Category Archives: Federal

Harper’s latest Senate appointment.

The Conservative Party’s Canada – where, if you are a businessman who can afford to own two Canadian Football League teams and to make large contributions to the Conservative Party, you can procure a seat in the Canadian Senate.

Not really surprising in light of the Conservative Party’s oft demonstrated policy of  increasing the Wealth of wealthy Canadians via policies that transfer resources not to Canadians and Canadian children in poverty, homelessness or need but to those Canadians in Greed. Whether it is by regressive tax policies, being ‘unable to afford’ housing or anti-poverty programs while being able to afford bailouts, subsidies, exceptions, grants or Senate appointments for businesses and the wealthy

Before we leave the subject of the Conservatives lack of ethics and the Senate, it is surprising Mr. Harper did not suffer severe whiplash from his abrupt change vis-à-vis the Canadian Senate.

Mr. Harper called for abolishment, for an elected Senate and condemned the Liberal government’s appointment and use of the Senate when Conservatives were not in power and the Senate was not of any use or advantage to the Conservatives.

But as soon as it was to the advantage of Mr. Harper and his Conservatives we were treated to the spectacle of Mr. Harper, who came to office stating he would never appoint senators, appointing 33 senators – to date

True Mr. Harper made several excuses for his massive about face on this matter; just as he did when, after having attacked the Liberal government on MP pensions when in opposition, Mr. Harper and his Conservatives bellied up to the trough to pig out on the same taxpayer funded golden pensions for MPS.

Interesting lack of an ethical center.

These are the same Harper Conservatives who recently tried to engineer a quick vote on Bill C-304, a private member’s bill calling for “secure, adequate and affordable housing for Canadians.”, in order to scuttle the bill.

The disappointing behaviour here is that of the three other parties in parliament in not getting behind and supporting this bill and a gravely need national housing strategy.

After all this is a Conservative government that, while it claims it has ‘no money’ for a national housing plan (or addressing child poverty), has unlimited millions (hundreds of millions?), for an advertising campaign promoting the Conservative party and paid for by Canadian taxpayers.

There is nothing wrong with political parties blowing their own horns – that’s part of the political process. But the cost of a party blowing its own horn is a cost that should, no must, be paid for out of the coffers of the party, not out of the coffers of the federal government and thus the pockets of Canadian taxpayers.

Sticking a label such as “Canada’s Economic Action Plan” on the spending  does not change the fundamental nature of what the advertising campaign is about – promoting the image and fortunes of the federal Conservative party.

No money for housing or child poverty but the Conservatives can find seemingly unlimited taxpayer $$$$ to pay for advertising to promote the Conservative government.

Interesting set of priorities and rather malleable ethics – ethics that shift to accommodate the circumstances the Conservative government finds to its advantage.

Given that that the Conservative Party likes to hold itself up as the judge and defender of moral behaviour and morality in Canada one has to wonder just what kind of definitions they are using for ‘moral’ and  ‘morality’. Clearly whatever the definitions the Conservatives are using do not include pesky concepts such as ethics, honour, character or the distinction between right and wrong.

While this type of unprincipled behaviour is behaviour as usual for Mr. Harper and his Conservative Party, I was somewhat surprised, based on what I knew of Mr. David Braley from his ownership of the BC Lions, that he allowed himself to be appointed. Although I suppose, upon taking time to consider his $$$$ support of the Conservatives and their behaviours and policies, it really is no surprise.

True ethics are not something that change when convenient. Indeed, true ethics often are inconvenient because they get in the way of what would be a convenient action or behaviour.

Ethics that change when convenient are many things – but they are not ethics.

Lack of ethics is a behaviour that results from seeking to govern simply to push an ideology or to be the party in power. Because in either case,  the operating principles and behaviours of the parties involved are about winning power and holding power. Ethical or honourable behaviours are tossed overboard in favour of whatever it takes to win. Actually any behaviour, such as MPs listening to the constituents they represent instead of mindlessly obeying the Prime Minister, that interferes with winning are rejected.

Yet the moment one becomes unwilling to lose on a matter of principle or ethics, that ones ethics become malleable or that one justifies doing whatever is necessary to obtain or retain power by claiming it is ‘for the good of the country’ one’s actions have ceased to be about delivering leadership and effective governance and one becomes part of the problem.

The current focus of governments and politicians at all levels in Canada is about advancing an ideology, being in power and  winning at any cost, about divide and conquer, pitting differing interest groups against each other; it is not about good government, building a strong Canada or a fair, balanced, understanding  and cosmopolitan society.

None of our current politicians and political parties have promulgated an ethos of what it is to be Canadian or articulated a vision for Canada and Canadian society.

It is time for a discussion of what it is to be Canadian, the type of society we want to have and how we as Canadians will achieve that vision.

It is pass time to stop allowing politicians to tell us why we cannot bring about the Canada we want and to support leadership that is about bringing the Canada we want into being.

Or most Canadians will find themselves entitled only to the rights and freedoms they can afford to buy.

Abbotsford 2010 Homeless Winter Games Daily Reports

February 16, 2010 Day -1

Fortune (or whatever is in charge of the weather) blessed the opening of Abbotsford 2010 Homeless Winter Games with sun.

Fortune continued to shower favour upon Abbotsford 2010 in providing a fine Shrove Tuesday lunch that included the traditional pancakes and an excellent barbeque repast for dinner.

That the first medalist was awarded on the first day was unusual, especially since it was awarded in the “to dumb to come in from the rain” event.

It should have taken several days to examine and judge all the entries. However with a competitor who fell asleep on the rails and got hit by a train; who, having survived what would be a life changing event for others, kept doing the same old same old – while complaining he was getting the same old same old; and who will not be able to accept his medal because he is incarcerated as a result of behaviour that turned release into months (if he doesn’t turn that into years) of lockup ….

No other competitor was even close to challenging.

Congratulations Mr. T.

