ELECTIONS WITHOUT POLITICS: Television Coverage of the 2001 B.C
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It's Time for a Change!
24 - The Prince George Citizen -Friday, August 2,1991 LOIS BOONE. MLA SPEWING OUT our months ago, Bill Vander Zalm re signed in disgrace and Rita Johnston tookF over as Premier of British Columbia. Mrs. Johnston now leads a gov ernment fractured by scan dals and resignations - a government with no clear policy directions. Just like Bill Vander Zalm, Mrs. Johnston Dromises a fresh start, but nas anything really changed in the last four months? SOCIAL CREDIT POLICY FLIP FLOPS FINANCIAL PRIORITIES? The Socred government continues to drift from oneThe policy Social to Credit government still can’t seem to get its financial another. house in order and its spending priorities straight. - March 1991 — Legislation passed to make tax increases illegal. — The budget deficit for B.C. this year is 1.2 billion dollars — the May 1991 —Taxes were increased. largest in B.C.’s history. - 1987 — Socreds vote against an NDP amendment to remove— B.C.’sthe direct debt has doubled in the last four years - to more than property purchase tax for first time home buyers. $9 billion dollars. - 1991 — Rita Johnston now thinks it’s a good idea. — B.C.’s budget increased 12% in the last 2 years but ... - June 1989 — Dual Entry for kindergarten is introduced despite- Alcohol and Drug programREDUCED — massive opposition. -Apprenticeship and Training programsREDUCED - - May 1991 - Dual entry is scrapped leaving 14,000 children in - Seniors programsREDUCED - - Hospital BedsCLOSED - limbo. - Gas Taxes - IN C R EA SED - May 1991 - Rita Johnston announces that B.C. will settle Land - User Fees IN- C R EA SED Claims and pay its fair share. -
Spot the Island
IISLANDSLAND WILDLIFE SSttrraaiit ooff GGeeoorrggiiaa NNewsletterewsletter Inside UUnniittiinngg TThhee SSaalliisshh SSeeaa ~~ FFrroomm CCooaasstt ttoo CCooaasstt ttoo CCooaasstt Volume 22 Number 23 2010 Year End Edition $2 at Selected Retailers Canadian Publications Mail Product Sales Agreement Nº 40020421 Photo: Derek Holzapfel Plumper Sound parking lot. Four (you can’t see one of them) idle freighters waiting for entry to the Port of Vancouver on November 28. Queens in trouble—Southern Gulf Commentary by Sara Miles Counting Carbon Islands’ ferries have a tough season Thank you, Bolivia! Thank you for giving makes up the government? You and I. The substitute Bowen Queen is still formidable variety of wind and current me the courage to say what I was too Our inaction on climate change makes suffering from overload problems on Route conditions. In fact, one of the most difficult Canadian to say: when it comes to climate me want to cry. Polar bears are just the Nº5. Ferry crews have been almost heroic in routes on the ferry system; in contrast to the change and carbon talks, we are big, fat cutest little guys and our irresponsibility is getting people home. Meanwhile, all has not port-to-port Comox–Powell River route. hypocrites. destroying them forever. been plain sailing for the Queen of Burnaby, Route Nº9’s fourth port of call, Sturdies On Day 2 of the COP-16 negotiations in I try to be environmentally friendly and borrowed from Comox–Powell River to Bay, is particularly exposed to southeast Cancun, Mexico, Bolivia’s ambassador to choose to walk or cycle as much as I can, but replace the Queen of Nanaimo (in refit) on winds from the Strait of Georgia, which the UN criticized the nations who are car drivers everywhere seem to have a plot the Southern Islands-Tsawwassen route . -
Public Affairs Office Fonds
