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Annual wishlist for healthy, dignified, workplaces

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Happy New Year

This annual 'wishlist' from Bill Wilkerson, though intended as an offering for employers from employees is poignant for every one of our own workplaces. It is a list for anyone who has the opportunity to help create caring, thoughful, workplaces; in fact everyone.

Every year, Bill Wilkerson, founder of the Global Business and Economic Roundtable on Addiction and Mental Health, sends out a seasonal wish list to employers, on behalf of employees. The document, which finds its way to many company posting boards and e-mail inboxes this time of year, provides much food for thought for the Ebenezer Scrooges and Bob Cratchits of the world.

Here is his 2010 offering:

The Gift of Helping Out
Really go out of your way to ask employees and co-workers how you can help. Reach out to those in a struggle to juggle work deadlines and home obligations.

The Gift of Clear Expectations
Help your people understand clearly what you want from them. In uncertain times, micro-managing is a really destructive practice. It may hasten but it doesn't help.

The Gift of Support for Single Working Parents
Employees raising children alone merit thoughtful support at work. Pregnant women are especially vulnerable to negative or chronic job stress.

The Gift of Empathy
Trim the tree of customer service with compassion and care: 20 per cent of the general population is clinically distressed and 100 per cent is a friend, family member or co-worker. You can't see that through a call centre, you can through wise eyes.

The Gift of Job Fulfilment
Paycheques buy bread for the table. Job fulfilment buys bread for the soul. Give the gift of nourishment for both.

The Gift of Sharing Success
Share the credit and not just the work.

The Gift of E-mail Alternatives
Give the gift of personal contact as an alternative to e-mails. Casual conversation is a sanctuary in an e-mail culture.

The Gift of Listening
Give this gift to someone every day. More than any other, it keeps on giving.

The Gift of Inclusion
In uncertain times, be mindful to include others in meetings, going out for lunch and sharing the kind of information that empowers everyone.

The Gift of Being Fair
Give the gift of fairness and create a "trust account," which earns interest in the form of productive people and satisfied hearts.

The Gift of Building Morale
Employees are realists, they can handle hope. Be hopeful.

The Gift of Being Home
In uncertain times, being home is important. The gift of understanding that - and accommodating it - has superior value. Separated, home and work are both stronger.
All festival details are available at the Heart of the City Festival website here

Wed. 28 October - Sun. 8 November 2009

Over 80 events at over 30 venues throughout the Downtown Eastside


I'm particularly drawn to the event on November 7th

Illuminating the Four Corners: an outdoor multi-level event at Main and Hastings featuring visual projections on buildings and through windows; DTES musicians and poets performing from windows, rooftops and soap boxes; a welcome song with Sam George; music of the DTES Samba Band; a theatrical reenactment of a 1935 milestone at the Carnegie Museum; songs from the Carnegie Village Choir Project led by Beverly Dobrinsky; ending with a street celebration on the four corners.

and from elsewhere on the site a different presentation of the themes and styles of this project......


ILLUMINATING THE FOUR CORNERS

Community Celebration
ILLUMINATING THE FOUR CORNERS
Saturday November 7, 8pm-9:30pm
Corner of Main and Hastings. Rain or shine

"We are here. We are here. We are here." Sandy Cameron

Carnegie&MosaicPhotoTerryHunter

Come on down and look around!  See our Four Corners illuminated like never before! This open-air multi-level evening opens with a welcome song from Squamish elder Sam George. You'll see images of the faces of Downtown Eastside community members projected onto buildings and through windows; buildings lit up with lights; musicians and poets performing from windows, balconies and soap boxes;  music of the Downtown Eastside Samba Band; a theatrical re-enactment (with members of the Carnegie Community Action Project) of the 1935 occupation by unemployed workers at the Carnegie Museum; neighbourhood banners by artist Diane Wood; Chinese lion dancers; songs from the Carnegie Village Choir Project led by Beverly Dobrinsky; ending with a street celebration on the four corners. Ohh...and did we say 'popcorn'?

We are here: to illuminate this corner - this neighbourhood - this community. We are here: standing proud and saying "This is who we are. This is our community, the heart of Vancouver."
Illuminating the Four Corners has been made possible with the support of the City of Vancouver Great Beginnings Program.

Free

ILLUMINATING THE FOUR CORNERS

Located on unceded Coast Salish land, the four corners at Hastings and Main have been home to Coast Salish people for thousands of years. For over a hundred years, it's been a gathering place for immigrants arriving from the four corners of the globe. Today it's the crossroads for residents of Gastown, the Main and Hastings corridors, Chinatown, Strathcona, Japantown (Powell Street) and the city of Vancouver.

