Survivors and Shelters Remember Women and Children N December 3Rd, Survivors and Committee Filled the Room with T- Park Were Invited to Attend

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Survivors and Shelters Remember Women and Children N December 3Rd, Survivors and Committee Filled the Room with T- Park Were Invited to Attend Call to action: Survivors and shelters remember women and children n December 3rd, survivors and Committee filled the room with T- Park were invited to attend. Women Owomen’s shelter workers joined shirts of women and children’s had hoped to talk with them about together to remember women and names. The women and children their experiences. children murdered in Ontario and to ‘took’ chairs at Queen’s Park while mark the National Day of Remem- participants stood to honour them. Unfortunately, it appears that all brance and Action on Violence MPPs had other priorities that day. Against Women. Two survivor advocates spoke about their experiences and their desire to Undaunted, the survivors took their Over 20 women travelled on a bus be involved in the work of ending vi- voices to the Main Legislature build- from Eastern OAITH Region to partici- olence against women for other ing where they called MPP offices to pate in the event. They were there to women. OAITH representatives pro- deliver the reports or have them see the launch of the Survivor Voices vided an overview of the Survivor picked up from the office of Sheila report and to add their voices to the Voices project. White, assistant to NDP MPP Andrea launch as they had as survivors to the Horwath, who had graciously pro- project itself. Shelter advocates from A video of the names of women and vided her space for the women. OAITH member shelters were also children murdered in Ontario since there to support the event. 1995--284 women and 43 children-- Assistants to Ministers Madeleine was played during the presentation. Meilleur and Deb Matthews did at- The OAITH Social Justice and Ac- tend and spoke with the women after tion/Anti-racism-Anti-Oppression MPPs from all three parties at Queen’s the event was over. OAITH Year in Review 2008 ARAO project trains shelter workers/trainers AITH was very pleased to wel- Ocome May Lui to the Association this year to deliver our ongoing ARAO membership training. May also or- ganized the training day at the AGM. May is an experienced trainer and Top left: Facilitator and trainer, Naomi also participated in the development Binder Wall outlines history of mental of the advanced ARAO curriculum health view of women over the years. that OAITH uses in trainings. Top right: Heather Cunningham won a The Advanced Feminist Anti-Racist Courage to Come Back award and now Anti-Oppression Organizational works for the Centre for Addiction and Men- tal Health facilitating the Beyond the Label Change and Service Delivery Training program. Curriculum will be delivered in eight shelter staff/manager trainings and Bottom: Linda Chamberlain, a founding four board trainings during the member of the Dream Team. She also facili- tates the Beyond the Label program and has months of April, May and June. won the Courage to Come Back award. The project is going very well. There was a Train the Trainer session held in Beyond pathology: a ʻDreamʼ workshop day January from which eight trainers omen’s experiences of mental They are part of the Dream Team, a emerged in the Whealth treatment and violence group of psychiatric survivors and OAITH mem- are linked. A number of expert family members who are advocating bership. These speakers brought that message to for more supportive housing in On- women will ac- OAITH’s annual anti-oppression train- tario for psychiatrized people. company May ing in a number of ways. on her provin- Linda is a founding member of the cial trainings. Les Marple, a graduate student at the group. She spoke of the life-changing Ontario Institute for Studies in Educa- impact of safe, supportive housing on The Ontario Tril- tion (OISE) spoke of the need to re- her and other survivors. She also out- lium Founda- think stigmatizing psychiatric lined the political action goal of the tion, our funder, mandates that May Lui, OAITH Project notions of mental health as illness group to advocate for supportive Coodinator, will be lead and the efforts of anti-psychiatry ad- housing for psychiatric survivors. shelters from facilitator in training. vocates to challenge traditional men- the North are tal health perceptions of women’s Heather is a new member of the prioritized. We are pleased that we lived experiences of violence. Dream Team. She shared her experi- have the funds in our grant that cover ences as a survivor and her goals to travel costs to ensure access to North- Naomi Binder Wall spoke of the dam- provide support for other survivors ern region shelters. age that has been done to women as well as to educate service during the evolution of psychiatry providers and the public about the May will be the lead trainer and one and mental health responses in need to stop stigmatizing and mar- volunteer