Public Affairs Office fonds Compiled by Christopher Hives (2001, 2002), Nicole Stanley and Clay Thibodeau (2006), and Adrienne Lai (2008) Last revised December 2010 *** Institutional records -- researcher access subject to review *** University of British Columbia Archives Table of Contents Fonds Description o Title / Dates of Creation / Physical Description o Administrative History o Scope and Content Series Descriptions o Photographic series o Audio Visual series File List Catalogue entry (UBC Library catalogue) Fonds Description Public Affairs Office fonds. – 1980-2002. 900 photographs. 183 video recordings. 42 audio recordings. Administrative History The University of British Columbia's Public Affairs Office emerged in 1994/95 as part of the External Affairs Division. Like its direct predecessors, the Information Office (1965- 1985) and Community Relations (1985-1994), the Public Affairs Office's primary function is to communicate UBC's mission, key messages and values to both its internal community of faculty, staff and students and to the broader external community. Public Affairs produces twenty-one issues of UBC Reports each year. This publication includes major articles on people, events and activities in the university community. In addition to using information for articles in UBC Reports, Public Affairs is also responsible for disseminating information to a broad base of print and electronic media sources for publication and presentation to the public. Public Affairs has also assumed an important responsibility for acting as the "University Spokesperson" for a number of major and complex issues. Scope and Content The fonds consists of two series: Photographic and Audio Visual. Series Descriptions Photographic series. -- 1980-1991. 900 photographs. Series consists of 900 35-mm negatives. -
Sustainable Region Initiative Meeting- November
November 1, 2006 NOTICE TO THE GVRD SUSTAINABLE REGION INITIATIVE TASK FORCE You are requested to attend a Regular Meeting of the GVRD Sustainable Region Initiative Task Force to be held at 9:00 am on Tuesday, November 7, 2006, in the 2nd Floor Boardroom at 4330 Kingsway, Burnaby, British Columbia. A G E N D A 1. ADOPTION OF THE AGENDA 1.1 November 7, 2006 Regular Meeting Agenda Staff Recommendation: That the Sustainable Region Initiative Task Force adopt the agenda for the Sustainable Region Initiative Task Force regular meeting scheduled for November 7, 2006 as circulated. 2. ADOPTION OF THE MINUTES 2.1 October 11, 2006 Regular Meeting Minutes Staff Recommendation: That the Sustainable Region Initiative Task Force adopt the minutes of the Sustainable Region Initiative Task Force regular meeting held October 11, 2006 as circulated. 3. DELEGATIONS No delegations presented. 4. REPORTS FROM COMMITTEE OR STAFF 4.1 GVRD and Regional Economic Initiatives (deferred from Oct 11) Designated Speaker: Delia Laglagaron, Deputy CAO, GVRD Recommendation: That the GVRD Board: a) Request the Chair to appoint a Standing Committee on the Economy as a forum to discuss issues on the region’s economy and define the role of GVRD and partners. b) Provide the Greater Vancouver Economic Council (GVEC) formal support including GVRD’s support in their request for Federal and Provincial financial assistance. c) Direct staff to identify projects that may be done in collaboration with GVEC; and d) Develop Terms of Reference for the development of a Regional Economic Strategy using the paper entitled “PROSPERITY, LIVABILITY, SUSTAINABILITY: Seeking a Strategy for the Future of Greater Vancouver’s Economy”, as a starting point. -
July 29, 2021
SPECIAL COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES JULY 29, 2021 A Special Meeting of the Council of the City of Vancouver was held on Thursday, July 29, 2021, at 1:01 pm, in the Council Chamber, Third Floor, City Hall, for the purpose of convening a meeting which is closed to the public. This Council meeting was convened by electronic means as authorized under the Order of the Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General of the Province of British Columbia – Emergency Program Act, updated Ministerial Order No. M192. PRESENT: Deputy Mayor Christine Boyle Councillor Rebecca Bligh Councillor Adriane Carr Councillor Melissa De Genova Councillor Lisa Dominato Councillor Pete Fry Councillor Colleen Hardwick Councillor Sarah Kirby-Yung Councillor Jean Swanson Councillor Michael Wiebe ABSENT: Mayor Kennedy Stewart CITY MANAGER’S OFFICE: Paul Mochrie, City Manager Karen Levitt, Deputy City Manager CITY CLERK’S OFFICE: Katrina Leckovic, City Clerk David Yim, Meeting Coordinator WELCOME The Deputy Mayor acknowledged we are on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Nations and we thank them for having cared for this land and look forward to working with them in partnership as we continue to build this great city together. The Deputy Mayor also recognized the immense contributions of the City of Vancouver’s staff who work hard every day to help make our city an incredible place to live, work, and play. IN CAMERA MEETING MOVED by Councillor De Genova SECONDED by Councillor Wiebe THAT Council will go into meeting later this day which -