Congratulations are also in order for Mr. Harper and Mr. Campbell for medalling (a tie) in the non-homeless “to dumb to come in from the rain”.

There had been no plans to award medals to any non-homeless but when the “to dumb to come in from the rain” award was made numerous competitors and spectators protested that politicians should have been eligible because of the major impact they have on homelessness and poverty levels.

ABHOC 2010 held a meeting ad libitum to hear arguments and rule on this point. The committee felt that given their effect on homelessness and poverty Mr. Harper and Mr. Campbell should be considered but that a) it would be separate from the event that Mr. T had won and that b) given the scope of their duties they could not be judged solely on their exhaustive maladministration of homelessness and poverty.

After considering the state of the province and country, the behaviours of both men and the consequences on not only current but future generations it was impossible not to conclude that both men deserved to be acknowledged many times over for being “to dumb to come in from the rain”.

It was decided to declare a dead heat and award medals to both men when it was decided that because of differences in scale between the federal and provincial government it was not possible to decide who was dumb and who was dumber.

Congratulations to both Mr. Harper and Mr. Campbell!

*************

February 17, 2010 Day – 2

A glorious sunny day with a forecast of continued sunny and unseasonably warm temperatures, the type of weather that smiles upon the homeless and not just upon the Homeless Games.

It certainly looks as if whatever higher power is in charge of weather, that higher power is sending an unmistakably clear message as to what Canadians should be focused on and what self gratifying amusements they should not be funding by taking funds from the most vulnerable and in need of help citizens.

The weather was perfect for the buggy load out event.

The medal in the cart load out was awarded to a transient person of No Fixed Address who demonstrated an attention to detail, an appreciation for the proper distribution of weight, the center of gravity and who ended up with a visually aesthetic loaded buggy.

The Marathon, Steeplechase and Health Care Obstacle Course events got under way to ensure they are completed by the closing ceremonies. After all they are deal with government bureaucracies.

We received a request from an editor-in-chief not to keep them informed as to the progress of the homeless games and, in the context of the homeless games, informed on the issues of homelessness, mental illness, addiction and poverty.

It was a little disconcerting but it certainly goes to explain why newspapers find themselves struggling.

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February 18, 2010 Day – 3

Final judgment of the camp relocation event was extended overnight from
Wednesday until Thursday to give the judges an opportunity to gather over coffee.

This was necessary as none of the competitors impressed the judges to the point they felt one of the competitors deserved to medal.

It was decided to award the medal to a local homeless person who had shown the tenacity of a dandelion when it came to removal by the City of Abbotsford and its armed troops.

Leaving behind material for the city minions to vent their destructive urges on and appearing to have been defeated and forced to relocate the winner would shortly return to the site to dig up and/or retrieve the buried/cached camp materials and, like a dandelion, take root once again.

Congratulations to Mr. C

The first round of the round table discussion/debate was held.

Given: Canada boycotted the Russian Olympics in Moscow because the Soviets had invaded Afghanistan and that Russia is attending the Canadian Olympics in Vancouver even though Canada is currently part of an Afghanistan invasion.

Discuss the irony and geopolitical change inherent in:

1980 – Russian government warmongers, increasing numbers of citizens live in poverty and substandard housing while the elite lives in wealth and luxury.

2010 – Canadian government warmongers, increasing numbers of citizens live in poverty and substandard housing while the elite lives in ever increasing wealth and luxury.

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February 21, 2010 Day – 4

Pop can Collecting

I wonder how many citizens ever consider just how littered their cityscapes would be if it wasn’t for the homeless (and others) who collect all the cans and bottles citizens litter their cities with?

As noted in the event description special care was taken to ensure all contestants were competing in unfamiliar territory.

Contestants were assigned an area and all had the same time limit of 6 hours.

Judging was provided by the bottle depots as all bottles and cans were cashed in with the winner being determined by who received the most cash.

Congratulations to Mr. J – who not only medaled but had a most profitable competition.

Marathon/Steeplechase update

The games adjudicator received an unexpected and intensive refresher on the Marathon/Steeplechase portion of the Games when mischance placed the adjudicator in the cross hairs of the Ministry of Housing and Social Development.

The adjudicator struggles to live with mental health issues which have resulted in being on disability (PPMB). Fortunately this means the adjudicator can work part time to earn up $500 a month. Any amount over $500 is clawed back by the Ministry of Housing and Social Development.

The $500 is vital to the adjudicator as it augments the unrealistic rent allowance provided by the Ministry and permits rental of the private housing required by the adjudicator’s mental health.

26 pay periods over 12 months means that twice a year the adjudicator has 3 pay periods in a single month and will have $225 clawed back. Discipline and frugality are required to, over the course of six months, set aside funds to cover the claw back. It is a hardship but with sufficient self-control is doable.

December 2009’s cheque had the $225 clawed back as a result of declaring 3 pay periods. Salary is to be declared in the month it is received, not when it is earned. Which is to unfortunate because the extra pay period is earned over the six months and declaring it on an accrual basis would result in significantly less claw back..

This month rather than a notice of deposit the adjudicator received the dreaded “If you are still in need of Assistance, (despite having filing ‘the stub’ with yes ticked to the question: are you still in need of assistance?) please come to the office to speak with a worker. Your cheque has been held & you may be asked to submit further information.” A notice which does wonders for those dealing with anxiety, stress and panic disorders.

The adjudicator was told the adjudicator needed to file a third pay period in January because the pay periods (which end on a Saturday) were the 2, 16, 30th. When the adjudicator stated that that was not the date payment was received and that December’s cheque had been reduced as a result of declaring 3 pay periods the adjudicator was told that the adjudicator had not claimed three pay periods in December.

Fortunately (or unfortunately) OCD – obsessive compulsive disorder is among the issues the adjudicator deals/lives/struggles with and so the adjudicator retains copies of all documents. So when the adjudicator returned with the requested pay slip for the pay period ending January 30th (paid February 5th) the adjudicator had documentation that showed December 2009’s cheque had been reduced by $225 as the result of declaring three pay periods.