trainer will assist and learn. Canada. She urged participants to ginalizing survivors. The training has been scheduled to take an anti-racist/anti-oppression take advantage of the best travel con- perspective on the ways in which She also spoke of the increased vul- ditions for women, especially in women’s experiences of oppression nerability of women to violence Northern regions. May is looking for- have been psychiatrized and used to against women experienced when ward to the trainings and is very sup- further support marginalization of they have no stable housing and portive of shelters doing this women in Canada. when community services follow op- important work. pressive responses to survivors: refus- Heather Cunningham and Linda ing admission to services, not If you have questions about train- Chamberlain shared their personal believing survivors and so on. ings after this project ends, please story of inaction within the mental contact the Education and Training health system and its impacts on Visit the Dream Team website at: Committee Co-Chairs, Valeska their lives. www.thedreamteam.ca . Gomez and Lee-Anne Lee. 2 OAITH Year in Review 2008 Shelter, Sanctuary, Status campaign aims to support ʻnon-statusʼ women sabel Garcia and her two children tion to raise pub- Ileft Mexico to escape a life-threaten- lic awareness of ing abusive situation but found little the issues for support from the government of ‘non-status’ Canada. Despite claims it is a world women and the leader in addressing violence against need for changes women, Canada rejected Isabel’s ap- to federal immi- peal to stay and ordered her de- gration policy and ported. She has not reported to go. practices. Supporters of Isabel and many other There are five de- women who seek refuge from gen- mands to federal der-based violence have been organ- authorities: izing to change the way community services and government treats End orders to women without “status.” deport women whose cases in- The Shelter, Sanctuary, Status cam- volve violence paign, which is a part of the No One Is against women. Marchers gather at Ryerson University in Toronto and walk to Immi- gration Department offices to protest deportation from Canada of Is- Illegal movement, has been working abel Garcia and other violence survivors without immigration status . to develop policies within commu- Direct immigra- tion authorities that all community larly vulnerable to violence. nity agencies, including women’s services supporting women experi- shelters, to support women who encing violence be sanctuary serv- Working with women’s advocates, need services but fear deportation if ices free from surveillance and ensure Immigration Department they reach out for help. enforcement. decisions are based on information and process founded on an under- OAITH has endorsed the campaign. Implement the promised Refugee standing of race, class, gender and Political actions Appeal Division. sexuality issues. In addition to the Toronto-based Implement a process for temporary For more information, visit the No community support efforts, the cam- foreign workers to receive perma- One Is Illegal website at: paign has also organized political ac- nent status on entry, especially http://toronto.nooneisillegal.org. live-in care givers who are particu- Congolese Womenʼs Campaign Against Sexual Violence seeks global support very day, 40 women are raped in They are raising an alarm against the the Congolese army.” Ethe Eastern Congo, according to use of rape, torture and sexual vio- women’s activists seeking interna- lence against women as weapons of The campaign website lists nine de- tional action to end the use of mands for all the parties in sexual violence in war. conflicts, the Congolese State, So that bodies of women cease being a battle- United Nations bodies and the According to one report, aid field, so that sexual violence ceases to be an arm International Criminal Court. workers from Oxfam label the of war, so that Congolese, both women and Democratic Republic of men, may take back their dignity and finally It asks that individuals and groups across the international Congo (DRC) “one of the worst have the hope of living in peace... places in the world to be a community sign on to a peti- woman.” In one 6-month pe- Congolese Womenʼs Campaign Against Sexual Violence tion in support of the demands riod, upwards of 5000 rapes in this ongoing campaign to end violence against women in the took place in the eastern part of the conflict and war in the DRC and say: Congo during armed conflict. Democratic Republic of Congo. “As activists and workers working The Congolese Women’s Campaign As part of our global support work, with the victims, we have for many OAITH has signed the petition. Against Sexual Violence is a an initia- years repeatedly denounced the sys- tive of women’s groups in Eastern tematic use of sexual violence by all For more information and to sign the Congo established to fight rampant of the armed groups present in the petition, visit the campaign website sexual violence against women.
