Advocacy

SOD TURNING

Housing is needed….

Sister Joan, pictured centre, in London Ontario with members of local non-profit housing advocates.

The Vision SoHo Alliance is responding to the Mayor’s call to build 3000+ units of affordable housing.

Six not-for-profit housing developers turned the sod on Friday, Oct. 14 in response to the Mayor’s call and to the desperate need for housing for many of our citizens.  The housing crisis in the city is on everyone’s mind as the fall turns cold, and snow will soon follow. 

What is unique about this effort is the collaborative work done by six non-profits to develop a piece of land that has both historical significance in London (former site of the War Memorial Children’s Hospital and the first Medical School) and its central location in London.  When completed it will provide approximately 680 units of mixed housing.  This is London’s biggest affordable housing project that the city has undertaken and has the potential to build a community where so many are needed to make it happen. 

We thank the media for the good overage we received for this ground-breaking ceremony and share the links to their coverage here:

Everything you need to know about SoHo affordable housing mega-plan - London Free Press

SoHo affordable housing project on old Victoria Hospital land to get underway in the spring - CBC News

SoHo development ready to move to the building phase - CTV News

Vision SoHo Alliance breaks ground on London, Ont. housing project - GLOBAL NEWS

We will post photos over time - following this transformation of land into homes.  We invite you to follow us!

Sister Joan Atkinson, Chairperson of the London Affordable Housing Foundation.

National Truth and Reconciliation Day

National Truth and Reconciliation Day– September 30

Image: Unsplash/Aedrian

This is the second year in which we are called to remember the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation or more simply known as “Orange Shirt Day”.  The focus of the day is to remember the children who died at Residential Schools and those who survived those schools but continue to live with the trauma of their experiences long after the last of those schools closed.

I want to acknowledge this day and I want to say thank you to the Indigenous people who invite us in healing and friendship to learn, to seek to understand and in some cases even to dance. It is day to express that it is time to heal the hurts of the past and be allies as we walk together into the future.  This will take time but this is a new moment to seek healing and reconciliation for the wrongs of the past.  Also, when we gather we also learn more of the truth about our Aboriginal peoples and their rich and meaningful culture and ceremonies.  We learn because these people are good storytellers and stories tell us who they are and who we are.

Such change and new understanding does not come all at once, or to each person in the same way.  It a journey that involves coming to know each other, listening to each other, and walking together into a new day. 

I will wear my orange shirt to express that going forward I will not forget the past, and also to express my desire and commitment to create the healing needed and do this together because together we are stronger!

-Sister Joan Atkinson, CSJ, Office for Systemic Justice | Sister of St. Joseph

It Takes a Whole Community

It takes a whole community…

The city of London, Ontario could learn from the people in the Maritime provinces when it comes to helping each other.  I am speaking about the response of people rolling up their sleeves to help in large and small ways to address the devastation that has hit so many individuals and families who are dealing with the effect of Hurricane Fiona.   We in London are facing a homelessness crisis.  We need to come together and to find a humane way to work with the people who are without food and shelter.  The solution the City of London has applied to shut down this program at the Baptist Church on Richmond St. due to a bylaw violation will not change much.  This may satisfy a few people who live or work in this area, but it is not the solution that is needed to create real change for everyone but most especially for those who need shelter, food and a lot of understanding.

Image: Unsplash/Jon Tyson

As the colder weather approaches us, this is not a problem that can be kicked down the road for a new council.  This is problem that all of us, who are a part of London, need to listen to and understand the multiple perspectives of many people.   People of faith communities, people at City Hall, people who are homeless, businesses in the downtown, neighbours, agencies, health care people and likely others who I have not named have ideas.  This is a challenge facing all who live in the city - in which a simple or “one size fits all” solution will not address the crisis. 

I would advocate that we start coming together to talk to each other and even more importantly, listen to each other.  I believe hidden in the spaces of such conversations are spaces for some new and innovative ideas to emerge.

I wonder if…” ideas worth considering could help us all move forward together. We will all be better for it.

Sister Joan Atkinson, CSJ | Office for Systemic Justice

Advocacy in Action

It has been wonderful to see churches in London stand up and declare that outreach to people living on the street is at the heart of their mission and integral to their ways of doing worship. And there is no doubt Ark Aid Street Mission is doing critical work, meeting needs which are not being adequately addressed. 

SEE ARTICLE HERE

Image: Unsplash/Nathan Dumlao

Equally encouraging has been the number of Londoners calling for City Hall to sit down with business owners, church ministers, and social agencies to find adequate solutions to the current situation.  Such a dialogue would be more complicated than simply slapping a church with a bylaw infraction, but one hopes it would yield more fruit – and certainly more justice.

At the same time,  the current situation begs the question:  What is the city’s plan for ensuring the wellbeing of the estimated 300 people who live outdoors?  How might the city’s budget surplus of $14 million come into play? How can we better support the critical work of social agencies in the city? And might we, as Londoners and City Hall together, advocate to the provincial government to use the $7.2 billion it budgeted, but didn’t spend (and indeed to add to this total) to boost programs such as OW and ODSP, mental health services, and affordable housing so we’re actually addressing some of root causes of homelessness?

 -Sister Sue Wilson, Office for Systemic Justice

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.