Edmonton Social Planning Council

Author: Web Administrator

  • We are Listening: Sparking Public Conversation on GSAs

    We are Listening: Sparking Public Conversation on GSAs was a public event held in the rehearsal hall of the Winspear Theatre in Edmonton on January 31, 2015.

    The event was held in response to the introduction of Bill 10, which would allow Alberta school boards to reject student requests to create peer-support groups known as gay-straight alliances (GSAs).

    The event was open to the general public as an opportunity to hear firsthand from individuals as they share their stories around their experiences with or without GSAs in schools.

    This Edmonton Social Planning Council document is a summary of what was said by youth, parents, educators and concerned citizens.

    ESPC Documents/A.04 WORKSHOPS AND CONFERENCES/We Are Listening Summary Report Final.pdf

  • April 14, deadline for Award of Merit nominations

    Nominations are being sought to determine the next recipient of the ESPC Award of Merit for Advocacy and Social Justice.

    The council is seeking forward-looking and courageous individuals and groups who have not turned away from controversy in an effort to seek social justice. The efforts of the individual or group should have had a clear impact on the community and be either ongoing or for a considerable period of time.

    “We recognize that many individuals and groups in our community work tirelessly to advocate for programs that parallel the social vision of the Edmonton Social Planning Council,” said board member Rose Marie Tremblay. “From time to time, we provide an award of merit to an individual or group whom we believe has provided a long-term record of dedication and achievement in the pursuit of social policies of benefit to Edmontonians.”

    A nominating committee made up of board members will decide whether any nominee sufficiently meets the award criteria. If a nominee is selected, a presentation will be made at the ESPC’s annual general meeting on May 21.

    The deadline to submit nominations is midnight on April 14, 2015.

    Click this link to download the Award of Merit 2015 Guidelines

    Click this link to download the Nomination Application Form

     

  • 2015 January fACT Sheet Literacy

    Literacy has been broadly defined by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) as “understanding, evaluating, using and engaging with written texts to participate in society, to achieve one’s goals, and to develop one’s knowledge and potential”. In addition, literacy also involves numeracy, defined by the OECD as “the ability to engage with mathematical information in order to manage the mathematical demands of a range of situations in everyday life.” Low levels of literacy reduce a person’s ability to carry out basic daily activities. For example, this may mean the inability to work, use public transportation or understand important documents necessary to receive medical or social services. Providing all Canadians with meaningful opportunities to develop and sustain quality literary skills will result in stronger communities bolstered by active participation in economic, employment, health, and social systems.

    ESPC Documents/Fact Sheets/FACT_Sheet_Literacy_2015.pdf

  • Former ESPC board member passes away

    The following message is from Vasant Chotai, board president of the Edmonton Social Planning Council:
     
    “On behalf of the Board of Directors of the Edmonton Social Planning Council, I would like to express our sadness at the passing of one of our former board members. The first time I met Father Ed I was on the board of Quality of Life Commission, an organization closely associated with the ESPC. At that time he convinced me to join the ESPC board of directors for the valuable research role the council plays in our city.
     
    I quickly came to know Father Ed’s compassionate nature as I sometimes gave him a ride to our meetings and had long chats on the way. He was a dedicated board member of the ESPC and a compassionate member of the community.
     
    He always brought personal stories of people in the community who were experiencing difficulty in their lives – either through being poor, aboriginal, single parent, senior, immigrant, refugee or disabled; and he eloquently connected their experience with the issue as a living testament. Up until the last meeting he attended recently at our sister organization, he was energetic and enthusiastic about helping people who were down, never losing courage to speak up loudly and clearly.
     
    Father Ed, as we called him, will be missed by our community and the two organizations he devoted his time to. Rest in peace, Father Ed.”
     
     
    For more information:
    Susan Morrissey, ESPC Executive Director
    (780) 423-2031 x353 or (780) 218-7395 cell
    susanm@edmontonsocialplanning.ca
  • Edmonton agencies brace for more poor as oil prices fall

    Edmonton Sun

    By Dave Lazzarino, Edmonton Sun
    First posted: Wednesday, January 14, 2015 02:29 PM MST

    Poverty trends in Edmonton have improved in recent years, but worries are surfacing that the fallout from sinking oil prices will undo those gains.

    “The first thing that comes to my mind is jobs, the loss of jobs, but also issues around rents going up and the ability for people to find affordable housing when they’ve lost their job,” said Susan Morrissey, executive director of the Edmonton Social Planning Council (SPC), following the release of a report profiling poverty in Edmonton.

    Among other statistics, the profile shows one in eight residents are living in poverty.

    Breaking the totals down, one in five children experience poverty and for children with aboriginal background, the numbers are even more stark, with almost 44 per cent of kids under six living in low-income homes.

    According to John Kolkman, research co-ordinator for the SPC, the trend has been improving in recent years.

