Toronto Emergency Services Down to 75% Staffing Levels
I'm just trying to get the word out everyone. If you look at the wording of official City of Toronto corporation when it comes to Emergency Services, here are a few quotes:
The official statement from Mayor David Miller (who, BTW, happens to have a twitter page @mayormiller.)
And although impacted by the work stoppage, emergency medical services will continue to operate...
And city councilor for my area, Mark Grimes, put on his twitter page @Mark_Grimes:
I regret the inconveniences caused by the strike. The City is trying to bring this to a quick resolution. Emergency Services are operating.
Because the city is so focused on the lack of garbage collection, the public is still not being told clearly that when you call 911 for an ambulance, there will be less dispatchers to answer the phones, and there will be less paramedics on the road to take patients to the hospital by ambulance. Emergency response times will be affected, how could they not be with only 75% of us working?
In an emergency, seconds can make the difference between life and death. The politicians are therefore playing with people's lives at this point, asking for unreasonable concessions that will probably end up with the Province of Ontario stepping in and passing legislation, as John Laforet discusses in his blogpost City Negotiators Need to Ask ‘What Would Arbitration Do?’
I received my phone call last night informing me that I am not supposed to come to my scheduled shift for this evening. Please understand, I am not exaggerating, I am an emergency medical dispatcher for the City of Toronto. I was scheduled to go into work tonight. I can personally attest that there will be one less person to answer the phone and dispatch ambulances if you call 911 for an ambulance tonight. I am officially on strike.
Ask yourself, should the City of Toronto be able to put public health at risk for their political maneuvering? This is just plain wrong. The people that are really hurt over this are the sick and elderly, the weak and dying, those who already have no one to stand up for them. Call or email or write the mayor's office and your local city councilor and tell them that you want 100% of the Emergency Medical Services to be operational!
You can find a copy of Mayor Miller's statement as well as links to many of the media resources on the Toronto strike at Torontopedia.ca. Please help raise awareness that 911 ambulance dispatchers and paramedics are on strike as well by passing this post on to others. Thank you for your support and comments.
Sovereign Immunity Must be Overruled
I agree with president Obama on a lot of things, like reducing the influence of the military industrial complex, or leveraging governmental authority to make health care affordable to the citizens of the United States, or being more open and diplomatic with Islamic countries but to name a few things. On his economic policies I think the things he has tried to do to help the average American taxpayer, like mortgage assistance and higher taxes on the wealthy are good too. He should not have agreed to bail out the banks in my opinion, but I realize that is pretty much a lost cause at this point.
Professor Turley from George Washington University is right in this case, to disagree with president Obama over the issues of sovereign immunity. To give the government a free hand to invade the privacy of its citizens, and to give the Bush administration a "get out of jail free" card for all of the illegal and immoral acts that it perpetrated while in power, is just plain wrong. This is something that every U.S. citizen should know about and should take steps to raise awareness and to create a discussion about where this kind of decision will lead us. We don't want to go there. The government is powerful enough without closing the door on its citizens ability to question its actions.
The End is Near
Is America really ready for a change? I hope so. I think that the rest of the world is ready too, at least the part I live in. This will be the second presidential election that I have witnessed from the Canadian side of the border, and I'm hoping that this time I won't be so disappointed. Part of me still can't believe that "W." was re-elected but fortunately his chapter in history as "leader of the free world" will soon be over.
Since 2003 I have met only a single person in Toronto that said they would have voted for Bush if given the opportunity. I know that out west there are more Bush sympathizers, but here the opinion is that he was and is a terrible president, probably the worst president in the history of the United States. I would have to agree.
There was an article in the New York Times the other day about Bush's decision for the troop surge in Iraq. This article praised Bush for sending in more troops and credited this decision to the decrease in violence there. I agree that tactically it was the right thing to do, the results speak for themselves. What the article failed to remind us was that Bush invaded Iraq illegally. He generated false intelligence and presented it to congress. It is quite simple, really, he is a traitor. Unfortunately being the president of the United States gives him a lot of legal and political clout and it looks like he will get away with it. In the past, U. S. citizens have been executed for much lesser crimes. It would be my greatest joy to see him prosecuted after he leaves office but I think the chances of that are quite slim.
As far as I am concerned the "troop surge" is one of the few things that Bush did right, but it wouldn't have been necessary if Iraq hadn't been invaded in the first place.
I'm still a registered voter in the state of Oklahoma, and I will be voting for Barak Obama this November. If you are an American reading this please remember all of the blood that has been spilled, relations soured, reputations tarnished, and ask yourself, Was it worth it? Are we any better off? Are Americans really safer? Saddam is dead but Osama is still out there. The rich are richer and the poor are poorer. It is time for a change. Open your eyes.