Presenting evidence that 3 pay periods have been declared and that December’s cheque was reduced by the $225 claw back – resulted in a demand for a bank statement.

To get monthly bank statements cost money, money anyone on assistance does not have to spare – the adjudicator cannot afford to waste limited funds on bank statements.

Because of the discipline and financial management required to survive, occasionally a printout of ‘the last ten transactions’ is printed off the bank machine to ensure the accuracy of the adjudicator’s personal accounting records of the bank balance. The last such audit printout showed that payment for the first two January 2010 pay period was received on the following Fridays.

There was a note put on file to prevent this from happening again. A note that joins the previous notes put into the file in order to “prevent this from happening again”.

The assistance levels in BC are so out of line with the actual costs of living that any unexpected, untimely reduction in cash flow starts the fast downward spiral to homelessness.

The threat to being unable to pay March’s rent and insurance is where the stress, anxiety and panic is rooted – the threat of a return to homelessness and becoming ensnared in a downward spiral of mental health.

Thankfully there is an ability to print off cheques on a timely basis so the adjudicator was able to have the security of having March’s rent safely in the bank.

*************

February 20, 2010 Day – 5

The buggy distance event was held today with each buggy loaded with 100 litres of water. While the midpoint check in location was set the routes competitors took to and from the midpoint was left to them to choose. This freedom of choice is because the shortest route is not necessarily the fastest when pushing a loaded cart.

Tampered water seals result in disqualification. An attempt to ‘Rosie Ruiz’ results in disqualification for the competitor and the driver has their vehicle impounded for 48 hours to encourage them to see the error of their ways.

Congratulations on his medal to Mr. B

The buggy sprints were also held today. The medal was awarded by the judges on the basis of time and entertainment value.

Congratulations to Ms S on her medal

Advantage was taken of the excellent ‘in favour the homeless’ weather to hold a round table outside to soak up the sun.

One homeless gentleman opened the discussion by speaking of a mindset that is focused on oneself, all about ME, the pursuit of exhilaration, the pursuit of what feels good, of getting high and that ignores the cost in its pursuit of that high.

The mindset of an addict.

How society and government, while pointing fingers at those with drug addictions lives in total denial of its own addictions and addictive behaviours such as the Olympics.

Focused on self gratification by holding the Olympics, telling itself lies – “it is about tourism, business …” to justify pursuing its self gratification. Stealing from its own children by increasing the deficit they will inherit and reducing the level of government services they will inherit/be able to fund, Ignoring the cost cuts in services to the most vulnerable in society – the elderly, the handicapped, women, children, the mentally ill, the mentally challenged, those suffering the scourge of addiction ….

We have become a society were the operating value of “greed is good” has led to a mentality of deserving and instant gratification, the mentality of an addict that ignores cost and consequences.

The consequence of the cuts to services and services unfunded is going to be deaths by neglect. Like any addict the government and society will deny these deaths, telling themselves whatever lie is needed – as any addict does.

Denial does not, will not, change the Reality of those deaths, of the consequences of this behaviour.

*************

February 21, 2010 Day – 6

No competitive events were held today. This day had been for ice events using city facilities. However, Abbotsford City Council has made Abbotsford city facilities the most expensive in the city. In some cases significantly more expensive that the fees at private facilities.

As a result long time pass holders have switched to the private facilities to save money and many families and citizens simply cannot afford to use the facilities or play sports. This while the city gives those who are well enough off to have $400 to spend on a year pass can save 31%.

There was discussion of fundraising. However, since paying the city’s usury user fees meant subsidizing a professional hockey team (the Heat) and subsidizing ever bum in the seats at the Entertainment and Sports Centre, it was decided not to hold any ice events.

Leaving competitors free to attend the Super Sunday services, listen as Joyful Noise made its joyful racket and partake of the magnificent brunch that followed. Or attend other worship services of their choice.

It also left the afternoon free to attend the Blue Bus collect a bag of foodstuffs to take home and enjoy soup, sandwich and coffee.

Aaahh the Blue Bus. In a city full of churches a church from Aldergrove has to come to Abbotsford to feed the city’s homeless, poor and hungry on Sunday.

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February 22, 2010 Day – 7

Travelling between points in the Valley is oft necessitated, for a variety of reasons, while a lack of money can make getting where one needs to go an interesting problem to be solved.

The travelling competition was moved up to today to allow the competitors to benefit from the sunny weather. The adjudicator did opine that it would be more reflective of normal winter conditions to wait until Wednesday as scheduled, since the forecast is for rain.

The urbicolous destinations chosen were Chilliwack and Mission for the different travel problems they present.

The medalist for the Chilliwack competition biked to and from Chilliwack, having the home field advantage of making this interurban journey on a near monthly basis.

Congratulations on your medal Mr. J – nice to see you looking so health as well.

There is regular bus service (the valley connector) between Abbotsford and Mission although roundtrip fare can present a challenge – particularly with the competition being rescheduled 2 days earlier.

The results were protested but the adjudicator ruled that while the winner did have assets that afforded her obvious advantages, this fact was a reflection of the reality of life where some are more equal than others. Otherwise there would not be people working 60 hours a week at three jobs just to keep their heads above water while so called leaders draw large salaries while ignoring the economic hardships increasing numbers of Canadians struggle with.

After all: “How unfair the fate which ordains that those who have the least should be always adding to the treasury of the wealthy.” Terence

So – congratulations Ms. G.

While the protest was being considered another matter came to the attention of members of ABHOC 2010 – an article titled Counterpoint at http://www.matthewgood.org/2010/02/counterpoint/.

That this came to ABHOC 2010’s attention at all attests to fate as the endless chain of causation, whereby things are.

ABHOC 2010 members were present to observe the events related in the commentary, indeed several members of ABHOC 2010 were questioned about the influx of homeless from Vancouver as a result of Olympics and homeless being bussed out of Vancouver.