    “There’s been a slow reduction in the poverty rate since 2000 through 2012,” Kolkman said. “We’ve also had a really strong economy.”

    Kolkman explained the recent numbers only go to 2012, meaning recent events could change that trend for the worse.

    “The downturn in oil prices is probably going to have both negative and positive effects,” he said.

    That’s what worries Morrissey.

    “We’re concerned there’s going to be cuts to programs,” she said.

    She said if social agencies start having to make cuts those cuts will be felt immediately by people on the cusp of poverty and the social cost will skyrocket.

    “It’s a lot easier and a lot less costly to be able to deal with them before they get there.”

    Mayor Don Iveson feels more drastic change needs to happen at the federal and provincial levels in order to turn the tables for the city’s poor, calling the numbers “unacceptable.”

    “A society as wealthy as ours, regardless of oil prices, can include more people and ultimately all people,” Iveson said.

    In his speech, he pointed to a personal belief that the tax system has to be changed. When asked to expand on that, he agreed a general sales tax is likely to hurt all people, poor and wealthy alike.

    “It seems to me that when we moved to the flat tax we became more regressive,” he said. “I know many high-income people who would be prepared to pay a little bit more by going back to a progressive income tax.”

    He said a mix of solutions is needed to solve the issue of income inequality.

    As for corporate tax, he said it could potentially keep companies from investing in the city, pointing instead to a progressive income tax and and a fuel tax to support provincial coffers.

    Recommendations from the city’s task force on poverty elimination are expected to be published in the fall.

    david.lazzarino@sunmedia.ca

    @SUNDaveLazz
     

     

  • Wanted: a better deal for young Canadians

    St. Albert Gazette

    Published January 14, 2015
    LOCAL NEWS

    St. Albert woman hopes to raise awareness about Generation Squeeze campaign
    By Victoria Paterson
    St Albert A campaign seeking a better deal for Canadians under the age of 45 has struck a chord with a St. Albert resident.

    Alex Morrison, a 27-year-old Grandin resident, recently read an article about the Generation Squeeze movement and found herself inspired to learn more.

    “It really, really hit home with me,” Morrison said. So much so she’s now hoping to help raise awareness in St. Albert and the region about the campaign, which highlights the challenges faced by Canadians 45 and under.

    Those challenges? Escalating housing prices, high childcare costs, salaries that haven’t gone up in step with those increasing costs, an expectation that a bachelor’s degree is now a minimum entrance requirement for many jobs and the associated student debt, and governments that spend more on seniors than they do on younger citizens.

    According to statistics from Generation Squeeze, the governments in Canada spend an average of $12,000 per Canadian under 45 versus about $45,000 for every retired citizen.

    The Generation Squeeze campaign is hosted at the University of British Columbia, where founder Paul Kershaw is a faculty member in the School of Population and Public Health.

    Their website states they would like to increase that spending by about $1,000 per person for those under 45 while keeping spending per senior at its current level.

    Morrison said she doesn’t want to take anything away from the country’s more senior citizens, but said her generation and others like it are “truly stuck between a rock and a hard place” when it comes to trying to afford a home, have a family and save for retirement.

    “How can we create equity and equality in this and how can we work together to make everybody within Canada’s … lives better,” Morrison said.

    More government funding for younger people would help those older generations, Morrison said, because they wouldn’t have to offer as much financial support to their children.

    “It’s become almost impossible for people in our generation to develop that financial independence,” Morrison said, acknowledging the only reason she and her husband were able to afford a house for their young family was through parental aid.

    “What one person made in the ’70s, two people are barely making now,” she said. Morrison said the campaign is about motivating those under 45 to start getting involved in politics so those who make policy hear their concerns.

    “Not only give us a voice but add some clout to our voice and make sure what we’re saying is actually being taken seriously,” Morrison said.

    John Kolkman, the research co-ordinator for the Edmonton Social Planning Council, agrees there needs to be policy work done to ensure that money is being spent effectively to support younger Canadians.

    “I agree – but it’s also going to depend on how we spend,” Kolkman said.

    For example, Kolkman thinks the federal Conservative government’s proposed income splitting is a misguided policy that won’t offer relief to those with modest incomes who need it most. But more funding for childcare would benefit many of the young people that are encompassed by the Generation Squeeze campaign.

    That spending shouldn’t take away from seniors, he said.

    Generational jealousy is not a new phenomenon, Kolkman said, and the campaign shouldn’t pit age groups against each other.

    “We faced many of the same challenges,” he said of his own generation, noting each new generation seems to feel they’ve got a worse deal than those who came before.

    There are some challenges for those 45 and under – housing is more expensive, Kolkman noted, though he added just how expensive depends where in Canada you live.

    But while housing prices are higher, he notes the high interest rates that hindered homebuyers in earlier generations are not a problem today. “Mortgage rates are at a generational low,” Kolkman said.