Welfare challenge cancelled because participants could face starvation

copperbadge:

patrickat:

entitledrichpeople:

Every fall for the past six years, Raise the Rates has challenged participants, including politicians, celebrities and chefs, to live on provincial welfare rates for one week. In 2017, after subtracting rent and other basics like bus fare, that meant $19.

But with recent rent increases, participants this year would have only $5.75 to spend on food for the week.

“This year we can’t possibly ask someone to voluntarily live on $5.75 a week for food,” organizer Kell Gerlings said during a news conference announcing the 2018 challenge.

I feel like the poor people could have told you this one.  I know groups like this often mean well, but I feel like there’s a lack of listening to poor people implicit in these events.

“We can’t ask anyone to do this voluntarily but we can sure force them to by necessity.”

I suspect that might be the point, though. 

It’s a non-profit advocating for change that’s been doing this for six years so they’ve had pretty much all the kinds of coverage they’re going to get on this event – the same articles every year about how hard it is, the same coverage they’ve always had. Cancelling it because it’s literally impossible to feed yourself for what we expect poor people to feed themselves on is a great way to get new coverage and point up the urgency of the situation.

The article even points out that part of Raise the Rates’ platform is rent control: 

Raise the Rates is calling for rent controls to stop landlords from raising rents between tenancies, as well as increases to income assistance. 

I mean…I’ve seen more coverage of this issue because of the cancellation than I’ve seen the last few years events like this have been in operation. Once Gwyneth Paltrow spent like half her “eat like a poor person” budget on limes, I feel like that exercise was pretty well over. 

Welfare challenge cancelled because participants could face starvation

Ontario businesses want trumpy Doug Ford to kill leave for domestic abuse survivors, allow mandatory high heeled shoes

mostlysignssomeportents:

Ontario’s “A Plan for Fair Workplaces and Better Jobs” (AKA Bill 148)
legislates leave for domestic abuse survivors, provides for 10 days of
paid emergency leave, three weeks paid vacation after five years’
employment, and a ban on employers requiring their employees to wear
high heels.

The Retail Council of Canada and the Ontario Chamber of Commerce have joined forces to lobby Ontario premier Doug Ford (previously),
a laughable trumplefuck elected on promises to lower the cost of beer
to $1 and to eliminate mentions of homosexuality from the provincial
sex-ed curriculum (his dead brother, Rob, disgraced the province when,
as Mayor of Toronto, he embarked on a series of drug-fueled, racist,
misogynist escapades).

Ontario businesses are riding high, enjoying record profits and
luxuriating in the recent news that Ford had killed the province’s $15
minimum wage.

https://boingboing.net/2018/10/03/bill-148.html

Canada revokes honorary citizenship for Aung San Suu Kyi

allthecanadianpolitics:

The House of Commons unanimously adopted the motion to revoke the honorary Canadian citizenship granted to Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi, the one-time champion of democracy who is now seen as a disgraced bystander in the ethnic cleansing of her country’s Rohingya population.

The historic motion was unexpected but foreseeable, after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said earlier this week that the honour Parliament had bestowed upon Suu Kyi could be reconsidered.

Bloc Québécois MP Gabriel Ste-Marie said that opening prompted him Thursday to ask a question to test the government’s resolve and then to rise immediately after question period to ask the Speaker to canvas if there was unanimous consent to immediately revoke the honour, which was granted in 2007.

Continue Reading.

Canada revokes honorary citizenship for Aung San Suu Kyi

Liberals to fix no-fly list, create system to help people wrongly flagged as security risks

allthecanadianpolitics:

The federal government is making changes to fix the no-fly list that had seen toddlers and other Canadians mistakenly flagged as aviation security risks.

A senior government official briefed reporters Wednesday on a new regulatory regime for an Enhanced Passenger Protect Program. The changes stem from a pledge in this year’s budget to close gaps with an $81 million investment.

One of the changes will bring the process of matching passenger manifests with the no-fly list compiled by intelligence and enforcement agencies under government control, instead of having the screening done by the airline. There will also be an automated redress system for passengers with false positive matches to the no-fly list.

