Darrin Bauer

473 posts

Darrin Bauer banner
Darrin Bauer

Darrin Bauer

@commish728

Husband, father, teacher. Golf/hockey lover.

Edmonton Katılım Mayıs 2010
185 Takip Edilen122 Takipçiler
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
Glenn Finockio
Glenn Finockio@gfinockio·
@ABDanielleSmith Where are the 1500 new teacher hires that were promised? Where are they?
English
8
26
116
1.7K
Wine Guy
Wine Guy@ryantyke·
Any word on if new Oiler Dickinson will be in the lineup tonight?
English
2
0
0
221
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
Dr. Raj Sherman
Dr. Raj Sherman@RajSherman·
Dear Fellow Albertans, This letter is written not as a partisan, but as an emergency physician who has cared for more than 100,000 Albertans, a former MLA, and someone who has devoted a working life to this province. Across Alberta, the strain is obvious. Housing is scarce. Emergency rooms are overcrowded. Schools are stretched. The cost of living weighs heavily on families. Anxiety about the future is real and justified. This is not anger. It is concern, because moments like this demand leadership. When people are under pressure, leadership is not just about solutions, but about direction: an honest explanation of what is actually going wrong, and reassurance about who we are as a society while we fix it. In recent weeks, Alberta’s challenges have been framed by the Premier, Danielle Smith, in a way that has left many people angry, not at systems or long-standing policy failures, but at immigrants and other governments. That is deeply troubling. The frustration people feel is understandable. But much of that anger is being misdirected at immigrants. With the exception of Indigenous peoples, all Albertans come from families that arrived here seeking opportunity. Immigrants did not break Alberta’s healthcare system or tear up family doctor contracts. They did not close hospital beds or cancel planned hospital capacity. They did not under build housing, assisted living, long-term care, or schools. They did not dismantle community care. Politicians did. Every day in emergency departments, the consequences are visible: acute-care beds occupied by patients who should be at home or in long-term care; ERs functioning as inpatient wards; and population growth encouraged without matching investments in primary care, continuing care, and hospital capacity. In 1992, Alberta had approximately 11,700 hospital beds. Today, with nearly double the population and a much older demographic, we have roughly 8,800. This is not an Ottawa or immigration problem. It is a planning and capacity problem. Many of the people caring for seniors, staffing hospitals, and holding the healthcare system together today are newcomers themselves. Blaming them delays real solutions and divides communities. That lesson is personal. Growing up as a newcomer involved violence, black eyes and broken bones, and learning early what happens when fear is tolerated and adults look away. Home was not always safe either, shaped by alcoholism and domestic violence. Those experiences leave marks. What mattered most was a mother who taught that anger shrinks a life, while forgiveness, discipline, and service strengthen it, and that opportunity carries an obligation to give back. That belief led to decades in emergency medicine, the training of thousands of doctors, and public service at personal cost. Those experiences lead to a clear conclusion. Albertans deserve leadership that lowers the temperature, not raises it. Leadership that fixes systems, not finds scapegoats. Leadership that takes responsibility for planning failures and invests in capacity to match growth. For these reasons, Alberta needs a change in direction and ultimately, a change in leadership, so the province can unite around practical fixes rather than division. This is not about racism. It is about judgment, competence, and the ability to govern responsibly during difficult times. Alberta needs leadership that brings people together and focuses on solutions, not blame. Premiers Lougheed, Klein and Stelmach have led through very difficult times and would not take our province to this sharp edge. Albertans are much better than this. I am a Canadian, an Albertan and I am an immigrant. God bless Alberta. Dr. Raj Sherman @ABDanielleSmith @nenshi @FreeAlbertaRob @PfParks @NightShiftMD @Alberta_UCP @UCPCaucus @albertaNDP @TheBreakdownAB @ryanjespersen @cspotweet #yeg #yyc #ABleg #cdnpoli
English
516
775
2.3K
402.1K
Darrin Bauer
Darrin Bauer@commish728·
@Isuckatpicking That’s what the best goalie in the league looks like. 9.5 million per year. Which 2-3 oilers do you need to get rid of to make cap space?
English
0
0
2
119
VisuallyBetter
VisuallyBetter@Isuckatpicking·
That’s what a number one goalie looks like
English
9
3
20
2.1K
Hon. Thomas A. Lukaszuk
Hon. Thomas A. Lukaszuk@LukaszukAB·
I think I am still running on adrenaline. It has been a whirlwind of a 90 day campaign. But it is you, Albertans, who shined. Yes, we received nearly half a million signatures, but we also built a #ForeverCanadian movement, a community. Thank you!   #ableg #cdnpoli
English
121
355
1.9K
41.3K
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
MLB Network
MLB Network@MLBNetwork·
"Dan Plesac is a GENIUS." @Plesac19 must've borrowed Greg's crystal ball before the game with this Addison Barger call 🤯
English
329
2.2K
15.5K
1.4M
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
Jim Stanford
Jim Stanford@JimboStanford·
Alberta teachers saw their real salaries cut by 13.2% since the last contract started in Sept 2020--the worst in Canada. The Alberta government wants to lock in that pay cut by ordering teachers back to work. The teachers' position is 100% morally & economically valid. #canlab
Jim Stanford tweet media
English
341
271
594
48.7K
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
Sid Seixeiro
Sid Seixeiro@Sid_Seixeiro·
Good morning. Celine Dion. George Springer. Have a great day.
English
135
1.2K
7.9K
300.1K
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
Jason Gregor
Jason Gregor@JasonGregor·
FYI... Alberta teacher's were offered 12% over four years, which is 3% each year, not 12% in one year. For some background... teacher's have had a 0% increase in NINE of the past 12 years. And the few years they got a raise it was 1.8% and 2%. But their main concern isn't money. It is class size, funding for curriculum, special needs and more. Families should be aware how much lower our education bar is in Alberta now compared to the past, due to cuts in funding and grossly oversized classrooms. This makes learning more challenging for your children or grandchildren. Education should be one of our top priorities.
English
390
636
2.9K
203.2K
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
VisuallyBetter
VisuallyBetter@Isuckatpicking·
Edmonton needs to separate from Alberta. Using Dani math the province takes in all of this money from Edmonton each year but then spends more of it on Calgary and rural Alberta than Edmonton receives. That's money paid by the Edmonton Taxpayer. Stop Alberta Equalization theft.
English
55
191
945
27.7K
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
Naheed Nenshi
Naheed Nenshi@nenshi·
Parents aren’t blaming teachers; they’re blaming Danielle Smith. They’re right to do so: Alberta is the richest province in Canada, yet we spend the least per student. That’s not an accident. That’s a choice. Let's stand with teachers and stand up for public education.
English
757
619
2.2K
100K
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
jason schilling
jason schilling@schill_dawg·
Alberta spends the least per student and has for years. We dealing with the consequences of this choice by government. #stoptheexcuses #kidscantwait
jason schilling tweet media
Courtney Theriault@cspotweet

