Showing posts with label Halifax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halifax. Show all posts

Monday, April 26, 2010


CANADIAN POLITICS- HALIFAX:
HALIFAX PROTESTS THE G8.



The notorious organized crime group, the G8 , is holding one of their regular plotting sessions this week in Halifax Nova Scotia, and Haligonians were out to protest their presence and actions. Here from the Halifax Media Co-op is what happened on Sunday.
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Protesters Shame G8 Agenda
March and rally call for a new direction
by Hillary Bain Lindsay


G8 leaders are prioritizing profit over people and the environment, say protesters. The march and rally were high-energy and filled with music, chanting and dancing. Many participants were frustrated that the march was re-routed by police from the original route down Spring Garden Road. Photo: Hillary Lindsay
Share Del.icio Also posted by Hillary:
Also in Environment:
•Protesters Shame G8 Agenda
•March Against the G8 in Halifax
•Rally 'welcomes' G8 to Halifax
•Citadel G8 Street Dance Party
•From Guerrilla Gardening to SPIN Farming
•G8 is Failing, say Climate Activists
•Farmers, Musicians, Food Activists and Students Oppose Corporate Agriculture
•Peasants Day protest feeds for free
•The Tide Is In!
•UPDATE: NDP climate bill survives vote "We're going to beat back the G8 attack. We're going to beat, beat back, the G8 attack," sang more than 300 protesters as they flooded onto South Park Street in Halifax on Sunday. Marchers were demonstrating against the G8 development ministers' meeting taking place in Halifax this week.

"I'm repulsed by the fact that the G8 development ministers are meeting in my town," says protester Cole Webber. "They represent an agenda that's about profit making without any regard for human needs and I think they should be opposed vigorously."

The official agenda for the G8 development ministers' meeting, includes maternal and child health in developing countries as a top priority, but march organizer Kaley Kennedy balks at the claim. "Where are G8 leaders when the International Monetary Fund and World Bank force governments in poor countries to slash the social safety net, shifting more and more of the burden of care for the sick and dying on the women of the world?" she asks.

G8 countries account for only 14 per cent of the world's population but control the majority of the world's wealth and almost half the votes at the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The IMF has been accused of worsening poverty in developing countries with its Structural Adjustment Programs.

It's not only in the developing world where policies of G8 countries are worsening poverty, points out Fiona Traynor from Dalhousie Legal Aid. "We have a housing crisis in Nova Scotia," she says. "We have a lack of decent, affordable housing that's putting people at risk. When people spend too much on shelter, they can't afford to feed their families."

Traynor says people can't expect leaders of G8 countries to fix the problems they've created in the first place. "We have to come up with our own solutions and not wait for them to give us answers."

One of those solutions is strengthening local economies, says Tom Oommen, from Inverness County in Cape Breton. "Inverness County is one of the many victims of the global economy in Canada and around the world," he says. "The G8 are the overseers of the global economy.... What they want to have happen is killing rural Canada [and] destroying farmers.... A lot of the fisheries have collapsed now, and that's because of the global economy."

Oommen says people need to start supporting their local farmers, fishers, craftspeople and businesses; otherwise, local economies crumble and young people are forced to leave rural communities.

"What's happening is a lot of people who used to have work in the Maritime provinces are going to work in the Tar Sands," he says. Oommen sees the Tar Sands as a symbol of a global economic system that is destroying the environment.

Jada Voyageur lives downstream from the Tar Sands. "People in my community are dying of rare cancers," she says. Voyageur is a member of the Athabascan Chipewyan First Nation and was a guest speaker at the rally. "We live downstream from one of the most destructive projects on Earth and they keep approving more development."

The government has no right to approve new developments because the land is not theirs, says Simon Reece, Downstream Coordinator for the Keepers of the Athabasca, who was also a speaker at the rally. "It's our land," he says. "We're the ones that have been living here for thousands of years. We're getting encroached on again. Not just by Indian Affairs pushing us onto reserves but now by industry."

"It's economics," says Reece, explaining a global system that's destroying communities and the environment. "The economics of North America is failing the whole world."

That economic system has a name, asserts Kyle Buott President of the Halifax Dartmouth District Labour Council. Its name is capitalism. “Capitalism is not working for workers in Canada,” he says. “It’s not working for workers in the US. It’s not working for workers throughout the world.

The march and rally were high-energy and filled with music, chanting and dancing. Many participants were frustrated that the march was re-routed by police from the original route down Spring Garden Road. Instead, the march wound its way down the much less visible South Park Street and South Street.

"I would have liked to see us use our collective strength - having a couple hundred people here today - to take the march where we want it to go," says Webber who was disappointed by the decision to comply with police orders. "It's our march, we have the numbers to take the street."

Traynor was also angered by police intimidation, saying people have to stand up to police misconduct and to G8 leaders and their vision of the world.

"We have to turn it around," she told the crowd. "We have to tell them what we want."
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The protests today were not as uneventful, but only one arrest resulted when police moved to clear the streets that demonstrators were blocking. Here's the story from the Canwest News Service.
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N.S. woman arrested at Halifax G8 protest.

HALIFAX - A Nova Scotia woman was charged with assaulting a police officer after demonstrators blocked a Halifax street during a G8 protest Monday morning.

Toni Marie MacAfee, 35, allegedly struck an officer in the chest when he asked MacAfee to move to the sidewalk off Marginal Road, near the city's port, where demonstrators blocked traffic in both directions.

The Hammonds Plains, N.S., woman was arrested immediately after the incident and was scheduled to appear in court later Monday.

Monday marked the second straight day of G8 protests in Halifax, where G8 development ministers are meeting.

The meeting are scheduled to focus on child and maternal health and on access to water.

Labour groups complain the ministers are more concerned about bank bailouts than the growing gap between rich and poor during their three days of meetings, which began Monday.

Sunday's protests took place with no arrests.
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It's not unexpected that the police and the lazier section of the media might attempt to portray the arrested union member as being at fault. Here's another item from the CBC that gives a different story from the perspective of eyewitness.
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Halifax G8 protester charged with assault
Protesters gather in Halifax on Monday as a G8-sponsored meeting kicks off at Pier 21.
(Phonse Jessome/CBC)
A labour leader has been charged with assaulting a police officer after being arrested during a noisy anti-G8 demonstration in Halifax Monday morning.

About 40 people marched down Terminal Road to Pier 21, where development ministers from major industrial countries are set to meet.

Two officers struggled with a woman when police tried to move the demonstrators to a sidewalk to clear the road, said CBC reporter Phonse Jessome.

Laurie Stacy, a protester who was standing nearby, said the heavy-handed treatment was unnecessary.

"They had asked her just to move. We said we were moving, but they didn't give her enough time. The cop in charge grabbed her by her shoulder and started squeezing and just looked at her with pure hate," said Stacy.

"She told them, 'Let go of me.' They didn't. The next thing you know three of them were on top of her on the ground."

The arresting officer told CBC News that the protester pushed him.

