Macbraughton
Culture – Creativity – ConflictWelcome to Mimico
Posted onOctober 29, 2009I was looking up directions today on Google Maps and tried to zoom and accidentally activated their Street View feature. I didn’t know that they had mapped our neighborhood yet, the last time I had checked had been quite a while ago. From the looks of the photos they were taken over the summer.
So, anybody wondering what it looks like where I live in Canada but can’t come for a visit, now you can see for yourself. And like any good trip to Mimico, we have to start at the Beer Store…
Toronto Emergency Services Down to 75% Staffing Levels
Posted onJune 23, 2009I’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.
The American Financial Meltdown Finally Comes to Canada
Posted onSeptember 18, 2008Shares of Manulife Financial Corp. erased 6.22 per cent, or $2.24, to $33.76 after it disclosed more than $800 million (U.S.) in total exposure to troubled Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., AIG and Washington Mutual Inc. Canada’s largest insurance company made that revelation late yesterday, adding it would take an unspecified third-quarter charge with respect to some of those holdings.
Link to the original article here.
This is only the tip of the iceberg for the spillover effects of the U.S. economy on Canada, I’m afraid. I’ve been talking to a lot people about the financial problems south of the border over the last year and most of them have thought that Canada was immune. The banks here were’nt giving out subprime mortgage loans (though the recently stopped practice of giving a 45-year loan with no downpayment I would argue is pretty much the same thing). So everything was okay, right? Wrong, because although Canadian banks weren’t giving the subprime loans, they were heavily invested in American companies that did.
It still amazes me, that the citizens of the biggest trading partner of the U.S. can think they’re not going to not be negatively effected by the economic problems down south. Though there seems to be a bit of a delay here, the tide is coming in nonetheless. The next dominoe to fall? I’m betting (and I must admit hoping) on the Toronto housing market. The “strong financial sector” here was supposedly the reason that housing prices had gone down across the country everywhere but here. The out of control speculators here now have nothing left to prop up the overinflated housing prices. It is going to be an interesting winter.
Recent Comments
Close block