Advocacy

Public Statement from Federation of Sisters of St. Joseph of Canada on Ontario’s More Beds, Better Care Act.

Public Statement from Federation of Sisters of St. Joseph of Canada on Ontario’s More Beds, Better Care Act.

August 30, 2022

The congregations within the Federation of Sisters of St. Joseph of Canada have a significant history of direct involvement in the ownership and administration of hospitals and long-term care centres. While we are no longer directly involved, we know the issues are complex, and the solutions must be systemic. Therefore, we highlight three interconnected points:

We are concerned about the way the Ontario government’s More Beds, Better Care Act allows hospitals to place seniors, who no longer need hospital-level treatment, in a long-term care home not of their choosing, possibly in other communities, while they wait for their preferred home. First, the government has short-circuited the democratic process by closing off key avenues for public input on these issues. Second, this legislation ignores the critical role family members are currently playing to care for patients in struggling hospital and long-term care settings.  Third, the legislation increases the hardship on seniors in community who are currently on waiting lists for long-term care centres and will be forced to wait longer.

A better way forward, one which addresses the systemic nature of the problem, can be found in Bringing LTC Home, a research report from the National Institute on Ageing (NIA). This report indicates that, with thousands of Ontarians on wait lists for long-term care homes, the best solutions are not to be found in directing hospital patients to long-term care homes they don’t want, but in addressing root causes by supporting Ontarians to age well in their homes for as long as possible.  The NIA notes that, currently, close to 90% of public funding for long-term care goes to institutionalizing people rather than caring for their in their homes as most would prefer.  To cover the costs of enabling people to age well in place, the NIA suggests a national long-term care insurance program as well as further improvements to the Guaranteed Income Supplement program.  These should be key components of a health care plan rooted in provincial-federal cooperation.

In the Ontario government’s recent budget, the intended increases to the health care budget are so small that, in effect, inflation and population growth will mean a significant erosion in health care spending per person in the next few years. No doubt this was a driving force behind Bill 124’s sharp limiting of wage growth for health care workers.  But Bill 124 has contributed to the troublesome trends of nurses leaving the public system and hospitals becoming increasingly reliant on temp agency nursing, which is not financially sustainable and results in public dollars flowing to private agencies.

The expedition of the accreditation of nurses trained in other countries can be an important piece of a wider plan for human resources health care.  But this must be part of an overall plan to strengthen and modernize a properly funded health care sector, and this plan should emerge from a transparent process grounded in substantial public input.

Finally, Ontario has been over-reliant on hospitals and especially emergency departments to respond to issues that are better addressed through prevention and strong community health services.  Increased funding to address the social determinants of health would ease the strain on the health care system.  Likewise, new models for family-doctor practices and increased funding for outpatient clinics, mental health services, and home care are some of the essential elements of a well-rounded health care plan.

We recognize this is a challenging time for the health care sector.  We urge the Ontario government to initiate a wide public consultation to surface the most promising models for moving forward; models which will give all people in Ontario good and timely access to a full range of health services.

 

International Day of Recognition for Nelson Mandela

WE REMEMBER NELSON MANDELA - JULY 18, 2022

“There is no passion to be found playing small – in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living”.

(Words of Nelson Mandela during the days apartheid)       

The United Nations declared July 18th (the birth date) as Nelson Mandela Day and encouraged people engaged in the struggle for justice to celebrate this day in honor of “Madiba.” The initial celebration, held on July 18, 2009, was a gathering of peoples across South Africa and around our world to recall how one person made a difference for both black and white communities in South Africa.   Today, in 2022, voices continue to be raised around our fragile world as the struggle for equality for all peoples is indeed not yet equally shared as we watch the evening news.   

I personally have admired Nelson Mandela for years in his passion and commitment to help bring about a just solution to the racial discrimination that he and many others lived through in his beloved country. Madiba’s long struggle for right relationship and for a just South Africa FOR ALL- came at great cost to him and his family.  I suspect that the journey to freedom was not an easy one for him. Nelson Mandela lived among the daily injustices he saw around him and oftentimes caused a negative response to the situation.