Protest organizers identified the demonstrator as Toni MacAfee, an education officer with the Canadian Union of Postal Workers.

"It was unprovoked," organizer Kyle Buott said of MacAfee's arrest.

Bev Oda, Canada's minister of international co-operation, will kick off the G8 meeting Tuesday. The main issue is how to improve the health of the world's poorest mothers and children.

More than 200 people took part in a peaceful demonstration in Halifax on Sunday. There were no incidents and no one was arrested.

A protest organizer said G8 policies back free trade but not freedom for women.


Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/story/2010/04/26/ns-halifax-g8-protest.html#ixzz0mHEVTUbf
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Here, from the Halifax Chronicle Herald is considerably more detail, both about the arrest and the protest in general.
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Cops charge union leader at G-8 protest

By PATRICIA BROOKS ARENBURG and JEFF SIMPSON Staff Reporters
POVERTY FACTS:

Aid agencies are under pres­sure to show donor countries that their money really works in developing countries. Here are some facts, published last week by the World Bank, about the percentage of populations living on less than $1.25 a day: East Asia and the Pacific : In 1990, 54.7 per cent lived on less than $1.25 a day. In 2005, it was about 16.8 per cent. By 2015, the World Bank fore­casts 5.9 per cent.

China : 60.2 per cent in 1990; 15.9 per cent in 2005; 5.1 per cent by 2015.

Latin America : 11.3 per cent in 1990; 8.2 per cent in 2005; 5.0 per cent in 2015.

South Asia : 51.7 per cent in 1990; 40.3 per cent in 2005; 22.8 per cent in 2015.

Sub-Saharan Africa : 57.6 per cent in 1990; 50.9 per cent in 2005; 38.0 per cent in 2015.


An Atlantic union leader has been charged with assaulting a police officer during a protest of the G-8 development ministers' meetings in Halifax.

Union leaders say Toni MacAfee, education and organization officer for the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, was arrested behind the Westin Nova Scotian Hotel shortly after 8 a.m.

Halifax Regional Police confirmed this afternoon that MacAfee of Hammonds Plains was charged in the protest.

Police allege that officers asked protesters three times to move off Marginal Road in downtown Halifax because they were blocking traffic. When some of the group didn't move, police stepped in, according to a police news release.

When an officer asked a woman to move, police allege she struck him in the chest, the news release says.

MacAfee, 35, was arraigned in Halifax provincial court Monday afternoon.

She was released on a recognizance after agreeing not to go within 50 metres of the Westin Nova Scotian hotel or Pier 21 or be involved in any further G8 protests. She returns to court May 26.

"It's certainly a drummed up charge," said Jeff Callaghan, the union's Atlantic director.

He was at the opposite side of the driveway behind the Hollis Street hotel when MacAfee was arrested at what he called a peaceful demonstration.

"When the cops grabbed her, she was actually two centimetres from a curb, so it wasn't a matter of blocking traffic," Callaghan said.

"They actually reached out and grabbed her and pulled her back — pulled her towards the street. There are lots of witnesses who saw it and we have the whole thing on tape."

Callaghan, who was on his way to the Gottingen Street police station to find MacAfee at the time of the interview, saw the "tail end" of the arrest.


He saw photos that showed MacAfee with her hands pinned behind her back and "three, large, male police officers" on top of her. He was told that "she wasn't resisting or anything."

During the protest, Callaghan said officers "were pushing people" and one cop reached into the crowd and grabbed his flag.

"They were just anxious to make some sort of arrest," he said.

Palmeter said police have made "painstaking efforts to work with these groups to ensure that their right to a peaceful protest is provided. However, if they are in violation, we are duty bound to respond and take some action. If required, then an arrest will be made."

The protest began at about 7 a.m. as more than 50 people from labour and community groups marched from Cornwallis Park toward Pier 21 on Marginal Road, leading to the G-8 development ministers' conference.

The Canadian labour groups were there to support the demands of their international partners, who are lobbying for funding for maternal programs, HIV and AIDS prevention and for healthcare for all , Tony Tracy of the Canadian Labour Congress said.

"Toni MacAfee is well-respected, well-regarded by all within the labour movement throughout Atlantic Canada and is someone who is looked up to in the trade union and community organizations with which she has been very active for many years," Tracy, the group's Atlantic representative, said.

The Canadian Union of Postal Workers web site states that MacAfee attended the Canadian Peace Conference held in Toronto in December 2008; the World Social Forum in Brazil in January 2009 and the March on Gaza in Cairo, Egypt from December 2009 to January 2010.

The purpose of the CUPW's delegation was Cairo was, in part, "to support the struggle of Palestinian people for justice (and) to make links with other activists."

MacAfee "knows what her lawful rights are and that she's not to be provocative or anything back," Callaghan said.

As far as he knows, she's never been arrested at any other rally, including the Gaza March, which had a heavy police presence.


On Sunday, about 300 people turned out for demonstrations against G-8 economic policies.


Environmental, labour, social justice and student groups banded together to form the G8 Welcoming Committee.

"Civil society is always excluded from these meetings," Kyle Buott, a protest organizer who is also part of the Halifax-Dartmouth and District Labour Council, said in an interview.

"That’s a big problem."

Buott said he believes there is an alternative to having the world’s eight wealthiest countries set policies that affect everyone else. He accused the G8 of bearing responsibility for the global financial crisis by backing unfair trade, bank deregulation and layoffs.

"We are opposed to the G8 as an overall body," he said.

"The G8 policies have caused the economic crisis that has ruined the lives of so many people."

The protesters massed at Victoria Park on Spring Garden Road before marching through the downtown streets to Cornwallis Park, across from the Westin Nova Scotian hotel.

They followed a banner reading Capitalism Isn’t Working For Workers and were accompanied by people chanting protest slogans, banging on drums, shaking tambourines and spinning hula hoops.

Dozens of police in marked and unmarked vehicles, on foot and on horseback, escorted the protesters down South Park and South streets. At one point, two officers on horseback struggled to control their skittish animals — one horse banged into and kicked a parked Honda Civic. Protesters, some of whom were dressed in black hoodies and wore handkerchiefs over their faces, jeered loudly and waved flags in officers’ faces. Police grabbed one of the flags.

"The police have made some errors on this march as far as going into the march and taking people’s things," Buott said. "That always poses problems."

Otherwise, the demonstration was largely successful and without conflict, he said. Police agreed, reporting that there were no arrests or confrontations.

David Bush, another protest organizer with the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition, was pleased with the protest yet critical of officers for changing the planned route at the last minute, keeping them away from the storefronts of pedestrian-heavy Spring Garden Road.

"It was just surprising that we couldn’t go down Spring Garden," Bush said.

"We wanted it to be family friendly and safe and it turned out to be that way. But there just seemed to be undue pressure from the police.

"We had a very good, positive energy. But the way the police acted just seemed a little unwarranted."

Development ministers from the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and Canada, as well as representatives of the European Union, meet today until Wednesday to draft proposals for the G8 Summit in Huntsville, Ont., in June.

