Category Archives: Consider

BC’s anti-volunteering legislation

I consider a love of reading to be the greatest gift my parents gave me. So, when I found out about the ‘Reading Buddies’ program at our local library, the opportunity to spend an hour a week sharing my love of reading and paying forward the gift of reading, I picked up an application.

While my mother gave me (and my siblings) the gift of reading, her alcoholism gave us the behaviour and thought patterns of children of alcoholism. I became a member of Alanon to deal with the profound negative effect growing up in an alcoholic household had on my life. The awareness of the profound negative effect growing up with alcoholism had, and would have continued to have if I had not found Alanon, is why I considered it important to volunteer when Alanon Sponsors were needed for our local Alateen group.

Being a dedicated swimmer led to meeting the male members of our local Special Olympics swim team as we shared a change room – they leaving practice and I arriving for the supper time length swim. When the team had a desperate need for volunteers……well, spending an extra 90 minutes in the water was not a real hard sacrifice for me to make.

While poverty may not permit me to financially support programs and organizations it has not prevented me from supporting programs and organizations in my community by volunteering. Even being homeless in Abbotsford, living in my car on the streets of Abbotsford did not prevent or interfere with my volunteering with the Special Olympic swim team.

No, it took BC government legislation to put an end to my volunteering.

Understand, I fully support the requirement for police checks for those working with youth or vulnerable individuals. Over the years I have had many police checks done .

When the province decided to bring in legislation to require police checks for all, rather than leaving the choice up to the individual organizations I felt it was only common sense. And since the organizations I volunteered with already required police checks, I foresaw no effect on me from legislating a police check as a requirement.

I do not know what had the government taking the sloppy route in drafting the legislation. It really doesn’t matter. What matters is that the government produced legislation that was seriously flawed.

When the legislation was introduced supporters of privacy and civil liberties pointed out to the government that the legislation contained an assault on both privacy and civil liberties of citizens. Mathematicians pointed out that statistical analysis showed a significant percentage of volunteers would be faced with the need to decide between violations/intrusions into their privacy, civil liberties and charter rights to get a police check or walking away from volunteering.

Which is the situation I found myself in and mulling over, meditating on and wrestling with this past week, after getting a call from the Abbotsford Police Department that they required my fingerprints in order to complete my Criminal Record Check. Never before, in over a decade of criminal record checks, has there been any problem.

Giving or being required to give the APD my fingerprints when I have done nothing wrong is a violation of my privacy, civil liberties and charter rights that I cannot countenance.

Last year I turned down an opportunity to attend (without any out of pocket cost to me) an interesting conference in the USA because of the privacy violations that go with flying into [or simply over] the USA. Even visiting my favourite used book store cannot tempt me into crossing the border into the USA. And Mr Harper’s cavalier selling out of Canadians privacy to the USA is among the top reasons on my ‘why I feel an uncontrollable need to kick Stephen Harper’s a** list’.

At a time when government cutbacks and funding cuts are making the services provided by volunteer organizations more and more vital, and at a time that many volunteer organizations cannot find the volunteers they need, the sloppy structure of the British Columbia Criminal Records Review Act is forcing volunteers to walk away from volunteering.

The sloppy drafting of BC’s British Columbia Criminal Records Review Act has added my name to its list of victims and has cost two local organizations a long time volunteer and denied another a new volunteer.

I have never had any problem with the need to provide a criminal record check and walking away from volunteering was a difficult and painful decision, that remains unsettling.

But I cannot, will not, allow the state (in this case BC) to violate my privacy, civil liberties and charter rights by forcing me to provide fingerprints, for the state’s convenience, in order to satisfy a piece of poorly drafted legislation.

None of the Above

Listening to the news reporters, the political pundits and political commentators talking about Canadians being upset to be heading for yet another election it struck me that the ‘experts’ were out of touch with the average Canadian.

A view supported later in the same broadcast when the ordinary citizens interviewed were not lamenting about facing another election, but about how they were offered no candidate, no choices, they wanted to vote FOR

If Canadians were offered something or someone to vote FOR, as to opposed to the current choose the least evil situation, Canadians would stampede to the polls with Joy..

Since it began to look that a spring election was a sure bet, the number of people who have expressed support for either the Conservatives, Liberals or NDP are in the minority of those I have heard address the question of who should win.

Should win, not will win.

The majority find themselves with no one to vote FOR.

Part of what the ‘experts’ see as anger at having another elections is the frustration this majority of Canadians are experiencing at finding themselves disenfranchised.

To disenfranchise someone or the citizens of a country does not require denying them a vote; a person is disenfranchised when there is a vote but they are not offered a way to express their opinions through a choice they WANT to vote for.

