Results tagged “Poverty” from Mobilizing Mouse

Sponsored by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and conducted by Gallup, this survey of 26 communities across the States, '.... probes the emotional factors that bind people to place.'

Press reaction has been very interesting, using the results and weighing them against the expected reaction to the recent recession.

A few press links are below

The New York Times blog

USA Today

Globe and Mail

A Google News search is here for continued overview of response to the findings.

Search the news for Soul of the Community

Soul of the Community

L + P = $

'Translated, it means that communities able to inspire loyalty and passion among residents are also likely to see a swell in their financial outlook.'

'.......researchers found perceptions of economic prosperity are not the leading drivers of attachment feelings among residents. Instead, most of the 14,000 respondents rated social offerings (such as entertainment and other venues that promote interconnectivity among residents), openness (acceptance of diversity) and community aesthetics as the top qualities that influenced decisions on where to anchor their lives and careers.'

(Globe and Mail)

Resource material (below) includes a summary PDF, a data file and one of the best PP shows I have seen for while - almost every slide a '....aha...so that means...'

Main page

http://www.soulofthecommunity.org/

Reports page with the resources that follow

http://www.soulofthecommunity.org/overall-findings/

While here are the links to a PDF, a data file and a Powerpoint

http://www.soulofthecommunity.org/files/2009/overall-2009.pdf

http://www.soulofthecommunity.org/download/2009/raw_data.zip

http://www.soulofthecommunity.org/files/2009/overall-2009.ppt


smallheavylifter.jpg











This photograph and article is from the Vancouver Sun on Wednesday 19th 2009.

It shows 3 new Quad cranes arriving at Deltaport. The cranes were made in China and transported by a Chinese ship.

So we are importing from the exporters the means to import from the exporters.

Whither lessons from British colonial history?

The trinkets and baubles imported from China filling every store and sometimes whole malls are all price driven, never directed by quality or ethics - ethics both in terms of buying local and the exploitation of the workers in China making this crap.

In order to keep up with demand (read addiction) for this low cost unethical crap, China is demanding more and more energy, including coal from Canada.

Add to the story above the recent announcement of the Chinese government investment of C$1.74 Billion in Teck Resources - it's all about cheap coal - three stories here:

Flaherty and the Bloomberg article on the Teck Deal

Full story fom CEO world here

Vancouver Sun piece via Reuters criticizes China for the weakness of the bid - not ruthless enough...!

Teck-Resources-Ltd.jpg


What this really looks like - Canada ripping itself apart to provide energy to China to pollute at will while producing unnecessary goods to fuel Canadian obsession with 'drive to the bottom' wages. Can you say Walmart, Costco and a hundred other retailers without a trace of moral fibre selling this crap to a million consumers without a trace of moral fibre.

Exploitation is apparently fine as long as we don't have to see it - either as in the picture above or in the sweat shops where our 'low cost' (cost to whom?) goods are made.

coaltruck.jpg




















This is what China wants - coal - which if burned here is 'bad', which if exported to China and burned is apparently 'good', firstly because it creates Canadian jobs, and secondly keeps the stream of slave labour produced trinkets going. A stream which destroyed Canadian jobs in the first place.

How many cloth bags (99% made in China btw) will it take to wipe out or equalize the CO2 produced by this coal when it is burned in China with few environmental cares?

Sickening all round.

1./ Read the label - stop buying Chinese made goods

2./ Repeat above

3./ Buy fewer goods of better quality from producers who value their tradition, their quality and their workers - preferably from the country where you live to keep local jobs for local people.

These are the ways to reduce the Chinese demand for Canadian coal, fueling this disgusting mess.

Last Updated: Thursday, February 5, 2009 | 3:19 PM ET

The number of Canadians who earned most of their income from the arts topped 140,000 in Canada in 2006, according to a report based on statistics from the 2006 census.

That made artists more numerous than auto workers -- about 135,000 Canadians worked in the auto sector in 2006 -- according to a report from Hill Strategies in Hamilton, Ont., created for the Ontario Arts Council, Canadian Heritage and the Canada Council for the Arts.

Canadian artists remain among the most impoverished of the working poor, earning an average annual income of $22,700, about 37 per cent less than the rest of the Canadian workforce.

And not all of that income is earned in the arts -- the census doesn't ask how much artists might make as waitresses and busboys, says Kelly Hill, president of Hill Strategies.

"Those earnings are included in the statistics. It's even more depressing from that standpoint," he told CBC News.


I don't know who Tom Sandborn is but this is so nicely done.

Motivation for an opera, a play, an installation? Anyone?

Tom Sandborn
Vancouver Courier

Friday, July 25, 2008

I have a file in my computer called "No Future for Satire." It is dedicated to news items that support my favourite literary theory, the proposition that satire is dead as a form of fiction in the 21st century. The basic assumption here is that it is impossible to make up anything as grotesque as the six o'clock news.

A little-noticed decision by city council last September is now a standout piece of evidence in that file. The folks we elected to conduct city business decided, in their infinite wisdom, to spend $5 million from the $20 million Olympics Legacy Fund on turning two downtown parking lots into enormous outdoor venues. Those of us who can't afford the pricey tickets for Olympic events can gather there and watch them on huge TV screens and enjoy live entertainment. Talk about pay per view!
Very comprehensive, very revealing.