The Halifax sessions will include Canada’s initiative to improve maternal and child health in poor countries. About 350,000 to 500,000 women die while giving birth every year and about nine million children under the age of five die every year.

"I look forward to welcoming my G8 colleagues to Canada," Bev Oda, the federal minister of international co-operation, said in an earlier news release.

"I believe that by working together, G8 countries can make major advancements in reducing maternal and child mortality, humanitarian goals that must be advanced, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa."

Catherine Abreu of the Nova Scotia Coalition for Climate Action said she is disappointed the ministers won’t be discussing global warming.

"Climate change is a phenomenon that’s really affecting the well-being of mothers."

Megan Leslie, the NDP MP for Halifax, participated in the march and said protests can have an impact on the agenda of such meetings.

"I really support the fact that (the) community is coming together to say, ‘We want these issues at the table. We want to talk about the real way to deal with maternal and newborn health.’

"It’s important voices are strong and voices are heard."

She cited as an example Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s initial intent to exclude family planning from the G8 maternal health agenda, which resulted in widespread criticism and Ottawa backtracking.

"They backed down," Leslie said.

"So it is really important that civil society, the community, come forward and demand certain things."

James Holloway, 29, of Halifax, attended the protest clad only in white shorts resembling a diaper and a sash across his chest that bore the phrase Colonize Mine.

He said the message was referring to corporations pushing specific body images to profit from making people feel bad.

"I felt like this might be an opportunity for me to connect with my community and learn about other people’s struggles.

"To me, colonization means forcing something on people."

Earlier in the afternoon, advocates for World Vision Canada, a Christian relief organization, arranged baby strollers, cribs and toys that were painted white in the shape of the number five on the Halifax waterfront. The intent was to highlight the roughly nine million children under the age of five who die every year of preventable causes such as malaria or pneumonia.

"We know what the solutions are," spokeswoman Caroline Riseboro said.

"The solutions cost pennies, so really it’s a matter of political will."

The group is calling on Canada to contribute $1 billion for the cause to provide things like antibiotics and mosquito nets for people in developing countries.

The police had hoped to take a different approach to this protest and last week unveiled information cards they intended to distribute among demonstrators to advise them of their rights.

They were hoping to deter some of the fiery protests that have broken out at previous meetings of world leaders in Halifax when demonstrators clashed with officers in riot gear who doused people with pepper spray.
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Meanwhile events in Halifax are being watched closely by both sides of the protest divide as they get ready for the upcoming G-20 meeting in Toronto this June. Here's a story from the group 'G-20 Toronto Mobilize' (originally from the Globe and Mail) about what both sides are expecting a couple of months from now. What strikes Molly is the police plan to use a gigantic film set as a detention centre for possible arrestees. I wonder what sort of movies they make there ?
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Protesters and police get ready to square off at G20 summit
Anna Mehler Paperny

They’re preparing buses, itineraries, bathrooms and places to crash for the night; they’re fundraising, holding media-training workshops and setting up a detailed, week-long schedule of events.

Organizers behind the protests surrounding Toronto’s G20 summit in June expect people to come from as far as Vancouver, Quebec City and the United States, representing everyone from labour groups to women’s shelters and militant students.

The summit’s integrated security unit is bracing for an influx of protesters, with tenders put out for thousands of police officers from across Ontario and the country. They’ve taking possession of one of the largest film sets in North America to use as a staging ground and potentially as a place to keep detained protesters.

At the same time, the protesters have plans of their own – from dance parties to a People’s Summit, marches and so-called Black Bloc tactics, that include confrontational methods that became notorious a decade ago.

The force and intent of the planned opposition brings to mind 2001 in Quebec City and 1999 in Seattle, where demonstrations erupted in violence, with tear gas being fired on masked protesters.

“ I think for the most part, people are planning on protesting peacefully during that time. Obviously, from a security perspective, we’re planning for any eventuality. ”— Meaghan Gray, Toronto police G20 planning team

But Syed Hussan, a spokesman for the Toronto Community Mobilization Network, said this year’s summit won’t be a repeat of Seattle.

“It’s been 10 years,” he said. “We grow up. We come up with new tactics. We learn new strategies. We’re going to talk about a scale that might be as big or bigger, but it’s not the same tools. I mean, this was before Facebook. ... We can tweet.”

Mr. Hussan said the advent of social media gives protesters many more options.

The mobilization network Mr. Hussan represents is liaising with groups across Toronto, Canada and elsewhere, attempting to co-ordinate the protest actions of dozens of divergent interests – and trying to find a place to put them all.

He refuses to even estimate how many people are coming – although it’s likely in the thousands – or how much it will cost to feed them, house them and equip them with signs and media spokespeople.

A group of law students is providing pro bono legal services, and has volunteered to monitor protests as observers and, if necessary, help bail out protesters. Legal updates will be sent throughout the week, Mr. Hussan said, as well as tweets.

Mr. Hussan emphasizes much is still in the planning stage, and he’s not sure what, exactly, will come of the numerous days of action protesters plan.

Will things get violent? “It’s up to the cops,” he said. “You put 15,000 people on the streets armed with tear gas, sonar cannons, right? I assure you, none of us has a sonar cannon. Nobody has a taser.”

Councillor Adam Vaughan, in whose Trinity-Spadina ward the summit and much of the surrounding demonstrations will take place, says he hasn’t been in touch with protest planners.

“These events attract a lot of people. I’m hopeful that when folks come to talk about the global economy, no one trashes the local one ... and that whatever sort of disturbances there are, it doesn’t require imprisonment.

“My job is to make sure my residents and my businesses are talked to and given as much information as possible. ... That’s really my focus.”

Meaghan Gray, with the Toronto police force’s G20 planning team, said police have been in touch with groups like the Toronto Community Mobilization Network, although she wouldn’t elaborate on the nature of their interactions.

“I think for the most part, people are planning on protesting peacefully during that time. Obviously, from a security perspective, we’re planning for any eventuality,” she said. “We want to co-operate with protest groups that are intending to protest peacefully. ... Not everybody is as willing to participate in that process.”

Paul-Émile Auger was only 13 years old when Quebec City protesters and police took over his Old Quebec neighbourhood during the summit in 2001.

“I had no choice but to get interested in what was going on – I mean when there’s riot police and people running, this was like a battlefield in my backyard,” he said. And he’s been hooked ever since.

He’s part of a small group of people planning to make the trip from Laval – mostly sociology students like him from Laval University. He suspects they’d be able to fit in a borrowed van, as opposed to Rage, a far larger group coming from Montreal, which he said will likely require three or four buses.

Mr. Auger’s group is trying to send a message, rather than incite violence. But “to make a stand,” he says, they have to try to get behind the security fence.

“What we want is to confront, to get a message across,” he said. “Personally, I don’t want this to be violent. But I know that often when there are calls for Black Bloc formation or other street tactics, this is often a sign of an escalation and of much more violence.”