Asking Canadians trapped in Libya whether they want to die by friendly fire from Canadian jet fighters or to die by friendly fire from the rebels who the Canadian (and other foreign) government is supporting or to die from fire from Gaddafi’s forces disenfranchises those Canadians when they are not offered the choice they wish to choose – not to die at all.

What emerges from listening (not polling or questioning or employing other ways of limiting Canadians ability to express their thoughts) is that the majority of Canadians are unhappy with the way Canada is heading; want to vote and have a say about the future of the country, what Canada is about and what it means to be Canadian; but have no one to vote for who will represent them, their thoughts and views.

This majority are expressing their frustration, their feeling of being abused by politicians and the electoral system – not at having an election – but at having an election where their vote does not count, has no effect on policy, because none of the parties or their candidates are addressing their important issues and priorities.

For the majority of Canadians the choice of either Harper, Ignatieff or Jack Layton might as well be the choice of either Gaddafi, Hu Jintao or Ahmadinejad.

Which has led to more and more Canadians expressing the desire for “None of the Above” to be a choice available to them on the ballot.

Of course none of the current federal (or provincial) parties or politicians are going to give Canadians a choice they can vote FOR when their party’s politics, strategy and campaign are built on fear and getting votes from voters who are voting against the other parties – rather than FOR the party that gets their vote.

Whether offered the choice of Gaddafi, Hu Jintao, Ahmadinejad and ‘None of the Above’ OR Layton, Harper, Ignatieff and ‘None of the Above’, ‘None of the Above’ is the choice that reflects the reality that for the majority of Canadians none of the current choices, candidates or political parties represent the best interests, needs and thoughts of these Canadians.

When ‘pundits’, ‘experts’, politicians and the media speak of the need for electoral reform to promote fairness they are speaking of each riding having the same number of constituents, based on the fact that under the current riding distribution rural ridings contain less constituents that municipal ridings.

The ‘pundits’, ‘experts’, politicians and media fail to see that the true unfairness, is that the majority of Canadians are disenfranchised.

Electoral fairness is the ability to say No to bad choices instead of being forced to choose ‘the lesser evil’. Being forced to choose the lesser evil is still being forced to choose evil – forced to choose against your best interests. The majority of Canadians currently are forced to make the choice that does them the least harm, rather than being able to make a choice that benefits them.

The majority of Canadians are faced with the need for Electoral Reform – or Revolution – in order for them to be able to cast their vote for a choice that benefits them and enhances their future.

The disenfranchised majority of Canadians have every right to demand adding ‘None of the Above’ to the ballot. Serving notice to the politicians that those disenfranchised by being denied representation by what has become ‘business as usual’ in the politics and governance of Canada and Canadians..

In pursuit of Election Reform to return a meaningful vote to the silenced majority Canadians should be holding up ‘None of the Above’ signs at all political rallies and functions; when asked the most important issue by pollsters or media Canadians should reply that adding ‘None of the Above’ to the ballot is the number one issue; Canadians should take advantage of any situation that presents an opportunity to raise having ‘None of the Above’ on the ballot as a choice to vote FOR as an issue.

As noted, the vested interest of the politicians together with the vested interests of all those who benefit from the current system (and thus support the current system and politicians) make it highly unlikely that ‘None of the Above’ will be appearing on a ballot – since it would pose a major threat to current politicians and thus those who benefit from them. Which is why Canadians need to consider Revolution.

When I use the word revolution I am speaking of a revolution in keeping with the essence of what it is to be Canadian.

Did you know that the nominations deadline for the election is March 15, 2011? Remember anyone who meets the criteria set out in the election act (and they have not been able to change the criteria to exclude the majority of Canadians – at least not yet) can file and run before that date.

Canadians in ridings across the country need to find an individual (or two) to stand for election. Once people in the riding have talked these individuals into running – they must then get out, knock on doors, encourage friends, family and coworkers to join, with all working, supporting, voting for and electing this candidate to represent their issues and best interests – rather than those of the wealthy, executives, banks and other corporations.

Sounds like an impossible mission does it not?

It isn’t because you would not be starting from zero. There are people in ridings and communities across Canada who are involved in discussions of the issues that affect their communities, province and Canada.

Look at them and see who has, first and foremost ethics and integrity as well as common sense, belief that leadership can bring about positive change, believe in financially responsible behaviours, believe in transparency and answering why they made the choice they did and are willing to say No – we cannot afford that and Yes – we must discuss this and set priorities.