Recommended publications
  • December 17, 2014 the Honourable Kathleen Wynne Premier of Ontario Legislative Building Queen's Park Toronto on M7A 1A1 the Ho
    December 17, 2014 17 décembre 2014 The Honourable Kathleen Wynne L’honorable Kathleen Wynne Premier of Ontario Première ministre de l’Ontario Legislative Building Édifice législatif Queen's Park Queen’s Park Toronto ON M7A 1A1 Toronto ON M7A 1A1 The Honourable Madeleine Meilleur L’honorable Madeleine Meilleur Attorney General of Ontario Procureure générale de l’Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General Ministère du procureur général McMurtry-Scott Building Édifice McMurtry-Scott 720 Bay Street, 11th Floor 720 rue Bay, 11ième étage Toronto, ON M7A 2S9 Toronto, ON M7A 2S9 Dear Premier and Attorney General: Chères Première ministre et Procureure générale, Re: The Protection of Communities and Exploited Re: Loi sur la protection des collectivités et des Persons Act personnes victimes d'exploitation We write to you as concerned citizens and Nous vous écrivons en tant que citoyens et members of the legal profession. membres de la communauté juridique. We are concerned about the direction the federal Nous sommes préoccupés par l’orientation prise government has taken with respect to adult par le gouvernement fédéral en ce qui a trait à la prostitution in Canada. The Protection of prostitution adulte au Canada. La Loi sur la Communities and Exploited Persons Act, which protection des collectivités et des personnes came into force on December 6, 2014, establishes victimes d'exploitation, entrée en vigueur le 6 a new legal regime that criminalizes many aspects décembre 2014, crée un nouveau régime juridique of adult prostitution, including the purchase of criminalisant plusieurs aspects de la prostitution sexual services, the advertisement of sexual adulte, y compris l’achat de services sexuels, la services, and communication for the purpose of publicité de services sexuels, et la communication prostitution.
    [Show full text]
  • Policing and Surveilling the Black Community in Toronto, Canada, 1992-2016
    From the Yonge Street Riot to the Carding Controversy: Policing and Surveilling the Black Community in Toronto, Canada, 1992-2016 By Maria Kyres A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Program in Cultural Studies in Conformity with the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Queen’s University Kingston, Ontario, Canada September, 2017 Copyright © Maria Kyres Abstract In the last decade, the conversation surrounding racial profiling and carding in the city of Toronto garnered much public and scholarly attention. Many journalists, academics and activists have examined the Community Contacts Policy, also known as carding, as well as mass incarceration and the police shootings and killings of unarmed, young Black men. The Yonge Street Uprising and the carding controversy in Toronto serve as two case studies to explore the ways that Black men have been disproportionately profiled, policed and surveilled in this country, particularly in the province of Ontario. Despite the fact that the Yonge Street Uprising and the carding controversy occurred decades apart, a common thread throughout both cases was the narrative of Black male criminality. In addition, it became apparent that many of the practices employed in contemporary society, such as racial profiling, carding and mass incarceration were derived from slavery, with the goal of limiting the freedom and mobility of Black people. Therefore, an examination of Canada’s historical treatment of Black people is necessary in order to demonstrate how practices rooted in slavery, such as, fugitive slave advertisements and historical representations of Black criminality helped inform current police practices. Through an analysis of historical, legal, criminological, and critical race scholarship, this work seeks to examine how and why Black people, specifically Black men, were and continue to be disproportionately more likely to be policed, surveilled and incarcerated.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2013