Alternative North Americas: What Canada and The
ALTERNATIVE NORTH AMERICAS What Canada and the United States Can Learn from Each Other David T. Jones ALTERNATIVE NORTH AMERICAS Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars One Woodrow Wilson Plaza 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20004 Copyright © 2014 by David T. Jones All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of author’s rights. Published online. ISBN: 978-1-938027-36-9 DEDICATION Once more for Teresa The be and end of it all A Journey of Ten Thousand Years Begins with a Single Day (Forever Tandem) TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction .................................................................................................................1 Chapter 1 Borders—Open Borders and Closing Threats .......................................... 12 Chapter 2 Unsettled Boundaries—That Not Yet Settled Border ................................ 24 Chapter 3 Arctic Sovereignty—Arctic Antics ............................................................. 45 Chapter 4 Immigrants and Refugees .........................................................................54 Chapter 5 Crime and (Lack of) Punishment .............................................................. 78 Chapter 6 Human Rights and Wrongs .................................................................... 102 Chapter 7 Language and Discord .......................................................................... -
The Media's Use of Lesbian Stereotypes
Canadian Political Science Review 3(3) September 2009 Changing the Game Changes the Frame: The Media’s Use of Lesbian Stereotypes in Leadership versus Election Campaigns Joanna M. Everitt (University of New Brunswick – St. John) and Michael Camp (St. Thomas University)1 Abstract This study uses content analysis and interviews to examine how the media reported the candidacy and campaign of Allison Brewer, the openly lesbian leader of the New Brunswick New Democratic Party. The “news values” that govern political reporting led the media to construct Brewer’s political persona during her leadership campaign using stereotypes of lesbians, activists and women in politics. This stereotypic treatment occurred at a point in her political career when impressions are most important. A year later, during the provincial election campaign her newsworthiness as a “new” or a “contentious” presence in politics had diminished, but had not completely disappeared. Introduction In September 2005 Allison Brewer was elected leader of the New Brunswick New Democratic Party (NDP). While she ran on a platform emphasizinG health care, education, the environment and increased support for social workers (Brewer interview 2006) what cauGht the media’s attention was her personal identity as an out lesbian. Despite the fact that her tenure on the political stage was not long (she stepped down in the fall of 2006 after losinG in the September provincial election), her experiences with the media durinG both the leadership campaign and the general election are of academic interest as they allow us to examine how the media cover relatively unknown political fiGures who happen to be homosexual. -
Ujjal Dosanjh: B.C.'S Indian-Born Premier