We may not elect enough of these individuals to form a government but even a few will have a profound effect as they bring commons sense to Ottawa and parliament. Should we succeed in electing sufficient independent representative to parliament to form the government we would achieved a particularly Canadian revolution

We have the right to be able to vote FOR ideas, policy, issues and priorities, to be represented by someone working for our best interests rather than the interests of themselves, the wealthy, corporations and over paid executives.

Get out and exercise your right to free speech, to be heard and to vote for a choice that is in your best interests.

While politics as usual may be ever decreasing our choices for how we are governed and the policies and behaviours of our – OUR – government, we still live in enough of a democracy that we can – should we so choose – throw ‘the bums’ out and replace them with fellow Canadians who would represents the best interests of all Canadians – not just those wealthy enoug to buy access and influence.

Canadians complain that their votes do not make any different, don’t count.

Be engaged, get out, participate, be the change you want to see – strike fear into the hearts of politicians around the globe – join the Canadian Governance Revolt, become dedicated to nonconformity and creative maladjustment..

The saving of our world from pending doom will come, not through the complacent adjustment of the conforming majority, but through the creative maladjustment of a nonconforming minority.” Martin Luther King

Ethics, Libya and Mr Harper

In sending Canadian war planes to Libya Steven Harper is at least being ethically consistent. Of course consistency is not really a good thing for Canada or Canadians when it is UNethical behaviour that is the constant.

From the Conservatives ‘moral superiority’ on MP’s golden pensions (which quickly disappeared when it was time to put their money where their ‘moral superiority’ was as all the Conservative MPs bellied up to the trough to pig out on taxpayer funded golden pensions) to Mr. Harper’s promises and ‘moral superiority’ on appointments to the Senate (until it was convenient to Mr. Harper to appoint Conservative Senators and control the Senate) to International Cooperation Minister Bev Oda’s changing a document and then lying about it to a parliamentary committee and the in-and-out illegal election spending (done to get around the law on election spending limits) both of which Mr. Harper has indicated he sees no problem with – Mr. Harper and the Conservatives have been consistent in not letting ethics interfere with how they behave.

There was no reason for Canadians to expect Mr. Harper to let questions of ethics interfere with an opportunity to curry favour with the Americans by sending warplanes off to join in another war.

And Mr. Harper did not disappoint – rushing to get his increasingly brown nose firmly and deeply affixed betwixt the checks of the American heinie.

Yes I know that those who are engaged in blowing the *bleep* out of Libya have laid claim to ‘moral superiority’ (why is it that those who claim ‘moral superiority’ so often behave without ethics?) citing Mr. Gaddafi for shooting civilians.

Of course these civilians were armed, attacking and capturing cities. Which sounds remarkably like a rebellion and civil war, not peaceful demonstrations…….as long as you are a friend of the USA. If you are someone the USA would like to see gone…….well the armed rebels are freedom fighters and must be protected.

Ethically based behaviour has a consistency that behaviour based on self interest lacks.

If the actions against Libya had been a matter of ethics……

At the time the aggressor nations began blowing the *bleep* out of Libya, in Bahrain Saudi Arabian troops were shooting unarmed demonstrators. Where is the outrage for those actions, the military action to protect unarmed civilians who were peacefully demonstrating? Of course Bahrain is considered a friend of the US and the Saudis have lobbyists and over the years have spent billions buying the US government.

At the same time the Iranian government was cracking down and killing its own unarmed demonstrators. Where is the outrage for those actions, the military action to protect unarmed civilians who were peacefully demonstrating? Nowhere – the Iranians, as much as the US would no doubt like to be bombing the *bleep* out of Iran, can shoot back.

Even if you overlooked the evidence that that what is occurring in Libya is a matter of convenience rather than ethics and believed that enforcing a no-fly zone was the right thing to do….

Shouldn’t Libya have been violating the no-fly zone before the invading force attacked? Instead the attackers pounded Libya with cruise missiles and followed that up with attacks using aircraft.

News reports were full of the film as Canadian jets hit munitions stores. Hopefully none of the Canadians in Libya become ‘collateral damage’ of the Canadian planes.

What the news didn’t have is any report of the no fly zone being violated. Yet the pounding of the portions of people of Libya loyal to Gaddafi continues unabated.

Among the targets hit in ‘enforcing the no-fly zone’ were tanks. I know the modern tank is a piece of advanced technology but I hadn’t realized they could fly.

The actions in Libya are not about enforcing a no-fly zone. If one wants to know what it is all about one merely needs to read reports of what is taking place in Libya:

“Libyan rebels backed by allied air raids say they have seized control of the frontline oil town of Ajdabiya from Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces.”

We are pounding Libya with ordinance and supporting rebel attacks on Libyan cities. Actions that kill civilians. It seems that Mr. Harper is going to protect Libyan civilians from Mr. Gaddafi – even if he has to kill them to ‘save’ them from Mr. Gaddafi.