Wednesday, November 12, 2008


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-HALIFAX:
DIRECT ACTION AGAINST POVERTY IN HALIFAX:

My editing of the links has given me the opportunity to revisit sites that I often ignore. One of them is the Autonomy and Solidarity site in Ontario. From these people comes a report from the Dominion Blog (see below for link) about recent action in the Atlantic city of Halifax over the closure of a shelter for the homeless just as winter is beginning to spread his chilly claws. For another take on this see the reports at the website of the Halifax Coalition Against Poverty. Also...there you will find instructions as to what you can do in solidarity.
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Life threatening decision to close Halifax shelter gets direct action response:
Life threatening decision to close Halifax shelter gets direct action response
by Asaf Rashid, from The Dominion Weblogs,
November 8, 2008.
On Monday November 3rd, Halifax Coalition Against Poverty (HCAP) members and supporters occupied the Halifax office of Nova Scotia Department of Community Services (DCS) for deciding not to fund Pendleton Place, a “harm reduction” shelter located in the basement of St. Patrick’s Church in Halifax. The closure was a move that one local housing activist, Paul O'Hara, described as a “life and death” decision gone the wrong way, and many more have made clear there will be a high risk of serious injury or death on the streets of Halifax this winter as a consequence.

“As long as DCS will commit poor people in our community to death, HCAP will refuse to allow business as usual within the Department.", stated HCAP as the action was underway
During the occupation, HCAP members and supporters numbered over a dozen. At 10 am they entered the DCS offices, occupying the space and stating – with megaphones blaring – their opposition to the closure of the shelter and demands for affordable housing. The occupation lasted approximately an hour. One DCS employee who was particularly sought after was an upper level bureaucrat, Lynn Brogan, regarded as having been in the position to have prevented the closure of Pendleton Place.

At one point, a Department employee told the group that Lynn Brogan was not in the office. Later, they were told that she was in fact in the office and would come out to speak with the group, but by then the police had arrived and gave a ten-minute warning for the group to leave. Whether or not Lynn Brogan ever intended on coming out of hiding in her office is unknown, but the police time limit expired before anyone saw her and the group was made to leave the building under the threat of arrest and likely some police violence. The door leading outside was locked behind the group, then guarded by the police, limiting access or approachability to anyone else who may have needed the public services inside. There were no arrests in the end.
Background
DCS announced on October 21, 2008, that it would not be reopening Pendleton Place. For the past three winters, DCS has funded the shelter. It was initially opened in the winter of 2004/05, when anti-poverty groups created an uproar after Gordie Connors, a Korean War veteran, died on the streets of Halifax.

The decision to permanently close Pendleton Place, made just days before the shelter was scheduled to open for the cold season, was tied to the Department’s desire to focus provincial funds on Metro Turning Point and Berry House, two other homeless shelters in Halifax. The decision results in 16 new beds and extended hours at these shelters, but it is a deceptive move by the government. Although these shelters gained some services, there is a huge loss overall to the shelter system in Halifax. Just looking at the bed numbers, the loss is obvious. When it was in operation, Pendleton Place provided between 20 to 40 beds for homeless people.

“Whichever way you look at it, the decision not to reopen Pendleton Place is a cost cutting move by the provincial government which will take $150 000 out of the shelter system in Halifax.”, stated a pre-action notice by HCAP.

Losing Pendleton Place will produce a gap in the shelter system, particularly for individuals who are currently barred by court order from Barry House and Turning Point, homeless youth and those deemed to have addictions and behavioural problems.

Pendleton Place had a harm-reduction philosophy and a mandate as a “shelter of last resort”. As well, Metro Turning Point, Barry House and another shelter, Adsum House, all provide services that are genders specific. The only requirements to access Pendleton Place was for people to identify themselves as homeless and to be unable to access other shelters in the Halifax Regional Municipality. This openness was one of the reasons why many homeless would choose either Pendleton place or sleeping outside, according to Wayne McNaughton, long-time advocate for the homeless in Halifax. Some are intimidated just by the rigorous intake process of the other shelters.

“We recognize...both the need for (the shelter) and (that) the funds exist to create a diverse array of shelters, for men, for women, for families, for individuals who are using and for individual who are not; the government is simply lacking the will and common decency,” stated an HCAP member after the action.
Post-action update
Several HCAP members have been harassed by the police since the action, at least a couple receiving “Protection of Property” notices, barring them from being allowed on the property of the DCS office.

HCAP was one amongst several anti-homeless and anti-poverty groups, as well as individual advocates, devastated by the decision to close Pendleton. Of course, the most devastated are the users of Pendleton place, who are currently in dire straits as the days get shorter and the weather bites harder.

The action on November 3rd was only one step along the way in what can be expected to be a determined struggle to re-open the kind of shelter that Pendleton place was. But as HCAP pointed out in a leaflet handed out during the action, the struggle to re-open a shelter of last resort is part of a much larger struggle.

“We’re also demanding that everyone should have the right to housing. More shelters, more subsidized housing, and higher income assistance rates can alleviate suffering in the here and now but HCAP struggles for something greater: a world where peoples' right to housing is guaranteed and where shelter is not a commodity to be bought and sold for profit.”
More info about HCAP calls for action on this issue: http://www.hfxcap.ca/

Saturday, October 11, 2008


CANADIAN LABOUR-HALIFAX:
LET'S GO PREMIER:
In Winnipeg and in Halifax flight attendants continue to agitate against Air Canada's planned closure of their flight attendant bases. Down East the Premier of Nova Scotia has "made an offer", and flight attendants want to see if he will carry through on his promise. Here's the story from the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE).
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Halifax flight attendants want to take Premier up on his offer:
(Halifax) – The union representing almost 200 Air Canada flight attendants based in Halifax wants to take Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald up on his offer from earlier this week.

CUPE Local 4090 President Lisa Vivian Anthony says, “The premier’s Communications Director said MacDonald supports retention of a base in Halifax and would be prepared to quote ‘jump on a plane’ and lead a delegation to Air Canada headquarters in Montreal.

“We’re saying to the premier, let’s go! Just name the date and the flight attendants will be there. With almost 200 jobs on the line, and the future of air travel in Atlantic Canada hanging in the balance, we fully support the idea of a business and all-party group, led by the premier, going to Air Canada to make the case for Atlantic Canada,” says Vivian Anthony.

CUPE Nova Scotia President Danny Cavanagh says, “We need to see some decisive leadership from the premier on this issue. It’s time Nova Scotia stood up to the corporate decision-makers and bean counters at Air Canada and reminded them that dependable air travel in Atlantic Canada is not a luxury – it’s a basic right.”

Says Cavanagh, “Without these highly trained individuals based out of Halifax, there is no doubt that Halifax flights will be more vulnerable to disruption by storms in Central Canada.”
“On behalf of the 187 workers and their families who will have their lives turned upside down by this decision, we anxiously await the premier’s reply,” says Cavanagh.