Contents Ujjal Dosanjh: B.C.'s Indian-Born Premier In an attempt to hang onto power and to stage a comeback in the court of public opinion after the resignation of Glen Clark, the beleaguered NDP government of British Columbia picks Ujjal Dosanjh as party leader and premier. The former attorney general of the province was selected following a process that itself was not without controversy. As a Canadian pioneer, Dosanjh becomes the first Indian-born head of government in Canada. A role model as well, the new premier has traveled far to a nation that early in the 1900s restricted Indian immigration by an order-in-council. Ironically, Dosanjh, no stranger to controversy and personal struggle, is the grandson of a revolutionary who was jailed by the British during India s fight for independence. Introduction The Ethnic Question A Troublesome Inheritance An Experiential Education The Visible Majority Multiculturalism in Canada Racial History in Canada Discussion, Research, and Essay Questions Comprehensive News in Review Study Modules Using both the print and non-print material from various issues of News in Review, teachers and students can create comprehensive, thematic modules that are excellent for research purposes, independent assignments, and small group study. We recommend the stories indicated below for the universal issues they represent and for the archival and historic material they contain. Vander Zalm: A Question of Accountability, May 1991 Glen Clark: Mandate Squandered? October 1999 Other Related Videos Available from CBC Learning Does Your Resource Collection Include These CBC Videos? Skin Deep: The Science of Race Who Is A Real Canadian? Introduction Ujjal Dosanjh: B.C.'s Indian-Born Premier On February 19, 2000, political history was made in British Columbia when the New Democratic Party chose Ujjal Dosanjh to be its new leader, and as a result, for the first time in Canada, an Indo-Canadian became head of government in a provincial legislature. -
OOP-2013-00348 Announcement of the Next Executive Council of B.C
Page 1 OOP-2013-00348 Announcement of the next Executive Council of B.C. Friday, June 7, 2013 - 2:00 p.m. Invitation List - Invitee Guests Bonnie Abram Scott Anderson Lyn Anglin Olin Anton Robert Anton Helen Armstrong Mike Arnold Mike Arnold Deb Arnott Peter Ashcroft Antonia Audette Dave Bedwell Cindy Beedie Dr. Deborah Bell Jim Belsheim Beth Bennett Glenn Berg Valerie Bernier Ben Besler John Bishop Peter Boddy Bill Bond Michael Brooks Richard Bullock Matt Burke Cindy Burton Sandy Butler Daniel Cadieux George Cadman Marife Camerino Karen Cameron Murray Campbell S 22 Clark Campbell S 22 S 22 S 22 Alicia Campbell Lee Campbell S 22 Clark Campbell Page 2 OOP-2013-00348 Announcement of the next Executive Council of B.C. Friday, June 7, 2013 - 2:00 p.m. Invitation List - Invitee Guests Resja Campfens Sandi Case Ken Catton Cindy Chan Pius Chan James Chase Michael Chiu J. Brock Chrystal Charlotte Clark Jonathan Clarke Anita Clegg Susan Clovechok Susan Clovechok Lynette Cobb Hilda Colwell Tom Corsie Wayne Coulson Sharon Crowson Warren Cudney Warren Cudney Michael Curtiss Marlene Dalton Brian Daniel Bette Daoust Bette Daoust Francois Daoust Francois Daoust Filip de Sagher Gabrielle DeGroot Marko Dekovic Nilu Dhaliwal Lysa Dixon Rada Doyle Wayne Duzita Urmila Dwivedi John Eastwood Vivian Edwards Scott Ellis Barbara Elworthy Mark Elworthy Evangeline Englezos Warren Erhart Ida Fallowfield Charlene Fassbender Mr. Steve Fassbender Mrs. Steve Fassbender Page 3 OOP-2013-00348 Announcement of the next Executive Council of B.C. Friday, June 7, 2013 - 2:00 -
Directors'notice of New Business
R-2 DIRECTORS’ NOTICE OF NEW BUSINESS To: Chair and Directors Date: January 16, 2019 From: Director Goodings, Electoral Area ‘B’ Subject: Composite Political Newsletter PURPOSE / ISSUE: In the January 11, 2019 edition of the Directors’ Information package there was a complimentary issue of a political newsletter entitled “The Composite Advisor.” The monthly newsletter provides comprehensive news and strategic analysis regarding BC Politics and Policy. RECOMMENDATION / ACTION: [All Directors – Corporate Weighted] That the Regional District purchase an annual subscription (10 issues) of the Composite Public Affairs newsletter for an amount of $87 including GST. BACKGROUND/RATIONALE: I feel the newsletter is worthwhile for the Board’s reference. ATTACHMENTS: January 4, 2019 issue Dept. Head: CAO: Page 1 of 1 January 31, 2019 R-2 Composite Public Affairs Inc. January 4, 2019 Karen Goodings Peace River Regional District Box 810 Dawson Creek, BC V1G 4H8 Dear Karen, It is my pleasure to provide you with a complimentary issue of our