Answering truthfully that there had been no massive influx, that in fact if anything the arrival of homeless from Vancouver was less than in prior years and that there had been no bus loads of homeless arriving in Abbotsford from Vancouver.

Not a real surprise given the increases in shelter, food and service resources in Vancouver – increases that did not occur in Abbotsford.

We are speaking of homeless, and those who have been homeless, in Abbotsford who have 5 – 10 – 10+ years of experience with homelessness in Abbotsford.

She, the questioner, was clearly not pleased with these replies and insistently repeated her demand for stories about homeless displaced by the Olympics and tales about busloads of homeless being driven out of Vancouver to Abbotsford and other outlying destinations.

When she was again told this was not happening she moved on to other homeless to repeat her questions and when they replied that this movement of homeless had not been happening she moved on to the next cluster and when that again failed to produce the answers she was seeking she moved on out of sight around the building.

Leaving the homeless she had spoken to speculating as to how long it would take her to find someone who would tell her what she so clearly was determined to find someone to tell her – without regard to the truth she clearly did not want to hear.

In about 15 – 20 (30?) minutes she returned around the building with someone, climbed into her car and drove off with that someone who apparently was telling her what she had set out to hear.

While it may make for dramatic storytelling there is not a large flood of displaced homeless, no busloads of homeless pouring into Abbotsford.

Going from homeless person to homeless person until someone tells you what you want to hear is not listening. Searching among the homeless until one finds what one wants to find is no different than the behaviour of politicians and bureaucrats.

If we are to address the issues of homelessness, addiction, mental illness and poverty we need to hear the voices of the homeless, addicted mentally ill and poor – even if those voices are not telling us what we want to hear.

Most notably when those voices are not telling us what we want or expect to hear.

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February 23, 2010 Day – 8

The queuing competitions went Tuesday.

Best use of time came down to choice between knitting and self improvement (Step 4, CBT to deal with social anxiety and impatience/anger).

Self improvement was chosen since it needs to be done just as one must queue to get things done.

Congratulations Mr. P.

Most creative use went to the gentleman who used a running monologue and conversation with himself to move to the front of the queue. Nice job, good technique.

Congratulations Mr. L.

On Tuesday night’s news there was Heritage Minister James Moore stating that they needed to keep the funding for “Own the Podium” from ending.

“Own the Podium” is the plan that was drawn up to provide support to athletes so that Canada would win more medals than any other country at the Vancouver Winter Olympics.

The federal government supported this plan over the ten years since the 2010 Olympics were awarded Vancouver and funded it with millions of dollars and a Conservative Cabinet Minister endorsed continued funding.

A federal Conservative government that refuses to support and/or fund a national housing plan or address child poverty in Canada.

Spend millions training athletes to win medals – Yes; spend hundreds of millions, even billions, to build venues for the athletes to compete on to win those medals – Yes; Spend money to feed the hungry or house the poor and homeless – NO!

There beside Mr. Moore stating that they needed to keep the funding for “Own the Podium” from ending was Mr Campbell, BC’s dogmatist premier.

Mr. Campbell under whose misgovernance BC has led Canada in child poverty rates six years in a row, has ‘achieved’ the lowest minimum wage coupled with the highest cost of living and has assistance rates that result in people living on incomes well below what the government itself calls the poverty line, despite Mr. Campbell’s boasts about the strength of the BC economy.

Spend millions training athletes to win medals – Yes; spend billions, to build venues for the athletes to compete on to win those medals – Yes; Spend money to feed the hungry or house the poor and homeless or address child poverty in BC – NO!

Interesting – in a catastrophic way – set of priorities.

*************

February 24, 2010 Day – 9

Medals for the ‘Marathon’ and ‘Steeplechase’ were awarded today.

The Marathon:

Was awarded to a 40 year old gentleman whose EI had run out and who found himself facing an unexpected reality – social assistance is not in any way about assistance, about helping people get back onto their feet.

Even if he had managed to plod his way through the forms in a timely manner he would still have lost his apartment as a result of the unrealistic rental and living allowance levels set by Housing and Social Development.

One is torn between sympathy and a sense of justice/karma being served; justice/karma at a taxpayer getting a rude awakening as to the reality of the social safety net in BC.

Should Prime Minister Stephen Harper keep up the economic policies his government is pursuing many more taxpayers are going to have the opportunity to face with this harsh reality.

Congratulations Mr. Average Joe (anonymity having been requested)

The Steeplechase:

The judges acknowledge that the medal was awarded to an old favourite barrier raised by the system; a barrier that some members of ABHOC 2010 have personally had to surmount.

The medalist in this category is another recent victim of the Harper conservative government’s priorities and economic policies who has had the unpleasant experience of gaining personal knowledge as to the inadequacy of BC’s social safety net.

He just had not realized how mind bogglingly bureaucratized, jump-through-the-hoops the system was; having assumed the primary focus of the system was about getting employment

Not having had success in his job search to date, he had decided he needed some help with job hunting skills, resume etc and had started the course at Triangle. This is an excellent course for getting one’s job hunt on track (the course is excellent in many other aspects as well).

When he informed Social Development of what he was doing he was told that he was suppose to be looking for work in order to continue receiving assistance and that attending the course at Triangle was not ‘looking for work’.

This individual had been searching for work with no luck and had, rationally, thought that taking a course to improve his job search skills was a wise course of action to find employment. He had forgotten that he had left the real world and entered another dimension, the dimension and unreality occupied by the Liberal government and Ministry of Housing and Social Development.

In that reality one is not proactive in ones job search, but rather one must spin ones wheels until such time as the system decides you need to attend Triangle in order to improve ones skills and ability to find employment. A barrier of illogic numerous others have encountered.

Congratulations Mr. P – the look on your face was priceless.

*************

February 25, 2010 Day -10

Fate, The Force, Higher Power … whatever appellation one uses for Petaybee (PTB – Powers That Be [in charge]) continued to shower their favour on Abbotsford 2010 Homeless Winter Games.