People gather at the four corners to find lost friends, catch up on the news and connect with their community. In 1903, the Carnegie Public Library/Museum and City Hall stood at the corner and Hastings was packed with people, restaurants, nightclubs, hotels, rooming houses, bars, and coffee shops. It was Vancouver's most important social and commercial district. Tattoo artists worked in sidewalk kiosks, lady barbers set up on the street, hawkers sold miracle cures side by side with evangelists warning sinners to return to the fold before the end of the world.

During the economic depression of 1907 homeless people camped out on the False Creek flats and half the city's population turned up for an Asiatic Exclusion League parade to City Hall at the "four corners." Inflammatory speeches sent the crowd storming down Pender into Chinatown--breaking windows, looting, starting fires--then raced to Powell Street's "Little Tokyo" where they were stopped by armed resistance from the residents.

During the hard times of the 1930s, Hastings Street was the main thoroughfare for public demonstrations for "work and wages" and in 1935 unemployed men occupied Carnegie for a day. The streets were a neon-lit circus of activity lined with theatres, cafes, bars, gambling clubs and union offices.

Changes followed World War II that reverberate in our community to this day: from the tearing up of the BC Electric Railway and street car tracks to the closing of the Carnegie library and museum (it stood vacant for over a decade); from the loss of housing and jobs to the closure of the community's largest business, Woodward's. These kinds of losses tore holes in the community's heart.

But this is a neighbourhood that refuses to lie down. After a six-year fight, the City agreed to re-open the Carnegie Library as a Community Centre and as each new physical and social change arrives to strain our social fabric, new grassroots initiatives rise to meet the challenges with local solutions. With the Carnegie building's Centennial celebration in 2003, initiatives arose to celebrate the community as the original heart of Vancouver; showcase our community's talents and cultures with affordable safe events; and commemorate its achievements and losses, its heroes and stories.

Here - at the crossroads of Main and Hastings--in the words of poet and historian Sandy Cameron, "the citizens of Vancouver can take pride in the long history of the Downtown Eastside."

by Savannah Walling





Drawn Festival arrives in Vancouver

Drawn - paper, canvas, walls, pencils, crayons, charcoal, cave art; back to pure expression.

http://www.drawnfestival.ca/

Some samples, examples are available here:

http://illolab.com/?p=943

One preview/ review from the Georgia Straight

New inspiration at Vancouver's inaugural drawing festival

By Robin Laurence

Spanning 16 galleries, the new Drawn festival celebrates an underappreciated form that's low-tech but high-skill

"Seeing is the problem," Ann Kipling says. "Drawing is the solution." One of Canada's most distinguished artists, Kipling is a key participant in Drawn, Vancouver's inaugural drawing festival. The first of its kind in Canada, Drawn celebrates an often underappreciated medium. It launches on Saturday (July 18) and runs until August 8 at 16 galleries across the city.

Drawing as performance, drawing as installation, drawing as sculpture--there's more to this seemingly modest medium than marks on a piece of paper. A series of events during the new Drawn festival will explode the art form out of the studio and into the public eye. One of the most fascinating takes place Friday evenings and Sunday afternoons, from July 19 to August 7, when the artists' collective DRIL mounts a site-specific drawing performance and installation, City Hall, at the foot of Carrall Street in Gastown.


Want to congratulate Mike Cote and Clearwater for this noble action?

He can be emailed here: mcote@clearwaterenviro.com

or phoned at 604-313-3837

July 3, 2009
Demolition company refuses work at Little Mountain housing complex
Project Manager attends July 4 rally to protest the demolition

Clearwater Environmental Group is a demolition company that refuses to bid on the demolition of the 224 social housing units at Little Mountain. "What the government is doing here is not right. They should not be taking down homes before they have a plan to build anything", says Mike Cote, Project Manager for the company.

Cote attended a government sponsored information meeting for prospective demolition companies on Tuesday, June 30 and left as soon as he understood the situation. "We thought these homes were coming down and would be replaced immediately. We are in the business of making people's lives better, not ruining them," he said. Clearwater Environmental Group was one of several demolition companies attending the meeting. The provincial government required the attendance of any company wanting to bid on the demolition of the 15 acre site.

"Everyone knows there is not enough affordable housing. How could you sleep at night after tearing down these homes for an Olympic parking lot? We want no part of this until there is a plan," Cote continued.