    A N N U A L R E P O R T of the JUSTICES OF THE PEACE APPOINTMENTS ADVISORY COMMITTEE for the Period from 1 January 2013 to 31 December 2013 Toronto, Ontario September 2014 A N N U A L R E P O R T of the JUSTICES OF THE PEACE APPOINTMENTS ADVISORY COMMITTEE for the Period from 1 January 2013 to 31 December 2013 Toronto, Ontario September 2014 ISSN 1918-4166 (Bilingual print) ISSN 1918-4174 (English Internet) ISSN 1918-4182 (French Internet) Persons wishing to comment on the process of the Justices of the Peace Appointments Advisory Committee are invited to write to: The Chair Justices of the Peace Appointments Advisory Committee 720 Bay Street 3rd Floor Toronto, Ontario M7A 2S9 PREVIOUS PUBLICATIONS OF THE JUSTICES OF THE PEACE APPOINTMENTS ADVISORY COMMITTEE: Annual Report for the Period from 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2007 (January 2009). Annual Report for the Period from 1 January 2008 to 31 August 2009 (January 2011). Annual Report for the Period from 1 September 2009 to 31 August 2010 (August 2011). Annual Report for the Period from 1 September 2010 to 31 December 2011 (January 2013). Annual Report for the Period from 1 January 2012 to 31 December 2012 (January 2014). TABLE OF CONTENTS LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL ................................................................................ 1 CHAIR’S SUMMARY ............................................................................................ 3 INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................. 5 THE COMMITTEE’S
    [Show full text]
  • Family Legal Services Review
    Ministry of the Attorney General Family Legal Services Review Report submitted to: Attorney General Yasir Naqvi and Treasurer Paul Schabas By: Justice Annemarie E. Bonkalo Date: December 31, 2016 December 31, 2016 The Honourable Yasir Naqvi Attorney General of Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General McMurtry-Scott Building 720 Bay Street, 11th Floor Toronto, ON M7A 2S9 Treasurer Paul Schabas The Law Society of Upper Canada Osgoode Hall 130 Queen Street West Toronto, ON M5H 2N6 Dear Attorney General Naqvi and Treasurer Schabas, Re: Family Legal Services Review On February 9, 2016, I was appointed by then Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur and then Treasurer of the Law Society of Upper Canada Janet Minor to lead a review of the provision of family legal services by persons other than lawyers. I have the honour to present to you my report in this matter. Yours sincerely, Justice Annemarie E. Bonkalo Disclaimer As set out in the Terms of Reference establishing the Family Legal Services Review, the Attorney General and the Treasurer of the Law Society of Upper Canada agreed to work together on a review of the provision of family legal services by persons in addition to lawyers. Chief Justice Lise Maisonneuve of the Ontario Court of Justice agreed to assign me to undertake this review. Acknowledgments I would like to express my sincere appreciation to the following members of my advisory body for taking the time to meet with me and for their thoughtful consideration of the issues: • Lisa Bernstein • Nikki Gershbain • Judith Huddart • Hilary Linton • Alf Mamo • The Honourable Mary Jo Nolan • Elaine Page and • Noel Semple.