That will provide a passenger who has been mistakenly flagged with a redress number they can plug in to clear them for future flights.

Continue Reading.

Liberals to fix no-fly list, create system to help people wrongly flagged as security risks

Toronto beats temperature record as students swelter in schools without AC

allthecanadianpolitics:

allthecanadianpolitics:

Students and teachers at hundreds of Toronto schools without air conditioning sweltered their way through record-breaking heat on Wednesday, as the city’s largest school board said it understood why some parents might choose to keep their children at home.

Forecasts said the city might hit a high of 32 C, but the mercury topped 33.9 C at Pearson International Airport by mid-afternoon. With the humidity, it felt like it was in the low 40s. The scorching temperatures beat a 73-year-old record for Sept. 5, set back in 1945 when Toronto hit 31.7 C.

With high humidity amplifying the heat, conditions were unbearable enough to have some people spending as little time as possible outdoors.

Continue Reading.

This story needs context.

This is the context everyone needs to know:

Ontario PC government cancels $100-million school repair fund

Ontario NDP: As students go back to school, Ford takes crumbling schools from bad to worse with $100M school repair cut

Toronto beats temperature record as students swelter in schools without AC

It terms on the indigenous people, there are news articles out there talking of the groups that support the pipelines that have been buried by other news. The main indigenous people who are impacted by this pipeline are in support. The main groups of people rallying and against the pipeline are from the states, getting money from rival oil and gas companies who are glad we can’t get our oil out for market price. – G 4

allthecanadianpolitics:

The majority of First Nations along the pipeline route have not consented to this pipeline:

Precarious work poses ‘serious consequences’ for millennials’ mental health, report says

latining:

allthecanadianpolitics:

Millennials see the lack of full-time jobs and affordable housing as the two biggest challenges facing their generation, with almost half of those in precarious employment saying their work status causes depression or anxiety, according to a new survey of young people in Hamilton.

Only 44 per cent of millennials working in the area have found full-time, permanent jobs, the report said. The majority reported not having jobs that provide extended health benefits, pension plans, or employer-funded training, while 38 per cent said they expected to be worse off than their parents, the report said.

The study conducted by McMaster University and the Poverty and Employment Precarity in Southern Ontario (PEPSO) research group surveyed 1,189 employed millennials in Hamilton. While not a representative sample of the entire demographic, the report says its findings are a “reasonable picture of what it is like” for workers under the age of 35 in the broader region.

“You hear a lot of criticism of this generation, but I think they are one of the most ambitious exciting generations,” said researcher Jeffrey C. Martin, who co-authored the report with McMaster University professor Wayne Lewchuk. “But the cards haven’t been dealt well for them.”

Continue Reading.

This is the “new normal” that Trudeau’s Finance Minister Bill Morneau thinks Canadians need to get used to.

Alexandria Ocasio Cortez got laughed at for bringing this up as a rebuttal to low unemployment in the US but it was clear af day to me she was referring to the situation facing Millennials and low income people.

Precarious work poses ‘serious consequences’ for millennials’ mental health, report says

allthecanadianpolitics:

enchantedengland
replied to your link “Liberals plan to soften carbon tax plan over competitiveness concerns”

Oh quit complaining about Justin Trudeau when we have a giant orange-headed turd as President I would love to have Justin Trudeau to complain about ha

I can and will continue to complain about Justin Trudeau.

Donald Fucking Trump is not the bench mark that all leaders should rise above to be considered ‘good’.

Justin Trudeau is not a good Prime Minister. He is a mediocre, flawed, and status quo politician in Canada, and he is actively harming many communities.

Would criticizing Obama as he killed countless people in the middle east and committed mass deportations be considered not allowed?

Would criticizing George W Bush and his war on terror be not allowed, just because there were other dictators such as North Korea’s Kim Jong-il?

Canada has one of the largest untapped reserves of oil on the planet. If Justin Trudeau, and collectively Canada continues to exploit them, the impacts of climate change from that extraction is going to effect every single person on Earth.

Canada’s spies collude with the energy sector

gendernihilistanarchocommunist:

What happens to all of the information and data gathered about activists?