Canada and Canadians were once respect and listened to by the world community because we were a voice of reason and balance.

Now we behave just like any other bullying warmonger. Not surprising since Canada has a head of state who has repeatedly demonstrated his disdain for letting ethics interfere in any way with his or the party’s behaviour.

Mr Harper has tarnished Canada to the point where we should be ashamed. Not of being Canadian or of Canada but that Mr. Harper was not been handed his walking papers.

The Fault Lies Not in Our Stars but in Ourselves

” What’s the matter with all of our elected officials? Obviously, health care is not your top priority. Taxing us to death seems to be at the top of your list.”

What is the matter with our elected officials Ms Whiteford? You and the majority of other citizens, along with reporters, pundits, the media and opposition politicians.

Where do you suggest the government get the funds to build more hospitals or pay more medical staff? Perhaps capture Rumplestiltskin, imprison him in the basement of the Legislature and have him spin straw into the tons of gold required to pay for the multi-billion dollar demands of yourself and others?

Billions of dollars in demands for new infrastructure and services that everybody demands and refuses to pay for – ” Taxing us to death…” Citizens behave as if the provincial government did have Rumplestiltskin in the Legislature basement generating an unending supply of gold from straw.

That may seem, may well be, a little snarky but – people demand to keep underutilized schools open, build new schools, smaller class sizes, more hospitals and hospital beds, more medical staff, more expensive medical treatments and drugs, they want to spend billions more to build and staff prisons to lock more people up for longer periods of time, they want……they want……they want……..

They want everything NOW and they want it for FREE – or at least they don’t want it to cost them any money or to raise their taxes.

You want more schools and hospital beds? Then that is what you should have been demanding the government spend its money on rather than spending billions on the two week blowout that was the Winter Olympics. The money being spent on replacing the stadium roof in Vancouver would pay for St. Paul’s hospital to be renovated.

We want it all without having to pay for it; the size of government debt bears witness that for years we have been consuming more government services that we were paying for – whipping out the credit card and running up a huge debt to pay for our lavish lifestyle; we don’t want to set priorities and make the tough choices; we behave like two year olds with no acknowledgment of reality, no economic sense or view for anything beyond the now, certainly no thought to the future.

And as happens in the real world our spendthrift ways are catching up to us. The cost of the services government provides are climbing – medical costs are increasing exponentially. Without an increase in revenue to offset these spiking costs we are going to be getting less services across the board – forget about more services.

Will we have a discussion about our priorities, about the costs of programs, about what we can afford and what we cannot, about what is – rather than what we believe or want to be, acknowledge we cannot have everything we want and discuss what we are willing to pay and what services the dollars we are willing to pay will purchase?

No, people will support the party that tells them what they want to hear – that there is no problem and to party on.

Then people will complain that the politicians lied to them. Ignoring the fact that lying to them is what voters reward politicians for doing.

Could the government be run in a more cost effective manner – yes;, could the money be spent more wisely – yes; could the future financial health of the province be much improved – yes. Will it? Well…..

Should anyone make the mistake of talking about acting in a fiscally responsible manner, of paying for what services we use rather than saddling our children and their children and their children with debt because we ‘put it on the provincial (or federal) credit card’, of setting priorities……

They will be sent home with their tails between their legs for not telling the people the lies they want to hear.

Pointing fingers at others, blaming others will not improve the financial reality of provincial (federal, municipal) finances. If people want to see the root cause – and where the solution lies – to our current (and increasing) political, social and economic woes they need only look in a mirror.

HST – the cost of repealing

I do not know if Mr. Vander Zalm is feeble minded or so focused on beating and/or beating up on the BC Liberals that he does not care what the consequences for the province and citizens of BC are. But at this point in time arguing the question of whether Vander Zalm is a lackwit or a scoundrel is as trivial and wasteful as arguing 2 months or closer to 18 months to discontinue the HST and bring back the PST + GST tax systems.

The referendum on the HST is June 24, 2011. This means that should British Columbians vote to repeal the HST the province will not receive the final $475 million payment for becoming a HST province that is due from the federal government on July 1, 2011.

Now, to Mr. Vander Zalm the loss of $475 million of revenue may be inconsequential or nothing for the taxpayers of BC to be concerned about. However I consider this first consequence of repealing the HST and the cuts that will have to be made to health care and education to offset this loss a significant and major consequence.