    [Show full text]
  • Delaying Justice Is Denying Justice: an Urgent Need to Address Lengthy Court Delays in Canada (Final Report), June 2017
    DELAYING JUSTICE IS DENYING JUSTICE An Urgent Need to Address Lengthy Court Delays in Canada Final report of the Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs The Honourable Bob Runciman, Chair The Honourable George Baker, P.C., Deputy Chair SBK>QB SK>Q June 2017 CANADA This report may be cited as: Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs, Delaying Justice is Denying Justice: An Urgent Need to Address Lengthy Court Delays in Canada (Final Report), June 2017. For more information please contact us by email [email protected] by phone: (613) 990-6087 toll-free: 1 800 267-7362 by mail: The Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs, Senate, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0A4 This report can be downloaded at: www.senate-senat.ca/lcjc.asp Ce rapport est également offert en français Table of Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .................................................................................................................................. 1 Priority Recommendations ....................................................................................................................... 5 CHAPTER ONE - INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................... 9 Canada’s Critical Delay Problem ............................................................................................................... 9 The Committee’s Study ..........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • National Historic Sites of Canada System Plan Will Provide Even Greater Opportunities for Canadians to Understand and Celebrate Our National Heritage
    PROUDLY BRINGING YOU CANADA AT ITS BEST National Historic Sites of Canada S YSTEM P LAN Parks Parcs Canada Canada 2 6 5 Identification of images on the front cover photo montage: 1 1. Lower Fort Garry 4 2. Inuksuk 3. Portia White 3 4. John McCrae 5. Jeanne Mance 6. Old Town Lunenburg © Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, (2000) ISBN: 0-662-29189-1 Cat: R64-234/2000E Cette publication est aussi disponible en français www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca National Historic Sites of Canada S YSTEM P LAN Foreword Canadians take great pride in the people, places and events that shape our history and identify our country. We are inspired by the bravery of our soldiers at Normandy and moved by the words of John McCrae’s "In Flanders Fields." We are amazed at the vision of Louis-Joseph Papineau and Sir Wilfrid Laurier. We are enchanted by the paintings of Emily Carr and the writings of Lucy Maud Montgomery. We look back in awe at the wisdom of Sir John A. Macdonald and Sir George-Étienne Cartier. We are moved to tears of joy by the humour of Stephen Leacock and tears of gratitude for the courage of Tecumseh. We hold in high regard the determination of Emily Murphy and Rev. Josiah Henson to overcome obstacles which stood in the way of their dreams. We give thanks for the work of the Victorian Order of Nurses and those who organ- ized the Underground Railroad. We think of those who suffered and died at Grosse Île in the dream of reaching a new home.
    [Show full text]
  • NEWS RELEASE for Immediate Release
    Développement économique et Tourisme / Economic Development and Tourism Comtés unis de Prescott et Russell / United Counties of Prescott and Russell 59 rue Court St., C.P./P.O. Box 304 L’Orignal, ON K0B 1K0 NEWS RELEASE For immediate release Glengarry-Prescott-Russell Day impresses a sixth time Toronto, October 7, 2015 – It was with great pride that the United Counties of Prescott and Russell (UCPR) and the Township of North Glengarry held the sixth edition of Glengarry-Prescott-Russell Day this afternoon at Queen's Park. Since 2008, Glengarry-Prescott-Russell Day has allowed the region to showcase local food products in front of the entire Legislative Assembly of the Government of Ontario as well as members of their staff. Once again this year, more than 200 people took part in the event, including Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, Ministers Jeff Leal, Madeleine Meilleur, Eric Hoskins and Yasir Naqvi, and Glengarry-Prescott-Russell MPP Grant Crack. “This day is important for our region because it affords us a rare opportunity to showcase our local food at the Provincial Parliament and, at the same time, advance and discuss our ongoing projects,” stated Robert Kirby, Warden of the United Counties of Prescott and Russell. The eight regional mayors representing the UCPR as well as Council members of the Township of North Glengarry were equally in attendance, and benefited from the opportunity to meet with several Ministers and their staff in order to advance economic development projects in the region. The showcased regional products include those of the St-Albert Cheese Cooperative, L’Orignal Packing, Skotidakis Goat Farm (St-Eugène), Mariposa Farm (Plantagenet), Cakes On St-Philippe (Alfred), Prima Cossa (L’Orignal), Vert Fourchette (Vankleek Hill), La Binerie Plantagenet, Beau’s All Natural Brewing Co.