new political newsletter, The Composite Advisor. British Columbia today is in the midst of an exciting political drama — one that may last for the next many months, or (as I believe) the next several years. At present, a New Democratic Party government led by Premier John Horgan and supported by Andrew Weaver's Green Party, holds a narrow advantage in the Legislative Assembly. And after 16 years in power, the long-governing BC Liberals now sit on the opposition benches with a relatively-new leader in Andrew Wilkinson. B.C.'s next general-election is scheduled for October 2021, almost three years from now, but as the old saying goes: 'The only thing certain, is uncertainty." (The best political quote in this regard may have been by British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan who, asked by a reporter what might transpire to change his government's course of action, replied: "Events, dear boy, events." New research suggests that MacMillan never said it — but it's still a great quote!) Composite Public Affairs Inc. -
Children: the Silenced Citizens
Children: The Silenced Citizens EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION OF CANADA’S INTERNATIONAL OBLIGATIONS WITH RESPECT TO THE RIGHTS OF CHILDREN Final Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Human Rights The Honourable Raynell Andreychuk Chair The Honourable Joan Fraser Deputy Chair April 2007 Ce document est disponible en français. This report and the Committee’s proceedings are available online at www.senate-senat.ca/rights-droits.asp Hard copies of this document are available by contacting the Senate Committees Directorate at (613) 990-0088 or by email at [email protected] Membership Membership The Honourable Raynell Andreychuk, Chair The Honourable Joan Fraser, Deputy Chair and The Honourable Senators: Romeo Dallaire *Céline Hervieux-Payette, P.C. (or Claudette Tardif) Mobina S.B. Jaffer Noël A. Kinsella *Marjory LeBreton, P.C. (or Gerald Comeau) Sandra M. Lovelace Nicholas Jim Munson Nancy Ruth Vivienne Poy *Ex-officio members In addition, the Honourable Senators Jack Austin, George Baker, P.C., Sharon Carstairs, P.C., Maria Chaput, Ione Christensen, Ethel M. Cochrane, Marisa Ferretti Barth, Elizabeth Hubley, Laurier LaPierre, Rose-Marie Losier-Cool, Terry Mercer, Pana Merchant, Grant Mitchell, Donald H. Oliver, Landon Pearson, Lucie Pépin, Robert W. Peterson, Marie-P. Poulin (Charette), William Rompkey, P.C., Terrance R. Stratton and Rod A. Zimmer were members of the Committee at various times during this study or participated in its work. Staff from the Parliamentary Information and Research Service of the Library of Parliament: -
Annual Report
SOS CHILDREN’S VILLAGE BRITISH COLUMBIA A n n uA l R e p o R t 2010 Message from the Executive Director & Chairman of the Board Celebrating 25 years OS Children’s Villages is the world’s largest non-governmental, non-denominational child welfare organization. It has existed for over 60 years with a presence in 132 nations. British Columbia is home to the only SOS Children’s Village in Canada and 25 years ago . that is something we are proud of. Vancouver welcomed the world to Expo ‘86 SNext year in 2011, SOS BC will be celebrating its 25th anniversary. It is inspiring to see what a Montreal took home the Stanley Cup team of dedicated volunteers, employees and donors have created over the past quarter century. William Bennett handed over the premiership of British Columbia to Bill Vander Zalm As we look forward to the next 25 years, it is important that SOS BC continues to evolve and SOS Children’s Village BC (Canada) Society was established! re-define its purpose to ever improve our services. SOS BC has developed a unique program structure that focuses on two distinct areas. One being set-up based on the personalized needs SOS Children’s Village BC is the only village in Canada. It was founded on the principle that life of our village families and the other on outreach programs for foster families in the community. could be and SHOULD be better for children in the care system. In 2010 we piloted two new outreach programs, the “Homework Club” and “Sounds of Learning” to 22 youth and children.