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10月23日

Change ID rules that stopped voters at the polls, May urges

Janice Tibbetts, Canwest News Service

Published: Wednesday, October 22, 2008

OTTAWA - Green Leader Elizabeth May urged the government Wednesday to repeal voting rules that she said kept Canadians away "in droves" from casting ballots in the federal election because they didn't have the required photo ID.

The federal government imposed the proof of identification two years ago in an effort to curb voter fraud, but critics say that all the law did was block an unknown number of eligible voters, particularly students, aboriginals, seniors and rural residents.

"This is a scandal in our country and we must address it," said May, who blamed the new rules for contributing to a record-low turnout in the Oct. 14 election. "We are not experiencing a crisis in Canada of voter fraud, we are experiencing a crisis of voter participation," she told a news conference on Parliament Hill.

http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/news/story.html?id=bd516fc0-07fd-442b-a9f8-91f43ef86d3b

Five years after the deluge

Major work undertaken since tragic 2003 flood, but some remains

Megan Grittani-Livingston mlivingston@whistlerquestion.com

October 23, 2008

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Megan Grittani-Livingston/The Question

 

Jeff Westlake, operations manager of the Pemberton Valley Dyking District, said flood-system upgrades since the 2003 flood have made the community safer.Whistler – In 2 1/2 days ending on Oct. 18, 2003, a downpour of approximately 369 millimetres of rain led to flooding that inundated parts of Pemberton, Mount Currie and much of the surrounding road system, and swelled Rutherford Creek so much that it reached out to claim the lives of five men. In that memorable period, the Richman family’s low-lying Highway 99 home filled with 1.4 metres (4.5 feet) of water.

 

http://www.whistlerquestion.com/article/20081023/WHISTLER12/310239980/1030

In-SHUCK-ch nearing final treaty

http://www.piquenewsmagazine.com/pique/index.php?content=In+shuck+ch+negotiations+1543

 

Negotiator slams Strahl for ‘glancing’ visits

By Jesse Ferreras

 

Gerard Peters wants to bring his people home.

 

The Chief Negotiator for the 908-member In-SHUCK-ch Nation, which consists of three First Nations living along the Lillooet River and Harrison Lake, has been working on a treaty with the federal and provincial governments that he hopes will bring people back to communities populated by less than a quarter of their native populations.

Aboriginals seek new commission, full disclosure

Power struggle doomed process, judge insists

Norma Greenaway, Canwest news service

Published: Wednesday, October 22, 2008

The abrupt resignation of the chairman of a federal commission on Indian residential schools has provoked bitter fingerpointing and demands from some aboriginal groups to start over and appoint a new slate of commissioners.

Others are calling on Justice Harry LaForme, who quit Monday as commission chairman, as well as the other two members of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, to "come clean" with residential school survivors and the general public about why they couldn't work together.

"This is about truth and reconciliation, so let's find out the truth," Patrick Brazeau, chief of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples, said yesterday.

http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=6797158b-7921-44d0-9fe2-b9f2f6206943

10月7日

Putting differences aside

http://www.canada.com/chilliwacktimes/news/story.html?id=c52591b0-e75e-4d47-8e00-09db0a110032

Making peace for children's sake

Paul J. Henderson, The Times

Published: Tuesday, October 07, 2008

While ill feelings have dominated the relationship between certain Sto:lo bands over the issue of child and family services, differences have now been put aside for the sake of action.

"We believe that the best approach is for communities to look after their children and families," said Maureen Chapman, chief of the Skawahlook First Nation and chair of the Fraser Region Interim Aboriginal Authority (FRIAA). "We will support one another in these efforts, share information, experiences and expertise and put aside personal interests. No matter what else has happened in the past, we all agree that our children must come first."

Vigil for aboriginal women mixes tears and hope

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20081004/OTT_women_081004/20081004?hub=Canada

 

 

Updated Sat. Oct. 4 2008 7:22 PM ET

ctvottawa.ca

 

Friends and families gathered across 40 Canadian communities, including Ottawa, on Saturday for the Sisters in Spirit vigil, remembering aboriginal women who have disappeared or been murdered.

 

 

The day hit home for the Kitigan Zibi First Nations community near Maniwaki, where two teenaged girls disappeared last month and their families continue a search for answers.

Vigil to mourn native women

Written by SCOTT STANFIELD
Citizen staff
  

Friday, 03 October 2008

 

A vigil today at the courthouse will remember the many aboriginal women who were murdered or who have disappeared along the Highway of Tears and other roadways across the country.
The Sisters in Spirit Vigil will also serve to remind the Prince George community about the issues aboriginal women face.
The list of victims from the Highway 16 corridor between Prince George and Prince Rupert begins with Gloria Moody of Williams Lake (1969) and ends with Aielah Saric Auger of Prince George (2006). The majority of victims were aboriginal.
A 2004 Amnesty International report called Stolen Sisters, suggests upwards of 500 aboriginal women have been murdered or disappeared across Canada.