    [Show full text]
  • Do Good Intentions Beget Good Policy? Two Steps Forward and One Step Back in the Construction of Domestic Violence in Ontario
    Do Good Intentions Beget Good Policy? Two Steps Forward and One Step Back in the Construction of Domestic Violence in Ontario by April Lucille Girard-Brown A thesis submitted to the Department of Sociology In conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Queen‟s University Kingston, Ontario, Canada January, 2012 Copyright ©April Lucille Girard-Brown, 2012 Abstract The construction of domestic violence shifted and changed as this issue was forced from the private shadows to the public stage. This dissertation explores how government policy initiatives - Bill 117: An Act to Better Protect Victims of Domestic Violence and the Domestic Violence Action Plan (DVAP) - shaped our understanding of domestic violence as a social problem in the first decade of the twenty-first century in Ontario. Specifically, it asks whose voices were heard, whose were silenced, how domestic violence was conceptualized by various stakeholders. In order to do this I analyzed the texts of Bill 117, its debates, the DVAP, as well as fourteen in-depth interviews with anti- violence advocates in Ontario to shed light on their construction of the domestic violence problem. Then I examined who (both state and non-state actors) regarded the work as „successful‟, flawed or wholly ineffective. In particular, I focused on the claims and counter-claims advanced by MPPs, other government officials, feminist or other women‟s group advocates and men‟s or fathers‟ rights group supporters and organizations. The key themes derived from the textual analysis of documents and the interviews encapsulate the key issues which formed the dominant construction of domestic violence in Ontario between 2000 and 2009: the never-ending struggles over funding, debates surrounding issues of rights and responsibilities, solutions proposed to address domestic violence, and finally the continued appearance of deserving and undeserving victims in public policy.
    [Show full text]
  • Political Intervention and Resumption of the Rescue / Recovery (7:30 P.M
    CHAPTER Political Intervention and Resumption of the Rescue / Recovery (7:30 p.m. on June 25 to 6:00 a.m. on June 27) Political intervention was essential to the resumption of the rescue / recovery . 211 Key players within the Premier’s Office and the Cabinet Office ................................. 211 June 23 – The Premier’s Office is informed unofficially of possible fatalities and trapped persons in the collapse ........................................................................ 212 5:36 p.m. – The premier is advised of the collapse: He is eager to obtain more information ............ 212 6:08 p.m. – First official EMO notification: Someone is trapped in the collapse, and UCRT is being mobilized ............................................................................ 213 6:41 p.m. – Premier’s Office is informed there may be fatalities ..................................... 214 7:40 p.m. – Mr. O’Leary learns of two possible trapped persons and seeks information from the Ministry of Labour about the Mall ........................................................... 215 Mr. O’Leary informs his colleagues in the Premier’s Office of the possibility of two trapped persons in the collapse ..................................................................... 215 June 24 – The premier speaks to Mr. Mantha and Mayor Hamilton, and he learns officially of one possible fatality ........................................................................ 216 10:17 a.m. – The premier is updated on the collapse: Although there is no new information, he is reassured that things are unfolding as they should .......................................... 216 11:33 a.m. – The premier speaks to the mayor, advising of provincial support ........................ 218 12:28 p.m. – The premier issues a statement: The province and the premier “are on the file” ........... 218 3:25 p.m. – Minister Meilleur speaks to Michael Mantha: All resources from the Ministry of Community Safety will be made available ....................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Ontario Ombudsman Turns 35 Years Young: Anniversary Pays Tribute To
