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	<title>Social Policy in Ontario &#187; Recorder and Times</title>
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		<title>Blame Tory policies for rising crime rate</title>
		<link>http://spon.ca/blame-tory-policies-for-rising-crime-rate/2010/11/18/</link>
		<comments>http://spon.ca/blame-tory-policies-for-rising-crime-rate/2010/11/18/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Nov 2010 14:07:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Duncan Matheson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Child & Family Debates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[corrections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[crime prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ideology]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://spon.ca/?p=5733</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[November 17, 2010
The fundamental factor behind most crime and criminal behaviour is poverty. The Tories have done a fantastic job of creating and spreading that around. Under their irresponsible fiscal and social leadership, the gap between rich and poor exploded and continues to grow. Yet services remain underfunded...  Government priorities remain upside down. Children are left to languish while services are chopped to fund unsustainable, irresponsible tax cuts to profitable corporations...  Are the Tories tough on crime? Absolutely not! They are only tough on the criminals their policies created.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Recorder.ca &#8211; News/Letters to the Editor<br />
November 17, 2010.    Dave Lundy, OPSEU regional vice-president</p>
<p>I read with interest your front page news story with the headline &#8220;Runciman defends mailouts.&#8221;</p>
<p>Apparently the mailouts were another in a long list of attempts by the Conservatives to portray themselves as tough on crime. I love how right-wing Tories walk around with their chests puffed up, exclaiming for any and all: &#8220;Hey, we&#8217;re tough on crime.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;We are tougher on crime than anyone else,&#8221; they say. Or &#8220;we invented boot camps for Ontario&#8217;s youth.&#8221; Their philosophy is &#8220;lock&#8217;em up.&#8221; Build more jails and follow the U.S. example.</p>
<p>Well, first you have to create the criminals, and boy, the Tories have done and continue to do a great job at that. First here in Ontario under Harris, now federally, they ravaged the social safety net. Look at unfunded children&#8217;s mental health care, reduced funding to classrooms and elimination of after-school programs for youth.</p>
<p>The Conservatives drastically cut welfare payments to families and single parents. They removed classroom support staff. They launched a legislative attack on unions to roll back union density and make Ontario&#8217;s workforce more &#8220;flexible,&#8221; they said.</p>
<p>The result was an explosion of temporary private manpower agencies and dead-end jobs. Over 500,000 Ontario families lost the benefits and pensions that they worked so hard to achieve. Then they changed the labour laws to ensure that it would be virtually impossible to qualify for overtime pay outside of a unionized worksite.</p>
<p>They also passed laws to contain unionization drives so workers could not unionize to recover lost wages and benefits, so families took on two, three even four jobs to make ends meet. This, of course, put added pressure on families and many of them disintegrated.</p>
<p>Some were forced to look for social housing, but the Tories anticipated that, and totally eliminated provincial funding for social housing, creating a crisis that communities across Ontario are struggling to deal with to this day.</p>
<p>Of course, the children were the hardest hit. How have we grown used to the idea of children and families living on the streets, and surviving through eating at the now institutionalized local food bank?</p>
<p>The minimum wage was left to languish to the point that even working full-time, a person could not support a family. Funding for higher education was hacked away to the point where our young people are now faced with a choice of obtaining higher education only through mortgaging their future decades of potential earnings.</p>
<p>But that just makes them more &#8220;flexible&#8221; as employees, right Bob, Steve and Gord? No French-style student demonstrations here.</p>
<p>The fundamental factor behind most crime and criminal behaviour is poverty. The Tories have done a fantastic job of creating and spreading that around. Under their irresponsible fiscal and social leadership, the gap between rich and poor exploded and continues to grow. Yet services remain underfunded.</p>
<p>Current Liberal policies are virtually indistinguishable from old Tory ones. Look out. The Children&#8217;s Aid Societies across the province are next on the chopping block.</p>
<p>Government priorities remain upside down. Children are left to languish while services are chopped to fund unsustainable, irresponsible tax cuts to profitable corporations -the ones that continue to cut jobs and ship profits out of the province.</p>
<p>Are the Tories tough on crime? Absolutely not! They are only tough on the criminals their policies created. I have not heard either MPP Steve Clark or MP Gord Brown or even Senator Runicman once publicly call for the removal of the convicted criminal Conrad Black from the Order of Canada list.</p>
<p>Dave Lundy, OPSEU regional vice-president, Merrickville</p>
<p>&lt; http://www.recorder.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2848735 &gt;</p>
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		<title>Home-care service initiatives invaluable, clients tell gathering</title>
		<link>http://spon.ca/home-care-service-initiatives-invaluable-clients-tell-gathering/2010/09/03/</link>
		<comments>http://spon.ca/home-care-service-initiatives-invaluable-clients-tell-gathering/2010/09/03/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Sep 2010 15:27:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Duncan Matheson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Child & Family Debates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mental Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poverty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[standard of living]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://spon.ca/?p=4914</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sept 1, 2010