The next consequence, should Mr. Vander Zalm actually prove to have a magic wand that would enable the federal and provincial governments to end the single tax HST and bring back the dual taxes of the PST + GST in one or two months time, is the loss of the $300 million extra dollars the HST would put in provincial coffers this year and the addition of the $50 million cost of collecting and administering the PST (a cost that under the HST is currently borne by the federal government).

Meaning an additional $350 million will have to be cut out of health care and education. Or the entire $825 (475 + 350) million could be offset by closing down the provincial court and prison systems.

Now, Mr. Vander Zalm may not consider a loss of revenue that would require shutting down the provincial court and jail system to offset to be a significant enough consequence to be concerned about in repealing the HST – personally I do.

In all honesty (I know, a novel concept in a political fight) I do not expect the $350 million per year loss of revenue + increased cost to have an effect before next year’s (2012 – 2013) budget. The need to replace the single HST form with two new (old) GST and PST forms, to procure and distribute the forms to all businesses in the province and to hire the staff to collect and administer the PST (remember the federal government is responsible for collecting the HST and remitting to BC their portion) plus the need of businesses to reprogram their cash registers/computers, to change accounting systems back to two separate taxes, to get the new forms….. There was good reason that the HST took all those months to implement.

Whether Mr. Vander Zalm is simply clueless, hasn’t bothered to give this matter any thought or would rather befuddle and distract the voters by arguing 2 versus 18 months to get rid of the HST and reinstate the PST + GST rather than face the multi-billion dollar effect repealing the HST will have on BC is a matter the reader will have to judge for themselves.

Although BC, should the result of the referendum be a HST repeal, will not receive the final payment of $475 million and thus not be liable for repayment of that amount BC will be liable for repaying the $1.1 Billion already received (and spent) for becoming a HST province.

Despite Mr. Vander Zalm’s airy dismissal of this debt the fact is that these funds were paid to BC as part of the HST agreement and that in reneging on the HST agreement the federal government is due repayment in full. Forget claims of ‘negotiation’.

The federal government is not about to set an unwelcome precedent for provinces taking their (the feds) money and reneging on agreements. The federal government will want repayment in full and since they can get their money back by simply reducing federal transfer payments to BC by $1.1 Billion Mr. Vander Zalm’s spurious claims of ‘negotiating’ or not having to repay the full $1.1 Billion are just so much Politician’s BS. The Province of BC will have to cut the $1.1 Billion out of budget spending because the feds will get their money back and there is nothing the province can do to prevent that.

Repealing the HST will impose a major financial indirect cost on the province of BC in the form of an increase in borrowing costs. Potentially a rather significant cost given the budget deficits BC is running and the increasing debt levels of the province of BC.

Repeal of the HST is a taxpayers revolt, a rollback of the tax increase effected by the switch to the HST and the fact that the provincial portion of the HST applies to more items than under the PST.

How are those who lend to the province repaid? Out of tax revenues.

BC is running large billion dollar deficits and taxpayers are refusing even a modest $300 million dollar tax rise to pay for provincial spending. Indeed, at the same time taxpayers are refusing to pay this modest tax increase they are demanding more healthcare and education spending.

Factor in the budget and financial chaos and damage the immediate loss of $475 million, the $300 million yearly reduction of revenue, the $50 million dollar cost of administering the PST and the $1.1 Billion dollar repayment to the federal government……and from the view of those with funds to loan, loaning BC money involves increased risk.

The perception of increased risk means an increased cost of borrowing. That the HST referendum is being held will increase BC’s cost of borrowing. Should the HST be repealed, a further premium will be added to the cost for BC to borrow.

Part of that premium will result from the perception that the BC government can no longer be counted on keep their agreements. And what that perception will cost businesses in BC, the government of BC and ultimately the taxpayers of BC only time will tell.

As I said, whether Bill Vander Zalm is a lackwit or a scoundrel is a rather trivial consideration at this moment, considering the devastation Vandr Zalm will have inflicted on the government and citizens of BC should he succeed in repealing the HST – once the consequences of repealing the HST come home to roost.

While there may be an element of truth to accusations that Premier-designate Christy Clark and Finance Minister Colin Hansen are fear-mongering (fear-mongering being a favourite tool of politicians) I have no doubt that Clark and Hansen are themselves (as is any British Columbian who understands the consequences of a HST repeal) afraid of the consequences of an HST repeal. Especially as they are the people who will be faced with dealing with the financial mess a repeal will bring about.

One final comment on this matter – Mr. Vander Zalm’s partners in crime. It does not matter whether the NDP’s support of repealing the HST signifies an abysmal lack of any comprehension of financial realities or a desperation to win the next election at any cost, no matter how devastating to the province and taxpayers. Either possibility disqualifies the NDP (without major changes in candidates and leadership) from being entrusted with