Normally the Thursday 5PM dinner is hosted at Faith Bible (through the generous spirit of the congregation) but appropriately Petaybee arranged matters such that the congregation of Faith Bible needed to use the Church themselves, returning the Thursday night BBQ to its original outdoor location.

THE appropriate location for the closing ceremony (dinner) of the Abbotsford 2010 Homeless Winter Games.

Petaybee continued to show its favour and support for the Homeless Winter Games through the weather by the absence of rain on the BBQ, even though there were rain showers in the area.

Is it not strange how, when you are walking the right path things seem to fall into place and when someone(s) are walking the wrong path, making wrong choices, their path is strewn with obstacles and headaches?

Homeless Hobble:

The state of ones feet is a major consideration for the homeless and poor who depend on their feet to meet all their transportation needs. Indeed, given the harsh living conditions ones overall health is a concern – and under stress from daily life and living conditions.

The medal in this category goes not to a member of the homeless community but to the Florence Nightingale who, through caring, compassion, generosity of spirit, time and patience has built a relationship with the homeless; nursing not just their feet but tending to their physical health, mental health and spirit.

A relationship in which the homeless tell others that they need to see our medalist when they have medical issues. A relationship such that they will go to a doctor (a task with which our medalist will aid) and even endure the obstacles and attitudes of the Hospital when our medalist stresses the need (insists, nags) for them to go.

The effect of simple caring on the homeless and their health is profound.

Thanks Ms. N.

Health Care Obstacle Course:

dinsdale-on-health-care

Health care is problematic for the homeless as these two typical cases highlight.

Physical: A homeless gentleman had his back go out and was forced to drag himself to the road to flag down help. This is a gentleman who’s last ambulance ride to the hospital was 30 years ago after a car accident, who does not abuse drugs or alcohol or the medical system.

Yet the ambulance attendants did not believe him when he related these facts, one attendant insisting he had taken the homeless gentleman to the hospital just weeks before.

The staff at the hospital did not believe him either, treating him unprofessionally and with disrespect, refusing to believe he was there solely because he was in agony because of his back.

Not surprisingly they found nothing wrong with his back and unprofessionally sent him on his way (when he needed bed rest) without medication – so he had to endure the agony of a bad back. It has been near a month and it is still painful, for others whose backs torment them, to watch him walk.

Mental: Oh, they just left.

Duh! You have someone who is in mental distress and just how reasonable (or professional) is it to expect them to sit for hours in the waiting room to see someone then sit hours more until someone from psych comes down to take them to the ward?

The last time someone from ABHOC 2010 took someone who was clearly in distress to the hospital it was only because the ABHOC 2010 member was willing to spend the hours necessary to keep the person in need calm that the person got the help they needed.

Enlightened medical care uses peer support workers to help those in distress through the system and has systems in place such that it is not a 4+ hour obstacle course to be admitted to psych (or the hospital). But then in civilized and enlightened counties medical care and adequate resources are available – enlightened and civilized nations are not further reducing already inadequate resources.

The medal here goes not to a specific individual but to those (unfortunately) very rare individuals who will invest hours of their time to get someone the care they need.

Afterword:

The problem ABHOC 2010 has with Vancouver 2010 is not about the Olympics (OK we are not supportive of fat cat IOC members and the excess focus on commercialism) and Olympic competition themselves but about the costs and how governments (and thus citizens) have chosen to pay for the costs of hosting the Olympics.

At their root the Olympics are about entertainment, the entertainment of watching the pageantry and competitions.

Extravagant entertainment spectacle is a LUXURY and should come well after NEEDS on the public spending priorities list.

That is not true for the Vancouver 2010 Olympics. They have been purchased with credit (deficits) and cutbacks or non-provision of necessary services. Cutbacks and non-provisions that will continue into the future; with the most vulnerable in our society paying the price for a luxury they could not afford to partake of.

It comes down to a question of what kind of society one wants: the dog-eat-dog, greed and mean spiritedness that underlie America OR a society that honours the principles of neighbourliness, caring and helpful spiritedness that I associate with Canada and Canadians before the recent decades of Americanization began?

If it is a return to Canadian values than tell politicians your wishes in this matter and if they do not listen – find someone in your community who is honourable and supports these values, get them to run for office, then support and vote for them.

Canada remains a democracy, despite a Prime Minister, Premiers and local politicians who act as if it was a dictatorship – until they come around to lie to voters so they can return to their dictatorial ways.

Exercise your Rights, Exercise your Voice and help take back Canada from wannabe Americans – returning it to Canadian values and the True North Strong and Free.

Of Hockey, true Canadian local TV and Generosity

The recent commotion caused by Alex Burrows denunciation of the actions he attributed to referee Stephane Auger caught my attention.

Many Canadians understandably regard hockey as Canada’s game, holding it near and dear to their hearts. Perhaps in hockey’s sportsmanship, teamwork and the generosity of spirit that underlies a team’s success they see a reflection of what it means to be Canadian.

Undoubtedly Canadians found the pettiness of spirit, the ‘it’s all about ME’ attitude and the total lack of consideration for others (in this case the fans) a disturbing reminder of just how americanized ‘Canada’s game’ has become.

Unhappily, I doubt that many recognized in this incident the highlighting of the creeping americanization of Canada  that has been corroding the Canadian Soul since the private broadcasting phase of the television age began.

As more and more private broadcasters entered the broadcasting business Canadians were subjected to more and more American programming. This programming has served to indoctrinate Canadians with the underlying principals of American life – Greed and Self-centredness.

This decades long barrage of Americanism has undermined Canadian values to the point our current Prime Minister is an American wannabe whose demonstrated goal is to replace the Canadians Ethical Rectitude with American narcissistic avarice.

It is to reverse this americanization of Canadian mores and allow Canadian mores to reassert and re-establish themselves as the underlying operating principals of Canadian society that the CRTC must not interfere in the Canadianization process that is currently taking shape in over the air broadcasting industry.