 

http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/20081003154619/local/news/vigil-to-mourn-native-women.html

Compassion is key

http://www.squamishchief.com/madison/WQuestion.nsf/0/CC2AE3AD06175CB7882574D6007999B9?OpenDocument

 

 

The latest saga facing a homeless couple now well-known to Chief readers highlights just how complicated the social problem can get. There’s simply no good guy here – and no bad guy either. What’s obvious is the homeless issue so often touches off impassioned discussion, with loads of people believing one extreme – that all homeless are lazy drunks or druggies who don’t deserve free accommodations – and others saying everyone deserves food and shelter, no matter what life decisions they make – including dangerous criminal behaviour.

 

The common link often found among those talking from the sidelines is they rarely look at how it happened. How a person’s life story leads to such a deplorable situation. But those details are of paramount importance – not as a means of justifying or denying help, but as a means of addressing an increasingly debilitating social ill.

10月3日

Training Indigenous “water-keepers” By Crystal Bergeron

http://ring.uvic.ca/08oct02/waterkeepers.html

 

While providing clean, safe and secure drinking water to Canada’s First Nations communities is a top priority of the federal government, providing an effective instructional tool for the training of Aboriginal small water systems operators is the top priority for UVic education professor Dr. Don Bergland, MDA’s (MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates) Russ Baker and their unique “water-keepers” team.

 

Since the Walkerton water contamination tragedy and the forced evacuation of hundreds of people from the Kashechwan Reserve in northern Ontario, the federal government has vowed to upgrade the standards for the operation of Canadian water systems. As a result, all water systems operators, including small water systems operators in rural Aboriginal communities and First Nations reserves, must now hold valid certification from their respective provincial bodies.

 

“Presently, level 1 certification requires completing a difficult training course, passing an exam and on-site experience of up to one year—a ‘textbook’ method of learning which is not conducive to many learners,” says Bergland, the team’s creative director. The group’s initial needs assessment determined that First Nations operators learn most effectively through visual, hands-on, experiential problem solving.

 

“Often, even veteran operators with years of applied experience end up failing the exam. Our challenge was to take this vast quantity of written textual material and convert it to multimedia formats to create a practical learning resource for immediate implementation among First Nations communities in British Columbia,” he adds.

 

Although Bergland and Project Director Russ Baker have had previous success designing learning technologies for NASA and other industry training programs, this was the first time they collaborated from an Aboriginal perspective.

The pair was adamant that the project be constructed and produced by First Nations media interns under the mentorship of industry specialists Robert Aiken (Kazoo Studios in Victoria) and Markus Tessmann (formerly of Disney) and consultants from many Aboriginal communities in British Columbia.

 

Bergland was pleasantly surprised by the level of technical expertise and talent each of the Aboriginal interns brought with them. “They were very knowledgeable about their specific media areas and were able to provide excellent input during both the design and production phases,” he says. A unique byproduct of the project was the reverse mentorship that occurred on a daily basis. While the team leaders were responsible for sharing their technical expertise with their young protégés, the interns were equally keen to share their First Nations culture and knowledge with their senior colleagues.

 

The team has now completed an innovative delivery system using 3D modeled simulation. The software teaches participants through an interactive First Nations training model of learning. Dr. Lorna Williams, Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Knowledge and Learning in the Faculty of Education, explains: “In the past, information provided to First Nations training program participants had always been presented in a linear, literacy-based fashion, fragmented, abstract and analytical, showing very little relationship between the actual work and what was presented in the program. Dr. Bergland’s project brings all those real-life, holistic elements back into the learning by providing a strong and coherent connection to reality. It provides endless opportunities for review, integration and synthesis. It makes it much easier to transfer the learning back into the actual work they will be tasked with. It isn’t about the lack of ability to learn, but rather the process that was used to engage the learning that was the barrier.”

 

Intern Daniel Smith, a Kwakwakawakw graphic designer adds, “This concept of learning and teaching is almost ‘too’ appropriate. It’s as if current education has missed a step in the learning process. By creating an interactive environment we are in fact going back in time to retake that missed step in order to learn.”

 

Dean of Education Dr. Ted Riecken, whose own research interests involve digital media, is extremely supportive. “This project is significant for us because it brings together our strong interest in Aboriginal education and leading edge research in the application of digital technologies to education. Dr. Bergland has significant industry and instructional experience as a digital media designer. His reputation as an excellent instructor and creative artist made him a natural for hosting this project.”

 

Funded by Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) through the First Nations Education Steering Committee, the project is set to launch Nov. 4 at the INAC Small Water Operators’ Conference in Vancouver.