DTES Demographic Study Final June 2008.pdf

Condo project would fuel 'class hatred,' activists say

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Fearing it would hurt the poor, demonstrators want proposed development quashed

VANCOUVER -- Housing activists made a last-ditch effort to derail a Downtown Eastside condominium project at a city hall hearing yesterday, claiming the development would fuel "class hatred" and make it more difficult for low-income people who live in the neighbourhood to obtain decent housing and services.

"We need some indication that there is a future for poor people in this neighbourhood - otherwise these condos are a slap in the face," Carnegie Community Action Project spokeswoman Wendy Pedersen said yesterday at a development permit board meeting.

Ms. Pedersen and other activists attended the meeting to register their objections to the 160-unit Greenwich condominium project, which developer Concord Pacific has proposed for a downtown site at 58 West Hastings St.

The area is now dominated by single-room accommodation hotels and the rough edges of Vancouver's drug trade.


Lori Culbert
Vancouver Sun

Friday, June 20, 2008

VANCOUVER - Gladys Radek will be thinking of her niece Tamara Chipman, who vanished along the Highway of Tears, when she leaves Vancouver Saturday to walk to Ottawa to demand justice for missing and murdered women.

She and other walkers planned to gather with supporters tomorrow morning at Trout Lake for a send-off breakfast before beginning their trek, which is scheduled to end Sept. 15 on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. 

Victoria vs Vancouver in homeless and the poverty slide

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Shelter plan is unfair to hard-pressed area
 
Beverley Bowes
Times Colonist

Friday, June 20, 2008

Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, Canada's poorest postal code, is the result of flawed policy and poor decision-making. Today, a Victoria neighbourhood is headed down the same slippery slope.

Practical, rather than moral, grounds were the order of the day in the early 1980s when prostitution was chased out of Vancouver's middle-class West End and Mount Pleasant districts into the Downtown Eastside. The same situation occurred in 2003 in Victoria when sex-trade workers were pushed out of the downtown core and into Rock Bay and Burnside Gorge. Along with The Stroll came the drug dealers and higher crime rates.

The neighbourhood managed to absorb the influx because it is a strong and diversified community. The area comprises light industrial, middle- to lower-income single-family dwellings and condos, transient accommodation offered by single-room-occupancy motels, pockets of executive condo developments, office buildings, subsidized housing complexes, residential drug and alcohol treatment facilities, housing for the hardest-to-house and housing for federal prison parolees.

This community is now teetering on the edge of an abyss, at the bottom of which lies a hell similar to the Downtown Eastside.
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The rights of drug addicts - even the Globe and Mail gets it......

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Globe editorial

The rights of drug addicts

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

May 29, 2008 at 6:09 AM EDT

Insisting that a Vancouver clinic be allowed to provide potentially life-saving supervision for heroin and cocaine addicts to inject their drugs, as a British Columbia judge did this week, is the right thing to do. It's right as a policy choice, but it's also right as a use of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to protect addicts from the arbitrary reach of the criminal law.



2nd Annual Women's Housing March Saturday June 14th

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2nd Annual Women's Housing March

Sat June 14 @ 2 pm
Starts outside Downtown Eastside Women Centre
(302 Columbia- corner Cordova, just west of Main)

To watch the video for the march, click here

(it might say the video is unavailable--just keep trying)

On Saturday June 14 at 2 pm, join women in the Downtown Eastside Women Centre Power of Women Group in the 2nd Annual March for Women's Housing and March Against Poverty!


Drug War Chronicle - world's leading drug policy newsletter

Feature: Western Hemisphere's Only Heroin Maintenance Program Coming to an End

Every day for 15 months, Vancouver heroin addict Rob Scott Vincent, 36, went into a nondescript building on the city's Downtown Eastside where a nurse would hand him a syringe loaded with pharmaceutical grade heroin. Sitting at a sterile, stainless steel counter, Vincent would inject himself with the drug, then sit in an equally sterile waiting room for awhile as the drug took hold before heading out to do his daily business.

http://stopthedrugwar.org/files/hastings.jpg
Hastings Street, on Vancouver's East Side (courtesy VANDU)
Vincent was one of 251 participants -- 192 in Vancouver and the rest in Montreal -- in the only heroin maintenance program in the hemisphere, a pilot program known as the North American Opiate Maintenance Initiative (NAOMI). Originally intended to operate in both Canada and the US, the US component never got off the ground in the drug war atmosphere there. And now, NAOMI is winding down in Vancouver and Montreal. The last handful of participants in the program will get their last fixes at the end of this month.

In the program, which was limited to long-time addicts over 25 who had failed to kick the habit at least twice in previous treatment tries, participants used treatments of oral methadone or injected heroin. A small percentage received a pharmaceutical opiate called Dilaudid. Participants also received counseling and other support services. The Canadian federal government (then under control of the Liberals) funded the project with $1.8 million and agreed to allow the importation of pharmaceutical heroin for the project.


Is Poverty a Crime?

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By Tyler McAuley

 

When taking a sobering view at the Criminal Justice System in Canada, there is one question that I often ask myself; is Poverty a Crime? It seems to me that it is. All of the UCR Data (Unified Crime Reporting) in this country indicates that being poor is a crime. A better question to ask our elected officials is; if being poor isn't a crime, then why are all of the people in jail poor? That question has more validity and I will tell you why.

A Welfare 'Savings' Boomerang

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A Welfare 'Savings' Boomerang

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About These Pages

From social activism, to homelessness in a wealthy city, to respectful workplaces, you'll find something to stimulate.

Working as an employment counsellor and mentor, I also question assumptions and offer resources for those in this important field.

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