    Ontario Ombudsman turns 35 years young: Anniversary pays tribute to former ombudsmen while reaffirming vital role amid “increasingly bureaucratic and depersonalized” society (TORONTO, November 1) – Not quite middle-aged but at a point well beyond the self- defining years, the Ontario Ombudsman’s Office turned 35 years young today, and marked the occasion with a gathering attended by Ministers, MPPs, and other distinguished guests including United Nations Ombudsman, John Barkat. The Honorable Roy McMurtry, former Ontario Chief Justice and Attorney General, recommended the appointment of the first ombudsman, Arthur Maloney in 1975. He has been a friend to each ombudsman ever since and in a speech paid tribute to Mr. Maloney and successive ombudsmen: Donald Morand (1979-84), Daniel Hill (1984-89), Roberta Jamieson (1989-99), Clare Lewis (2000-05), and André Marin (2005-Present). “In my view, the Office of the Ombudsman has served a legacy in which we all should be very proud. The Ontario Ombudsman has been an effective means of humanizing government and smoothing out the rough edges of relationships between the citizen and government and bureaucracy and bringing about important policy change.” Mr. McMurtry also emphasized the vital role the office plays today: “The reality is we live in a society that's becoming increasingly bureaucratic and depersonalized. Even with the best intentions, governments are becoming more remote from the citizens whom they serve. While individual members of the legislature continue to play a most vital role,
    [Show full text]
  • INSTIT WATCH Sum04
    institution watch SPRING 2009 G VOLUME 5, NUMBER 1 “An institution is any place in which people who have Monitoring the been labeled as having an intellectual disability are isolated, segregated and/or congregated. An institution is any place in progress toward which people do not have, or are not allowed to exercise a vision of full control over their lives and their day to day decisions. An institution is not defined merely by its size.” community living Deinstitutionalization Task Force for all persons with intellectual disabilities. This is a newsletter written and produced by the People First of Canada- Photo: Gary Beechey, BDS Studios CACL JointTask Force on On March 31, 2009, the last of the large government operated Deinstitutionalization. institutions for persons with intellectual disabilities in Ontario — For more information, Huronia Regional Centre, Rideau Regional Centre and contact Don Gallant at Southwestern Regional Centre — finally and officially closed. (416) 661-9611 or Shelley Rattai at (866) 854-8915. These closures signal a new era in Ontario — an era in which people of all abilities can contribute and participate fully in community. A day to celebrate — an era to embrace. COMMENTARY BY CATHERINE FRAZEE Professor of Distinction, School of Disability Studies at Ryerson University As reflection and response to the Freedom Tour film and the closure of Ontario’s Institutions, March 31, 2009 HAT CAN YOU SAY at a time like this? What can you say in a moment that is heavy with the honour and fierce conviction of the men and women who have Wbrought us this mighty film? What can you say when you are breathless from what you have just witnessed, not breathless from the crimes and degradations of these dark and ugly places, but breathless from the sheer force of so much survival, so much resistance, so much humanity.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Moncton President Raymond Théberge Nominated for Federal Language Watchdog: Radio-Canada
    23 novembre 2017 – CBC New Brunswick University of Moncton president Raymond Théberge nominated for federal language watchdog: Radio-Canada Previous nominee, Madeleine Meilleur, withdrew her candidacy after controversy over political donation The president of the largest French-language university in Canada outside Quebec is the Liberal government's nominee to be the next commissioner of official languages, Radio-Canada is reporting. A Franco-Manitoban, Raymond Théberge has been president and vice-chancellor of the Moncton, N.B., university since 2012. Théberge previously served as a deputy minister, which is a senior non-political role, in the government of former Ontario Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty. The official languages commissioner is an officer of Parliament whose job it is to ensure both official languages have equal status in federal institutions, legislation and in Parliament itself. The reported appointment comes after the previous nominee, Madeleine Meilleur, withdrew her candidacy after it emerged that the former Ontario Liberal cabinet minister had donated to the federal Liberal Party and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau when he was campaigning to head up the party. Théberge was never a member of the Liberal Party of Canada nor did he donate to the party, Radio-Canada reported. Before being officially appointed, a nominee must appear before a House of Commons committee, a process that could take a few weeks. When the Trudeau government first chose Meilleur as commissioner, Francophone groups and opposition parties sharply criticized her nomination, arguing the commissioner must be independent of any political influence. The process for nominating Meilleur was also criticized. The NDP argued the Liberals violated the Official Languages Act by not consulting opposition parties before making the nomination.
    [Show full text]