For information: Danny Cavanagh, CUPE N.S. President -(902) 957-0822 (Cell); Lisa Vivian Anthony, President, CUPE Local 4090 - 873-2307 (o); John McCracken, CUPE Communications Rep.- (902) 455-4180

Friday, July 25, 2008


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-HALIFAX:
HALIFAX FREE SKOOL-LAST FREESKOOL OF THE SUMMER:
The Halifax Free Skool Collective will be holding its last series of workshops of the summer season tomorrow, Saturday, July 26. If you're in the Halifax area why not drop by and see what's it's all about. Here's the announcement.
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Subject: Last FreeSkool of the summer!
Hey all,
First off, a huge thank-you goes out to everyone who's helped make this possible! Our facilitators have been more than wonderful and have shared some really incredible things with us over the last six months, and our attendance has been amazing and participation has been more than we could have asked for ever. A big thanks to the Friendship Centre and Kitpu Youth, as well as the North Memorial library for letting us use their space, to Home-Grown Organic Foods, Uncommon Grounds, and Java Blend for keeping us fed and caffeinated every other Saturday, and a HUGE HUGE thanks to NSPIRG for helping make this all happen. Last of all, a massive thank-you to all of the co-ordinators and everyone who's helped make this run smoothly in any way possible, and to everyone who's participated in the FreeSkool.
That said, here's the scoop for this weekend! Because there are a lot of concurrent events this Saturday, including some major goings-on for pride week, we do only have a couple of workshops this week to offer, but they're good ones!
12:00 - Independent Radio Journalism Part 2: Script Writing and Audio Editing Software: With audio collected from the previous session, we will learn how to produce a piece for broadcast. The skills learned in this session include script writing and using Audacity (a Free/Open-Source software) http://audacity.sourceforge. net/download/by Neskie and David from CKDU....note: audio from this workshop will be used to produce a piece to be aired on CKDU 88.1FMAND
1:45 - a Home Tattooing discussion, by Keegan Lam
We hope that you've all had a wonderful summer, and thanks again to everyone who's participated!
-- Thanks, -
The Halifax Free Skool Collective

Thursday, July 24, 2008


CANADIAN LABOUR:
THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST AIR CANADA CUTS:

As promised here is more on the continuing campaign against the recently announced illegal cuts on the part of Air Canada management. From the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE)...

..............................


Flight attendants fight Air Canada layoffs:
CUPE members are rallying, leafleting, advertising and emailing against Air Canada’s plan to eliminate hundreds of jobs and close bases in Halifax and Winnipeg.





This action will have a devastating impact on passengers, employees, their families and ultimately on everyone in the community.



On July 10th, Air Canada management notified flight attendants in Manitoba and Halifax, that they would be laid off in November.



The layoffs would affect 144 CUPE flight attendants in Winnipeg and 187 in Halifax.



Since then the union has launched a campaign to fight the cuts and the closures.



Flight attendants are contacting politicians to get their support to have the airline withdraw its planned cuts and closures.



Meetings have been held with local MPs to get their support. A number of MPs have already intervened to help resolve this situation. Send email to your MP.



CUPE will distribute postcards this week at the Richardson International Airport in Winnipeg to raise awareness about how the cuts and closures will affect passengers.



Newspaper ads will run this week in Winnipeg’s two major newspapers.



CUPE is planning rallies for Halifax, Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg, Calgary and Vancouver on Monday, July 28th at noon.



The company plans to cut attendant bases in Winnipeg and Halifax, leaving bases in Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary and Montreal.



Air Canada asked the Minister of Labour to exempt the company from requirements of the Canada Labour Code - sections 214 to 226, Division IX, Part III.



These provisions allow for a reasonable way to address worker concerns when there are major layoffs proposed by an employer.



Minister Jean-Pierre Blackburn said he will investigate the request and report by July 30th. The union has argued that there is no justification for the exemption.



Politicians have been asked to write to Minister of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities, Lawrence Cannon to intervene on behalf of the Air Canada employees. Already letters have gone from a number of MPs and hundreds of e-mails have been sent from the public.



The union has asked to see a ‘base viability study’ Air Canada conducted after they decided to close the two bases. The airline has refused to release the study results.



The Winnipeg flight attendant base is the airline's oldest. Trans-Canada Air Line was started in 1937 and the Winnipeg base was the first established for flight attendants.



After Air Canada acquired Canadian Airlines in 2000, the company reduced the number of flight attendants to 7,200 from 8,500.



Flight attendants agreed to a 13.5 per cent wage rate cut, among other concessions, to deal with the airline's financial crisis in 2003 and 2004.



The airline was privatized in 1989. In 2000, Air Canada acquired Canadian Airlines International. The largest private sector owner of the airline is ACE Aerospace Holdings, of Toronto.



Robert Milton, Chairman of Air Canada earned a $1.2 million salary, a $3.9 million bonus and $11.2 million in stock option gains from Air Canada in 2007. He posted $23.1 million in option gains since ACE was created in October of 2004.
..............................
Here's the list of rallies planned for next Monday.........

Rallies to protest Air Canada layoffs
Calgary
Calgary Airport
Delta hotel , Marie Wright Room on the Mezzanine Level
10:00 am
Claire Renaud
President
403-870-1779
403-221-2625
CUPE 4095

Halifax
Grand Parade Square
at George and Barrington Centre
2:00 pm
Lisa Vivian Anthony
President
902-873-2307
902-430-6548
CUPE 4090

Montreal
Aéroport de Montréal
Departure Level – Door One
1:00 pm
Suzanne St-Jean
President
514-347-4658
514-422-2235
CUPE 4091

Toronto
Pearson International Airport
Arrivals Area F
(Details to be confirmed)
1:00 pm
Cidalia Ribeiro
President
416-795-4293
905-676-4293
CUPE 4092

Vancouver
International Airport
March from Sea Island Elementary School on Miller Road, up Grant McConachie Way to airport.
March begins at 10:00 am
Deborah Purvey
President
604-551-5737
604-279-9905/106
604-295-4259
CUPE 4094

Winnipeg
Air Canada Centre
355 Portage Avenue
assemble at Radisson Hotel and walk at 11:45
12 Noon
George Bouchard
President
204-999-3541
204-788-6958
CUPE 4093

When: July 28, 2008 (All Day)
Location: Across Canada
Contact: Daniela Scarpelli
Related Link: http://cupe.ca/airlines/Flight-attendants-fi


Tuesday, July 22, 2008


CANADIAN LABOUR-WINNIPEG/HALIFAX:
FLIGHT ATTENDANTS PROTEST AIR CANADA CUTS:
As reported earlier here at Molly's Blog flight attendants don't intend to take the proposed illegal cuts on the part of Air Canada laying down. In addition to the online campaign (see earlier on this blog) to pressure the federal government to obey the law in this case there will be physical protests across Canada next Monday, especially here in Winnipeg and in Halifax, the centres most affected by the dismissals. Here in Winnipeg the protest will begin at noon hour at the Radisson Hotel, and people will march from there to the downtown Air Canada building. Organizers from local 4093 of CUPE are hoping for a turnout of hundreds of CUPE members, other union members and supporters. For further updates check out the national CUPE website , the website of the Air Canada Component of CUPE or stay tuned to here at Molly's Blog.
The planned closures will eliminate 143 flight attendant jobs(out of 500 attendant jobs the company plans to cut) here in Winnipeg, out of possibly 2,000 total jobs that management intends to eliminate nationwide. What this means to the consumer is higher fees, longer line-ups and less service (from an airline already famed for having the level of "service" one would expect from 'Albania Air'). Meanwhile on the other end of the country about 200 jobs are due to be eliminated from the Halifax area. This contrasts with the salary of Robert Milton, President and CEO of Air Canada's parent corporation who was paid $43 million in 2007 to mismanage the company further into debt. Does the word "incompetence" mean nothing ?
Here's an item from the CUPE website about the effect the cuts will have on the Halifax area.
.............................

