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Solidarity March with CUPE-Ont Against Austerity & Privatization
Submitted by ocap on Mon, 05/23/2016 - 21:32.
Friday May 27
11:30am
Meet @ Toronto City Hall Square
Bay and Queen
Food Provided
Solidarity march on the financial district with CUPE-Ontario
The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE)- Ontario are marching on the banks at Bay and King to challenge their agenda of privatization and austerity and OCAP will be marching with them. Ontario Hydro, health care, public housing, the delivery of social services - governments are preparing to try and sell all of these off to the banks and corporations. This means increased costs, reduced services and deeper poverty.
Reclaim The Streets Rally & March
Submitted by ocap on Mon, 05/23/2016 - 19:25.
Thursday, June 23, 5:30pm, Regent Park Community Health Centre
Downtown East Women Rally & March to End Violence Against Women &
Gender Based Violence
In memory of women who have died on the streets - Stop the violence, Reclaim the Streets!
Every year we march in the Downtown East neighborhood of Toronto in memory of Carolyn Connolly and to honour too many other women, friends and family, that we have lost over the years. We march against the many daily occurrences of violence on our streets – the targeting of homeless, street-involved, racialized, sex workers, and Indigenous women, two-spirit, and trans folks. We march to demand better – an end to this violence and better housing, support and services that everyone deserves!
Talking About Social Justice: OCAP Speaking Series - May 19
Submitted by ocap on Fri, 05/13/2016 - 19:18.UPDATE: Audio from May 19th, 'Organizing and Disruption', now available-
Click Here to listen!
3rd Thursday of every month
6:00PM
St. Luke's Church (Education Centre)
353 Sherbourne Street
Free Event with: Dinner, Childcare, Wheelchair Access, Tokens
Once a month, join OCAP for a new, free speaking series on a bunch of topics central to organizing around poor people's issues! A new topic will be presented every month and all events are open to the public. Come on out, invite your friends and please share widely!
May 19th - Organizing and Disruption
Speakers: Chanteal-lee Winchester and John Clarke
- What are examples of people winning what they need?
- Why is disruption important?
- How do we fight to win?
Open Letter to Toronto City Council from Agencies and Workers Regarding the Shelter Crisis
Submitted by ocap on Wed, 03/30/2016 - 17:47.March 23, 2016
To the Members of Toronto City Council:
We are concerned agencies, organizations and individuals that work directly with people experiencing homelessness and who struggle to access safe and adequate shelter on a nightly basis. We are writing with regards to the city’s lack of response to the homelessness crisis and the dangerous, overcrowded and unacceptable state of the emergency shelters in the city.
Recently the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP) released a report, entitled Out in the Cold: The Crisis in Toronto’s Shelter System, that details the experiences of over 100 service users in shelters and Out of the Cold programs. The report highlights concerns about unsafe conditions and difficulties with access. It also confirms that despite a promise made by city council to keep occupancy rates at 90%, shelters across all sectors continue to operate well above that each and every night.
Basic Income in the Hands of the Liberal Party
Submitted by ocap on Thu, 03/17/2016 - 18:26.Both the Federal Government and the Wynne Regime in Ontario have been making noises of late about the notion of introducing a system of Basic Income. The Provincial Budget even suggests that a pilot project will be set in motion in a community to be determined. Clearly, a significant development in the area of social policy is possible and we must ask ourselves how we should view this.
At first glance, especially as the impact of austerity and social cutbacks throws ever more people into poverty, the idea that everyone should be guaranteed a certain minimum level of income that lifts them out of poverty is enormously appealing. If that was all we were considering here, the matter would be very clear cut and Basic Income would have our unqualified support. Sadly, however, things are less straightforward and the issue raises some alarm bells. In this regard, there are several questions to consider.
129 Years of Neglect: A Brief History of Toronto's Shelter Conditions, 1887 - 2016
Submitted by ocap on Fri, 03/11/2016 - 22:57.The warehousing of homeless people in Toronto in overcrowded and vile conditions has a long history, as this collection from the past shows. Under the impact of austerity and redevelopment, the situation in 2016 is especially dreadful. The appalling levels of overcrowding are lethal at the moment and constitute an assault on health and dignity. OCAP is demanding that the Federal Armouries be opened to provide emergency shelter, as they were at various times in the 1990s and again in 2004. Pressure must be take off the system and we and our allies are working hard to prevail up Mayor John Tory and the City Council to act immediately.
As Food Prices Soar, Ontario Liberal Budget Intensifies the War on the Poor
Submitted by ocap on Thu, 02/25/2016 - 22:29.The 2016 Ontario Budget provides an increase for those on Ontario Works (OW) and the Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP) that is pegged below even the official rate of inflation, let alone the real cost of living increases that poor people are experiencing.
The Budget provides a wretched 1.5% increase to those on social assistance, with an extra pittance for those with the lowest incomes of all, single people without children on OW, that will provide them with a total additional payment of $25 a month. At present, they are seeking to survive on a maximum of $681 a month. These increases will not even kick in until September and October.
#OutintheCold Report Officially Released!
Submitted by ocap on Mon, 02/15/2016 - 19:48.A survey and study of Toronto's shelter system backup, the volunteer-run Out of the Cold (OOTC) program, conducted last month by members of the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty has been publicly released today and is already driving discussion around the ongoing implosion of the emergency shelter system.
Why Poor & Homeless People Should Welcome The Refugees
Submitted by ocap on Mon, 02/08/2016 - 18:51.Over the last few weeks, the OCAP office has taken a lot of calls from people living in poverty who question whether refugees should be allowed into Canada when so many are experiencing homelessness and hard times. An expression we keep hearing is that 'we should take care of our own first'. This is our response to such ideas and to those who want us to blame the refugees rather than look at the real reasons why there is poverty and homelessness.
Canada has, of course, been shaped by immigration and the history of the people who have come here is hardly a picture of easy times and luxurious treatment. Those fleeing persecution and poverty have always experienced discrimination and super exploitation. At the same time, immigrants have always faced the lie that they were somehow 'queue jumpers' enjoying special treatment. Refugees coming here today from Syria and other countries face the same slanders. Lots of hateful and false claims of refugees getting special treatment are all over the internet. One widely circulated offering, for example, suggested that refugees are provided with $2,470 per month when this figure included a one time start up payment and presented it as monthly payment. Those who are privately sponsored, moreover, don't get government assistance. The free ride for the refugees is a racist myth you should take with a whole salt mine.
MARCH ON CITY HALL! OPEN NEW EMERGENCY SHELTERS NOW! Wednesday, February 17, 11AM, Queen & Sherbourne
Submitted by ocap on Mon, 02/01/2016 - 22:22.TORONTO'S HOMELESS SHELTERS ARE BURSTING AT THE SEAMS
March on City Hall
Wednesday, February 17
Assemble: Queen and Sherbourne, 11.00 AM
Soup Provided