For one thing, some of it is shared with the energy sector. Starting in 2005, Natural Resources Canada, in collaboration with CSIS and the RCMP, began hosting twice-yearly classified briefings with executives from energy companies at CSIS’s headquarters in Ottawa – which continue to this day. “You have the RCMP and CSIS giving these briefings to the private sector – but the private sector wanting those briefings to be driven by the demands of those receiving the information,” says University of New Brunswick sociologist Tia Dafnos, who has researched this topic.

In 2012, Tim O’Neill, a senior criminal intelligence research specialist with the RCMP’s Critical Infrastructure Intelligence Team, wrote an email in which he said the purpose of these meetings “is to provide intelligence briefings to select energy representatives so they are able to implement the required security precautions to protect their assets. The briefings also provide a forum for the private sector to brief the Canadian intelligence and law enforcement community on issues we would not normally be privy to.” This email noted that the energy sector executives possess at least a “Level II (Secret) Security Clearance.” Indeed, Keith Stewart, head of Greenpeace Canada’s climate campaign, estimates “there are over 200 executives in the natural resources sector who have security clearance from CSIS and RCMP around these things like critical infrastructure.”

Agendas for these briefings, that have emerged through access to information requests, show that items of discussion include issues such as “security challenges presented by Radicalized Individual Groups to Canada’s Energy Sector” and “Extremist Activities within Aboriginal Communities”, and topics such as “Improvised Explosive Devices”, or on specific projects, such as the oilsands and Northern Gateway pipeline.

These briefings are well-attended, too. On the government side, they include people from the RCMP and all of Canada’s intelligence services, as well from the departments of Natural Resources, Defence, Public Safety, Transport, Industry Canada, National Energy Board (NEB), Atomic Energy Canada Ltd., the governments of New Brunswick, Quebec and Alberta, and the federal Office of the Auditor General, among others.

On the corporate side, however, it’s unclear who attends. All federal documents have been censored prior to release under access to information legislation to remove the names of companies that send executives to the meetings.

Nonetheless, in 2013, minutes to one meeting reveal that networking and coffee receptions at the briefing was sponsored by the pipeline company, Enbridge Inc., along with the (US) $250-billion Toronto-based global conglomerate, Brookfield Asset Management Inc. (Enbridge did not respond to requests for a response while Brookfield says it has been a number of years since they have participated in the briefings, and did so only because they were concerned about cyber-security and loss prevention).

Meanwhile, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., which operates the Horizon oilsands project in Fort McMurray, Alberta, was an invitee to the briefings, according to one RCMP email (the company refused to discuss its participation in these briefings when approached by National Observer). “This is how the energy companies have become part of the national security bureaucracy themselves,” observes Monaghan. “They are embedded within the bureaucracy because now, for the most part, ‘critical infrastructure’ is privately owned… It’s a two-way street: the police and CSIS have deputized the companies and their security actors to provide intelligence as well. This emerges from the energy companies putting pressure on the governments saying ‘You are not doing enough to stop these activists from disrupting whatever’.”

like this shit makes my stomach turn inside out

Canada’s spies collude with the energy sector

UCP candidates win Innisfail-Sylvan Lake and Fort McMurray-Conklin byelections

allthecanadianpolitics:

allthecanadianpolitics:

United Conservative Party candidates won by wide margins in two Alberta byelections on Thursday.

Devin Dreeshen was elected with roughly 80 per cent of the vote in the riding of Innisfail-Sylvan Lake while Laila Goodridge captured nearly 66 per cent of the vote in Fort McMurray-Conklin.

The byelections were triggered by the resignations of UCP MLA Don MacIntyre in Innisfail-Sylvan Lake and former Wildrose leader and UCP MLA Brian Jean in Fort McMurray-Conklin.

Continue Reading.

See that guy on the left? Devin Dreeshen?

He campaigned to get Donald Trump elected in the USA. He’s now an elected official in the Alberta legislature for the riding of Innisfail-Sylvan Lake:

Conservative Candidate in Alberta Hiding Past as a Trump Campaigner

He got 80% of the vote.

UCP candidates win Innisfail-Sylvan Lake and Fort McMurray-Conklin byelections