Premier Danielle Smith claims that Alberta spends a proper amount per student on classroom staffing. But ATA president @schill_dawg says funding is well-behind the current need (and national avg)- another sticking point as a teachers' strike looms. podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/pre…

English
0
139
231
25.6K
Great Golf Holes ⛳️
Great Golf Holes ⛳️@GreatGolfHoles·
4th Hole, Banff Springs Golf Course, Banff, Alberta, Canada
Great Golf Holes ⛳️ tweet media
CY
36
67
1.6K
202K
Darrin Bauer retweetledi
ABResistance
ABResistance@AB_Resistance·
Unannounced AGLC fee increase (tax) on wine in Alberta. Cheap mass-produced wines are exempt whereas anything unique or with quality will be penalized. Danielle Smith has increased taxes on Canadian wines at the height of the Trump trade war.
ABResistance tweet media
English
22
158
253
9.8K
SportsCentre
SportsCentre@SportsCentre·
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, along with player reps Tiger Woods and Adam Scott, issued an optimistic statement about the “reunification of golf” following a meeting at the White House on Thursday with President Donald Trump. More from @BobWeeksTSN: tsn.ca/bob-weeks-wood…
English
3
2
5
6.8K
Scouting The Refs
Scouting The Refs@ScoutingTheRefs·
Didn't look like a kick from here...
English
15
1
25
40.5K