It is imperative that Canada  get actual local Canadian television and programming that reflects Canadian ethics and values to reverse the americanization of the Canadian Soul.

Despite the misrepresentation of their current “save local television” campaign, the private over the air broadcasters are not Canadian much less local.

Rather than Canadian television we have an American television programming rebroadcast system.

News programming, which should be an epicentre of Canadian values and ideas, is driven instead by the need for profit to feed the conglomerates which have come to own Canada’s media. News is not about ideas, discussion and goal setting but is about what sells – if it bleeds it leads.

Without CRTC interference Canadian over the air broadcasters and/or stations will have to reinvent themselves as true Canadian local television since over the air broadcasters will not survive (without CRTC interference) simply rebroadcasting American programming as is the current state of affairs.

The lack of viability of the current conglomerate media structure should, with the conglomerates failure, return control of television stations to local ownership.

The establishment of true local Canadian television and programming will help reclaim the Canadian Soul.

The desperate need for a restoration, a revitalizing, of the Canadian Soul is written in events occurring now in 2010 and throughout 2009.

Throughout 2009 the numbers of Canadians in need of help from their fellow Canadians to have shelter and food simply to survive grew at an accelerating rate.

In the months leading up to the end of 2009 there was story after story, report after report, concerning the increasingly (20% to 60% increases) large numbers of Canadians needing help just to find food to eat and to survive another night

The result of all this coverage? Charities, despite the well publicized large increases in the numbers of Canadians in need of help, did not make their targets and have had to carry their campaigns into the new year.

At the same time so many Canadians were left in need, other Canadians were spending an additional 3% this year over last year’s Christmas season on indulging themselves.

That’s correct, as the numbers of Canadians in need skyrocketed, those Canadians fortunate enough to be able to be generous were being less generous – except to themselves. How very American.

If Canadians do not want to continue to lose what it means to be Canadian, we must not just stop the americanization of the Canadian Soul but must actively seek to reclaim the Canadian Soul, our Canadian ethical rectitude.

We need to reverse the subtle process of indoctrination and americanization that our television broadcasters have enabled as an American programming rebroadcast industry, by allowing the market to force local ownership and Canadian programming and content.

We need tell Stephen Harper that if he wants to be an American he can immigrate; that we want to be Canadians, are proud to be Canadians and to not interfere with the Canadianization of the over the air broadcast industry currently underway.

Local Television – a Sunset Industry?

I was watching a favourite show the other evening when it was rudely interrupted by yet another save us from the consequences of our own bad management decision making commercial AKA save local television.

At the time I was watching an American television program via a Canadian television signal that was replacing the signal of the US station I was watching.

Which has me pondering: Are these really local stations? Regardless of whether they are local or not, should we save them?

My television was tuned to an American station but the US signal was replaced by the Canadian stations signal – even though this results in portions of the program having been removed to make room for the extra minutes of commercial time Canadian stations are permitted.

It was necessary to impose Canadian content rules on these stations (with the exception of the CBC and its different mandate as the public broadcaster) to ensure a minimal Canadian content. Still, the majority of the programming is foreign (mainly US). On a content basis not only are these stations not local, they are not even Canadian.

Before making this statement I considered the matter of the daily news broadcasts. Take Global for example, which I believe has the most hours of local news broadcasts; 5:30 – 9:00 in the am; the noon hour news; early news from 5:00 – 5:30 pm; supper hour news; and a final hour of news for an apparent total of seven hours.

But is it seven hours of news? If you watch all the news broadcasts during a day it quickly becomes evident that most of the seven hours is made up of rerun material. Indeed if you watch the first half hour of the news in the early morning, all you really need to watch of the final news cast is the first few minutes to catch any (if any) interesting or important stories that have developed during the day.

Take out the international news and non-local sports and one is left with what? A hour total of different, non-repeated news in a day? Further, if one watches the news programming on the different stations the stories, the news reported is the same (for all practical purposes).

Does an hour of local news a day make a station or stations a ‘local television station’ when weighed against all the hours of foreign and non-local programming?

Keep in mind that a local newspaper such as the Vancouver Sun contains far more news and detail than an audio/video newscast can. Print media is an inherently denser medium for the transfer of data – the news.

Consider also the question: for someone living in Vancouver is a Toronto station a local station? Obviously not, even though the Toronto station occasionally carries stories about Vancouver.

In a similar manner Vancouver is not Abbotsford’s local television simply because the occasional story about Abbotsford is broadcast on a Vancouver station. This is an important point because Vancouver and other metropolitan stations are going to want cable to pay them for their signals delivered to communities in the vicinity of the metropolitan area such as Mission or Abbotsford.

As I stated: on a content basis not only are these stations not local, they are not even Canadian.

Another result of Canadian media, for the main part, being controlled through conglomerates is that content, management and decision making are dictated not by the needs of the local market but by the needs and best interest of the conglomerate.

If content, ownership, management and decision making are all non-local, how can it be ‘local’ television?

Perhaps the more important question we should be asking is whether we should be “saving local television”? Is television a sunset industry and should the market be allowed to determine the future/fate of local, over the air broadcast television.

In the beginning of the television age in Canada private stations were owned by local businessmen. Such locally owned stations were however, few and far between due to the lack of a market that would allow a private television station to earn a profit.

People who love to criticize the CBC forget that at the beginning of the television age population density and geographic distance meant Canada lacked a market place and a demand for private television signals. The CBC was created to sew the country together and to nation build through the dissemination of news and information across Canada.

It took time and the CBC to develop and build a market for television broadcasting that could support private television stations outside of a few well populated Canadian cities such as Toronto or Montreal.

Media conglomerates came into existence only when the market for advertising in television markets made the purchase of stations across Canada possible by providing ‘collateral’ that enabled the conglomerates to borrow funds to purchase television stations across Canada  from the local owners.

At the time this media consolidation was occurring the conglomerates cited market forces, the changing marketplace, for driving media consolidation. They stated that the conglomeration taking place was a result of market forces and that the CRTC had to permit the broadcast industry to change in response to changes in the marketplace.