“When a man/woman is denied the right to live the life (s)he believes in, (s)he has no choice but to become an outlaw”.  (Words from Mandela as he faced a long jail term for his actions)

Madiba was arrested in 1963 and found guilty of conspiracy and sabotage to overthrow the government of South Africa which meant he would be facing an extensive jail term which was a way the government used to silence him and the movement that was coming into its own!  After 27 years of incarceration, with many of those years in solitary confinement, Nelson Mandela did not show hostility or anger toward his oppressors and in the upcoming election was selected as the first black leader of the Rainbow nation.   

In his autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom, we are able to see some of the attitudes Nelson chose to live by to survive this difficult time in his life…his transformation time…his time to live in a liminal space.  Perhaps each of us will take courage as our own personal journey of transformation continues to unfold from his insights:

  1. Believing that things would get better – There were many dark moments when my faith in humanity was sorely tested but I would not and could not give myself up to despair.

  2. Oppression was character building – The policy of apartheid created a deep and lasting wound in my country and my people.

  3. Focusing his hatred on the system not the PEOPLE running the system – In prison, my anger toward whites decreased, but my hatred for the system grew.  I loved even my enemies.

  4. Finding beauty in unexpected places fueling hope – Some mornings I was in the courtyard and every living thing there, seemed to smile and shine in the sun. I knew that someday my people and I would be free.

  5. Tending a garden became a metaphor for Life and Leadership – I saw the garden as a metaphor for certain aspects of my life.  A leader tends his garden; plants seeds, and then watches, cultivates and harvests the result.  A leader, like a gardener, must take responsibility for what is cultivated – mind his work, repel enemies, preserve what can be preserved and eliminate what cannot succeed.

  6. Reading survival stories of others – In reading classic Greek plays, I learned that character was measured by facing up to difficult situations and a hero would not break under the most trying of circumstances.

  7. Leaning on the camaraderie of others – Prison is designed to break one’s spirit and destroy one’s resolve, by stamping out that spark that makes each one of us a unique human being. We supported each other and gained strength from each other.

The home of Nelson Mandela, Soweto, South Africa, where Nelson Mandela lived from 1946 to 1962.

While working with Scarboro Missions in Malawi, our return flight was diverted to Cape Town, South Africa and there was not a connecting flight to Malawi for two days.  Being in Cape Town meant that there might be a possibility of visiting Nelson Mandela’s home located in the heart of the city - and right down the street from the residence of Desmond Tutu! My travelling companion, Brian Swords, a member of the Scarboro Leadership Team, was coming for a visit to our Mission in Malawi.  He was open to venturing out and finding the neighborhood where Nelson Mandela lived, and healed, after his years in confinement.  Upon crossing the threshold I noticed that his home was a small, humble dwelling – yet these were the words that came to mind as we stood on holy ground that day. 

All are welcome in this home where a new reality for the people of South Africa was born and continues to be lived out even to this day. 

-Sister Ann MacDonald, csj

International Day for Malala

International Day for Malala – July 12, 2022

Many will remember Malala, who at age 17, received the Nobel Peace Prize for advocating on behalf of young girls in her country, Pakistan to receive an education along with the boys who were schooled without question.  Pakistan was under the rule of the Taliban and still today education for young girls is forbidden.  As a youngster wanting the opportunity to learn, Malala defied this rule and went to school – and one day was brutally attacked for her action against the rules of the Government.  This forced her family to flee Pakistan for medical help and also to protect her family members.  Her passion and commitment did not wane and up to the present day, Malala continues to use her voice on behalf of the many girls and women desiring an education in her country and other countries around the world. 

On July 12, 2013, the United Nations called for world wide access to education with the institution of Malala Day.   Her words that day still are heard across our broken world: Malala Day is not my day.  Today is the day of every woman, of every girl, of every boy who have raised their voice for their rights.”  (UN Address, July 12, 2013)

A line from our own Sisters of St. Joseph Statement, Moving With Love, comes to mind for personal reflection on the current situation in our world:

            “We commit to risk taking and justice making”…

What risks do we need to take to build a more just world for all?

Where are we being invited to use our voice to promote justice for all? 

-Sister Ann MacDonald, csj

Canada Bans Single-Use Plastic

Karen Wirsig, Plastics Program Manager, Environmental Defence made remarks at the announcement in Toronto, ON. Photo by: www.shaymarkowitz.com / Shay Markowitz

We finally did it! Canada’s single-use plastic bans are for real

Big news this week! With a series of live announcements held across the country, the federal government finally released the final regulations to ban six single-use plastics – straws, stir sticks, check out bags, cutlery, some takeout containers, and six pack rings. 