The celebration in Brockville focused on three aging-at-home services, including the Home at Last and Home First programs for patients who would otherwise be waiting in hospital beds for nursing home spaces to become available...  however, their praise was for the SMILE program (Seniors Managing Independent Living Easily) delivered by CPHC, Bayshore Home Health and the Red Cross...  Last spring's closure of 15 beds at Brockville General Hospital was a result of the policy, said Thompson, noting the beds were no longer needed after alternate care patients began receiving health care at home.]]></description>
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<p>Recorder.ca &#8211; City and District<br />
Sept 1, 2010.   Posted By NICK GARDINER , STAFF WRITER<br />
Bob Trussell is eager to tout the benefits of what he calls a &#8220;10-star&#8221; aging-at-home health care strategy.</p>
<p>The  81-year-old retired salesman told an audience of 60 health-care  providers Tuesday how services provided at home have allowed him and his  wife Anne to stay at home, despite recent health problems.</p>
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<p>&#8220;This is keeping us in our home. I&#8217;m able to sit out back with Anne and feed the birds and enjoy what we can,&#8221; said Trussell.<br />
Trussell  and Doris Seabrooke of Athens provided testimonials to local home-care  initiatives during a meeting arranged by the South East Local Health  Integration Network (LHIN) and hosted by Brockville&#8217;s Community and  Primary Health Care (CPHC) agency which delivers some of the services.</p>
<p>Similar  services are provided under different titles and acronyms by the  province&#8217;s 14 LHINS and each held a celebration Tuesday timed to  coincide with announcement of funding by Health Minister Deb Matthews.</p>
<p>The  celebration in Brockville focused on three aging-at-home services,  including the Home at Last and Home First programs for patients who  would otherwise be waiting in hospital beds for nursing home spaces to  become available.</p>
<p>In the case of Trussell and Seabrooke, however,  their praise was for the SMILE program (Seniors Managing Independent  Living Easily) delivered by CPHC, Bayshore Home Health and the Red  Cross.</p>
<p>Bob Trussell said he lives on a pension and the program has  helped with meals, personal respite, household chores and care for his  wife that he could not accomplish alone.</p>
<p>He said Anne has had  heart surgery and a stroke, is partially paralyzed and legally blind  while he has had both knees replaced and has knee and shoulder problems  that limit his ability to help his wife.</p>
<p>Through the SMILE  program, however, Anne was provided with a walker to promote her  mobility, a gate to prevent her from falling out of bed, weekly sponge  baths, meals, blind-training from the CNIB, a Lifeline connection to  emergency help if something happens when she is alone and many other  services, said Trussell.</p>
<p>Moreover, respite service was provided to keep Anne company and allow Bob time for personal interests or to run errands.<br />
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// ]]&gt;</script>&#8220;According to government standards, we live in poverty but our cup runneth over,&#8221; said Trussell.</p>
<p>Despite his own ailments, Trussell said he gets as much exercise as possible, including riding a lawn mower to cut his grass.</p>
<p>&#8220;I want to get all the help I can get, but I don&#8217;t want to take what I don&#8217;t need.&#8221;</p>
<p>Doris  Seabrooke, who was also on hand to provide a testimonial for the  program, showed a similar reluctance to accept help &#8220;for anything I can  do myself.&#8221;</p>
<p>A fall on the ice a couple of years ago left Seabrooke  with a badly injured shoulder that required surgery and continuing  therapy.</p>
<p>But she is determined to continue living at the active  beef farm she built with her late husband Harold, with a little help  from the SMILE team.</p>
<p>&#8220;My right arm is still strong but I can&#8217;t pull up the zipper on my clothes or wash my hair,&#8221; said Seabrooke.</p>
<p>&#8220;And you should try shovelling with one arm tied behind your back. Step on it and it will whirl around and hit you in the head.&#8221;</p>
<p>She  does sweep the floor again after being unable for a year, but relies on  help from the program for outside maintenance once a week and inside  cleaning every second week.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s pretty neat. I invite you all to come and see it,&#8221; joked Seabrooke.</p>
<p>The  SMILE program is provided by the South East Ontario Victorian Order of  Nurses, which contracts agencies to deliver it locally.</p>
<p>In Leeds,  Grenville and Lanark, the service is provided by Bayshore Health  Services, the Red Cross and Community and CPHC, which hosted Tuesday&#8217;s  event.</p>
<p>Ruth Kitson, CPHC executive director, said she enjoyed the  testimonials for a popular program which has a waiting list of  clients.</p>
<p>Kitson said it is unclear how the funding announcement by  Matthews will be rolled out, but she is &#8220;guardedly optimistic&#8221; it will  include additional program delivery from the CPHC.</p>
<p>In London  Tuesday morning, Matthews said $272 million is being invested in  home-care services as part of a strategy to reduce people&#8217;s reliance on  emergency rooms and hence to reduce waiting times.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a strategy  that has already worked to reduce the number of hospital beds used for  alternate care patients from 60 per cent to 28 per cent in seven  hospitals across the South East region, LHIN chairman Georgina Thompson  told the Recorder and Times after formal ceremonies.</p>
<p>Last spring&#8217;s  closure of 15 beds at Brockville General Hospital was a result of the  policy, said Thompson, noting the beds were no longer needed after  alternate care patients began receiving health care at home.</p>
<p>Judy Stewart, president of the South East Ontario VON, said &#8220;client-choice&#8221; is an attractive feature of the program.</p>
<p>Like  Trussell and Seabrooke, many seniors are staunchly independent and  don&#8217;t want help for something they can do themselves, said Stewart.</p>
<p>Moreover, people may self-refer to the SMILE program by calling 1-888- 866-6647 to enquire about receiving services, she said.</p>
<p>But she noted the criteria is restrictive &#8220;to capture the frailest of the frailest senior citizens.&#8221;</p>
<p>Patients  must be over 75, suffering from an age-related disease and living alone  or with a caregiver unable to provide all their needs, said Stewart.</p>
<p>Moreover,  they must have a cognitive impairment and an unscheduled medical  appointment in the 50 days previous to receiving services.</p>
<p>&lt; http://www.recorder.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?archive=true&amp;e=2737446 &gt;</p>
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