If the CRTC had to permit change in the form of conglomeration to occur in the broadcast industry in response to marketplace changes does it not follow that the CRTC also has to permit change to occur in the broadcast industry in response to current changes in the marketplace?

Remember that the current over the air local television broadcaster system came into existence when over the air stations were the only way to deliver video into the home. Remember the effect that television had on radio?

Radio had ruled the airwaves before the introduction of television which became the new king of the airwaves. People would gather around the radio in the evening to listen to The Shadow, Amos and Andy, Gunsmoke and numerous other shows.

Once television became wide spread it was the television set people gathered around in the evenings. Dramas, comedies, variety and others shows all died on radio – or in a few cases adapted and moved to television as Gunsmoke did. Although with different, more photogenic actors to play the characters.

Radio was left to adapt, to play music, report the news or broadcast live sports.

In the same way that radio was displaced as king by television, television has/is now being displaced as king by cable which is itself being challenged by new and emerging technologies.

The market that the existing over the air television broadcast system served no longer exists.

In the same way radio had to adapt and redefine itself to find and develop a market they could generate revenue from when television came along, television stations must redefine and reinvent themselves to develop a market they can generate revenue from.

Much of our current television system evolved simply to rebroadcast US (and other nations) television programs over the air because, with the limits on signal strength and thus distance, local over the air broadcasts were the only way to deliver television signals to the home. This is why the end of the broadcast day signoffs included a list of repeater stations and their frequencies that were used to extend the coverage area of individual stations.

For years Hamilton’s CHCH local television station prospered. With only the CBC and CTV in the Toronto market CHCH could choose from among the programming available that was not shown on these networks and thrive. Along came Global and City TV who could pay higher fees for programming and CHCH ceased to be profitable.

This was a scenario played out across Canada as new networks, small or Canada-wide, together with new stations in some of the major markets changed the marketplace and resulted in loss of independent local stations such as CHCH.

Did CTV, Global, City, et al call for the government to impose fees to be used to support these local stations? Of course not, they declared that the casualties were the result of the market and that the market was the best judge of what stations should survive.

During this period the ownership structure changed as well moving from ownership based mainly in the communities to national media conglomerates.

Cable has profoundly changed the marketplace, providing not only access to US over the air broadcasts but to a host of cable channels and programming that have come into existence.

There is no longer a need for the existence of multiple stations to broadcast foreign programming locally because this programming is now directly available to the viewers.

Finally keep in mind that cable is not immune to changes in the market. Satellite, phone companies, the internet and wireless technologies are changing the market place and challenging cables position as king.

Radio – Television – Cable: as the market changes we must allow change to the broadcasters/signal providers to occur in response to these changes. Or we will find ourselves propping up the equivalent of buggy whip manufacturers, with the arrival of the automobile, in the broadcast/signal providing industry.

The local over the air broadcast system as it exists today is a Sunset Industry. The market that over the air broadcasters were created to serve no longer exists; the market having undergone and continuing to undergo profound change driven by rapid technological development.

Up to date technology, especially communications technology is a key component of Canada’s economic future. It is imperative that the government and the CRTC not interfere with the changes necessary for the broadcast/signal providing/communications industry to adapt to the new marketplace and emerging technologies, even though it means some stations will cease to operate.

Over the air broadcasting will not disappear. But it will be composed of fewer stations, with an ownership structure and management more responsive to the local market, providing programming that will need to be innovative and not based on the tradition rebroadcasting of US programming, with more locally and Canadian generated programming (along the current lines of the CBC).

In the same way that the new technology television was allowed to displace the old technology radio because televisions newer technology had changed the marketplace the Government, the CRTC and Canadians must allow the newer technologies of cable, satellite, the internet and wireless to displace the old technology of over the air television. Or risk protecting a sunset industry, denying the development of competitively necessary new technologies and businesses required to support Canada’s future economic prosperity.

Thought Bites

thinkerthumbH’mmm

Hail, snow flurries, torrential downpours, driving rain, high winds and cold temperatures.

Obviously it is once again time for the City of Abbotsford to send in its minions, backed by the strong arm of the APD, to render the homeless even more homeless and destitute; turning them out of what shelter they managed to cobble together and expropriating any meagre belongings they possess.

With no housing the homeless can afford available, with shelters full and the weather a threat to health and life – why would city council not take the opportunity to reduce the number of living homeless on the streets of Abbotsford?

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I see that another annual Abbotsford tradition, council’s annual scare/bamboozle/sell the fudget budget to the pubic, has begun with Mayor Peary opening this year’s season with “what services are taxpayers willing to do without.”

Why do any services need to be cut? The Ratepayer’s association was correct that we could save close to a million dollars by cutting the business development department, a department with no demonstrable benefit to the city.

There are several millions slated for parks. Just why are we developing parks when we cannot maintain our current parks? Given the usury level of fees the city charges who can afford to use all the current fields?

Then there are items such as why the Abbotsford Recreation Centre needs three people to run one centre?

Which raises an important question: why does the City not allow citizens access to the detailed numbers of Abbotsford’s finances and how taxpayer dollars are actually spent. Details that would settle questions such as how ARC is managed, allowing the public to determine whose source is correct, whether it is one person in charge of the pool and one for the rest of the facility OR one person in charge of the pool, one in charge of the ice rink and one person in charge of the operations of the Plan A extension.

Access to adequately detailed information would undoubtedly reveal abundant Fudget fat to cut, saving Abbotsford money and requiring no service cuts.

With less salesmanship and scare tactics, more detailed financial numbers and a budget process that would past muster with BC’s Auditor General, Abbotsford could get its financial house in order before citizens start to lose their homes to the City because they cannot pay their municipal taxes.

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Only in Abbotsford.

It did not take the brains of a rocket scientist to predict that if the province granted council’s request for a 2 cents a litre gas tax it would not be long, given council’s spendthrift ways, for council to want to increase the tax.