Pat yourself on the back. This is only happening because so many of us demanded it.

The bans will start to come into force this year, earlier than suggested in the draft regulations. The final rules also ensure that these harmful products can no longer be exported to other countries by the end of 2025. These improvements in the final regulations are the result of so many of us insisting on them.

Check out our Instagram Live and learn more about what the new single-use plastic bans mean, what they can accomplish and what still needs to be done.

By the end of 2022, companies will no longer be able to manufacture or import single-use plastic stir sticks, checkout bags, cutlery and certain takeout containers. The same rule will apply to six-pack rings in mid-2023. A year after the manufacture and import ban comes into effect, these items will no longer be allowed to be sold or given away with other products. Straws will continue to be available, but only in packages in retail stores intended for people who need them for medical and accessibility reasons.

The news was met with celebration, as these bans are an important first step in reigning in the plastic pollution crisis. But not everyone was feeling so joyous…

It’s sickening that the main producers of plastic in this country – including Nova Chemicals, Dow Chemical and Imperial Oil – are still trying to kill the government’s action on plastic pollution. Yes, the outrageous Big Plastic lawsuit against federal regulation of plastics is still before the courts. Now these same companies have sent a new round of letters to the government specifically to oppose the bans. 

Countries on every continent are imposing bans on plastic. It’s wonderful to see Canada join that club. 

By this time next year, we shouldn’t have to pick up any more used straws on the beach or fish plastic bags out of streams and tree branches. The government estimates that the bans will mean 1.3 million tonnes less of plastic waste over a ten-year period, and 22,000 tonnes less of plastic litter leaked directly into the environment. 

Of course there’s much more to do to end plastic pollution … including further bans on harmful single-use plastics and easy access to reusable and refillable packaging. And you can count on us to keep the pressure on to make sure these things happen – we hope you’ll join us. 

We’ll have more to announce on the next steps soon, so stay tuned!

- Karen Wirsig. Plastics Program Manager, Environmental Defence Canada

Learn more: https://environmentaldefence.ca/

World Oceans Day

United Nations World Oceans Day

Theme Revitalization: Collective Action for the Ocean.

I live along the Thames River and only rarely have had occasions to put my toes in the surrounding ocean of earth’s continents. Paul Bains, our Blue Community Coordinator reminds us in our June Newsletter that “Over 30 million Canadians live inland. One in two live along the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. For many Canadians, it is not the ocean and coastline that frame our identity; rather, it is the vast interconnected landscape of wetlands, lakes, rivers, and waterways. Canada has over 2 million lakes and more than 8,500 rivers. All of this water flows through one of five drainage basins to the ocean – 60% of this water flows north to Inuit Nunangat (Inuktut word meaning homeland, used by Inuit in Canada). Thus, in Canada, ocean literacy is fundamentally about our relationship with the ocean and the waterways that connect us to each other and the sea.” (Sourced from: https://colcoalition.ca/our-work/)”

Our congregational heritage, having grown out of living the gospel, continually calls us to live in right relationship with God, with all people and with creation. And so, I am fascinated by this beautiful and mysterious system that God has loved into being – the ocean: the rich interplay of hundreds of thousands of marine species, deep cold currents transporting oxygen and nutrients, the fact that the ocean is really one continuous body of water that oceanographers have divided into four principal areas. https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/all-about-the-ocean

The UN reminds us that “the ocean connects, sustains and supports us all. Yet its health is at a tipping point and so is the well-being of all that depends on it.”

Since 2017 when our congregation became a Blue Community, we have challenged ourselves with effecting change with the multiple relationships we have with water, from our misuse of it in over consumption, to clogging it with plastic, to advancing the awareness of water as a sacred right for all.

The many voices calling for change are heralds of hope.

This year there is a wonderful opportunity for us to learn more, and find out about the communities, ideas and solutions that are working together to protect and revitalize the ocean and everything it sustains. This day long event is hosted by the United Nations Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea, Office of Legal Affairs, with the generous contribution of Oceanic Global, which is made possible by La Mer. The event will be broadcast live. RSVP to join the United Nations World Oceans Day (UN WOD) virtual broadcast taking place on Wednesday 8 June, 2022.

Perhaps we will meet around the zoom screen!

Sister Loretta Manzara, csj