Air Canada job cuts in Halifax will have devastating impact:
(Halifax) – The president of the CUPE local representing Air Canada employees in Halifax says the announced job cuts are going to have a devastating impact, both on employees but also on the local economy.
Lisa Vivian Anthony of CUPE Local 4090 says, “Air Canada brought the union executive representing 8,000 flight attendants from six CUPE Locals from across the country to Toronto yesterday, to talk about mitigation options for the 500 layoffs they announced two weeks ago.

“The company informed us that they had conducted ‘Base Viability Studies’ but did not provide us with any details or results of the studies which were necessitating the closure of the Halifax and Winnipeg bases. CUPE anticipates reviewing these details with a financial analyst when the information is provided to us,” she says.

CUPE National Representative, Peter Baxter says, “Obviously, this bad news was brewing for days and possibly weeks as they had eight-page Fedex packages ready to be delivered to affected members, as well as managers in place at the affected bases to deal with shocked and grieving flight attendants.

“The public needs to understand that the economic hit is staggering for the local economy in Halifax. The average income of flight attendants is approximately $40,000 per year multiplied by 200 crew members, which amounts to $8,000,000 annually that will be forever lost,” says Baxter.

Baxter explains, “In previous rounds of concessionary bargaining during bankruptcy protection (CCAA) there was a wholesale gutting of our collective agreement to help the company recover from financial instability. We tightened our belts to assist Air Canada, our members took a 13.5% wage cut to help keep the company afloat and now they are paying us back by throwing us an anvil and closing our base.”

Anthony says, “We negotiated packages for our senior members to exit with dignity and a voluntary separation package to help smooth the transition. This was agreed upon by the company during bankruptcy protection and now they are denying our senior members the packages. We are currently in arbitration over this issue. The union is perplexed as to why the company would not want to replace the senior members with new hires making half the money. They agreed to this and now they are fighting us every step of the way.”

Says Baxter, “They paid Robert Milton, President and CEO of Air Canada’s parent company, $43 million dollars in 2007, and Air Canada President and CEO, Montie Brewer $8 million dollars. Obviously, they need to get the money from somewhere and the pound of flesh is coming off the backs of the flight attendants based in Halifax and Winnipeg.”

Says Anthony, “It is the end of an era for us. We have been serving the travelling public for 32 years. We have some members who have been working here for over 30 years.”

Sunday, July 20, 2008



CANADIAN LABOUR:
FLIGHT ATTENDANTS FIGHT BACK:

Air Canada has recently announced its intention to terminate the jobs of more than 639 flight attendants operating out of Halifax and Winnipeg. The trouble is that the company has to violate the law to do this. Surely "no problem" for the present Conservative government in Ottawa who have little respect for the law when it interfers with profit. But they can be pressured to obey their own laws. Here's an appeal from the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) asking you to petition Ottawa to turn down the request from Air Canada.

..........................
Tell Air Canada to respect the law Exigez qu’Air Canada respecte la Loi‏:
(Le francais suit l'anglais.)

Air Canada has announced plans to terminate more than 629 flight attendants and permanently close its flight attendant bases in Halifax and Winnipeg.




Meanwhile, Robert Milton and Air Canada President Montie Brewer are trying to enlist the federal government as a partner in this venture. Air Canada has asked Ottawa for a special exemption from the law so the airline can short change the flight attendants who will lose their jobs.




Air Canada believes that a family flight pass is adequate compensation for the loss of a job with no possibility of recall for employees with as much as 30 years of service. Please take a moment to urge Ottawa to turn down this request. Visit http://cupe.ca/action/respect-the-law .




Please take action right away. A decision on Air Canada’s request is due any day now. Once you have sent your message, please forward this note to your friends and contacts.

--------
Air Canada a rendu public son projet de mettre Ă  pied plus de 629 agents de bord et de fermer pour de bon ses bases d’agents de bord de Winnipeg et de Halifax.




Entretemps, Robert Milton et Montie Brewer essaient de recruter le gouvernement fĂ©dĂ©ral comme complice dans cette entreprise. Air Canada a demandĂ© Ă  Ottawa d’Ăªtre exemptĂ©e des exigences du Code canadien du travail pour pouvoir escroquer les agents de bord qui perdront leur emploi.




Air Canada considère qu’une passe de vol familiale constitue une compensation adĂ©quate pour la perte d’un emploi sans possibilitĂ© de rappel pour des employĂ©s qui peuvent avoir jusqu’Ă  trente ans de service.




Nous vous prions de prendre un moment pour sommer Ottawa de ne pas cĂ©der Ă  la demande d’Air Canada. Visitez notre site: http://scfp.ca/action/respectez-la-loi




Nous vous demandons de vous mobiliser maintenant. La rĂ©ponse Ă  la demande d’Air Canada est attendue d’un jour Ă  l’autre. Quand vous aurez Ă©crit au ministre et Ă  votre dĂ©putĂ©, nous vous prions de transmettre cette lettre Ă  vos amis et collègues.
...........................




THE LOCAL CONNECTION:


Many of the jobs that are due to be eliminated are from here in Winnipeg. Local Winnipeg Free Press columnist Golrdon Sinclair has taken up this question. Here is his first article on the matter from the July 11 edition of the Free Press.

.........................
Flight attendants deserve better
Face of Air Canada labelled as 'surplus':

Gordon Sinclair Jr.
Being the bearer of bad news comes with the job, but I'd never delivered it quite the way I did Thursday.



Actually, the last time I rang the front door bell of my neighbour, an Air Canada flight attendant, it was in gratitude.

Kathy Courtney got bad news Thursday.



I was dropping off a box of Bernard Callebaut chocolates as my way of saying thanks to Kathy Courtney, who had recognized me as a Linden Woods neighbour and treated me especially graciously on a flight home to Winnipeg.



This time I arrived at Kathy's front door in sympathy.



A Fed-Ex envelope in hand.



The envelope -- and the bad news therein -- hand been stuffed in her mailbox, which I just happened to see before she did.



"That's probably the letter," Kathy said, as I handed it to her at the front door.



The official letter -- couriered overnight to all 145 of the Winnipeg-based Air Canada flight attendants -- confirmed what a colleague in Toronto had already told her the day before.



