"The supportive housing sector exists because society’s systems have failed. Our sector forms the fabric of the social safety net. The holes in that safety net are getting bigger, and now is not the time to limit the tools we have in stitching it back together."
There's a dire shortage of teachers and support staff in our public schools. Ignoring it has serious consequences. This comprehensive new report identifies the factors that urgently need to be addressed. #bced#bcpoli#cdned#PublicEdPublicGood
A jury that sat through eight days of evidence looking into how developmentally disabled people are cared for in British Columbia has recommended a complete overhaul of the system.
https://t.co/y4YEE3gxFr
“The federal government thinks they can turn funding on and off like a tap, but these are people,” said researcher @VeroSioufi. “People don’t get settled overnight.”
https://t.co/faLr76Gh3r
We've seen factories move overseas when workers demand fair wages. But Amazon's union-busting closures in Quebec are different: Amazon MUST stay in Quebec to serve Quebec customers. That creates space to fight back. My take for @CDN_Dimension: https://t.co/x5SQXv1dvg #canlab
The current unionization rate is well under half what it was roughly 45 years ago. We will need policy reforms, like the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act and the Public Service Freedom to Negotiate Act, in order to bring numbers back up 📈
https://t.co/8U70lvAFny
Our former colleague Ben Parfitt's latest in @TheTyee.
Fighting oil and gas industry developments is almost always a losing proposition.
https://t.co/1xABIMxhtg
"If Trump is serious about these tariffs and it's not just a negotiating ploy then it means we need to look at other things. How do we deepen our domestic markets? How do we improve inter-provincial trade?" asks senior economist @MarcLeeYVR.
https://t.co/O9cOKQqlXT
New from @ccpa: Last year saw governments across the world backslide on their climate commitments, and embrace increasingly dangerous anti-environmental policy. Let's take stock of the damage. By @hadrianmk#ClimateAction
https://t.co/tb7Fdj5EpX
Lulu Hernández said when she first started working as a cleaner in Vancouver, she just accepted the long hours and low wages that were the industry standard.
But two women she met on the job helped her realize her workday could be different.
https://t.co/NuBAwjQnJX
“A barista doesn’t magically appear at the coffee shop when a customer comes to the door. They need to keep the coffee shop ready for when customers come. It’s the same thing being able to work delivery," says @VeroSioufi of BC's rules for gig drivers.
https://t.co/f4XJ9Ux9zJ
Here is today's segment from @TheCurrentCBC with @mattgallowaycbc on the impacts of Trump's tariffs, and how 🇨🇦 can respond: https://t.co/W8fH8XYmFx. I joined two business guests (auto parts from Ont and seafood from NS), who were both articulate, sincere, and (like me) worried.
ICYMI Concern about infrastructure costs has become the latest housing NIMBYism cry say @1alexhemingway & Danny Oleksiuk.
But denser housing actually means lower prices per unit for infrastructure upgrades, they explain.
https://t.co/wK7Y2zbJou
Amazon was happy to gobble up public handouts in Quebec, before they decided to cut and run when workers unionized.
Read @mostafah’s analysis about why Amazon is quitting Quebec to ‘shock and awe’ workers worldwide: https://t.co/aIe2Q8xbTf
This has quickly become one of the most popular pieces I've written for Substack. And for good reason.
The coming months and years will drive you insane if you don't have a plan to manage your sanity.
Here's how to start.
https://t.co/OdeFQSwx60
The costs of public infrastructure are becoming the go-to excuse for restrictive zoning policies in BC, policies that ban apartments on most residential land and reserve it exclusively for low-density options, write @1alexhemingway and Danny Oleksiuk.
https://t.co/wK7Y2zbJou