall” — a giant home battery that charges up on ultra low overnight electricity rates, when the province produces surplus renewable energy, to provide electricity for the entire house. For Andreas Souvaliotis and Joe Gisini, it means never paying peak hydro rates (and never suffering from blackouts), while freeing up electricity for their neighbours in a part of the city where aging wires and transformers are under daily strain. As Ontario faces an electricity crunch and potential blackouts this summer, Marco Chown Oved reports on the battery’s potential future.

  • Why it matters: “It’s a beautiful blend of selfish and unselfish,” said Souvaliotis. “It gives us unbelievable resilience, savings on our bills and it’s also something we can do for our city.”
  • Go deeper: “Peak demand is so much higher than what we normally consume. If we can shave the peak, we’ll never need to build another nuclear plant again,” he said. “Little creative solutions like this are the way forward.”

TDSB is turning the page on a drag queen storytime event policy after parent outcry

Why did Toronto’s public school board seek parental permission usually reserved for field trips, for a drag queen storytime on campus? After parents raised concerns that the policy implied the activity posed some sort of risk to the kids, the board has backtracked and is no longer seeking parental approval. A spokesperson says, however, that parents who wish to have their child participate in alternative activities can contact the school. Janet Hurley breaks down the controversial decisions and the parent reactions.

  • Context: Drag queen storytime has become a flashpoint for the far-right in Canada and in the U.S., with protests targeting library events where drag queens share books and songs with 2SLGBTQIA+ themes.
  • Word from a parent: “If we are committed to equity in all measures but we think that parents should be able to pull out of drag queen storytime — with its vetted, age-appropriate materials — that doesn’t track to me,” one parent said. “By making it opt-out instead of opt-in, the optics are the same.”
  • More: “The fact that, in that environment, the kid who’s not out yet gets to see someone like them, well I think there’s probably more benefit from that then there is risk, frankly,” another parent said.

WHAT ELSE:

Smoke from forest fires in Northern Ontario and in Quebec contribute to pink hazy sunset in the city from the Cherry Beach over Toronto. June 6, 2023.
  • A parliamentary committee is urging the CBSA to stop deporting Indian students caught in a fake admission letter scandal. Here’s what it had to say.

POV:

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre rises in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, June 7, 2023. Poilievre is attempting to filibuster the Liberal's budget implementation bill, C-47.

The attack by Pierre Poilievre and others on safe supply will cost us lives.

CLOSE-UP:

Ukrainian security forces carry on a boat a local resident during an evacuation from a flooded area in Kherson on June 7, 2023, following damages sustained at Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant dam. Ukraine was evacuating thousands of people on June 7 after an attack on a major Russian-held dam unleashed a torrent of water, inundating two dozen villages and sparking fears of a humanitarian disaster.

KHERSON: Ukrainian security forces carry a local resident on a boat during an evacuation from a flooded area on Wednesday. Ukraine evacuated thousands of people after an attack on a major Russian-held dam unleashed a torrent of water, inundating two dozen villages and sparking fears of a humanitarian disaster.

Thank you for reading First Up. You can reach me and the First Up team at firstup@thestar.ca

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Manuela Vega is a Toronto-based staff reporter for the Star’s Express Desk. Follow her on Twitter: @_manuelavega

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