"We are writing you today," senior Air Canada director Stephen Knowles' letter began, "to confirm the difficult business decision that will close the Winnipeg and Halifax In Flight Service (IFS) cabin crew bases, effective November 1, 2008."



I was going to say "sorry" to Kathy.



But Kathy said sorry first.



She apologized for the messy house.



The 50-year-old mother of two teenage boys explained she had been flying for eight straight days -- her flight to Toronto later Thursday would be make it nine -- and I'd caught her trying to do the laundry and clean the house.



That's not the only reason she was a bit behind on the home front. Kathy had just returned to work in April after being off for a year and a half due to breast cancer.



With 28 years of service -- which puts her in the middle of the seniority list of an extremely long-serving Winnipeg base -- she and the rest could survive the collective bad news.



They could fly standby to work in Toronto where they would probably end up having to share the rent with other cabin crew in a "crash-pad" apartment. Complete with mattresses on the floor, which Kathy said is already happening.



"It could be done," Kathy said. "But there's not much space flying out of Winnipeg. And there are flight attendants who are single mothers and for them, I don't know what they're going to do."
There's another possibility.



The Winnipeg-based flight attendants could simply move to Toronto. But that's not likely.
"Everyone who's here has chosen to be here," Kathy said.



Actually, years ago, after Kathy's husband, Don, transferred from Toronto to Winnipeg with CP Rail, she didn't want to move to Winnipeg.



Now she can never imagine leaving.



Having flown across Canada, she knows how precious our Winnipeg lifestyle is by comparison.
But she has kids going into university, kids who know this as home.



"I've got to keep working," Kathy said.



Air Canada is citing sky-high fuel prices as the rationale for doing away with the flight attendant base.



But where are the savings in Winnipeg, when the pilots who are staying and the flight attendants who are leaving share the same office space administration support?



The savings, I suspiciously suggest, come in trying to make life so impossible for the seniority-heavy Winnipeg-based flight attendants that they'll simply retire rather than attempt to commute standby to Toronto.



There is one sentence -- one word actually -- that speaks to the attitude that really fuelled the layoffs.



Again it was in that letter from senior Air Canada director Stephen Knowles.



"This decision means that all cabin crew based in Winnipeg and Halifax will be surplus to the operation and subject to layoff as per Article 17 of the Collective Agreement."



You gotta love the oh-so caring language.



Surplus?



I thought that was how you talked about old army gear.



Not people.



Especially not people who have been the face of Air Canada and spent most of their working lives serving airline and those of us who fly it.



People whose lives have just been relegated to standby.



gordon.sinclair@freepress.mb.ca


.........................
And here's the second article from the July 19th edition of the Free Press.
........................

Message to Air Canada: We're ready for a fight:

Gordon Sinclair Jr.
It's interesting how people react when they're treated like people.


Last week, I wrote a column that featured my neighbour Kathy Courtney, a mother of two teenage boys and an Air Canada flight attendant.


I spoke with her the day after she had formally been told that, along with 300 flight attendant layoffs in Vancouver, the Winnipeg and Halifax flight-attendant bases would be closing come November.


In its official notification, Air Canada referred to the hundreds of affected flight attendants as "surplus."


As if they were disposable pieces of equipment, instead of long-serving and valued employees -- and people.


Air Canada blamed sky-high fuel prices for the "difficult" decision. The flight attendants' union believes it's simply a convenient excuse for ridding Air Canada of higher-salaried senior staff who won't be bothered to relocate to Toronto, or attempt to fly standby to work there.
Kathy's story -- she had only recently returned to work after being off for two years battling breast cancer -- inspired colleagues from across the country to speak out themselves.
I have chosen to withhold some of the names of current Air Canada employees.
* * *
FROM HALIFAX. . .
I am an Air Canada flight attendant in Halifax with 30 years of seniority.


It is cold comfort to the dedicated employees at Winnipeg and Halifax (and the 300 in Vancouver) to be referred to as SURPLUS. We will all have to commute to Toronto and bump the most junior flight attendants who are there. This will greatly affect the personal lives of many employees and their families, and may have unforeseen negative repercussions for Air Canada's bottom line. Remember that the junior employees in Toronto, who will ultimately pay the price for this, are also the lowest paid of Air Canada's 7,000 flight attendants (about $19,000 per year). I think I understand the realities of the new financial environment but I disagree with the assumption that the company will save money by closing these crew bases. I suspect there are other reasons behind Air Canada's decision.
* * *
FROM TORONTO. . .
I am a flight attendant in Toronto but have very fond memories of living in Winnipeg. I was forced to move there in the late '80s coming back from a layoff. I loved the city, the people, the lake and all that it had to offer. I returned home and left Winnipeg behind. Sometimes I wonder if I should have stayed.


My brother and his wife are both flight attendants in Halifax. They can commute (fly standby) to Toronto and stay with me, but like Winnipeg, it is a tough, stressful commute. They have teenage children who will be attending university so they will need to keep working. I really am worried about them. Thanks for showing the empathy and caring the company cannot.
* * *
FROM VANCOUVER...
I cried when I read your article.


I am a Vancouver-based flight attendant with Air Canada and we are still all in shock from the news. The trickle-down effect will hurt everyone not just the YWG (Winnipeg) and YHG (Halifax) flight attendants.


We are all still reeling.


It's nice to know that people out there care.
* * *
FROM CALGARY.
.. Unlike Kathy, I have only worked 10 years for this company. All the while, I have been treated as only a number in the system and not a person. When I read the company's announcement of layoffs and their use of the word surplus, it didn't even move me. You see, for us it is so commonplace to be treated so impersonally, it no longer fazes us. I can tell you, the use of such a word escaped most of us. It was not until I read your article that I came to a shocking realization: They see us as only numbers, they consider us surplus, and that is why we are so easily disposable in their minds. Thank you for reminding me not to accept the use of such language to define my role as a worker, and for taking the time to tell this very moving story. I hope it brings the point across to your readers about the very human face of those affected by this terrible turn of events.
* * *
FROM A RETIRED FLIGHT ATTENDANT
... I started my career as a flight attendant in Winnipeg (1970) and I am shocked to hear this sad news. Some of my former colleagues still are flying and I am in disbelief. I hope that your comments will underscore how unfair this is especially in light of the fact that the pilots have been allowed to be based there and the costs can be shared. With only 145 flight attendants left (in Winnipeg) it would be a classier act to allow them to fly out their careers. However, in the past few years Air Canada continues to treat their employees with no respect or sensitivity. I am thankful that I retired two years ago. The history of the Winnipeg base is rich and with the merger of Air Canada and its cousins in the industry, Trans Air, Pacific Western and CP, this base closure is an insult to the many years that those employees have invested. At least with support from the media and the public, if Winnipeg base goes down in flames it will be noticed with due respect.
Gerry May (formerly Taillieu)
* * *
The Winnipeg and Halifax flight attendant bases don't have to go down in flames.


The union is fighting the closures.


And you can try to help save them by contacting your member of Parliament and voicing your concern.