Mind bogglingly, city council has outdone themselves with a 50% raise to 3 cents a litre – before the tax is even approved by the province.

Which is why I urge fellow Abbotsfordians to join me in calling for Mike de Jong, John van Dongen, Randy Hawes, Bill Bennett and Gordon Campbell to “just say no” to enabling city council’s spending addiction and give a NO to Abbotsford’s proposed gas tax.

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The fudgeting process throws into stark relief the fact that the ideas of cost cutting, only spending on necessities and NOT spending on things that are not necessities are totally foreign concepts council and staff.

The root of Abbotsford’s financial mess, debt and the constant upward spiral of taxes and fees is council and staffs’s spending addiction.

Well that plus council and staff’s demonstrated lack of any ability for financial planning and realistic budgeting, highlighted by the reports of the need to subsidize the operations of the Sports and Entertainment Complex to the tune of $2 million a year. It turns out that those who questioned council’s promise, during the Plan A debate, that the Complex would make money had/have a much better grasp of arithmetic and financial reality than council and staff.

Still, the first order of business to avoid the embarrassment (not to mention the financial calamity) of council and staff spending the City of Abbotsford into Bankruptcy is doing something about their spend, spend, spend, spending addiction.

Perhaps we can arrange a group rate at Kinghaven? This would have the additional benefit of having council and staff spending time with people who live in the real world and would, perhaps, help council and staff to ‘get real’.

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Mission councillor Paul Horn writing about the homeless issue urged the use of Section 28 of the Mental Health Act to lock the homeless up for their own good as you cannot trust “a person with an acute mental illness to make a major life decision”.

I suspect that having “an acute mental illness” and that this being why they are homeless will come as quite a shock to all those who thought they were homeless because they simply could not afford the cost of housing in the lower mainland.

People who the recession cost their jobs and prevented from finding employment before their Employment Insurance ran out and they discovered the harsh reality that in BC “assistance” levels are such that the entire “assistance” cheque would not cover their rent, much less luxuries such as food.

Or those who are working 40 hours (or more) a week but whose wages are not sufficient to cover the cost of living in Abbotsford or Mission.

FYI – the leading cause of homelessness in Canada is now Poverty and not mental illness.

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I was conversing with a friend who lives under a bridge about what it says about Canadians that we tolerate a federal government that, if you have a bathroom is willing to use taxpayer dollars to help you renovate it, but should you have no bathroom has no leadership or money to address affordable housing or poverty.

A federal government with billions to bailout big business, but no money to help individuals facing a shaky financial future or even homelessness as their Employment Insurance runs out.

A government whose priorities are policies of corporate welfare and increasing the wealth of the wealthiest, but places no priority on slowing the growth of poverty in Canada, much less stopping or reducing poverty levels.

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And it does say something about us that we not only tolerate but continue to elect governments with priorities based on greed and lacking in ethics or principled behaviour.

The BC government can find $3.3 Billion to spend on a bridge but cannot find the funds to keep the Adolescent Psychiatric Unit open in Abbotsford.

But hey, children and young people do not need appropriate care that reflects their age. Just throw them in with the adults and pray that there are no predators.

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Another casualty of the Great Fraser Health Mental Health Massacre was the detox center in Chilliwack.

According to Fraser Health the utilization rate of detox was only 60%. Which comes as quite a surprise to all who regularly sought to help addicts gain admittance to this medically supervised detox service and who were told detox was full and the waiting list was from one to six months in length?

Was the facility only funded sufficiently to open 6 out of its 10 beds OR was it managed in such a way that 40% of its capacity was wasted?

As this was not the only service that was cut due to under utilization in the face of abundant demand we are faced with the disturbing possibility that management and operating practices waste 40% of the health care systems capacity.

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Watching a news report of deaths in a house fire had me wondering where Rich Coleman was.

After all, if the death of a single homeless person from fire last year in BC has Minister Coleman violating the rights of the homeless with the draconian “Assistance to Shelter Act”, how is it this fire death and the many other deaths that occur as a result of house fires in BC do not have Minister Coleman rushing into enacting legislation to have the police force people out of their homes because they are fire death traps?

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On the subject of Minister Rich Coleman, who as the Minister of Housing and Social Development is in charge of income assistance in BC:

Could sending Minister Coleman (rich.coleman.mla@leg.bc.ca) and Premier Gordon Campbell (Gordon.Campbell.MLA@leg.bc.ca ) the definition of assistance along with explanations and examples of what assistance means and what assistance is, possibly enlighten them to the reality that current levels of what passes for assistance in BC is in fact a major barrier to the survival of those who fall into the clutches of the system, much less getting off the system and on with their lives?

Worth a try as it would also serve to put politicians on notice that their priorities need to be ethical and principled behaviour.

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People’s well-being centered priorities at both the federal and provincial levels would relieve the pressure on the Abbotsford Food Bank from the increasing number of people depending on the food bank to eat.

In spite of our local politicians trumpeting Abbotsford as the most generous place in Canada, donations to the Abbotsford Food Bank at Thanksgiving where only a third of last year’s levels.

This decrease in donations comes at the same time information is emerging that across Canada  the numbers of those in need of help from food banks soared.

Could it be government’s lack of appropriate people priorities is not a matter of tolerance on the part of Canadians but is reflective of citizen’s priorities?

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Waddle is the best word to describe people leaving the Salvation Army’s meal centre at lunchtime Saturday November 22, 2009.

Gentlemen from our East Indian community prepared and served lunch; then returned to serve dinner for the Emergency Shelter. On a previous Saturday the women from the East Indian community had prepared and served lunch at the meal centre.

Some in our community are taking action to reduce hunger in Abbotsford.

The food was plentiful and tasty to the point that many struggled to finish what was on their plates before waddling on their way.

Not that the food the ladies prepared was not tasty and appreciated but … sorry ladies, the men were on their game/had their game on and sent diners waddling on their way.

Thank you, it was delicious and much appreciated.