The web address to send a message to your MP is:
http://cupe.ca/action/winnipeg

It seems that flight or fight has taken on a whole new meaning.
gordon.sinclair@freepress.mb.ca
.......................
Sorta says it all- Molly

Friday, July 11, 2008


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-HALIFAX:
ANARCHIST DISCUSSION GROUP ON MENTAL HEALTH:
The Halifax Free Skool Collective (see our Links section)has sent the following notice about something they forgot to mention in their other recent releases. Drop on by if you live in the Halifax area.
.......................
July 12th Discussion Group
Hey everyone, just a quick little add-on that we forgot to mention in the last mail-out: The Halifax Mental Health Discussion group will be meeting this Saturday at 7 PM(July 12-Molly) in room 314 of the Dalhousie Student Union Building. This group meets biweekly to discuss mental health issues and alternatives, and was formed out of a discussion series hosted by the FreeSkool recently. Anyone interested should feel free to swing by and check things out!
-- Thanks, -
The Halifax Free Skool Collective

Sunday, July 06, 2008


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-HALIFAX:
EVENTS AT THE HALIFAX FREE SCHOOL:
Molly has mentioned these people before. The Halifax Free Skool is a Halifax City collective dedicated to self education in a libertarian atmosphere. in addition to their regular activities (such a meeting tonight) they hope to stimulate other projects. This Wednesday, July 9th there will be a meeting at the North Memorial Library in hope of setting up a new artist co-op. Drop on by if you live in the Halifax area. They also say that they will be bringing out a new workshop schedule by the 12th.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008



CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT:

HALIFAX FREE SKOOL COLLECTIVE EVENTS:

The Halifax Free Skool Collective is an informal collective of people based in Halifax Nova Scotia that believes that education should be self-education and non-hierarchical. They feel that everyone should be both teacher and student. Here's an announcement about their latest activities.

...............................

FreeSkool Updates

Hey all! So, we're back from Montreal, and ready for another Free Skool weekend in Halifax! We will be running workshops on the 31st (that's this Saturday!) at the North Branch Library on Gottingen, from 11AM to 4PM. The final schedule looks somethin' like this:

11:15 - Vegetarianism & Veganism, a hows & whys talk facilitated by Carla Fraser

12:30 - How to Make Your Own Soy Milk & More, by Jasmine Marsh

1:45 - Mental Health, Radical Alternatives, and Antipsychiatry, facilitated by Ian Matheson (Part 2 of a 2-part discussion series)and

3:00 - A Discussion on Polyamory by Aaron Doncaster & Jasmine Marsh



There will be, as always, free food + coffee provided, and childcare is available! Also, starting this weekend we will have some small 'zines and patches available by donation, as well as MP3 CDs of past workshops and maybe more if we get productive!



After this, workshops will run on the 2nd and 4th Saturday of every month, at the Library UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED IN AN EMAIL NOTIFICATION. We are looking to run outdoor workshops as summer progresses, and notification of these will be posted here and hopefully on future posters around HRM. Otherwise, the North Library will be the de-facto location for workshop days.



Tonight (Wednesday!) there is also a general meeting at the Crow's Nest of the Anchor Archive at 7PM - all are welcome, feel free to come by to get an idea of what happens behind the scenes, and get involved!



Furthermore, we are getting ready to possibly start hosting monthly discussion groups on various topics, if there is community interest. There has been demand for workshops on bike repair, and interest in continuing the discussions on radical mental health, alternatives, and antipsychiaty. These will run outside of regular workshop hours (ie. not 11-4 biweekly at the library), and will continue more or less indefinitely. If anyone is interested in taking part in, facilitating, or otherwise getting involved in these discussion groups then let us know, or come out to tonight's meeting! We will do our best to accommodate different schedules and locations.



Thanks all, and hopefully we'll see you out this Saturday!

-- Thanks, -

The Halifax Free Skool Collective

Friday, June 22, 2007


SOLIDARITY WITH ATLANTICA ARRESTEES:
There were 21 people arrested at the recent action against 'Atlantica' last June 15th. There has been a considerable debate on the Maritimes Indymedia site about the tactic of "refusing identity" to the police, though there has been no debate on the wisdom of engaging the police in theatrical battles. The Halifax Coalition Against Poverty has undertaken the defense of the 21 arrested people and they are calling for financial donations. Money may be sent to :
Halifax Coalition Against Poverty
ACC (Anti-Capitalist Coalition)
2420 Agricola St.
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
B3K 4C2
Molly has to call a time out here. Once more she has to emphasize the "real meaning: of "direct action", the favoured tactic of anarchists. It does NOT mean the most militant action possible with NO chance of success. Those who think that way are Maoists hiding under the camoflauge of anarchism. What "direct action" means is the self directed action of communities to solve their problems "directly" without the intervention of "sympathetic" politicians. Organizing a co-op is direct action. With all the limitations involved with subculturism, 'Food Not Bombs' is direct action. A work to rule strike is direct action insofar as it is aimed at weakening managerial rule. Squatting is direct action. Self reduction movements in public transit are direct action. Setting up an Infoshop is direct action.Travelling across many miles to try and beat police who are much better than you are just to show off is not direct action. It would become such only if there was a reasonable expectation of actually disrupting the event you protest. There hasn't been such an expectation for almost ten years. Whether it is 50 people as in the case of Atlantica or 2,000 people in Europe at the G8 this is a forelorn hope. It hasn't happened ever since Seattle and it will never again. Quite frankly the police are smarter than their opponents and they are not hamstrung by ideological nonsense. They do what is effective. Thus they win- every time.
Molly is not opposed to contributing to the defense of the people arrested during the Atlantica protest. All that she says is that anarchists should look towards their "strengths" as they have become something of a "hegemonic idea" amongst the left today rather than clinging to an outmoded way of acting that only exposes weakness (50 people,50 people,50 people..drawn from half a continent...dummy up your head). Most larger cities in North America have far more anarchists and sympathizers(ie much more than 50) who could be drawn into much more constructive projects.
Yes, Molly knows that abandoning the romance of pretending that you are a match for well trained and well disciplined police substracts from the "appeal" of anarchism. Yet this romance is obviously built on a lie, and its supporters can only uphold it by increasingly shrill appeals to a diminishing number of people willing to be cannon fodder (50 people,50 people,50 people). Does the appeal of modern anarchism depend upon such a lie ? If it does it does not deserve to exist. Molly can only hope that at least a large proportion of modern anarchists in North America can see the difference between the fads and the underlying ideas. If they do they will abandon useless tactics and make their contributions to the constructive side of anarchism. Beyond this the "street fighting" tactic means that you have abandoned the "moral high ground", something that is critically important if you see your actions as "political" rather than "existential" as in proving yourself or influencing only a tiny little segment of the population thag you perform in front of. Yeah, I've read the bullshit supposedly justifying much more serious actions than street riots,and as an outsider to the cult my only regret is that I can't sink myself into the cultish mind enough to condemn it in its own language.